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Louisiana State University - HIST 2055 Chapter 9 The Early Republic TRUE/FALSE 1)The “revolution of 1800” refers to the election of Thomas Jefferson
Louisiana State University - HIST 2055
Chapter 9 The Early Republic
TRUE/FALSE
1)The “revolution of 1800” refers to the election of Thomas Jefferson.
- Marbury v. Madison was sparked by one of President Adams’s “midnight appointments.”
- Once in office, Jefferson set out to dismantle Hamilton’s Federalist economic program.
- During Thomas Jefferson’s presidency, the national debt grew much larger.
- Thomas Jefferson signed an act outlawing the foreign slave trade as of 1808.
- From 1763 to 1803, the Louisiana Territory belonged to France.
- The expansion of the United States into the West weakened the Federalists.
- President Jefferson ignored a subpoena requiring him to appear in court with certain documents in his possession.
- James Madison followed Thomas Jefferson as president.
- During the early 1800s, the British were more likely than the French to respect American shipping rights.
- Tecumseh was a Shawnee leader who supported the United States in the War of 1812.
- Most “war hawks” were New England Federalists.
- William Henry Harrison was the American hero at the Battle of New Orleans.
- The Battle of New Orleans was meaningless since it was fought after the war had officially ended.
- The Federalist party was badly hurt by its involvement in the Hartford Convention.
- Americans felt intensely patriotic in the aftermath of the War of 1812.
MULTIPLE CHOICE
- Between 1800 and 1840, the nation’s most dramatic population expansion occurred:
- west of the Appalachians
- in New England
- in Atlantic seaports
- in the Deep South
- beyond the Mississippi
- In the early nineteenth century, the fastest growing segment of the population was:
- immigrants
- free blacks
- Indians
- slaves
- women
- The nature of work was transformed for numerous Americans by:
- government regulations
- the growing factory system
- free land in the West
- advances in education
- scientific farming methods
- Jefferson’s inauguration was notable for:
- its sharp partisan tone
- the impassioned delivery of his speech
- its being the first in Washington, D.C.
- the luxurious surroundings
-
- its immediate call to arms
- Who said, “We are all Republicans—we are all Federalists”?
- Alexander Hamilton
- Thomas Jefferson
- Francis Scott Key
- James Madison
- John Adams
- Thomas Jefferson’s inaugural address reflected:
- his strong partisan desire to oppose the Federalists now that he was in office
- his desire to adopt Federalist principles now that he was in office
- an affirmation of educational elitism and commitment to continued governmental formal- ity
- a tone of simplicity and conciliation
- his hopes for a new war to unify the country
- President Jefferson’s cabinet:
- included no one from New England
- was marked for its mediocrity
- included Madison as secretary of state
- never actually met
- In the case of Marbury v. Madison, the Supreme Court:
- showed its commitment to states’ rights
- ruled that Marbury should occupy his judicial position
- made itself the government’s most powerful branch
- proved it was not influenced by politics
- declared a federal law unconstitutional
- In the case of Marbury v. Madison, the Supreme Court chief justice who established the principle of judicial review was:
- Albert Gallatin
- John Jay
- John Pickering
- John Marshall
- John Quincy Adams
- Jefferson showed his commitment to limited government by:
- cutting military spending
-
- selling the national bank
- ending the tariff
- abolishing the post office
- canceling the national debt
- Thomas Jefferson believed that a large federal debt would:
- mean high taxes and public corruption
- be a national “blessing”
- help bankers and investors in the United States make money from the federal government
- be easily paid off in fifty years
- cause another revolution
- In the early 1800s, the United States engaged in a naval conflict with:
- France
- North African pirates
- Britain
- Spain
- Canadian smugglers
- The Louisiana Purchase was made possible by:
- Jefferson’s threat to take the land by force
- Britain’s support of the U.S. effort
- Napoléon’s disastrous setback in Haiti
- the fact that France offered it for free
- the political backing of the Federalists
- The Louisiana Purchase was a problem for Jefferson because:
- the cost was too high for the United States to pay
- acquisition of new Indian lands was contrary to his principles and beliefs
- the territory was ideal for slavery, which he opposed
- he believed that the Constitution did not give authority to acquire new land
- it would be hard to defend it against the Spaniards
- All of the following are true of the Louisiana Purchase EXCEPT:
- it was Jefferson’s greatest achievement as president
- the United States acquired an immensity of new territory
- it was easily approved by the Senate
- it was clearly constitutional
- it soon led to further territorial acquisition
- To President Jefferson, one major incentive to purchase Louisiana was to:
- gain the support of the Federalists
- secure American access to the Mississippi River and New Orleans
- spend some of the surplus money in the Treasury
- prove that the United States had become a world power
- acquire new ports on the Pacific
- Jefferson sent Lewis and Clark to:
- make peace with the Indians
- establish a settlement in Louisiana
- capture California
- spread Christianity westward
- map and explore well beyond the Mississippi
- Lewis and Clark’s expedition:
- gave the United States a claim to Oregon
- was a spectacular failure
- fought against Spaniards in Texas
- encountered no friendly Indians
- concluded that the West was uninhabitable
- Jefferson’s policy and political successes were indicated when became a Republican.
