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Chapter 9, 10, 11 Cherokee Removal Antebellum States’ Rights

Chapter 9, 10, 11 Cherokee Removal Antebellum States’ Rights

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Page 1: Chapter 9, 10, 11 Cherokee Removal Antebellum States’ Rights

Chapter 9, 10, 11

Cherokee RemovalAntebellum

States’ Rights

Page 2: Chapter 9, 10, 11 Cherokee Removal Antebellum States’ Rights

Daily Ten: Read each section and answer each question in a timely manner to turn in for a class work grade

University of Georgia (CRCT book-pg 52) Louisville (CRCT book-pg 53) The Spread of Baptist and Methodist

Churches (CRCT book-pg 54)

Cotton Gin (CRCT book-pg 58)

Page 3: Chapter 9, 10, 11 Cherokee Removal Antebellum States’ Rights

Answers University of Georgia 139. C 140. B 141. D Louisville 142. C 143. B 144. B 145.C

Page 4: Chapter 9, 10, 11 Cherokee Removal Antebellum States’ Rights

Spread of Churches 146. A 147. D 148. D 149. B Cotton Gin 160. B 161. B 162. B 163. D

Page 5: Chapter 9, 10, 11 Cherokee Removal Antebellum States’ Rights

Cotton Gin

Page 6: Chapter 9, 10, 11 Cherokee Removal Antebellum States’ Rights

Louisville Served as Georgia's third capital from 1796 until 1807. The town grew as the result large-scale immigration to

the Georgia upcountry after the American revolution Upcountry legislators demanded a state capital in a

more western location than Savannah Legislators also specified that the new capital would be

named Louisville in honor of King Louis XVI of France, America's Revolutionary War ally.

Organizers purchased 1,000 acres near the Ogeechee River to take advantage of the river transportation.

Georgia's Revolutionary War debt and the threat of a large-scale conflict with the Creek Nation delayed the official opening of the Louisville statehouse until May 1795, when delegates convened there for a state constitutional convention

Page 7: Chapter 9, 10, 11 Cherokee Removal Antebellum States’ Rights

Louisville In 1796 the legislature gathered in Louisville amid the

political uproar caused by the 1795 Yazoo Land Fraud. Tobacco and, later, cotton served as the major cash

crops during Louisville's first decade. The legislature briefly considered making Louisville

the home of the U of GA but decided to build the Jefferson, or Louisville, Academy there instead.

Louisville served as the state capital for ten years. Criticism of the site arose over the vulnerability of its residents to malaria outbreaks, disappointment with the Ogeechee river trade, and the town's inaccessibility to the growing western population. In the fall of 1807 the state gov’t relocated to Milledgeville and the arrival of the railroad turned economic activity away from the old statehouse square.

Page 8: Chapter 9, 10, 11 Cherokee Removal Antebellum States’ Rights

Louisville Map

Page 9: Chapter 9, 10, 11 Cherokee Removal Antebellum States’ Rights

Daily Ten: Read each section and answer each question in a timely manner for a class work grade

Railroads (CRCT page 59) #164-169 Alexander McGillivray (CRCT page 61)(170-1) William McIntosh CRCT pg 61(172-3) Sequoyah (CRCT page 62) ((174-5) Dahlonega Gold Rush CRCT page 63)#176-180

Page 10: Chapter 9, 10, 11 Cherokee Removal Antebellum States’ Rights

ANSWERS RAILROADS MCGILLIVRAY SEQUOYAH

164. C 170. B 174. D. 165. B 171. C. 175. C 166. D 167. C MCINTOSH DAHLONEGA 168. D 172. A. 176. B 169. A 173. C. 177. D ___________________________ 178. C 179. B 180. B

Page 11: Chapter 9, 10, 11 Cherokee Removal Antebellum States’ Rights

Vocabulary

1. Worcester v Georgia

2. John Ross

3. Trail of Tears

4. Indian Removal Act

Page 12: Chapter 9, 10, 11 Cherokee Removal Antebellum States’ Rights

Activator: Quick WriteOn your own paper:

Write a paragraph about how you would feel if you were a Native American and were forced to leave your home and walk to an unknown place to live for the rest of your life.

Use sensory details.

Page 13: Chapter 9, 10, 11 Cherokee Removal Antebellum States’ Rights

Daily Ten: Read each section and answer each question in a timely manner for a class work grade

Worcester v Georgia, John Marshall and John Ross (181-183)(CRCT page 65)

Andrew Jackson (184-185) (CRCT page 66)

Removal of the Creek (186-187) and Cherokee (188-191) (CRCT page 67)

Trail of Tears (192-197) (CRCT page 69)

Page 14: Chapter 9, 10, 11 Cherokee Removal Antebellum States’ Rights

Answers CRCTWorcester V GA pg 65181. C182. C183. DAndrew Jackson184. D185. BIndian Removal186. A187. C

Page 15: Chapter 9, 10, 11 Cherokee Removal Antebellum States’ Rights

Answers CRCT188. D189. A190. C191. D192. D193.C194. A195. B196. C197. B

Page 16: Chapter 9, 10, 11 Cherokee Removal Antebellum States’ Rights

TEXT Chapter 10 page 226 questions 1-6WRITE YOUR ANSWER IN COMPLETE SENTENCES!

LOOK IN THE BOOK FOR YOUR ANSWERS!

1. What role did Eli Whitney play in the cotton boom?

2. What difficulties did GA farmers face?3. How did the cotton boom affect industry in GA?4. What was Terminus?5. Why did slaves identify with the children of

Israel?6. What were GA’s 5 major cities in 1860?

Page 17: Chapter 9, 10, 11 Cherokee Removal Antebellum States’ Rights

Chapter 11 Vocabulary

5. Sectionalism

6. States’ rights

7. Secede

8. Nullify

Page 18: Chapter 9, 10, 11 Cherokee Removal Antebellum States’ Rights

Daily Ten: Read each section and answer each question in a timely manner for a class work grade

Slavery CRCT pg 70 #198-205States’ rights CRCT pg 73 #206-208

Nullification CRCT pg 73 #209-210Missouri Compromise CRCT pg 74 #211-212

Page 19: Chapter 9, 10, 11 Cherokee Removal Antebellum States’ Rights

Chapter 11 Vocabulary

9. Missouri Compromise

10.Dred Scott

11.John Brown

12.Jefferson Davis

13.Fugitive Slave Act

Page 20: Chapter 9, 10, 11 Cherokee Removal Antebellum States’ Rights

Daily Ten: Read each section and answer each question in a timely manner for a class work grade

Compromise of 1850 (CRCT pg 74) #213-219

Kansas-Nebraska Act (CRCT pg 77) #220-221

Dred Scott Case (CRCT pg 77) #222-223

Election of 1860 (CRCT pg ) #224-228

Page 21: Chapter 9, 10, 11 Cherokee Removal Antebellum States’ Rights

Lincoln’s Election40 % popular vote59% electoral vote (representatives)His name was not even on the ballot in the South

His election convinced the South to secede

The South feared he would abolish slavery

GA ratified a Confederate constitution on March 16, 1861