AP US History

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AP US History

Chapter 8– Jeffersonianism and the Era of Good Feelings, 1801-1824

Identifications: After reading Chapter 8, you should be able to identify and explain the historical significance of each of the following:

TJ’s Inaugural Address, 1801

Henry Clay yeoman farmers

Sally Hemings

Albert Gallatin

Barbary pirates

Federal Judiciary Act of 1801 midnight judges

Marbury v. Madison

John Marshall

Judicial Review

Louisiana Purchase, 1803

Lewis and Clark Expedition

Sacajawea

Election of 1804

Tecumseh

William Henry Harrison

War of 1812

Election of 1812

Burning of Washington

Francis Scott Key

Treaty of Ghent

Battle of New Orleans

Andrew Jackson

Hartford Convention

James Monroe

Election of 1816

Election of 1820

The “Era of Good Feelings”

Dartmouth College v. Woodward

Aaron Burr and conspiracy

Quids

John Randolph impressment

Chesapeake-Leopard Affair

Embargo Act of 1807

“peaceable coercion”

Election of 1808

Non-Intercourse Act

War Hawks

McCullough v. Maryland

Panic of 1819

The Missouri Compromise

John Quincy Adams

Rush-Bagot Treaty

British-American Convention

Adams-Onis Treaty

The Monroe Doctrine

John C. Calhoun

Thought Questions:

1. Compare and contrast the political and economic views of Hamiltonian Federalists and the Jeffersonian Republicans. When, why, and how did the differences between the two parties blur?

2. Contrast the successes of Jefferson’s first term with the frustrations of his second term.

3. The U.S. engaged in a nearly disastrous war from 1812-1814 without any significant gains or results that addressed prewar problems. Assess the validity of this statement.

4. Discuss the foreign policy of President James Monroe and his Secretary of State John

Quincy Adams. In what ways did they have a long-term impact on the U.S.?

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