Cuprill - AP US History - Chapter 13 American Pageant Flashcards
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| 550385261 | Henry Clay, William H. Crawford, John Quincy Adams, Andrew Jackson | Four main candidates in 1824 | |
| 550385262 | John C. Calhoun | Vice president on two presidential tickets in 1824; changed his position over time to be against the Tariff of Abominations | |
| 550385263 | William Crawford | Candidate who suffered a paralytic stroke | |
| 550385264 | Andrew Jackson | Candidate who was not chosen because he was an enemy of Clay | |
| 550385265 | John Quincy Adams | Victor of the election of 1824 | |
| 550385266 | Henry Clay | Influential Speaker of the House who greatly influenced the decision in the election of 1824; thought of himself as a national figure (he was Speaker of the House and author of the "American System"). Was from Kentucky."Corrupt Bargain" - •When Clay was appointed Secretary of the State, the traditional stepping-stone to the presidency, Jacksonians cried foul play and corruption. Jackson said he, the people's choice, had been swindled out of the presidency by career politicians in Washington D.C. | |
| 550385267 | John Randolph | Man who insulted Clay because he felt Adams's decision to make him Secretary of State was corrupt | |
| 550385268 | National Republicans | Political party in the Quincy Adams's presidency that supported Federalist views | |
| 550385269 | Democratic-Republicans | Political party in the Quincy Adams's presidency that supported the rights of the individual | |
| 550385270 | Oak | Tree used to symbolize Adams | |
| 550385271 | Hickory | Tree used to symbolize Jackson | |
| 550385272 | Rachel Jackson | Andrew Jackson's wife | |
| 550385273 | West and South | Region(s) where Jackson held the most influence | |
| 550385274 | North | Region(s) where Adams held the most influence | |
| 550385275 | Samuel Startwout | Man awarded the position of the collector of customs of New York and stole $1 million from the government | |
| 550385276 | The South Carolina Exposition | A pamphlet that denounced the high tariff as unconstitutional | |
| 550385277 | John C. Calhoun | The writer of The South Carolina Exposition | |
| 550385278 | Robert Y. Hayne | Man who composed a counterproclamation to Jackson's proclamation against nullification | |
| 550385279 | Force Bill | Bill authorizing President to use army and navy to collect taxes if necessary | |
| 550385280 | Society for Propagating the Gospel Among Indians | Group created to assimilate Indians into white society | |
| 550385281 | Cherokee National Council | Cherokee form of government modeled after republicanism | |
| 550385282 | Cherokee, Choctaw, Chickasaw, Seminole, Creek | Five "civilized" tribes | |
| 550385283 | Compromise Tariff of 1833 | Tariff proposed to settle the dispute between nullies and Jackson | |
| 550385284 | Henry Clay | Man who composed the Compromise Tariff of 1830 | |
| 550385285 | Black Hawk | Indian chief who led tribes to resist eviction | |
| 550385286 | Jefferson Davis | Man who crushed Indian resistance to displacement | |
| 550385287 | Osceola | Indian who led a guerilla war against white expansion in the Everglades | |
| 550385288 | Nicholas Biddle | President of the Bank of the United States | |
| 550385289 | Daniel Webster and Henry Clay | Two men who proposed a renewed bank charter | |
| 550385290 | Anti-Masonists | Third party in the race between Jackson and Quincy Adams | |
| 550385291 | Specie Circular | Order that all new land be bought with metallic money | |
| 550385292 | Martin Van Buren | Jackson's successor | |
| 550385293 | Austin was to bring three hundred American families into Texas, Immigrants were to be of Roman Catholic faith, Immigrants were to be Mexicanized | Three conditions of colonization in Texas | |
| 550385294 | Stephen Austin | Man chosen to receive Texas | |
| 550385295 | Davy Crockett | Famous Texan rifleman | |
| 550385296 | Jim Bowie | Famous for inventing a knife | |
| 550385297 | Sam Houston | Ex-governor of Tennessee, led the Texas Rebellion | |
| 550385298 | Santa Anna | Mexican dictator during the Texas Rebellion | |
| 550385299 | Colonel W. B. Travis | Leader of Texans at the Alamo | |
| 550385300 | Goliad | City where four hundred American soldiers were slaughtered | |
| 550385301 | San Jacinto | City where Santa Anna was captured and forced to sign treaties | |
| 550385302 | William Henry Harrison | Victor in the election of 1840 | |
| 550385303 | Charles Dickinson | Jackson's opponent in one of his nearly-fatal duels | |
| 550385304 | Thomas Jesup | Military leader who treacherously capture Osceola | |
| 550385305 | Lorenzo de Zavala | Spanish leader in the Texan revolution, later became vice-president of Texas | |
| 550385306 | peninsulares | leaders of Spanish Mexico | |
| 550385307 | Halt Indian attacks, Americans were stealing Mexican wild horses, Bring in American ingenuity, Mexico abolishes slavery | Reasons for the Texan Revolution | |
| 550385308 | Cotton | Main crop of Texas | |
| 550385309 | David Bernette | President of Texas | |
| 550385310 | Treaty of Valasco | Treaty made at San Jacinto that Santa Anna was forced to sign | |
| 550385311 | Peggy Eaton | Wife of a cabinet member, caused a scandal that lead to a rift in the cabinet | |
| 550385312 | John Tyler | William H. Harrison's vice president | |
| 550385313 | Maysville Road Bill | Bill for internal improvements from federal funds, vetoed by Jackson | |
| 550385314 | Daniel Webster | Changed his position and surprisingly supported the Tariff of Abominations |
