Title: New Forms of transportation, a factory system and more available capital fueled this revolution in the first half of American history.
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2New Forms of transportation, a factory system and
more available capital fueled this revolution in
the first half of American history.
3Market Revolution
4This movements goal was to end the sale and use
of alcohol in America.
5Temperance Movement
6President Jacksons policies towards this group
included the following opposition to their
assimilation, the Removal Act of 1830, and his
refusal to enforce the Worcester v. Georgia
decision.
7Indians
8Reforms under this president included expanded
male suffrage, people having a greater political
voice through parties, and the rotation of office
holders.
9Andrew Jackson
10President Jackson opposed this because he
believed that it was controlled by the rich.
11The Bank of the United States
12The doubling of agricultural production, the
growing urban population and work force all
contributed to the growth in this sector in the
1840s and 1850s.
13Economy
14The growth of railroads in the 1840s prompted the
growth in these two industries.
15Iron and Coal
16Seventy Five percent of the immigrants to the
United States in the 1840s were from these 2
countries.
17Ireland and Germany
18Finish the statement In the 1840s, America was
_____ rich and ______ poor.
19Land/Labor
20The Virginia and Kentucky Resolutions, the
Hartford Convention, and the South Carolina
Exposition and Protest were all based on
21StatesRights
22This is the belief that America had the god given
right to spread its civilization.
23Manifest Destiny
24Leaders of this movement included Harriet Tubman,
Sojourner Truth, Frederick Douglass.
25Abolitionists
26The meeting at which reformers met to organize
their fight for equal rights was known as this.
27The Seneca Falls Convention
28Individuals who sought to create alternative
lifestyles to the industrial world created these
in the mid 1800s.
29Utopias.
30Polk used the slogan 54 40 or Fight to acquire
this territory.
31Oregon
32Until this invention in the 1700s cotton was not
as profitable to produce.
33The Cotton Gin
34The south pushed westward primarily to acquire
more lands for the production of this crop.
35Cotton
36After the election of Polk the annexation of this
territory led the US into a war with Mexico.
37Texas
38This region in the US (in the early 1800s) had
the following characteristics fewer cities, no
public school system, and few immigrants.
39The South
40These were the small farmers who grew food and
some cotton believed in the supremacy of whites.
41The Plain Folk or the yeoman farmers
42Slavery did not become a lasting institution in
this areas because it was unprofitable on the
small farms there.
43The North
44The Southern states were opposed to the election
of this man in 1860 for he hoped to stop the
spread of slavery into the new territories.
45Lincoln
46The Missouri Compromise, the Compromise of 1850
and the Kansas-Nebraska Act attempted to solve
this issue.
47Extension of slavery into the Western territories.
48This relationship was the Constitutional
secession issue of 1828 and 1860.
49Federal and State relationship.
50Southerners used this as a defense of slavery.
51They were better cared for than the Northern
factory workers.