history 17a chapter 10
"The Republicans have out-federalized Federalism" refers to Republicans in the late 1810s supporting a national bank and a protective tariff.
True
A collapse in cotton prices set off the panic of 1819.
True
Andrew Jackson defeated the Seminole Indians in Spanish Florida.
True
Before the Tariff of 1816, New England shippers and southern farmers opposed a protective tariff.
True
Henry Clay was the dynamic nationalist who championed the American System.
True
In the election of 1828, Andrew Jackson was more popular than the incumbent president, John Quincy Adams, with ordinary folk and southern planters.
True
John C. Calhoun initially championed internal improvements, believing that western development would help the South.
True
John Quincy Adams's administration was crippled from the beginning because of the "corrupt bargain."
True
The 1810 census showed that the South had almost as many manufacturers as New England.
True
The Monroe Doctrine developed after France seemed ready to help Spain regain her old empire in Latin America, although most nations there had declared their independence.
True
The Rush-Bagot Agreement eliminated naval competition with the British on the Great Lakes.
True
The extension of voting rights in most states to white men was a factor in Andrew Jackson's election in 1828.
True
There were no Federalist candidates for the presidency in the election of 1824.
True
In the early 1800s, the trinity of ideas promoting economic nationalism consisted of
a national bank, a protective tariff, and internal improvements.
The "firebell in the night" that awakened and filled Jefferson with terror was the
issue of slavery.
Jefferson, Madison, and Monroe favored a constitutional amendment to
provide for internal improvements.
The percentage of Americans who could vote increased between 1790 and 1820 because
states abolished many property and taxpaying requirements.
The United States was able to acquire Florida easily because of
the lack of Spanish control over the area.
The "corrupt bargain" settled the presidential election of 1828.
False
The Monroe Doctrine was immediately and widely accepted as international law.
False
In the 1816 vote on the Bank of the United States,
Henry Clay and John C. Calhoun supported it, but Daniel Webster opposed it.
The election of 1824 was decided when
Henry Clay supported John Quincy Adams.
The "Era of Good Feelings" describes
James Monroe's administration.
In 1828, the idea that a state could nullify an act of Congress was proposed by
John C. Calhoun.
In settling the northwestern boundary of the United States, Secretary of State Adams had to negotiate with
Russia.
The Missouri Compromise of 1820
admitted Missouri as a slave state.
As president, James Monroe
all of the above
In McCulloch v. Maryland, John Marshall
all of the above
Southern slave states sought to protect their national political interests by
ensuring an equal number of slave states and free states.
In Dartmouth College v. Woodward, the Supreme Court
expanded the definition of contracts and put them beyond state control.