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| CHAPTER 10 | NATIONALISM AND SECTIONALISM | OVERVIEW |
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CHAPTER TIMELINE |
| 1816 |
Bank of the United States chartered |
| 1816 |
Tariff of 1816 |
| 1816 |
election of James Monroe |
| about 18161819 |
Era of Good Feelings |
| 1817 |
Rush-Bagot Agreement |
| 1819 |
Transcontinental Treaty |
| 1819 |
acquisition of Florida |
| 1819 |
financial panic |
| 1819 |
Dartmouth College v. Woodward |
| 1819 |
McCulloch v. Maryland |
| 1820 |
Missouri Compromise |
| 1820 |
Monroe reelected |
| 1823 |
Monroe Doctrine |
| 1824 |
Gibbons v. Ogden |
| 1824 |
election of John Quincy Adams |
| 1828 |
South Carolina Exposition and Protest |
| 1828 |
election of Andrew Jackson |
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CHAPTER OBJECTIVES |
After you finish reading and studying this chapter, you should be able to: |
- Explain the emergence of nationalism after the War of 1812 in the economy,
the government, diplomacy, Supreme Court decisions, and politics.
- Account for the outbursts of sectionalism in the era 1816–1828.
- Explain the demise of the first political party system and analyze the shifting
patterns of party principles in this era.
- Explain the significant Supreme Court decisions of this time.
- Account for the political rise of Andrew Jackson.
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