HIST 1301 CHAPTER 9
The Rush-Bagot Agreement eliminated naval competition with the British on the Great Lakes.
TRUE
The three regions of the US (North, South and West) had very different economic objectives and very different political objectives.
TRUE
There were no Federalist candidates for the presidency in the election of 1824.
TRUE
Andrew Jackson was known as the defender of the educated elites.
FALSE
The "Era of Good Feelings" describes
James Monroe's administration
The Era of Good Feeling was brought to an end by the
Panic of 1819
In the election of 1828, Andrew Jackson was more popular than the incumbent president, John Quincy Adams, with ordinary folk and southern planters.
TRUE
Perhaps the most important aspect of American history in the first half of the 19th century was the continuing tension between states' rights and national power between what was called sectionalism and nationalism.
TRUE
The North/Northeast was very much centered on an economy focusing on trade, international trade, and commerce, banking and finance, and industrial development.
TRUE
James Tallmadge Jr.
introduced amendment to ban slavery from Missouri
Andrew Jackson
led the war against the Seminoles in Florida
James Monroe
presided over the "Era of Good Feelings"
John Marshall
was a national chief justice
Henry Clay
was an advocate of compromise as an effective political tool
James Madison
was president at the end of the War of 1812
Daniel Webster
was the Massachusetts senator who favored a protective tariff in 1828
William Crawford
was the presidential candidate in 1824 from Georgia
John Quincy Adams
won the second most popular votes in the 1824 presidential election
John C. Calhoun
wrote the South Carolina Exposition and Protest