RUSHch7-8

RUSH CHAPTERS 7&8

TUES 9/15 – pp212-218 – Examine how the invention of the cotton gin, the development of interchangeable parts, mass production, and transportation (roads, railroads, steam power, canals) changed the U.S. and promoted nationalism. Describe how each region changed during this period, and explain the American System.

WED 9/16 – pp219-223 –Nationalism and its Impact on the United States - Analyze how Nationalism grew in the U.S. (McCulloch v. Maryland, Monroe Doctrine, Missouri Compromise)

THURS 9/17-FRI 9/18 - pp224-235 - Why did the common man support Andrew Jackson? – Explain the spoils system, the Indian Removal Act, the Tariff of Abomination, and the National Bank issue. States Rights vs the Federal Government - Defend or criticize Jackson and his fights over the National Bank and the Indian Removal Act, the Nullification issue or the spoils system.(pick 1) due FRI 9/18

MON 9/21-TUES 9/22 - pp240-244-pp254-265 - Evaluate how the 2nd Great Awakening and religion in general sparked an age of reform. Explain three ways in which these revivals impacted individuals, and how they then impacted society. Describe how women impacted the reform movement and why unions grew. – Choose a reform (prisons, education, temperance, women’s rights, health, unions, immigration) that you think had the greatest impact on the U.S. during this time period. Give at least two reasons. due TUES 9/22

WED 9/23 pp248-253 – Explain the beginnings of slavery in the U.S. and what made it different than other slave cultures. Why did the South defend slavery? How did the abolitionist movement get its start? What issue came about between the South and North because of abolition during this period?

THURS 9/24 - Test – Essay – List 4 ways Nationalism grew after the War of 1812 and describe the two most important. due THURS 9/24

STUDY GUIDE

Eli Whitney, interchangeable parts, mass production, cotton gin, Henry Clay, American System, Erie Canal, Tariff of 1816, McCulloch v. Maryland, John Q. Adams, Monroe Doctrine, Missouri Compromise, Andrew Jackson, spoils system, Indian Removal Act, Trail of Tears, Daniel Webster, John C. Calhoun, Tariff of Abominations, Bank of the U.S. Whig Party, Martin Van Buren, William H. Harrison, John Tyler, 2nd Great Awakening, civil disobedience, Dorothea Dix, abolition, Frederick Douglass, Nat Turner, Elizabeth Cady Stanton, Irish and German immigration, National Trades’ Union