Unit 4 Plan - Doral Academy Preparatory

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UNIT 4: Jeffersonian Era, Era of Good Feelings, Market Revolution (1800-1848)
PERIOD 4 (1800-1848)
Big Picture: (3 weeks) Tentative Exam Date and Due Date for Terms, presidency charts, and
HIPPOS, etc… will be B DAY: Thursday, November 12 and A DAY: Friday, November 13
Between 1800 and 1848, conflict over the increasing power of the national government created
intensified sectional tension, there is economic reform, and industrialization.
Essential Question: What was the Jeffersonian vision and how did it build our nation in the early
republic?
Themes:
Economic transformations, politics and citizenship, war and diplomacy
Required Readings:
1) Chapters 7-8 in AMSCO book
2) Chapters 8-9 in Divine textbook
Pacing Guide: Read both chapters of the AMSCO book first within a few days; then start
reading the textbook.
Primary Sources: Analyze each document with the HIPPOS analysis worksheet.
Marbury v. Madison, John Marshall
Monroe Doctrine, John Quincy Adams
Presidency Chart: Thomas Jefferson, James Madison, and James Monroe
Complete a presidency chart on Thomas Jefferson, James Madison, and James Monroe (PDF file of chart
can be found on website)
I will assign an essay (FRQ/LRQ) to be completed in class once we finish the War of 1812.
Preview Content:
Significance of Jefferson’s presidency
Expansion into the trans-Appalachian West; American Indian resistance
The War of 1812 and its consequences
Compare major individuals, events in Federalist Era
Revolution in transportations
Emergence of the Market economy
Politics of nation building after the War of 1812
UNIT 4 TERMS—in your spiral notebook
1. President Thomas Jefferson
2. “We are all Republicans; we are all Federalists”
3. Albert Gallatin
4. 12th Amendment
5. John Marshall
6. Marbury v. Madison, 1803
7. judicial review
8. impeachment of Samuel Chase
9. Tripolitan War
10.Pasha of Tripoli
11.Stephen Decatur
12.Haitian Rebellion
13.Toissant L’Ouverture
14.Louisiana Purchase
15.Lewis and Clark Expedition
16.Sacagawea
17.Essex Junto
18.Aaron Burr
19.Napoleonic Wars
20.Berlin Decree
21.order in council
22.Milan Decree
23.Impressment
24.Chesapeake-Leopard Affair
25.Embargo Act
26.Non-intercourse Act
27.President James Madison
28.Macon’s Bill #2
29.War Hawks
30.Henry Clay
31.John C. Calhoun
32.Battle of Tippecanoe
33.Shawnee Confederation
34.William Henry Harrison
35.Daniel Webster
36.War of 1812
37.Francis Scott Key, Star Spangled Banner
38.Andrew Jackson
39.Battle of Horseshoe Bend
40.Battle of New Orleans
41.Treaty of Ghent
42.Hartford Convention
43.Nationalism
44.Davy Crockett
45.Noah Webster
46.McGuffey Readers
47.Knickerbocker Group
48.Washington Irving
49.James Fennimore Cooper
50.William Cullen Bryant
51.Henry Wadsworth Longfellow
52.Ralph Waldo Emerson
53.Henry David Thoreau
54.Walt Whitman
55.John Trumbull
56.Hudson River School
57.Thomas Cole
58.Asher Durand
59.“American System”
60.2nd National Bank
61.Tariff of 1816, protective tariff
62.internal improvements
63.“Era of Good Feelings”
64.Panic of 1819
65.Tallmadge Amendment
66.Missouri Compromise of 1820
67.judicial nationalism
68.McCullough v. Maryland
69.Dartmouth v. Woodward
70.Cohens v. Virginia
71.Gibbons v. Ogden
72.Daniel Webster
73.Rush-Bagot Treaty
74.Convention of 1818
75.Florida Purchase Treaty (Adams-Onis Treaty)
76.John Quincy Adams
77.Monroe Doctrine
78.Market Revolution
79.Irish Potato Famine
80.Tammany Hall
81.nativism
82.“Know-Nothing” Party
83.Industrial Revolution
84.Samuel Slater
85.spinning jenny
86.Eli Whitney
87.cotton gin
88.interchangeable parts
89.sewing machine, Elias Howe & Isaac Singer
90.telegraph, Samuel F.B. Morse
91.Francis Cabot Lowell
92.Boston Associates
93.“Lowell girls”
94.general incorporation laws
95.limited liability
96.Charles River Bridge case
97.steel plow, John Deere
98.mechanical mower reaper, Cyrus McCormick
99.Transportation Revolution
100.
turnpikes
101.
National Road
102.
conestogas
103.
Pony Express
104.
steamboat, Robert Fulton
105.
Erie Canal
106.
regional specialization
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