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TAV Chapter 5 Growth and Division 1816-1832

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TAV Chapter 5. Growth and Division 1816-1832. Chapter 5 Section 1. American Nationalism. Jackson Invades Florida. Sec. of War, John C. Calhoun ordered Jackson into FL to stop raids by the Seminoles Took St. Marks and Pensacola and removed their leaders - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: TAV Chapter 5

TAV Chapter 5

Growth and Division1816-1832

Page 2: TAV Chapter 5

AMERICAN NATIONALISMChapter 5 Section 1

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Jackson Invades Florida

• Sec. of War, John C. Calhoun ordered Jackson into FL to stop raids by the Seminoles

• Took St. Marks and Pensacola and removed their leaders

• Adam-Onis Treaty – Spain ceded all of FL to the US.

Page 4: TAV Chapter 5

The Monroe Doctrine

• Declared that the US would not allow European powers to set up colonies in the Americas.

Page 5: TAV Chapter 5

EARLY INDUSTRYChapter 5 Section 2

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Erie Canal

• Connected the Hudson River to Lake Erie– 363 miles long– Began in 1817 and ended 1825

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National Road

• From Cumberland, Maryland to Vandalia, IL

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Steam Engines

• Boats• Trains

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Industrial Revolution

• Began in G.B. in the mid 1700’s• The use of complex machines to do work.

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Free Enterprise System

• Based on private property rights • Est. capital and use it to create more

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Samuel Slater

• 1789, Pawtucket, Rhode Island• Received funding from Moses Brown to build

a water frame.• Used to create thread from raw cotton

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Lowell System

• Francis C. Lowell introduced the mass production of cotton goods in his factories.

• Workers had company housing• Mainly women and children

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Eli Whitney

• Cotton Gin• Interchangeable parts for making guns

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Samuel Morse

• Morse code • Sending out messages over long distances• 1844, Washington to Baltimore- “What hath

God wrought?”

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Labor Unions

• Organizing• Strikes

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Northern Cities

• Factories• Polution

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Farms

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THE LAND OF COTTONChapter 5 Section 3

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The Southern Economy

• Eli Whitney invented the cotton gin in 1793– Removed seeds from the cotton– 1lb a day by hand to 1,000 lb a day with cotton gin

• Increased the need for slave labor

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Southern Industry

• Coal• Iron• Salt• Copper• Some ironworks and textiles

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Southern Society

• Yeoman Farmers were the regular farmers who did not have a lot of money. – Many only had around 4 slaves– Majority did not own any slaves

• The majority of Southerners did not own slaves

• Planters were the wealthy land owners in the South

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Slavery

• On some farms they practiced the task system.– Slaves were given specific jobs to do and when

they were done they were done working for the day. Loose approach

• Larger plantations used the gang system to make the slaves work in large groups.

Page 23: TAV Chapter 5

GROWING SECTIONALISMChapter 5 Section 4

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Missouri Compromise

• Maine admitted as a free state• Missouri admitted as a slave state• No slavery above 36-30 or in Louisiana

Territory

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Election of 1824

• Jackson won the majority vote but not the E.C.• John Quincy Adams won by making a “corrupt

bargain” w. Henry Clay. • Clay received appt to Sec. of State• Henry Clay and Andrew Jackson were

Democratic-Republicans but after Clay threw his support to Adams the group split.– Clay formed the National Republicans– Jackson the Democrats