History Chapter 8
True or false: Jefferson was interested in the Louisiana territory because he wanted to secure permanent access to the port of New Orleans.
True
True or false: John Adams acceptance of defeat in 1800 established the vital precedent of a peaceful transfer of power from defeated party to its successor.
True
True or false: Newspapers and pamphlets were a primary vehicle for political debate in the early republic
True
True or false: Tecumseh and Tenskwatawa tried to revive a pan-Indian movement and unite against the white man.
True
True or false: The whiskey rebellion of 1794 proved to federalist a that democracy in the hands of the ordinary citizenry was dangerous.
True
True or false: by the early 1800s some members creek and Cherokee tribes were living like white Americans as traders and slaveholders
True
True or false: free trade and sailors rights were the two issues that drew the United States into the was of 1812.
True
True or false: most of the public government buildings constructed around 1800 in Washington, D.C. Were built by using slave labor.
True
True or false: slave artisans played a prominent role in Gabriel's rebellion.
True
True or false: the Jacobin clubs of Paris were an inspiration for the democratic-republican societies.
True
True or false: the Republican Party of today started in the 1790s
True
True or false: the twelfth amendment required electors to cast separate votes for president and Vice President.
True
True or false: to Americans, Jackson's victory at New Orleans demonstrated virtuous citizens of a republic could defeat the forces of despotic Europe.
True
Quasi-War
Unofficial conflict with framce
Henry Clay
War Hawk
Mary Wollstonecraft
Wrote a vindication of the rights of women
Hartford convention
Ended the Federalist party
True or false: Acre for acre, the Louisiana purchase was not a bargain.
False
True or false: Canadians tried to rebel against Britain during the war of 1812
False
True or false: Most states in the Union supported the Virginia and Kentucky resolutions.
False
True or false: Pocahontas served as Lewis and Clark's interpreter.
False
True or false: Women were counted fully in determining representation in congress, and there was nothing specifically limiting women's rights in the constitution.
False
True or false: george Washington wore the finest English clothes at his first inauguration.
False
True or false: jay's treaty abandoned any American alliance with Britain by positioning the United States close to France.
False
True or false: lousianas slaves enjoyed far more freedom under the liberty loving United States than under the rule of tyrannical Spain.
False
True or false: seeing the events as an extension of their own progress of liberty, white Americans supported the Haitian Revolution and the establishment of hate as an independent nation.
False
True or false: the battle of Washington, D.C. Valiantly fought by the Americans, was a much needed victory.
False
True or false: the embargo act was devastating to the British and French.
False
True or false: the revolution of 1800 was extremely violent.
False
True or false: when Thomas Jefferson became president, he was not interested in dismantling the policies that the federalists had established
False
True or false: the U.S. Military was well prepared for the war of 1812
Fasle
Impressments
Forest American sailors into the British Navy
Strict constructionist
Government could only do exactly what the Constitution stated
Toussaint L'Overture
Haitian slave revolution
Marbury v. Madison
Judicial review
John Adams
Lost reelection for president in 1800
Jay's Treaty
Negotiated with Britain
Gabriel
Organizer of a slave rebellion in America
Tecumseh
Pan-Indian movement
Fries rebellion
Pennsylvanian farmer uprising
John Fries
Pennsylvanian militia leader tried for treason
Benjamin Franklin
President of the Pennsylvanian abolition society
Sedition act
Restrictions placed on freedom of the press
Aaron Burr
Shot Alexander Hamilton in a dual
Virginia resolution
Attacked the sedition act as unconstitutional
Matthew Lyon
Accused under the sedition act
Judith Sargent Murray
Argued for equal educational opportunities for women
XYZ affair
Bribery scandal
Louisiana territory
But for $15 million
War hawks
Called for war against Britain
John Marshall
Chief Justice of the Supreme Court