57
Chapter 7… ALL OF IT • I’m sorry to do this too you all, but we are behind and need to catch up…

Chapter 7… ALL OF IT I’m sorry to do this too you all, but we are behind and need to catch up…

Embed Size (px)

Citation preview

Page 1: Chapter 7… ALL OF IT I’m sorry to do this too you all, but we are behind and need to catch up…

Chapter 7… ALL OF IT

• I’m sorry to do this too you all, but we are behind and need to catch up…

Page 2: Chapter 7… ALL OF IT I’m sorry to do this too you all, but we are behind and need to catch up…

Regional Economies Create Differences

Chapter 7 Section 1

Page 3: Chapter 7… ALL OF IT I’m sorry to do this too you all, but we are behind and need to catch up…

• During the 1800’s many changes took place in the United States. For example, moved from small workshops to large factories that used machines. This change was partly due to Eli Whitney.

Page 4: Chapter 7… ALL OF IT I’m sorry to do this too you all, but we are behind and need to catch up…

• In 1798 Eli Whitney built a firearms factory near New Haven, Connecticut. The muskets his workmen made by methods comparable to those of modern mass industrial production were the first to have standardized, interchangeable parts.

http://www.eliwhitney.org/new/museum/about-eli-whitney/factory

Page 5: Chapter 7… ALL OF IT I’m sorry to do this too you all, but we are behind and need to catch up…

• These changes in manufacturing brought about Industrial Revolution. This was the name given to the massive changes – to both the economy and society – that resulted from the growth of the factory system.

Page 6: Chapter 7… ALL OF IT I’m sorry to do this too you all, but we are behind and need to catch up…

• Industrialization in America took place primarily in the New England states. As a result, people were willing to manufacture goods.

Page 7: Chapter 7… ALL OF IT I’m sorry to do this too you all, but we are behind and need to catch up…

• In 1793, Eli Whitney helped to further promote agriculture by inventing the cotton gin. The machine helped to clean the cotton and increased cotton production, which led to the establishment of large cotton plantations.

Page 8: Chapter 7… ALL OF IT I’m sorry to do this too you all, but we are behind and need to catch up…

• As a result, the number of slaves in the south nearly doubled from 700,000 to 1,200,000 by the mid 1800’s.

Page 9: Chapter 7… ALL OF IT I’m sorry to do this too you all, but we are behind and need to catch up…

• The Federal government also began improving the nation’s transportation network. In 1811, the government began building the National Road to carry settlers west.

Page 10: Chapter 7… ALL OF IT I’m sorry to do this too you all, but we are behind and need to catch up…

• In 1816, Congress voted to set up the Second bank of the United States.

Page 11: Chapter 7… ALL OF IT I’m sorry to do this too you all, but we are behind and need to catch up…

Nationalism at Center Stage

Chapter 7 Section 2

Page 12: Chapter 7… ALL OF IT I’m sorry to do this too you all, but we are behind and need to catch up…

Nationalism Shapes Foreign Policy

• Secretary of State John Quincy Adams established a foreign policy that was based on nationalism. This is a belief that national interests as a whole should be more important than what one region wants.

Page 13: Chapter 7… ALL OF IT I’m sorry to do this too you all, but we are behind and need to catch up…

• Adams believed that foreign affairs should be guided by this national interest.

Page 14: Chapter 7… ALL OF IT I’m sorry to do this too you all, but we are behind and need to catch up…

• In 1817, Adams worked out a treaty with Great Britain that reduced the number of both countries’ navy ships on the Great Lakes. The United States and Great Britain also agreed to settle boundary disputes in North America.

Page 15: Chapter 7… ALL OF IT I’m sorry to do this too you all, but we are behind and need to catch up…

• Two years later, Adams turned his attention to Florida. By this time, most Americans assumed that Spanish Florida eventually would become part of the United States.

Page 16: Chapter 7… ALL OF IT I’m sorry to do this too you all, but we are behind and need to catch up…

• Spain responded by handing over Florida to the United States in the Adams-Onís Treaty. Under the terms of the treaty, Spain also gave up any claims it had on the Oregon Treaty.

Page 17: Chapter 7… ALL OF IT I’m sorry to do this too you all, but we are behind and need to catch up…

• In 1823, the fifth president, President James Monroe warned European nations not to interfere with any nation in the Americas. In return, the United States would stay out of European Affairs. This statement is called the Monroe Doctrine.

Page 18: Chapter 7… ALL OF IT I’m sorry to do this too you all, but we are behind and need to catch up…

• As a growing number of Americans settled there, the West became more populated. As a result, some territories were ready to become states.

