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Title: Nationalism%20and%20Sectionalism%20Chapter%207


1
Nationalism and SectionalismChapter 7
  • How did nationalism and sectionalism affect the
    United States from the early 1800s to the
    mid-1800s?

2
Standards
  • SSUHS 7 Students will explain the process of
    economic growth, its regional and national impact
    in the first half of the 19th century, and the
    different responses to it.
  • a. Explain the impact the Industrial
    Revolution as seen in Eli Whitneys invention of
    the cotton gin and his development of
    interchangeable parts for muskets.
  • b. Describe the westward growth of the
    United States including the emerging concept of
    Manifest Destiny.
  • c. Describe reform movements,
    specifically temperance, abolitionism, and public
    school.
  • d. Explain womens efforts to gain the
    suffrage, including Elizabeth Cady Stanton and
    the Seneca Falls Conference.
  • e. Explain Jacksonian Democracy,
    expanding the suffrage, the rise of popular
    political culture, and the development of
    American nationalism.

3
Industry and TransportationSection 1
  • How did transportation developments and
    industrialization affect the nations economy?
  • Vocabulary
  • turnpike Francis Cabot Lowell
  • National Road Lowell girl
  • Erie Canal interchangeable parts
  • Industrial Revolution Eli Whitney
  • Samuel Slater Samuel F.B. Morse

4
Industry and Transportation
The Transportation Revolution   Main Idea During
the nineteenth century, efforts to improve
overland transportation began through the United
States. Most notable was the development of the
railroads and steam-powered ships. Technology
Sparks Industrial Growth Main Idea
Developments in technology transformed
manufacturing. This transformation came to be
known as the Industrial Revolution, which
transformed the nations economy, culture, social
life, and politics. Inventions Transform
Industry and Agriculture Main Idea The
revolutions in transportation and industry were
paralleled in the early 1800s by a number of key
innovations. These innovations advanced the
dramatic changes taking place in the American
economy and society.
5
Transportation in Early 1800s
6
Transportation
  • Roads Wilderness Road, Daniel Boone
  • Corduroy roads
  • Plank roads
  • National Road, Maryland to
  • the Ohio River
  • Turnpikes

7
Transportation
  • Robert Fulton
  • First successful steam powered boat
  • Clermont steamed upriver, against the current

8
Transportation
  • Canals Erie Canal completed in 1825 to join the
    Hudson River in New York state to Lake Erie
  • 3,300 miles of canals, mostly in the Northeast
  • by 1840
  • Provided transportation
  • that linked farms to cities
  • Resulted in the growth of
  • New York City population
  • grew to 800,000 by 1860

9
Transparency Canals Improve Transportation
Canals Improve Transportation
TRANSPARENCY
10
Transportation
  • Railroads were cheaper to build, could climb
    hills, moved faster, and could carry more weight
  • Baltimore and Ohio Railroad
  • By 1860, 31,000 miles of track
  • Trains ended canal building

11
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12
Reading Skill Identify Causes and Effects
NOTE TAKING
13
Technology Sparks Industrial Growth
  • Industrial Revolution shift from manual labor to
    mechanized work that began in Great Britain
    during the 1700s and spread to the U.S. around
    1800

14
Inventions
  • Samuel Slater came to America from Britain with
    knowledge of the textile industry
  • Samuel Slater first water-powered textile mill
    opened first mill in Pawtucket, RI in 1793 used
    family system for employees
  • First successful textile mill in the U.S.

15
Industries of Northeast
  • Francis Cabot Lowell built the first totally
    centralized textile mill in Waltham,
    Massachusetts in 1813
  • Hired young unmarried women, known as Lowell
    girls, because they would work for half the pay
    that men demanded

16
Changes in Factories
  • Machines increased pace of work
  • Divided work into small tasks
  • Reduced the need for skilled labor
  • Some jobs like sewing garments and shoes were
    still performed in the home

17
Inventions
  • Eli Whitney factory to manufacture muskets
  • More efficient production of products
  • Interchangeable parts
  • Cotton Gin
  • Kept the South a land of slavery and farming

18
Telegraph
  • Samuel F.B. Morse
  • electric telegraph sent coded signals along a
    metal wire
  • By 1860 nation had 50,000 miles of telegraph lines

19
Communication
  • Postal service 8,450 post offices by 1830
  • Delivered mail as well as newspapers, magazines,
    and books

20
Agriculture
  • Agriculture remained the largest industry in the
    United States
  • Farmers adopted better methods
  • for planting and harvesting crops
  • Improved methods for raising
  • livestock
  • By 1840, the steel plow invented
  • by John Deere and the mechanical
  • reaper developed by Cyrus
  • McCormick improved farming