- Thomas Pickering
- John Quincy Adams
- Daniel Boone
- Aaron Burr
- Alexander Hamilton
- The Essex Junto was:
- a group of New Englanders who supported the Louisiana Purchase
- the name given to Republican supporters of Aaron Burr
- an extremist group of Federalists in New England who developed the idea of secession from the Union
- the primary supporter of Jefferson’s Embargo Act
- Jefferson’s most trusted group of political advisers
- The 1804 presidential election resulted in:
- a comeback for the Federalists
-
- Aaron Burr’s duel with Alexander Hamilton
- Jefferson’s landslide reelection
- the rise of a powerful third party
- months of confusion over the actual winner
- To avoid the problems associated with political parties running multiple candidates for the presidency, Congress:
- outlawed multiple party candidates
- called for a constitutional convention to deal with this issue
- changed the qualifications for president
- passed the Twelfth Amendment providing that electors use separate ballots to vote for a president and a vice president
- made popular vote the method by which presidents would be chosen
- The “Old Republicans,” led by John Randolph:
- were mostly Southerners
- defended states’ rights
- opposed tariffs
- supported an agrarian society
- all of the above
- Aaron Burr’s conspiracy:
- involved a plot to assassinate Jefferson
- brought his conviction for treason
- involved the Federalists
- aimed to give him a private western empire
- caused his removal as vice president
- Aaron Burr’s treason trial featured:
- John Marshall’s insistence upon a rigid definition of treason
- Burr’s dramatic confession
- Jefferson’s testimony on behalf of the prosecution
- charges that the jury had been bribed
- three witnesses of overt acts of treason
- The British used the 1805 Essex decision as an excuse to:
- seize American ships
- close the West Indies to American trade
- blockade American ports
- cancel Jay’s Treaty
- reopen trade with France
- As a result of the competing British and French “paper blockades,” American shippers:
- stayed at home
- ran the risk of capture
- got Jefferson to strengthen the navy
- armed their merchant vessels
- paid bribes to the British and French navies
- In the Essex case:
- a British court ruled that enemy goods were subject to seizure even if shipped through neutral ports
- a French gunboat that ran aground in North Carolina was burned
- the American navy seized and improperly searched a British ship
- certain provisions of Pinckney’s Treaty were violated
- Britain explained why its impressment of American sailors was legal
- Jefferson’s response to British and French interference with American shipping was:
- an effort to woo France into an alliance
- an effort to woo Britain into an alliance
- what he called a policy of “peaceable coercion”
- to ignore the matter and continue trading with both
- to shift the American economy toward industrialization
- The Leopard’s attack upon the Chesapeake:
- resulted in an American victory
- occurred on the Great Lakes
- created war fever in the United States
- brought an official British apology
- ended the British practice of impressment
- Jefferson’s Embargo Act:
- forced a change in British policy
- was effectively enforced by the navy
- had widespread public backing
- sought to stop all American exports
- ended Jefferson’s presidency on a successful note
- President Madison’s attempts to deal with British and French interference with American trade:
- were far more effective than Jefferson’s
-
- showed his belief in peace at any price
- boosted the domestic economy
- revealed that Napoléon could be trusted
- led to war with the British
- The Shawnee leader, Tecumseh:
- worked to unite Indians in a vast confederacy
- was probably the greatest Indian preacher
- befriended western settlers
- attacked British Canada
- won a battle when Americans attacked his capital
- The greatest support for the declaration of war in 1812 came from:
- the New England area
- the areas in which commerce and international trade were a primary occupation
- the manufacturing centers
- the agricultural regions from Pennsylvania southward and westward
- the Old Republicans
- Which war hawk loudly proclaimed that his state of Kentucky was ready to march on Canada and ac- quire its lucrative fur trade?
