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Chapter 12 Section 3 1.Rising sectional differences A. 3 sections of the country were: 1. Northeast 2. South 3. West

Chapter 12 Section 3

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Chapter 12 Section 3. Rising sectional differences A. 3 sections of the country were: 1. Northeast 2. South 3. West. Chapter 12 Section 3. B. They were arguing over: 1. Sale of public land 2. Internal improvements 3. Tariffs ---- see page 364. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Chapter 12 Section 3

Chapter 12 Section 3

1. Rising sectional differences A. 3 sections of the country were: 1. Northeast 2. South 3. West

Page 2: Chapter 12 Section 3

Chapter 12 Section 3B. They were arguing over: 1. Sale of public land 2. Internal improvements 3. Tariffs ---- see page 364

Page 3: Chapter 12 Section 3

Chapter 12 Section 3

2. Tariff of Abominations (1828) A. This tariff was a high tax placed of raw materials and manufactured goods coming into the country. 1. South was MAD! Now they’d have to sell cotton cheap. 2. South blamed JQ Adams. This helped A. Jackson get electedhttp://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VNgIUUD7i-A

Page 4: Chapter 12 Section 3

Chapter 12 Section 3

3. Crisis over Nullification A. John C. Calhoun (VP) spoke out against the tariff 1. He felt that states could ignore federal laws if they felt they needed to. (this is actually unconstitutional)

Page 5: Chapter 12 Section 3

Chapter 12 Section 3

4. States Rights Debate A. Webster/Hayne Debate– A famous debate on the states rights topic B. A. Jackson (president) and JC Calhoun (VP) were at odds on this topic

Page 6: Chapter 12 Section 3

Chapter 12 Section 3

5. South Carolina threatens to secede A. SC was so angry that they threatened to leave the USA B. A. Jackson asked congress to lower the tariff C. Congress lowered it

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Chapter 12 Section 3D. SC is still angry– they refused to obey it and built an armyE. A. Jackson was reelected in 1832. He was ready to fight SCF. Clay came up with a compromise and all is okay for a while.

Page 8: Chapter 12 Section 3