unit 4 review 1800-1848. key concept 4.1 the united states developed the world’s first modern mass...
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Unit 4Review1800-1848
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Key Concept 4.1
• The United States developed the world’s first modern mass democracy and celebrated a new national culture, while Americans sought to define the nation’s democratic ideals and to reform its institutions to match them.
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Key Concept 4.2
• Developments in technology, agriculture, and commerce precipitated profound changes in U.S. settlement patterns, regional identities, gender and family relations, political power, and distribution of consumer goods.
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Key Concept 4.3
• U.S. interest in increasing foreign trade, expanding its national borders, and isolating itself from European conflicts shaped the nation’s foreign policy and spurred government and private initiatives.
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• The U.S. defined itself as a nation during this period
• Rapid demographic, economic and territorial growth
• Development of mass democracy• Birth of a new national culture• Creation of a market economy• Advancements in industry and transportation• Development of new reform movements
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• Conflict with Native Americans• Nativism and Anti-foreignism• Native Americans, African Americans and
women were not included in the new democracy
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Jefferson
• “The Revolution of 1800”• Louisiana Purchase– Lewis and Clark Expedition (1804-1806)• Increased geographic and scientific knowledge of the
region; better claim to Oregon territory
• Barbary Pirates• Embargo Act (1807)
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The War of 1812
• Non-intercourse Act (1809) and Macon’s Bill No. 2 (1810)
• War Hawks– Democratic-Republicans in Congress– Many from the frontier states– Wanted war with Britain- defend American honor;
gain Canada; remove Indian threat on frontier• Hartford Convention• The Treaty of Ghent
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The Era of Good Feelings
• Federalist Party collapsed• James Monroe President• 1816 to about 1819• Issues such as tariff and sectionalism still
existed
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The Rise of the Common Man
• By the 1820s• Shift to universal manhood suffrage• Many states eliminated property requirements
for voting• States began to allow voters to choose
representatives to the Electoral College as opposed to state legislatures
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Reform
• Influenced by Second Great Awakening• Belief that humans could achieve
perfectionism• Reformers looked to influence politics at the
local, state and national level
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• Temperance– Maine prohibited sale of alcohol in 1851– Other states passed similar laws
• Abolition• Prisons• Asylums
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Utopian Societies
• Some people sought to remove themselves from society and establish communal societies (both religious and non-religious) that would be more perfect
• Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints (Mormons)– Founded by Joseph Smith and later led by Brigham
Young
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Transcendentalists
• Influenced by European Romanticism• Emphasis on connection between man and
nature• Ralph Waldo Emerson• Henry David Thoreau- “On Civil
Disobedience”- advocated passive resistance as a form of protest