Page 19: Chapter 7… ALL OF IT I’m sorry to do this too you all, but we are behind and need to catch up…

• The issue of slavery made the process of becoming a new state difficult. In order to appease both the North and the South, Congress tried to keep an even number of slave and free states, or states where slavery was prohibited.

Page 20: Chapter 7… ALL OF IT I’m sorry to do this too you all, but we are behind and need to catch up…

• In 1819, Missouri asked to enter the union.• At that time, the nation consisted of 11 free

states and 10 slave states.

Page 21: Chapter 7… ALL OF IT I’m sorry to do this too you all, but we are behind and need to catch up…

• Southerners expected Missouri to become the 11th slave state. However, the House of Representatives passed a statehood bill that would allow Missouri to gradually free its slaves.

Page 22: Chapter 7… ALL OF IT I’m sorry to do this too you all, but we are behind and need to catch up…

• The debate over Missouri grew more intense after Alabama was admitted as a slave state. This meant that Missouri’s admittance would tip the scales in favor of either the free or slave states.

Page 23: Chapter 7… ALL OF IT I’m sorry to do this too you all, but we are behind and need to catch up…

• A crisis was adverted when Henry Clay crafted a series of agreements known as the Missouri Compromise. Under the compromise, Maine was admitted as a free state and Missouri as a slave state.

Page 24: Chapter 7… ALL OF IT I’m sorry to do this too you all, but we are behind and need to catch up…

• This preserved the balance between slave and free states. In addition, the rest of the Louisiana Purchase was divided into free and slave territory.

Page 25: Chapter 7… ALL OF IT I’m sorry to do this too you all, but we are behind and need to catch up…

The Age of Jackson

Chapter 7 Section 3

Page 26: Chapter 7… ALL OF IT I’m sorry to do this too you all, but we are behind and need to catch up…

Expanding Democracy

Changes Politics

• Andrew Jackson, a hero from the War of 1812, ran for president in 1824 against John Quincy Adams. Neither candidate received a majority of electoral votes and the House of Representatives had to decide the winner.

Page 27: Chapter 7… ALL OF IT I’m sorry to do this too you all, but we are behind and need to catch up…

• Speaker of the House Henry Clay disliked Jackson. He used his influence to help Adams win the election.

Page 28: Chapter 7… ALL OF IT I’m sorry to do this too you all, but we are behind and need to catch up…

Jackson’s followers accused Adams of stealing the election. They called the relationship between John Quincy Adams and Henry Clay a Corrupt Bargain.

Page 29: Chapter 7… ALL OF IT I’m sorry to do this too you all, but we are behind and need to catch up…

• Jackson and his allies formed their own party – the Democratic Party. Adams supporters called Jackson a “Jack-Ass”. Jackson took the put down and made it his party’s mascot.

Page 30: Chapter 7… ALL OF IT I’m sorry to do this too you all, but we are behind and need to catch up…

• For the next four years, the new party attacked Adams’ policies.

Page 31: Chapter 7… ALL OF IT I’m sorry to do this too you all, but we are behind and need to catch up…

• With their help, Jackson won the following presidential election by a landslide.

Page 32: Chapter 7… ALL OF IT I’m sorry to do this too you all, but we are behind and need to catch up…

Removal of Native American

s

• By the early 1800’s, some Native American groups in the Southeast began to take on the culture of their white neighbors. These tribes – the Cherokee, Choctaw, Seminole, Creek, and Chickasaw – were called the Five Civilized Tribes.

Page 33: Chapter 7… ALL OF IT I’m sorry to do this too you all, but we are behind and need to catch up…

• Despite all this, settlers did not wish to live with Native Americans. Instead, they wanted Native American land in the South and West for farms.

                                                                  

                                                                                 

Page 34: Chapter 7… ALL OF IT I’m sorry to do this too you all, but we are behind and need to catch up…

• As a result, President Jackson decided to remove the Native Americans from their lands.

Page 35: Chapter 7… ALL OF IT I’m sorry to do this too you all, but we are behind and need to catch up…

• Congress passed the Indian Removal Act in 1830. The law ordered all Native Americans to move west of the Mississippi river.

Page 36: Chapter 7… ALL OF IT I’m sorry to do this too you all, but we are behind and need to catch up…

• In 1830, Jackson pressured the Chocktaw to sign a treaty that required them to move from Mississippi. In 1831, he ordered U.S. troops to forcibly remove the Sauk and Fox from their lands in Illinois and Missouri. In 1832, he forced the Chickasaw to leave their lands in Alabama and Mississippi.

