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Essential Question Essential Question : Which was the more powerful force during the Era of Good Feelings: nationalism or sectionalism?

Essential Question :

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Essential Question : Which was the more powerful force during the Era of Good Feelings: nationalism or sectionalism?. What contributed to the rise of sectionalism???? c onstruct a t-chart of the regions within the United States (north, south, west) - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Essential Question :

Essential QuestionEssential Question:Which was the more powerful

force during the Era of Good Feelings: nationalism or sectionalism?

Page 2: Essential Question :

What contributed to the rise of sectionalism????

construct a t-chart of the regions within the United States (north, south, west)

We will be analyzing the social, political, economic issues of this era and how these

issues slowly ripped the us in 2.

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Evaluate the Contributions of the Federalists………….

Positives Negatives

Established viable govt Political Parties emerge

Solid economic foundation Alien and Sedition Acts

Order (Whiskey Rebels) Jay’s Treaty

Avoided War (esp w France)

Never settles impressment

Created order on Frontier Never settles forts on frontier

Est 2-term precedent

“Peaceful Revolution” (1800)

Pinkney’s Treaty

Est. Judicial system (Marshall)

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The Era of Good Feelings

(1816-1825)

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The Era of Good Feelings After the War of 1812, America

experienced an “Era of Good Feelings” characterized by:–An extremely popular president–The emergence of a 2nd

generation of U.S. leaders–Dominance by the Republicans –A surge in nationalism that

united the country & improved U.S. industry & transportation

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Monroe as PresidentJames Monroe was elected

president in 1816 & 1820 with a clear set of goals:–To promote national unity –To promote America’s power in

the worldRepublican dominance of the

presidency & Congress helped push through a series of new laws

He appointed Democrats, Federalists, Southerners, Northerners to his cabinet; including Sec of State John Q Adams

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The Great TriumvirateBy 1816, a wave of new leaders

shaped the antebellum era:Henry Clay (Republican, KY) :

–Represented the “West”–Speaker of the House–Proponent of national

economic development (“American System" to promote industry & markets for farmers)

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The Great TriumvirateBy 1816, a new wave of leaders

shaped the antebellum era:John C. Calhoun (Republican, SC):

–Represented the “South”–Sec of War; VP–He was the nation's

leading proponent of states' rights (he embraced nullification)

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The Great Triumvirate By 1816, a new wave of leaders

shaped the antebellum era:Daniel Webster (Whig, MA):

–Represented the “North”–Congressman; Sec

of State–Strong proponent of

nationalism & strong critic of states' rights

While they did not always agree, this “Great Triumvirate” of Clay, Calhoun, &

Webster enthusiastically supported national economic development

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Politics After the War of 1812The Dem-Repubs traditionally

represented limited gov’t, states' rights, & strict construction

But, without Federalist opposition, the Dem-Repubs adopted many traditionally Federalist policies:National economic development A permanent armyTransportation improvementsA national university in D.C.

Who else are you going to vote for?

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Henry Clay’s American SystemHenry Clay’s American SystemAmerican System in

1816 proposed the creation of:–The 22ndnd Bank of the U.S. Bank of the U.S. to

stabilize U.S. currency –Tariff of 1816Tariff of 1816 to promote U.S.

industry & limit the importation of British manufactured goods

–A nat’l system of roads & canalsThe “American System” helped

unify North, South, & West

Jefferson let the charter of the 1st BUS expire in 1811

1st significant protective tariff in U.S. history

All were proposed by Hamilton & opposed by Republicans in the 1790s

Helped pave the way for future RR construction & western Indian removal

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Judicial Nationalism John Marshall (1801-1835) used

the Supreme Court to strengthen the power of the national gov’t:–Exerted the power of the

national gov’t over the states–Rejected the claim that states

could check powers of the national gov’ t

–Affirmed the loose construction argument of the elastic clause

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Judicial NationalismDartmouth v. Woodward (1819):Dartmouth v. Woodward (1819):

gov’t cannot interfere with contracts between private parties

McCullough v. Maryland (1819):McCullough v. Maryland (1819): Congress possesses powers not explicitly stated in Constitution; Congressional laws are supreme to decisions made by the states

