Table Of Content
Thomas Jefferson
Thomas Jefferson Presidency
Jeffersonian Democracy
The Federal Judiciary
The Louisiana Purchase (1803)
The Barbary Pirates
The Embargo Act
The Slave Trade
James Madison (Also the War of 1812)
Election of 1808
James Madison Presidency
Cause of the War of 1812
The War of 1812
British Invasion
Conflict in the Frontier
The End of the War
The Hartford Convention
The Impact of the War of 1812
James Monroe
The Era of Good Feelings
The Great Triumvirate
Henry Clay (KY)
John C. Callhoun (SC)
Daniel Webster (MA)’
The American System
Protective tariffs
National Bank
Infrastructure
The Adams-Onis Treaty
The Other Treaty
Rush Bagot Treaty
Anglo-American Treaty
The Monroe Doctrine
The Missouri Compromise (or the Compromise of 1820)
, AP US History Period 4 1800-1849
Andrew Jackson
Election of 1824 & 1828
The Jackson presidency
Nullification Crisis
Maysville Road Project
Indian Removal Act
National Bank
The Bank wars.
Election of 1832
Legacy of Jackson
Market & Transportation Revolution
Transportation Revolution
Steamboats & Canals
Railroad
The Market Revolution
Early Industrialism
Regional Antebellum (North, South, West)
Mass Immigration
Anti-Immigration reactions
Jacksonian Reforms
Regional Specialization
The South White Society
Abolitionism and Antislavery Reforms
American Colonization Society (1816)
William Lloyd Garrison and the American Antislavery society (1833-1870)
Fredrick Douglass
Slave Revolts
Nat Turner
La Amistad Case (1839-1841)
Cult of Domesticity
Separate Spheres
“Cult of True Womanhood”
Women’s Rights Movement
Immigration
The Second Great Awakening
Growth and Impact
Revivalism
Communal Societies
Reform Movements
Temperance
Education
Rehabilitation
Transcendentalism
, Thomas Jefferson
About Thomas Jefferson
Plantation and Slave Owner from Virginia
Statesperson
Declaration of Independence
Minister to France
Secretary of State
Vice-President
Democratic-Republican
Kentucky Resolves
Inaugural Address
“Every difference of opinion is not a difference of principle…We are all
republican; we are all Federalists.
“Renaissance Man”
Inventor, Philosopher, Architect, Scientist
Jeffersonian Democracy
Republicanism and Civic Virtue
Civic Duty
Voting
Education
Federalism and State’s Right
Strict Constructionist
Ultimate Sovereignty in the States
Nullification
Yeoman Farmers as Ideal Citizens
Empire of Liberty and Foreign Policy
Spread Democracy
Avoid Entangling Alliances
Society
Republican Motherhood
Native Americans are capable, just need to “catch up.”
White Superiority over Slaves
Separation of Church and State