- Felix Grundy
- Henry Clay
- John Randolph
- John C. Calhoun
- Andrew Jackson
- In the Battle of Tippecanoe:
- British forces defeated a larger American army
- American forces defeated a larger British army
- American frontiersmen battled Spanish settlers in Florida
- the hope of an Indian confederation to protect their hunting grounds was ended
- William Henry Harrison was shamefully defeated by the Indians
- Western settlers and politicians believed war with Britain might enable:
- monopoly of the fur trade
- expansion to the Pacific
- conquest of Canada
- an alliance with Tecumseh
- an alliance with Napoléon
- As the War of 1812 started, one strength of the United States was:
- a large standing army
-
- a small but war-tested navy
- a surplus in the federal budget
- the national bank’s stabilization of the economy
- President Madison’s genius as commander-in-chief
- The naval battle on Lake Erie resulted in:
- the death of Tecumseh
- American control of Canada
- the end of British naval supremacy
- Commodore Perry’s glorious victory
- a British invasion of New York
- At Horseshoe Bend, Andrew Jackson won a smashing victory over the:
- Cherokees
- Shawnees
- British
- Spaniards
- Creeks
- The British invasion of the mid-Atlantic coast in 1814 resulted in:
- their capture of Baltimore
- their defeat by American militia
- the capture and burning of Washington, D.C.
- Madison’s resignation as president
- the U.S. decision to sue for peace
- The most notable aspect of the British assault upon Baltimore was:
- the complete destruction of Fort McHenry
- the large number of civilian casualties
- the length of the siege that followed
- its inspiration for the eventual national anthem
- the superb performance of the U.S. Navy
- The British attack on Baltimore’s Fort McHenry:
- resulted in the destruction of the British fleet
- made a national hero of Andrew Jackson
- increased support for the war in New England
- resulted in a bombardment that did not force the fort’s surrender
- resulted in an embarrassing American defeat
- The British defeat at New Orleans is best explained by:
-
- their attack upon a strong defensive position
- Andrew Jackson’s military genius
- their loss of energy in the southern heat
- the sharpshooting of the Americans
- prior awareness that a peace treaty had been signed
- The Treaty of Ghent:
- guaranteed American shipping rights
- gave the British access to the Mississippi River
- recognized the clear U.S. victory
- ended the war
- gave the United States part of Canada
- The Hartford Convention illustrated deep opposition to the war in:
- the South
- New England
- New York
- the West
- Congress
- At the Hartford Convention, delegates:
- voted to secede from the Union
- proposed a series of constitutional amendments to limit Republican influence in govern- ment
- denounced New England merchants who had traded with the British during t he war
- voted to join the Republican party
- offered generous peace terms to the British
- The War of 1812:
- made the United States a world power
- strengthened the Federalists
- was the deadliest in U.S. history
- gave the United States its first colonies
- generated intense patriotic pride
- In the aftermath of the War of 1812:
- Americans took decisive action against the Barbary pirates in the Mediterranean
- the Barbary pirates defeated the small U.S. Navy and forced President Madison into an ex- pensive settlement
- the U.S. government paid tribute to the Barbary pirates to avoid an additional war with them
-
- America and the Barbary states reached a peaceful settlement concerning shipping rights off the Barbary Coast
- the United States, Britain, and France combined to defeat the Barbary pirates
- As a result of the War of 1812, President Madison:
- ran for a third term
- was even more committed to limited government
- learned the value of some Federalist policies
- is recognized as a great president
- switched parties
MATCHING
51 Match each description with the item below.
-
- appointed justice of the peace in the District of Columbia
- elected president in 1804
- negotiated Louisiana Purchase
- was a naval hero against the Barbary pirates
- was a war hawk
- saw British attack of Fort McHenry from Baltimore Harbor
- became vice president in 1801
- was chief justice
- was an American naval hero in the War of 1812
- explored Louisiana Purchase and Far West
- Aaron Burr
- Henry Clay
- Stephen Decatur
- Thomas Jefferson
- Francis Scott Key
- Meriwether Lewis
- Robert R. Livingston
- William Marbury
- John Marshall
- Oliver H. Perry
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