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The United States 1800-1860. Manifest Destiny Chapter 3. Chapter 3 Section 1. Thomas Jefferson believed in a more simple form of government Smaller, with less impact on lives Importance of agriculture and the South Marbury v. Madison (1803) First time “Judicial Review” used
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The United States 1800-1860 Manifest Destiny Chapter 3
Chapter 3 Section 1 • Thomas Jefferson believed in a more simple form of government • Smaller, with less impact on lives • Importance of agriculture and the South • Marbury v. Madison (1803) • First time “Judicial Review” used • Strengthened the Supreme Court
Louisiana Purchase (1803) James Monroe sent to France to purchase New Orleans Bought it all for $15 million
Lewis and Clark (1804-1806) To find out what we bought and a water route to Pacific
War of 1812 • War bet. Britain and France • British interference with American shipping and trade • Impressments • Encouraged native Americans to resist resettlement
War Declared June 1812 • U.S. Invaded Canada • Burned British buildings • Turned back • British invaded Washington – burned the capitol
Star Spangled Banner Francis Scott Key Attack on Fort McHenry (1814)
Treaty of Ghent (December 24, 1814) • Battle of New Orleans occurred after Treaty signed • General Andrew Jackson (old Hickory)
James Monroe elected in 1816 • Secretary of State John Adams negotiated joint ownership of the Oregon Territory with Britain • Set western border with Spain and transferred Florida to the US
Monroe Doctrine (1823) No further European interference in western hemisphere
Age of JacksonChapter 3 Section 2 • Regional differences begin to matter • North – industrial • South – agriculture • Efforts to unite on issues break on these differences • Tariffs • Admission of new states
Missouri Compromise • Missouri to be admitted as a slave state – Maine as a free state • Line between N and S set • Free states above line
Jacksonian issues • Nullification crisis • John C. Calhoun (S. Carolina) • States could nullify (ignore or declare void) laws they believed to be unconstitutional • States Rights v Federal Government
Indian Removal Act (1830) • Forced treaties that moved tribes west • Make room for white settlements • Supreme Court sides with Indians but Jackson ignores ruling and moves them anyway • 100,000 from five tribes moved into Oklahoma
“Trail of Tears” 15,000 Cherokees moved from Georgia (gold)
Chapter 3 Section 3 • Manifest Destiny • Ordained (heavenly mandate) to expand to the Pacific and into land held by Mexico • Land available for the taking • Farmers • Mormons to escape religious persecution in New York - Utah
Republic of Texas • 1835-36 Texicans defeated Santa Anna • Independent Republic for several years • 1845 entered as a state • President Polk attempted to buy CA and New Mexico – refused $30M offer
Polk sends troops to Texas border -“fired” upon in 1846 • Mexican War ended in 1848 • Treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo • CA and NM became US territory • 1853 US bought rest of NM and Arizona for $10M
The 49-ers • Gold rush of 1849 • Hundreds of thousands of new inhabitants • 150,000 Native Americans to 35,000 by 1860
Reform and ChangeChapter 3 Section 5 • The Second Great Awakening (1790-1830) • Revival meetings – impassioned preaching to bring people back to religion
Faith mattered more than social status Spurred Social Reforms & Redefined the Idea of Equality Education Temperance Women’s Rights Penal Reform Abolitionism
Harriet Beecher Stowe • Uncle Tom’s Cabin Uncle Tom’s Cabin
Women had few educational opportunities • Even limited at elementary level • 1833 – first coed at Oberlin College • 1837 – Mount Holyoke Female Seminary • African American women had no options
<Elizabeth Cady Stanton and Lucy Stone • Leading women’s rights movement • demanding the right to vote and hold office