21
Farm Work
22
Farm Inventions
23
Progress Monitoring Transparency Section 1
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Progress Monitoring Transparency
24
Sectional DifferencesSection 2
  • How did the North and South differ during the
    first half of the 1800s?
  • Vocabulary
  • Tariff of 1816
  • capital
  • labor union
  • nativist
  • cotton gin

25
Sectional Differences
The North Embraces Industry Main Idea The
tariff Congress placed on imported goods helped
industry to flourish, particularly in the
Northeast, where there were many factories and
laborers to keep them running. Industrial
Workers Main Idea The arrival of industry
changed the way many Americans worked by reducing
the skill required for many jobs. This trend hurt
highly skilled artisans, who could not compete
with manufacturers working with many low-cost
laborers. Southern Agricultural Economy and
Society Main Idea During the 1780s, Thomas
Jefferson, James Madison, and George Washington
hoped that slavery would gradually fade away.
However, with the emergence of cotton as the
Souths leading crop, slavery persisted.
Continued
26
Vocabulary
  • Free enterprise system an economic system in
    which companies compete for profits also called
    capitalism
  • Capital wealth that can be invested to produce
    goods and make money
  • Bank note a piece of paper that banks issued to
    their customers similar to checks
  • The Wealth of Nations by Adam Smith the
    principle of supply and demand rather than
    government regulation should guide business
    decisions

27
Industrialization Spreads in the North
  • Embargo of 1807 and War of 1812 cut off access to
    British goods
  • Americans built factories in Northeast
  • Tariff of 1816 tax on imports to protect
    American manufacturers
  • Why did manufacturing grow in the North
  • -Access to capital (money)
  • -Cheap labor
  • -Many swiftly flowing rivers to provide
    water
  • power

28
Social Change in the North
  • Workers organize by forming labor unions
  • groups of workers who unite for better pay and
    conditions
  • Workingmens Party
  • Unions use the strike to try to achieve goals
  • Middle class emerges bankers, lawyers,
    accountants, etc.
  • Emigration from Ireland and Germany in the 1840s
    due to political upheavals, depressions, and
    famines many were Catholic or Jewish

29
Labor Disputes
  • Long hours and low wages
  • Owners grow rich workers will demand more from
    their bosses
  • Main complains are long hours and low wages
  • Strike work stoppage
  • Labor union organization of workers formed to
    protect the interests of its members National
    Trades Union (NTU) formed to protect interests
    of workers unions soon died out, but showed
    workers would take action against employers
  • By 1840s, North is a mixed economy of industry
    and agriculture

30
Rise of Banking
  • Banks made money by charging interest for the
    loans it made banks used the money that
    customers deposited.
  • No insurance on deposits
  • Many banks made bad loans that could not be
    repaid
  • Bank notes, paper issued to customers, were
    unpredictable since the value fluctuated

31
Growth of Cities
  • By 1840 12 of the population lived in cities in
    the North
  • Tenements crowded apartments with poor standards
    of sanitation, safety, and comfort
  • Cities were unable to handle the rapid increases
    in their populations no sewage systems, or
    reliable water
  • Thousands killed or sickened by cholera in 1832
    and 1833

32
Urban Growth
  • Cities developed slowly
  • New Orleans, Charleston, Richmond smaller
    populations than Northern cities
  • Poor housing and sanitation
  • Large numbers of free African Americans in
    cities by 1850 12 of African Americans were free

33
Transparency Industrialization in the Northeast
Industrialization in the Northeast
TRANSPARENCY
34
Geography of the South
  • Rural Pertaining to the countryside
  • 200 to 290 frost-free days made farming
    profitable
  • Fertile soil and plentiful rain
  • Few factories in the South
  • Many farmers moved to trans-Appalachia
  • Small farmers often bought out by large
    plantation owners

35
The South - As cotton farming grew, so did the
slave trade leading to several slave revolts
South develops economy based on farming and
slavery
South has good conditions for farming
Cotton Gin makes cotton manufacturing more
profitable
Rich landowners create huge plantations, relying
on slave labor to grow cotton. Cottonocracy
Cotton becomes the most valuable product in the
South
Industrial Revolution leads to growing textile
industry which needs cotton to make cloth
36
King Cotton
  • Three developments increased cotton production
  • -cotton gin
  • -western expansion
  • -industrialization
  • In the early 1800s cotton farming became the
    Souths main economic activity. This boosted the
    slave trade, triggering slave revolts in 1822 and
    1831.
  • 1850 crop over 1 billion pounds
  • 1860 cotton made up 2/3 of value of American
    exports
  • Created enormous wealth in the South

