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AP US History Chapter 6 Flashcards

AMSCO United States History 2015 Edition Chapter 6

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7509436149James Madison1. "Father of the Constitution". 2. solved the questions of sovereignty and limiting power with the separation of power and checks and balances. 3. Contributed to the Federalist papers.0
7509436150Alexander HamiltonOne of the authors of the Federalist Papers. He favored a strong central government. He was appointed by washington as secretary of the treasury. He also desird the creation of a national bank.1
7509436151FederalistsGroup that supported ratification of the Constitution, later became a political party. Alexander Hamilton was a well known leader feared disorder, anarchy, chaos, unchecked power of the masses2
7509436152Anti-Federalistthose who opposed ratification of the constitution. They believed the constitution violated the principles of the revolution. They were concerned that the constitution lacked a bill of rights and gave government too much power feared the dangers of concentrated power and that the gov would abuse the citizens' rights like england3
7509436153Bill of RightsThe first ten amendments (changes to the Constitution) were added to protect the rights of individual citizens. Nine dealt with basic rights. The tenth reserved state power for anything not specifically withheld from or delegated to the federal government.4
7509436154Kentucky and Virginia ResolutionsTwo states passed resolutions that argued states had the right to nullify laws passed at the federal level. it was unsuccessful.5
7509436155Checks and balancesDesigned to keep one branch of government from dominating the other6
7509436156Great CompromiseA compromise made at the constitutional convention of 1787. Stated that their would be a 2 house legislature with one house represented by population and each slave would count as 3/5ths of a person in both taxation and representation. The upper house would have 2 representatives per state regardless of population.7
7509436157House of RepresentativesRepresentation would be based on population of each state8
7509436158SenateRepresentation would be two per state, regardless of state size9
75094361593/5ths Compromisefor every five slaves, three would be counted for representation and direct taxation10
7509436160Legislative branchThe branch of government that makes laws11
7509436161CongressLegislative branch; House and Senate12
7509436162CabinetTerm for chiefs of departments appointed by President constitution does not specify how many there should/should not be. first 3 were state (jefferson), treasury (Hamilton), and war (knox)13
7509436163Judiciary Act of 1801reduced the number of Supreme Court Justices by one but increased number of federal judgeships. Adams stayed until midnight on his last day in office appointing judges before his term ended, known as "midnight appointments"14
7509436164Supreme CourtUltimate court in the US had the power to make final decisions in cases involving constitutionality of state laws15
7509436165Democratic-Republican PartyRival to Federalists; opposed strong central government; led by Jefferson16
7509436166John AdamsIn 1796 he was a Federalist who was elected as the second president.17
7509436167Revolution of 1800Election in which Democratic-Republicans peacefully took power from the Federalists. Close election ended in a tie between two Republican candidates which had to be decided by the current Congress (Federalist majority). Thomas Jefferson was elected on the 36th ballot18
7509436168French RevolutionDivided Federalists and Republicans. Republicans applauded democratic, anti-aristocratic spirit they believed the FR embodied, Federalists were horrified at attacks on organized religion, the overthrow and eventual execution of the king and queen19
7509436169Proclamation of NeutralityIn 1793 Washington announced US as neutral in the war between England and France20
7509436170Jay's Treatyestablish American Sovereignty over the entire Northwest Territory and produced a satisfactory commercial relationship with britain.21
7509436171Pinckney TreatySpain agreed to open lower Mississippi River and New Orleans to US trade & conceded to prevent indian attacks across the border of FL.22
7509436172Articles of ConfederationAmerica's original governing document. - Established a very weak central government and strong state governments. This government was favored by those terrified of tyrannical central government.23
7509436173The Virginia PlanA plan for new government with three branches, Executive, Legislative, and Judicial. According to this plan the legislative branch would have 2 houses. The lower house would represent the states based on population, the upper house would be appointed by the lower house. Favored by large states, disliked by small states.24
7509436174The New Jersey PlanA plan proposing a "federal" not "national" government. This plan would have a one house legislature with equal representation for each house but with more ability to tax and regulate commerce. Favored by small states, disliked by large states.25
7509436175Federalist PapersSeries of widely published essays written by Alexander Hamilton, John Jay, and James Madison under the pseudonym Publius. They defended the constitution to the public attempting to get them to want to ratify the constitution26
7509436176First national elections in 1789George Washington elected to the presidency unanimously. John Adams became Vice-President. April 30, 1789 Inauguration.27
7509436177Judiciary Act of 1789An act that provided a Supreme Court with six justices, thirteen district courts and three circuit courts of appeals. The act also gave the Supreme Court final decision in cases involving the constitutionality of state laws.28
7509436178National BankHamilton proposed this to stabilize and unify the American banking system. controversial bcz constitution did not assign it so some people argued that it was not legal. Hamilton argued that it was necessary and that the constitution did not specifically prohibit it29
7509436179RepublicansBecause of the rise of the Federalist party headed by Hamilton, it's opposition formed the (Democratic) Republican party. Key figures were Thomas Jefferson and James Madison.30
7509436180Whiskey Rebellion of 1794Farmers in western PA refused to pay the excise tax on whiskey, directly breaking federal law. They also terrorized tax collectors. Washington organized an army of 15,000 and personally led the troops to PA....rebellion quickly ceased. Helped secure the frontier by intimidating the whiskey rebels into allegiance and gaining loyalty of other frontier people by accepting their territories as new states (NC, RI, VT, KT, TN)31
7509436181Indians in the ConstitutionVague/conflicting mentions - excludes those "not taxed" from being counted in population totals to determine House of Rep seats. Seems to make clear that tribes are not "foreign Nations" but recognizes existence of tribes as legal entities32
7509436182Election of 1796Washington did not run for presidency. The Republican party had Thomas Jefferson. The Federalist party was split between John Adams and Thomas Pinckney. Adams won by three electoral votes.33
7509436183The Alien ActThis act put new obstacles in the way of foreigners who wished to become American citizens and strengthened the president's hand in dealing with foreigners.34
7509436184The Sedition ActThis act allowed the government to prosecute anyone who committed "libelous or treasonous acts" against the government. Different people thought different things treasonous so the government could basically prosecute anyone who did not agree with them.35
7509436185federalismpower divided between states and federal government36
7509436186separation of powersdivided power among the branches so that one branch would not be more powerful than the other37
7509436187citizen genetfrench diplomatic representative who went to charleston and tried to convince shipwconers to aid the french when us was trying to remain neutral38
7509436188quasi warstarted by the XYZ affair, was an undeclared war with France. US created a navy to fight french ships forming an ally with britain in the war with france. came to a reasonably peaceful end in 1800 after Adams sent another commission to Paris and the new French govt (headed by Napoleon) agreed to a treaty39
7509436189XYZ AffairRevolutionary France and America had unstable relations, so President Adams appointed a commission to negotiate with France. When the Americans arrived, the french demanded a loan and a bribe before any negotiations began. Adams reported this to Congress and replaced the names of the French agents with X, Y, and Z.40

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