Era of Good Feelings...Era of Good Feelings Panic 1819 Sectionalism bipartisan politics AdamsOnis...
Transcript of Era of Good Feelings...Era of Good Feelings Panic 1819 Sectionalism bipartisan politics AdamsOnis...
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Era of Good Feelings
Panic 1819
Sectionalism
bipartisan politics
AdamsOnis Treaty, 1819
Monroe Doctrine
Missouri Compromise
Growth of Cities
2nd Great Awakening
President James Monroe
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Group Tasks
Spirit 238239 & 239240• Explain the issue before the President's Cabinet. How does the Monroe Doctrine solve the concerns about the European Holy Alliance?
Spirit 234236 & 236• Describe the debate over continuing slavery in the Missouri Territory. Explain whether the Missouri Compromise solves the issue.
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Balance of power = European Powers to reclaim their thrones
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"We can tell . . . this . . . independent and dignified message will not be read by the crowned heads of Europe without a revolting stare of astonishment. . . . their backs, could not have anticipated that their unified force would so soon be defied by a young republic, whose existence . . . cannot be measured with the ordinary life of man. . . This message itself constitutes an era in American history, worthy of commemoration. . . ." Vermont Gazette, 1823
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Missouri Compromise 1821
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"I take it for granted that the present questions is a mere preamble a little page to a great tragic volume." John Quincy Adams
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Attachments
Beards history of US
Aim.docx
http://images.google.com/imgres?imgurl=http://www.gutenberg.org/files/16960/16960-h/images/287.png&imgrefurl=http://www.gutenberg.org/files/16960/16960-h/16960-h.htm&h=828&w=1106&sz=179&hl=en&start=10&tbnid=bfyI8vWLMtYjUM:&tbnh=112&tbnw=150&prev=/images%3Fq%3DClay%2527s%2BAmerican%2BSystem%26gbv%3D2%26svnum%3D10%26hl%3DenAim # 23: To what extent did the “era of good feelings’ represent a turn toward
nationalism?
I. “Era of Good Feelings”
A. Culture
1. Growth of cities
2. 2nd Great Awakening
B. Monroe Presidency (1817-1825)
1. Bi-partisanship- Monroe, a Republican, brought in old Federalists
into his cabinet (i.e. J.Q. Adams - as Secretary of State)
2. The Republican administration supported old Federalist projects
such as the National Bank and interstate transportation projects
(i.e. Henry Clay’s “American System”)
3. Old Federalists supported expansion
a. Rush-Bagot Treaty (1817) - secured Canadian border
b. Adams-Onis Treaty (1819) - same as above
c. Monroe Doctrine (1823)
II. “Era of Good Feelings” ends in conflict
A. Panic of 1819
B. Missouri Compromise (1820)
1. Admitted Missouri as a slave state and Maine as a free state
2. Established 36’30” line as the borderline of free (north of the line) and
slave (south of the line) states
Summary:
· While there was certainly a temporary boom in nationalism, the sectional differences once again become the primary contradictions, as slavery and the Panic of 1819, which hurt agriculture most prominently, exacerbate the differences between manufacturing and agriculture or North vs. South.
SMART Notebook
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