37
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38
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39
Transparency Life on a Plantation
Life on a Plantation
TRANSPARENCY
40
Chart Cotton Production and Slavery, 1800-1860
Cotton Production and Slavery, 1800-1860
CHART
41
Slavery System
  • By 1804, all northern states had either banned
    slavery or passed laws to end it gradually
  • 1808, Congress banned importation of slaves
  • Slave trade in the South increased due to
    population growth of slaves
  • Slave population 3.2 million by 1850 4 million
    in 1860 typical worth was 1,800
  • Increase due to high birth rate
  • South became too dependent on one crop with the
    population dispersed few immigrants population
    in the North increased

42
Slavery on Farms
  • Small farms more contact with whites
  • Large plantations large slave communities
  • Harsher conditions
  • Womens roles were difficult due to child care,
    housework, and laboring in the fields some women
    endured physical or sexual abuse by owners

43
Slaves as Property
  • Prices for slaves rose in the 1830s
  • Price rose from 500. in 1832 to 1,300 in 1837
  • Little regard for keeping families together

44
Slave Revolts
  • Veseys Plan Denmark Vesey, a free slave,
    planned a slave revolt he planned to seize
    Charleston in 1822, kill all whites, and burn the
    city
  • Betrayed by followers Vesey was hanged along
    with 34 others

45
Turners Rebellion
  • 1831 Turner led slaves in raids, killing 57 white
    people
  • Hanged along with other slaves
  • Riot by whites resulted in 100 slaves being killed

46
Alarm
  • White southerners nightmare since slaves often
    outnumbered the whites
  • Tightened restrictions on slaves
  • -prevented the teaching of reading
  • -stopped slaves from moving freely or meeting
    to stop communication

47
Economic Consequences
  • Dependent on one crop
  • Small urban population
  • Little industrialization
  • Few immigrants
  • North increased political power in the House of
    Representatives
  • Limited consumer demand because slaves had no
    money

48
Cultural Consequences
  • Dispersed population
  • No education for slaves and little for poor
    whites
  • Hope of farmers was to gain plantations
  • Fear of revenge of freed slaves
  • Sense of superiority of Southern whites
  • Defense of slavery as a good institution, better
    than the industrial life of the North

49
Note Taking Reading Skill Compare and Contrast
Reading Skill Compare and Contrast
NOTE TAKING
50
Progress Monitoring Transparency Section 2
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Progress Monitoring Transparency
51
An Era of NationalismSection 3
  • How did domestic and foreign policies reflect the
    nationalism of the times?
  • Vocabulary
  • nationalism Adams-Onís Treaty
  • Henry Clay Monroe Doctrine
  • American System Missouri Compromise
  • John Quincy Adams

52
An Era of Nationalism
Nationalism Shapes Domestic Policies   Main Idea
In 1817, people in all parts of the country
seemed united in purpose. A spirit of
nationalisma glorification and promotion of the
nationswept the country. Nationalism
Influences Foreign Affairs Main Idea
Nationalism affected more than domestic policy.
It also influenced the nations foreign policy. A
key figure in this development was John Quincy
Adams, James Monroes Secretary of State and son
of former President John Adams. The Nation
Compromises Over Slavery Main Idea Missouris
admission to the union as a new state posed the
potential to offset the balance of free and slave
states. Henry Clay crafted the Missouri
Compromise in an attempt to re-establish balance.
53
Nationalism
  • People began to think of themselves as Americans
  • Leaders sought to exercise the powers of the
    federal government to unite the country

54
Era of Good Feelings - (1817-1824)
  • James Monroe President
  • After War of 1812
  • Feeling of Nationalism came to USA that had been
    missing since after the Revolution
  • Good Feelings
  • Nationalism
  • Incredible Growth
  • 1816 - 2nd Bank of the U.S. helped growth
  • Henry Clays American System
  • Protective tariff, national bank, federal aid for
    roads, bridges, and canals
  • Political parties faded
  • Three Political Giants
  • John C. Calhoun - SC, farmer, Yale, intensity
  • Daniel Webster - MA, Lawyer, well-respected
  • Henry Clay - The Great Compromiser, KY

55
  • John C. Calhoun
  • Daniel Webster
  • Henry Clay

56
Nationalist Economic Policies
  • Henry Clay American System wanted federal
    government to build roads and canals to Midwest
  • Wanted to reestablish national bank to control
    money supply and banking
  • 1816 second Bank of the U.S. established