Gibbons v. Odgen (1824):Gibbons v. Odgen (1824): interstate commerce is power reserved for national gov’t

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These men dominated their professions like none other

John Marshall, Chief Justice1801-1835Longest ChiefEstablished Judicial cred

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Nationalist Foreign Policy President Monroe & Sec of State JQ Adams developed a nationalist foreign policy agenda

Rush-Bagot Treaty (1817): to avoid conflicts along the Great Lakes, the U.S. agreed not to take Canada & Britain not to invade the U.S

The Convention of 1818 set the US/Canada border set at the 49º

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Nationalist Foreign PolicyMonroe & JQ Adams turned their

attention to acquiring Florida:–Andrew Jackson took it upon

himself to end Indian attacks on Georgia from Spanish Florida

–Jackson’s military advances & U.S. success in the War of 1812 helped force the Adams-Onis Adams-Onis TreatyTreaty (1819) that ceded Florida & Oregon to U.S.

Also, Spain assumed Florida would eventually be annexed

U.S. agreed to pay Spain $5 million & renounced claims to Texas

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Adams-Onis Treaty (1819)

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Nationalist Foreign PolicyWhen Latin American nations

revolted against Spain, the U.S. supported the new republics:–European powers disliked these

liberal rebellions & were tempted to re-conquer them

–Monroe DoctrineMonroe Doctrine (1823) warned European nations to stay out of the Western Hemisphere & the U.S. will not interfere in Europe

The U.S. will protect Latin American independence

The U.S. will act independently & will protect its sphere of influence

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Sectionalism in the Era of Good Feelings

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Settlement of the Trans-MississippiCongress quickly admitted

5 states to the Union:

Louisiana (1812)

Indiana (1816)

Mississippi (1817)

Illinois (1818)

Alabama (1819)

By 1810, 1/7th of the U.S. population lived in the West; By 1840 over 1/3rd lived in the West

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Sectional Disputes The Era of Good Feelings started

with a wave of national unity, but sectional disputes between the North & South emerged & would dominate politics for next 40 years–Disagreed over the use of

protective tariffs, especially when cotton prices fell in 1820s

–Disagreed over slavery in the western territories & states

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Missouri CompromiseIn 1817, Missouri applied for

statehood as a slave state & revealed U.S. sectional rivalries:–North resented Southern control

of presidency & its 3/5-inflated representation in House of Reps

–South feared a Northern conspiracy to end all slavery

–Equality had been maintained by alternating admission of “free” & “slave” states added to the US

Population was growing more rapidly in North, so House of Reps favored Northerners

NY rep Tallmadge wanted Missouri only if its state constitution provided for

the gradual elimination of slavery

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Missouri Compromise (1820)Missouri Compromise (1820):

–Missouri became a slave state–Maine (which broke from Mass)

was admitted as free state–Slavery was banned elsewhere

in the Louisiana Purchase above the latitude of 36°30'

The Missouri controversy exposed a deep rift between North & South

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Missouri Compromise, 1820-1821

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ConclusionsThe “Era of Good Feelings” led to:

–An improved American economy–Better transportation–More territory & more clearly-

defined borders–A foreign policy in Latin America–But…sectional problems

between the North & South

Page 27: Essential Question :

Compare the Era of Good Feelings w/ Federalist Era…….

•Started out united, one party. Factionalized over time•Domestic stability led to focus on economic growth•Clay’s American System……Hamilton’s Plan

American System Hamilton’s Plan

2nd Bank of US 1st Bank of US

Protective Tariffs Revenue Tariffs

Internal Improvements Funding at par

•Monroe, like Washington was respected Virginia plantation owner who was a sound administrator , served 2 terms.•Federal gov’t strengthened (by Ham &Army in Feds, Marshall in E.G.F.)•Difference: Federalists stabilize economy, D-R face Panic of 1819

Federalists sketchy foreign policy (Jays, undecl w/Fr, Br violationsD-R have foreign policy success w/ JQA (Adams-Onis, Monroe Doc)