Unit 4 Key Terms APUSH Popovich

studied byStudied by 19 people
5.0(1)
get a hint
hint

Steamboat

1 / 29

Tags and Description

30 Terms

1

Steamboat

Paddlewheelers that could travel both up- and down-river in deep or shallow waters; they became commercially viable early in the nineteenth century and soon developed into America’s first inland freight and passenger service network.

New cards
2

Erie Canal

Most important and profitable of the canals of the 1820s and 1830s; stretched from Buffalo to Albany, New York, connecting the Great Lakes to the East Coast and making New York City the nation’s largest port.

New cards
3

Cotton Kingdom

Cotton-producing region, relying predominantly on slave labor, that spanned from North Carolina west to Louisiana and reached as far north as southern Illinois.

New cards
4

Porkopolis

Nickname of Cincinnati, coined in the mid-nineteenth century, after its numerous slaughter houses.

New cards
5

Mill girls

Women who worked at textile mills during the Industrial Revolution who enjoyed new freedoms and independence not seen before.

New cards
6

nativism

Anti-immigrant and anti-Catholic feeling especially prominent from the 1830s through the 1850s; the largest group of its proponents was New York’s Order of the Star-Spangled Banner, which expanded into the American (Know-Nothing) Party in 1854.

New cards
7

Manifest destiny

Phrase first used in 1845 to urge annexation of Texas; used thereafter to encourage American settlement of European colonial and Indian lands in the Great Plains and the West and, more generally, as a justification for American empire.

New cards
8

Transcendalists

Philosophy of a small group of mid-nineteenth-century New England writers and thinkers, including Ralph Waldo Emerson, Henry David Thoreau, and Margaret Fuller; they stressed personal and intellectual self-reliance.

New cards
9

Second Great Awakening

Religious revival movement of the early decades of the nineteenth century, in reaction to the growth of secularism and rationalist religion; began the predominance of the Baptist and Methodist Churches.

New cards
10

Cult of Domesticity

The nineteenth-century ideology of “virtue” and “modesty” as the qualities that were essential to proper womanhood.

New cards
11

The Dorr War

A movement in Rhode Island against property qualifications for voting. The movement formed an extralegal constitutional convention for the state and elected Thomas Dorr as a governor, but was quashed by federal troops dispatched by President John Tyler.

New cards
12

Democracy in America

Two works, published in 1835 and 1840, by the French thinker Alexis de Tocqueville on the subject of American democracy. Tocqueville stressed the cultural nature of American democracy, and the importance and prevalence of equality in American life.

New cards
13

American System

Program of internal improvements and protective tariffs promoted by Speaker of the House Henry Clay in his presidential campaign of 1824; his proposals formed the core of Whig ideology in the 1830s and 1840s.

New cards
14

tariff of 1816

First true protective tariff, intended to protect certain American goods against foreign competition.

New cards
15

Panic of 1819

Financial collapse brought on by sharply falling cotton prices, declining demand for American exports, and reckless western land speculation.

New cards
16

Era of Good Feelings

Contemporary characterization of the administration of popular Republican president James Monroe, 1817–1825.

New cards
17

Missouri Compromise

Deal proposed by Kentucky senator Henry Clay in 1820 to resolve the slave/free imbalance in Congress that would result from Missouri’s admission as a slave state; Maine’s admission as a free state offset Missouri, and slavery was prohibited in the remainder of the Louisiana Territory north of the southern border of Missouri.

New cards
18

Monroe Doctrine

President James Monroe’s declaration to Congress on December 2, 1823, that the American continents would be thenceforth closed to European colonization, and that the United States would not interfere in European affairs.

New cards
19

spoils system

The term meaning the filling of federal government jobs with persons loyal to the party of the president; originated in Andrew Jackson’s first term.

New cards
20

Tariff of Abominations

Tariff passed in 1828 by Parliament that taxed imported goods at a very high rate; aroused strong opposition in the South.

New cards
21

Exposition and Protest

Document written in 1828 by Vice President John C. Calhoun of South Carolina to protest the so-called Tariff of Abominations, which seemed to favor northern industry; introduced the concept of state interposition and became the basis for South Carolina’s Nullification Doctrine of 1833.

New cards
22

Webster-Hayne debate

U.S. Senate debate of January 1830 between Daniel Webster of Massachusetts and Robert Hayne of South Carolina over nullification and states’ rights.

New cards
23

Force Act

1833 legislation, sparked by the nullification crisis in South Carolina, that authorized the president’s use of the army to compel states to comply with federal law.

New cards
24

Indian Removal Act

1830 law signed by President Andrew Jackson that permitted the negotiation of treaties to obtain the Indians’ lands in exchange for their relocation to what would become Oklahoma.

New cards
25

Bank War

Political struggle in the early 1830s between President Jackson and financier Nicholas Biddle over the renewing of the Second Bank’s charter.

New cards
26

The "peculiar institution"

A phrase used by whites in the antebellum South to refer to slavery without using the word “slavery.”

New cards
27

"Cotton is King"

Phrase from Senator James Henry Hammond’s speech extolling the virtues of cotton, and, implicitly, the slave system of production that led to its bounty for the South. “King Cotton” became a shorthand for Southern political and economic power.

New cards
28

Underground Railroad

Operating in the decades before the Civil War, a clandestine system of routes and safehouses through which slaves were led to freedom in the North.

New cards
29

The Amistad

Ship that transported slaves from one port in Cuba to another, seized by the slaves in 1839. They made their way northward to the United States, where the status of the slaves became the subject of a celebrated court case; eventually most were able to return to Africa.

New cards
30

Nat Turner's Rebellion

Most important slave uprising in nineteenth-century America, led by a slave preacher who, with his followers, killed about sixty white persons in Southampton County, Virginia, in 1831.

New cards

Explore top notes

note Note
studied byStudied by 36 people
Updated ... ago
5.0 Stars(2)
note Note
studied byStudied by 24 people
Updated ... ago
5.0 Stars(1)
note Note
studied byStudied by 13 people
Updated ... ago
5.0 Stars(1)
note Note
studied byStudied by 5 people
Updated ... ago
5.0 Stars(1)
note Note
studied byStudied by 14 people
Updated ... ago
5.0 Stars(1)
note Note
studied byStudied by 15 people
Updated ... ago
5.0 Stars(1)
note Note
studied byStudied by 252 people
Updated ... ago
5.0 Stars(2)
note Note
studied byStudied by 119 people
Updated ... ago
5.0 Stars(4)

Explore top flashcards

flashcards Flashcard38 terms
studied byStudied by 12 people
Updated ... ago
5.0 Stars(2)
flashcards Flashcard61 terms
studied byStudied by 15 people
Updated ... ago
5.0 Stars(1)
flashcards Flashcard100 terms
studied byStudied by 11 people
Updated ... ago
5.0 Stars(1)
flashcards Flashcard129 terms
studied byStudied by 2 people
Updated ... ago
5.0 Stars(1)
flashcards Flashcard744 terms
studied byStudied by 13 people
Updated ... ago
5.0 Stars(2)
flashcards Flashcard52 terms
studied byStudied by 2 people
Updated ... ago
5.0 Stars(1)
flashcards Flashcard50 terms
studied byStudied by 109 people
Updated ... ago
5.0 Stars(1)
flashcards Flashcard891 terms
studied byStudied by 18 people
Updated ... ago
5.0 Stars(1)