Tuesday, March 20 1. Update your table of contents DateEntry TitleEntry # 3/5 Monroe movie 27...
-
Upload
rylee-charley -
Category
Documents
-
view
218 -
download
3
Transcript of Tuesday, March 20 1. Update your table of contents DateEntry TitleEntry # 3/5 Monroe movie 27...
Tuesday, March 20
1. Update your table of contents Date Entry Title Entry #3/5 Monroe movie 273/6 Test Review
283/8 John Quincy Adams movie 293/19 Politics of the People worksheet 303/20 Chapter 12 Vocabulary 31
2. Turn to entry #30
Did Mrs. Siek take role????
Yes – go on to next slide
No – GO TAKE ROLE NOW!!!!!
Learning Recovery– Wednesday, March 21th
Dolly Madison Primary Source
Landon Robertson
Chapter 12 Section 1 Politics of the People P. 43/P. 348A. Summarizing As you read this section on the politics of the 1820s, summarize the
information in the chart below.1. Who were the candidates in the 1824 presidential
election and their supporters?
• John Quincy Adams- New Englanders
• William Crawford- South
• Henry Clay & Andrew Jackson- Westerners
2. What was the outcome of the 1824 election?
3. What happened as a result of the 1824 election? 4. How did expanding democracy bring Andrew Jackson to power?
John Quincy Adams-
New Englanders
William Crawford-
South
Henry Clay
&
Andrew Jackson-
Westerners
Chapter 12 Section 1 Politics of the People P. 43/P. 348A. Summarizing As you read this section on the politics of the 1820s, summarize the
information in the chart below.1. Who were the candidates in the 1824 presidential
election and their supporters?
• John Quincy Adams- New Englanders
• William Crawford- South
• Henry Clay & Andrew Jackson- Westerners
2. What was the outcome of the 1824 election?
3. What happened as a result of the 1824 election? 4. How did expanding democracy bring Andrew Jackson to power?
2. What was the outcome of the 1824 election?
•Jackson did not get majority of electoral votes
•John Q. Adams & Henry Clay made a deal that made Adams president
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6qnVpC4zXpM&feature=related
Chapter 12 Section 1 Plantations and Slavery Spread P. 43/P. 348
A. Summarizing As you read this section on the politics of the 1820s, summarize the information in the chart below.
1. Who were the candidates in the 1824 presidential election and their supporters?
• John Quincy Adams- New Englanders
• William Crawford- South
• Henry Clay & Andrew Jackson- Westerners
2. What was the outcome of the 1824 election?
•Jackson did not get majority of electoral votes
•John Q. Adams & Henry Clay made a deal that made Adams president
3. What happened as a result of the 1824 election?
•D-Republican party split-Jackson & supporters became Democrats
*Adams & supporters became Nat’l Republicans
•Angry Jackson started campaign again for re-election
4. How did expanding democracy bring Andrew Jackson to power?
Chapter 12 Section 1 Plantations and Slavery Spread P. 43/P. 348
A. Summarizing As you read this section on the politics of the 1820s, summarize the information in the chart below.
1. Who were the candidates in the 1824 presidential election and their supporters?
• John Quincy Adams- New Englanders
• William Crawford- South
• Henry Clay & Andrew Jackson- Westerners
2. What was the outcome of the 1824 election?
•Jackson did not get majority of electoral votes
•John Q. Adams & Henry Clay made a deal that made Adams president
3. What happened as a result of the 1824 election?
•D-Republican party split-Jackson & supporters became Democrats
Adams & supporters became Nat’l Republicans
•Angry Jackson started campaign again for re-election
4. How did expanding democracy bring Andrew Jackson to power?
• Easing of voting restrictions-
Increase # of common people who could vote
• Jackson was hero to common people
3. What happened as a result of the 1824 election?
•D-Republican party split-
Jackson & supporters became Democrats
Adams & supporters became Nat’l Republicans
•Angry Jackson started campaign again for re-election
4. How did expanding democracy bring Andrew Jackson to power?
• Easing of voting restrictions-
Increase # of common people who could vote
• Jackson was hero to common people
5. What qualities made Andrew Jackson a popular candidate and leader?
• Humble background
• Reputation of toughness
• Success as military leader
6. What were the characteristics of Jacksonian democracy?
“The inauguration…was one grand whole—an imposing and majestic spectacle…one of moral sublimity.”
“The president, after having literally been nearly pressed to death…escaped to his lodgings at Gadsby’s….Ladies
fainted, ,men were seen with bloody noses.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nyFhnZi8eUA&feature=related
Jackson – 7th President
3. What happened as a result of the 1824 election?
•D-Republican party split-
Jackson & supporters became Democrats
Adams & supporters became Nat’l Republicans
•Angry Jackson started campaign again for re-election
4. How did expanding democracy bring Andrew Jackson to power?
• Easing of voting restrictions-
Increase # of common people who could vote
• Jackson was hero to common people
5. What qualities made Andrew Jackson a popular candidate and leader?
• Humble background
• Reputation of toughness
• Success as military leader
6. What were the characteristics of Jacksonian democracy?
•Gov’t by people
•Democracy (equality) in social, economic & political life
•Support for farmer & laborer
•Limited gov’t w/ strong president
The now-famous Democratic donkey was first associated with
Democrat Andrew Jackson's 1828 presidential campaign. His
opponents called him a jackass (a donkey), and Jackson decided to use the image of the strong-willed animal on his campaign posters. Later, cartoonist Thomas Nast used the Democratic donkey in
newspaper cartoons and made the symbol famous.
The Democratic Donkey and the Republican ElephantEver wondered what the story was behind these two famous party animals?
Nast invented another famous symbol—the Republican elephant. In a cartoon that appeared in Harper's Weekly in 1874, Nast drew a donkey clothed in lion's skin, scaring away all the animals at the zoo. One of those animals, the elephant, was labeled “The Republican Vote.” That's all it took for the elephant to become associated with the Republican Party.
Democrats today say the donkey is smart and brave, while Republicans say the elephant is strong and dignified.
B. Drawing Conclusions What changes in the United States did Jackson’s election
signal?
Democracy expanded by lowering of property rights for voters
Common people now had voice in political life
Vocabulary chapter 12Jacksonian Democracy Spoils System
Indian Removal Act Indian Territory
Trail of Tears Tariff of Abominations
Doctrine of Nullification Webster-Hayne Debate
Secession Inflation
Panic of 1837 Depression
Whig Party