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AMSCO AP US History Chapter 9 Flashcards

AMSCO United States History 2015 Edition, Chapter 9 Sectionalism, 1820-1860

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11499863267NortheastIn the early 19th century, the area which included New England and the Middle Atlantic states. (p. 173)0
11499863293Old NorthwestIn the early 19th century, the territory which stretched from Ohio to Minnesota. (p. 173)1
11499863294sectionalismLoyalty to a particular region of the country. (p. 173)2
11499863295NativistsNative-born Americans who reacted strongly against the immigrants, they feared the newcomers would take their jobs and weaken the culture of the Protestant and Anglo majority. (p. 176)3
11499863296American partyIn the early 1850s, this party which opposed immigrants, nominated candidates for office. They were also called the Know-Nothing party. (p. 176)4
11499863268Supreme Order of the Star-Spangled BannerA secret anti-foreign society in the 1840s. In the 1850s the society turned to politics by forming the American party. (p. 176)5
11499863270Free African AmericansBy 1860 as many as 250,000 African Americans in the South were free citizens. Most of them lived in the cities where they could own property. However, they were not allowed to vote or work in most skilled professions. (p. 179)6
11499863271plantersThe South's small wealthy elite that owned more than 100 slaves and more than 1000 acres. (p. 180)7
11499863272Codes of ChivalryThe Southern aristocratic planter class ascribed to a code of chivalrous conduct, which included a strong sense of personal honor, defense of womanhood, paternalistic attitudes toward all who were deemed inferior. (p. 180)8
11499863273poor whitesThe term for the three-fourths of the South's white population who owned no slaves. (p. 180)9
11499863274hillbilliesDerisive term for poor white subsistence farmers, they often lived in the hills and farmed less productive land. (p. 180)10
11499863297mountain menIn the 1820s, these were the earliest white people in the Rocky Mountains. They trapped for furs and served as guides for settlers traveling to the West coast. (p. 181)11
11499863275the WestThe term that referred to the new area that was being settled, the location changed as the white settlements moved westward. (p. 181)12
11499863276the frontierThe area that was newly settled in the West, it moved further west over time. (p. 181)13
11499863277Deep SouthThe cotton rich area of the lower Mississippi Valley. (p. 178)14
11499863298American Indian removalBy 1850, most American Indians were living west of the Mississippi River. The Great Plains provide temporary relief from white settlers encroaching on their territory. (p. 181)15
11499863299Great PlainsNative Americans in this area used the horse to hunt buffalo. Tribes such as the Cheyenne and the Sioux, became nomadic hunters following the buffalo herds. (p. 181)16
11499863278white settlersIn the 1840s and 1850s, they settled the Western frontier. They worked hard, lived in log cabins or sod huts. Disease and malnutrition were even greater dangers than attacks by American Indians. (p. 182)17
11499863279urbanizationEarly 19th century urban working class neighborhoods featured crowded housing, poor sanitation, infectious diseases, and high rates of crime. (p. 174)18
11499863280urban lifeThe North's urban population grew from about 5 percent of the population in 1800 to 15 percent by 1850. (p. 174)19
11499863281new citiesAfter 1820, Buffalo, Cleveland, Detroit, Chicago, Cincinnati, and St. Louis developed as transportation points for shipping agricultural products to the East, and receiving manufactured goods from the East. (p. 175)20
11499863300Irish potato famineFrom 1820 to 1860, almost 2 million immigrants came from Ireland. Most of them were tenant farmers driven from their homeland by potato crop failures. (p. 176)21
11499863282Roman CatholicMost of the Irish were this religion and they faced strong discrimination because of it. (p. 176)22
11499863283Tammany Halla political organization within the Democratic Party in New York city (late 1800's and early 1900's) seeking political control by corruption and bossism, th most notorious political machine; Marcy Tweed also know as Boss Tweed became head in 186323
11499863284GermansIn the 1840s and 1850s, because of economic hardship and the failure of democratic revolutions, one million of these people came to the United States. They often established homesteads in the Old Northwest and generally prospered. (p. 176)24
11499863285immigrationFrom the 1830s to the 1850s, four million people came from northern Europe to the United States. (p. 175)25
11499863301King CottonBy the 1850s, this agricultural product was by far the South's most important economic force. (p. 177)26
11499863302Eli WhitneyThe United States inventor of the mechanical cotton gin, which made cotton affordable throughout the world. (p. 178)27
11499863303peculiar institutionA term that referred to slavery because many southern whites were uneasy with the fact that slaves were human beings yet treated so unfairly. Some used historical and religious arguments to support their claim that it was good for both slave and master. (p. 178)28
11499863304Denmark VeseyIn 1822, he led a major slave uprising which was quickly and violently suppressed. However, it gave hope to enslaved African Americans, drove Southern states to tighten already strict slave codes, and demonstrated to many the evils of slavery. (p. 179)29
11499863305Nat TurnerIn 1831, he led a major slave uprising. (p. 179)30
11499863286slave codesIn parts of the Deep South, slaves made up nearly 75 percent of the population. Fearing slave revolts, laws were passed which restricted blacks movements and education. (p. 178)31
11499863306Industrial RevolutionOriginally this revolution was centered in the textile industry, but by the 1830's, northern factories were producing a wide range of goods - everything from farm implements to clocks and shoes. (p. 174)32
11499863287unionsFor a brief period in the 1830s an increasing number of urban workers joined unions and participated in strikes. (p. 174)33
11499863288Commonwealth v. HuntIn 1842, the Massachusetts Supreme Court ruled that peaceful unions had the right to negotiate labor contracts with employers. (p. 174)34
11499863289ten-hour workdayDuring the 1840s and 1850s, most northern state legislatures passed laws establishing a ten-hour workday for industrial workers. (p. 174)35
11499863307Cyrus McCormickUnited States inventor and manufacturer of a mechanical reaper, which made farms more efficient. (p. 175)36
11499863308John DeereUnited States inventor of the steel plow, which made farms more efficient. (p. 175)37
11499863290environmental damageThis term, described what occurred when settlers cleared forests and exhausted the soil. (p. 182)38
11499863291extinctionThis term, described what trappers and hunters did to the beaver and buffalo populations. (p. 182)39

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