History Chapter 8
The Kentucky and Virginia resolutions condemned state laws against seditious speech.
false
With the Louisiana Purchase,
the size of the nation was doubled
The Constitution makes no mention of political parties.
true
The Haitian Revolution renewed fears of a slave rebellion in the United States.
true
The Whiskey Rebellion reinforced Federalist beliefs in the need for a strong standing army.
true
The word "male" did not appear in the Constitution until after the Civil War.
true
The first U.S. coin to feature a real person was the image of
Abraham Lincoln
"The Star-Spangled Banner," written by Frances Scott Key, commemorates what event in the War of 1812?
Fort McHenry withstood British bombardment
By 1798, the United States and what country were engaged in a "quasi-war" at sea?
France
In the XYZ affair of 1797
French officials presented American diplomats with a demand for bribes.
Which was not part of Fries's Rebellion of 1799?
John Fries, a local militia leader and auctioneer, was hanged.
The case that established judicial review was
Marbury vs. Madison
The two political parties of the mid-1790s were the
Republicans and Federalists
The Virginia and Kentucky resolutions, written respectively by Madison and Jefferson, attacked what federal law?
Sedition Act
The only time in American history that the president has actually commanded an army in the field was during
The Whiskey Rebellion
The Hartford Convention
affirmed the right of a state to interpose its authority if the federal government violated the Constitution.
Initially welcomed in America, Edmond Genet's downfall occurred when he
commissioned American ships to attack British vessels under the French flag.
After Washington's unanimous reelection in 1792, he wanted to run for president once more, but Congress had barred him from obtaining a third term.
false
As head of the Treasury department, Hamilton's ambitious economic program was originally only strongly opposed in the northern states.
false
Federalists felt the creation of such groups as the Democratic-Republican societies cemented the virtuous ideals of liberty.
false
In consequence of the December 1814 Hartford Convention, the Federalist Party grew in strength and vigor.
false
The "Revolution of 1800" was
the peaceful transfer of the office of the presidency between political parties.
After writing The Rights of Man, Thomas Paine was forced to flee to France.
true
As more American settlers moved west of the Appalachian Mountains, some Indians changed their position on assimilation and embraced the federal policy of "civilization."
true
In 1792, Mary Wollstonecraft published A Vindication of the Rights of Women in response to Thomas Paine's Rights of Man.
true
James Madison opposed Congress even receiving a petition from slaves from North Carolina as he felt they had "no claim" on lawmakers' attention.
true
Jefferson and Madison felt the greatest threat to American freedom lay in the alliance of a powerful central government with an emerging class of commercial capitalists.
true
Jefferson was the first president to begin his term in Washington, D.C.
true
Jefferson's embargo on U.S. exports proved an economic disaster for American port towns.
true
Judith Sargent Murray's argument was that women were capable of the same intelligence men possessed yet women were denied "the opportunity of acquiring knowledge."
true
One of Lewis and Clark's tasks was to record information about plant and animal life along their journey.
true
Slave women residing in the area later known as the Louisiana Purchase had the right to go to court for protection against cruelty or rape by their owners.
true
The Barbary Wars were the United States's first contact with the Islamic World.
true
The same American leaders of democracy who hailed the French Revolution as a step in the universal progress of liberty reacted in horror against the Haitian Revolution.
true
George Washington was elected the first president of the United States
unanimously by all sixty-nine electors.
When Chief Justice John Jay was sent to Britain to stop impressment of American citizens,
he brokered a treaty that canceled the American-French alliance and recognized British supremacy.
The War of 1812 was ended by what treaty?
in December 1814 by the Treaty of Ghent
"Impressment" as practiced by the British was
kidnapping sailors
Which was not true of Gabriel's Rebellion in 1800?
led by Toussaint L'Ouverture
In the aftermath of the War of 1812, Americans tended to view Canadians as
monarchial and lacking in an understanding of liberty.
By 1807, at the time Congress enacted the Embargo Act, how many American sailors had the British impressed?
over 6,000
After Washington's inauguration, he proclaimed liberty and the republican model of government was dependent on the success of America's experiment in
self-government
Most of the labor in building the public buildings of the national government in Washington, D.C., was done by
slaves
The "Second War of Independence" was
the War of 1812.
Thomas Jefferson brokered an agreement to assuage southerners to accept Alexander Hamilton's economic plans in exchange for
the new, permanent capital would be built in the South
Which of the following is among the more memorable passages of Jefferson's first inaugural address?
"We are all Republicans, we are all Federalists."
Who killed the first U.S. secretary of the Treasury in a duel?
Aaron Burr
Which of the following was not a significant feature of the War of 1812?
Northerners strongly supported the war; southerners strongly opposed it.
On their journey of exploration from Missouri to Oregon, Lewis and Clark were accompanied by the American Indian interpreter
Sacajawea
"Millions for Our Defence Not a Cent for Tribute" was a motto that originated during
The War of 1812
Which statement is true regarding the Republican Party under Madison and Jefferson?
The party had more faith in democratic self-government.
Which of the following series of events is listed in proper chronological sequence?
Thomas Paine's The Rights of Man; Mary Wollstonecraft's Vindication of the Rights of Woman; Gabriel's Rebellion
A result of the expanding factions within the new government, more citizens attended political meetings and the country experienced rapid growth of the American press.
True
While in office, some army officers suggested that President Washington set himself up as a dictator of the new country.
True
Which was not part of Secretary of the Treasury Alexander Hamilton's financial plan of 1790-1791?
cease the tax on whiskey
Jefferson barely won the election of 1804.
false
Mary Wollstonecraft's work called for greater access to education and paid employment for women while also fervently challenging traditional gender roles in America.
false
No one was ever convicted under the 1798 Alien and Sedition Acts.
false
President Thomas Jefferson refused to purchase the Louisiana Territory because it was an affront to his strict constructionist view of the Constitution, but Congress overrode his veto.
false
The "Revolution of 1800" pitted the French against the newly incorporated American military.
false
The British were the main targets of the Sedition Act.
false
The Louisiana Purchase stalled Thomas Jefferson's plan to remove Indian tribes beyond the Mississippi River that refused to cooperate in "civilizing" themselves.
false
The Shawnee brothers Tecumseh and Tenskwatawa led the way in promoting Indian adoption of white customs.
false
The War of 1812 ended only after the British pledged to cease the impressment of American sailors.
false
The discoveries made by Lewis and Clark on their expedition through the West persuaded Jefferson to go ahead with the Louisiana Purchase.
false
The first contested presidential election pitted John Adams against James Madison.
false
The newly created Bank of the United States was originally a branch of the government under the suggestion of Alexander Hamilton.
false