Page 37: Chapter 7… ALL OF IT I’m sorry to do this too you all, but we are behind and need to catch up…

• The Cherokee Nation, however, fought the Indian Removal Act in court. Chief Justice Marshall ruled in their favor. The Court said that the United States had no right to take Cherokee land.

Page 38: Chapter 7… ALL OF IT I’m sorry to do this too you all, but we are behind and need to catch up…

• But Andrew Jackson refused to obey the Court’s ruling. Instead, federal agents signed a treaty with a group of Cherokee leaders willing to leave their land.

Page 39: Chapter 7… ALL OF IT I’m sorry to do this too you all, but we are behind and need to catch up…

• Beginning in October and November of 1838, U.S. Army troops began forcing the Cherokees’ to travel from Georgia to the new Indian territory west of the Mississippi River.

Page 40: Chapter 7… ALL OF IT I’m sorry to do this too you all, but we are behind and need to catch up…

• The 800 mile trip was made partly by steamboat and railroad but mostly on foot.

Page 41: Chapter 7… ALL OF IT I’m sorry to do this too you all, but we are behind and need to catch up…

• As the winter came, more and more Cherokee died. Along the way, government officials stole the Cherokees money, while outlaws made off with their livestock. The journey became known as the Trail of Tears because more than a quarter of the travelers died on it.

Page 42: Chapter 7… ALL OF IT I’m sorry to do this too you all, but we are behind and need to catch up…
Page 43: Chapter 7… ALL OF IT I’m sorry to do this too you all, but we are behind and need to catch up…
Page 44: Chapter 7… ALL OF IT I’m sorry to do this too you all, but we are behind and need to catch up…

State’s Rights and the National Bank

Chapter 7 Section 4

Page 45: Chapter 7… ALL OF IT I’m sorry to do this too you all, but we are behind and need to catch up…

A Tariff Raises the States’ Rights Issue

• Jackson’s vice president was John C. Calhoun of South Carolina.

• The two men opposed each other over the Tariff of 1816.

Page 46: Chapter 7… ALL OF IT I’m sorry to do this too you all, but we are behind and need to catch up…

• This was a tax that increased the price of foreign-made goods. By 1828, the tariff had been raised twice.

Page 47: Chapter 7… ALL OF IT I’m sorry to do this too you all, but we are behind and need to catch up…

• Although Calhoun supported the tariff at first, he came to oppose it. He called it a Tariff of Abominations, because he believed that it hurt the South.

Page 48: Chapter 7… ALL OF IT I’m sorry to do this too you all, but we are behind and need to catch up…

• Southerners had little industry of their own.• They believed that they were paying more for

goods in order to support industry in the North.

Page 49: Chapter 7… ALL OF IT I’m sorry to do this too you all, but we are behind and need to catch up…

• Calhoun believed the South had the right to disobey the tariff based on the principle of nullification. This principle held that states could nullify federal laws that they felt were unconstitutional.

Page 50: Chapter 7… ALL OF IT I’m sorry to do this too you all, but we are behind and need to catch up…

• Calhoun went even further. He believed that if the government forbid a state from nullifying a federal law, that state had the right to leave the union.

Page 51: Chapter 7… ALL OF IT I’m sorry to do this too you all, but we are behind and need to catch up…

• South Carolina declared the new tariff invalid.• The state threatened to secede, or leave the

Union.

Page 52: Chapter 7… ALL OF IT I’m sorry to do this too you all, but we are behind and need to catch up…

• This made President Jackson furious.• He threatened to send troops to make South

Carolina obey the law.

Page 53: Chapter 7… ALL OF IT I’m sorry to do this too you all, but we are behind and need to catch up…

Jackson Attacks the National Bank

• South Carolina’s action wasn’t the only thing that stirred Andrew Jackson’s anger.

• The President also took on the second national bank, the Bank of the United States (BUS) in Philadelphia.

Page 54: Chapter 7… ALL OF IT I’m sorry to do this too you all, but we are behind and need to catch up…

• Jackson viewed the bank as an agent of the wealthy and elite – a group he deeply distrusted.

Page 55: Chapter 7… ALL OF IT I’m sorry to do this too you all, but we are behind and need to catch up…

• Jackson tried to shut the bank down by taking money out of it and putting it in other banks.

• In an attempt to save the bank, the bank’s president called for all loans to be repaid.

Page 56: Chapter 7… ALL OF IT I’m sorry to do this too you all, but we are behind and need to catch up…

• This caused many businesses to go bankrupt.• As a result, the bank lost much support.• In 1836 the national bank went out of business.

Page 57: Chapter 7… ALL OF IT I’m sorry to do this too you all, but we are behind and need to catch up…

• As a result, these people formed a new political party.

• Known as the Whig Party, it tried to limit the power of the presidency.