History 121 - Chapter 7 Review
Created the Northwest Territory (area north of the Ohio River and west of Pennsylvania), established conditions for self-government and statehood, included a Bill of Rights, and permanently prohibited slavery.
Northwest Ordinance of 1787
Yearly grants of federal money to Indian tribes that institutionalized continuing government influence in tribal affairs and gave outsiders considerable control over Indian life.
"annuity" system
The practice of admiting a territory's population as equal members of the American political system, rather than ruling over the West as a colonial power.
"empire of liberty"
The nineteenth century policy of immigration in which almost all white persons were eligible to claim American citizenship, unless they were unwilling to renounce hereditary titles of nobility.
"open immigration"
A provision signed into the Constitution in 1787 that three-fifths of the slave population would be counted in determining each state's representation in the House of Representatives and its electoral votes for president.
three-fifths clause
Opponents of the Constitution who saw it as a limitation on individual and states' rights; their demands led to the addition of a Bill of Rights to the document.
Anti-Federalists
The 1794 defeat of the Miami Confederacy by 3,000 American soldiers led by Anthony Wayne.
Battle of Fallen Timbers
First ten amendments to the U.S. Constitution, adopted in 1791 to guarantee individual rights against infringement by the federal government.
Bill of Rights
The 1784 ordinance divided the Northwest Territory into districts that were initially governed by Congress and eventually admitted to the Union as member states. The 1785 ordinance directed surveying of the Northwest Territory into townships of thirty-six sections (square miles) each, the sale of the sixteenth section of which was to be used to finance public education.
Land Ordinances of 1784 and 1785
A book published in France in 1782 by Hector St. John de Crèvecoeur, in which he popularized the idea of the United States as a melting pot.
Letters from an American Farmer
An alliance of Indian tribes in the Ohio Valley that waged open warfare, under the leadership of Little Turtle, on American forces in the 1790s.
Miami Confederation
Published by Thomas Jefferson in 1785, the book compared the white and black races, claiming that blacks lacked the qualities that made freedom and loyalty to the nation possible—the capacity for self-control, reason, and devotion to the larger community.
Notes on the State of Virginia
Massachusetts farmer Daniel Shays and 1,200 compatriots, seeking debt relief through issuance of paper currency and lower taxes, attempted to prevent courts from seizing property from indebted farmers.
Shays's Rebellion (1787)
Collection of eighty-five essays that appeared in the New York press in 1787-1788 in support of the Constitution; written by Alexander Hamilton, James Madison, and John Jay and published under the pseudonym "Publius."
The Federalist
A treaty signed in 1795 as a direct result of the Battle of Fallen Timbers; in this treaty, twelve Indian tribes ceded most of Ohio and Indiana to the federal government, and the system of annuity was established.
Treaty of Greenville
Feature of the U.S. Constitution (also known as the "separation of powers") in which power is divided between executive, legislative, and judicial branches of the national government so that no one can dominate the other two and endanger citizens' liberties.
checks and balances
Envisions the nation as a community open to all those devoted to its political institutions and social values.
civic nationalism
Defines the nation as a community of descent based on a shared ethnic heritage, language, and culture.
ethnic nationalism
The division of political power between the state and federal governments under the U.S. Constitution (also known as the "division of powers").
federalism
The process of emancipation in which children of slaves born after a certain date would be freed. The North's gradual emancipation acts assumed that former slaves would remain in the country, not be colonized abroad.
gradual emancipation