HISTORY STUDY GUIDE
During the first half of the nineteenth century, what motivated Americans to continue the trend illus- trated in the map above?
(A) Access to valuable resources that would fuel American development
The conflict described in the passage best reflects the ongoing debates about
(C) the rightful scope of federal authority.
11. Henry James's assertion that the embargo would "shake the Union itself" is most clearly supported by which of the tollowing processes occurring in the United States at the time!
Increased sectionalism in the nation's economic and political friends
Which of the following best explains why conflicts like the one revealed by the cartoonist's perspective were more common in the mid-nineteenth century?
The surge of international migrants and their set- tlement in major cities increased the hostility of nativists.
Which of the following details would most grantl have magnified the sentiments depicted in the cartoon?
The tendency among immigrants to live in con- centrated ethnic communities
Which of the following most directly supports the author's contention that the economic changes of the era in question led to a "deeper revolution in human relations'?
The widening wealth gap
which of the following developments most directly incouraged the trend revealed in the map above Auring the United States' first half-centurv?
)Improvements in transportation technology
Which of the following conflicts of the 1840s is most directly revealed by the cartoon above?
Nativistssoughttolimitthepoliticalpowerofimmi- grants, whom they saw as a debasing influence on society
Which of the following demographic changes was most directly caused by the developments described by the passage?
Rapid population growth along the frontier
13. Which of the following realities of the early nineteenth century best explains why the embargo created such a negative response in the United States?
The acceleration of the trend toward national unity
1. Based on the context of his remarks, Col. Mason would most likely receive support tor his position on this issue in
the North
Strong support in the South for the arguments made iv Pinkney in this passage would most immediately lead to
the growth of a distinctive, regional identity based partly on ideas about slavery
The ideas expressed in the passage are best under- stood as part of the debate in American politics over
the relative power of the national government.
The arguments made by Jefferson in this passage would be most crectly reflected in the nineteent centurv debates over
the scope of federal economic policies.
Which of the following best describes the impact of We decisions made by the Constitutional Convention regarding slavery following the debate excerpted the left?
Conflict over the issue was postponed via compromise, rather than resolved
Which of the following most directly contributed to the revolution described in the passage above?
Governmental efforts to support the growth of unihed, national economy
Which of the following groups would have advo- cated most strongly for government support of the trend revealed by the map?
Middle-class farmers in the Old Northwest
Which of the following regions of the United States would have been least affected by the economic transformation described in the passage?
The South
The conflict revealed in the passage led most directly to which of the following?
The creation of the first political parties
The trend shown in this map contributed most significantly to
the debate over the status of slavery in newly acquired territories.