57
Supreme Court Cases
  • McCulloch v. Maryland Maryland tried to wipe out
    the National Bank by levying heavy taxes on it
    Marshall ruled that Congress had authority to
    charter the national bank
  • Powers of the federal government greater than
    those spelled out in Constitution
  • Used Article I, Section 8 that states that
    Congress has the right to make all laws
    necessary and proper for carrying out the powers
    granted it under the Constitution no tax on
    bank states cannot tax institutions created by
    the federal government

58
Supreme Court Cases
  • Dartmouth College v. Woodward New Hampshire
    could not change charter of the college
    protected business contracts and helped the
    economy by providing stability
  • Gibbons v. Ogden Ogden sued Gibbons, who had a
    federal license to operate a steamboat line
    between New York and New Jersey Marshall
    declared that states could not regulate commerce
    on interstate waterways, giving the federal
    government authority over all types of interstate
    business

59
Economic Panics
  • Boom-and-bust cycle of business
  • Between 1815 and 1860, there were three panics
    1819, 1837, and 1857

60
Diagram Cycles of Boom and Bust
Cycles of Boom and Bust
DIAGRAM
61
American Art and Literature
  • American Renaissance reflected the
    nationalistic spirit
  • James Fenimore Cooper The Leatherstocking Tales
  • The Hudson River School landscape paintings

62
Expanding the United States
  • General Andrew Jackson entered Florida to fight
    the Seminoles, who were raiding Georgia and
    protecting run-away slaves, seizing Spanish forts
  • Adams-Onís Treaty 1819 Americans gained Florida

63
Nationalism Abroad
  • Rush-Bagot Agreement eased tension with Britain
    by reducing the number of warships on the Great
    Lakes
  • Later extended the northern border of the U.S.
    along the 49 N latitude to the Rocky Mountains

64
Nationalism
  • Monroe Doctrine
  • 1. U. S. not involved with European affairs
  • 2. U. S. recognized colonies in Western
    Hemisphere and would not interfere
  • 3. U.S. would not permit any further colonization
    of the Western Hemisphere
  • 4. Any attempt by a European power to control any
    nation in the Western Hemisphere would be seen as
    a hostile action

65
Note Taking Reading Skill Understand Effects
Reading Skill Understand Effects
NOTE TAKING
66
Missouri Compromise
  • Missouri sought admission as a state
  • Controversy over slavery 1820
  • Provisions of Compromise
  • 1. Missouri admitted as a slave state
    Maine would be admitted as a free state
  • 2. As U.S. expanded westward, states north of
    36o30 would be free

67
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68
Democracy and the Age of JacksonSection 4
  • What changes did Andrew Jackson represent in
    American political life?
  • Terms and People
  • causus spoils system
  • Andrew Jackson Indian Removal Act
  • Martin Van Buren Trail of Tears
  • Jacksonian Democracy

69
Democracy and the Age of Jackson
The Election of 1824 Main Idea The election of
1824 resulted in the House of Representatives
having to decide the outcome. John Quincy Adams
became President and received criticism for his
aggressive program of federal spending. Jackson
Emerges Main Idea In his speeches and writings,
Jackson celebrated majority rule and the dignity
of the common people. He projected himself as a
down-to-earth common man, which contrasted with
the image of the aristocratic leaders of the
past. Native American Revival Main Idea Many
southern whites believed that Indians could never
be civilized and wanted to seize their valuable
lands. Many Indians resisted removal, and
violence erupted. However, U.S. troops prevailed
and forced the Indians from their lands.
70
John Quincy Adams
  • Son of John Adams
  • Secretary of State under James Monroe
  • After serving as President, he was elected to the
    House of Representatives until his death

71
John Calhoun
  • South Carolina lawyer, plantation owner,
    statesman
  • For nationalism sponsored economic measures to
    help unify the nation (Second Bank of the U.S.,
    roads, navy, and tariffs)
  • Foresaw Civil War over slavery
  • Withdrew from election 1824

72
Henry Clay
  • Kentucky plantation owner (freed slaves in will)
  • Harry of the West
  • Gift for giving speeches
  • Survived two duels
  • Senator who ran for President in 1824

73
Andrew Jackson
  • Tennessee plantation owner General in Army
  • Victories in War of 1812 and Seminoles and
    Spanish in Florida made him famous
  • Popular with colorful personality
  • Said to be poorly educated and ill-tempered
  • Ran for President in 1824

74
Andrew Jackson (1767-1845) First to
have Vice President (John Calhoun) resign
First to be nominated at a national
convention--second term First target
of an assassination attempt First
born in a Log Cabin First to marry a
divorcee Only first lady who smoked
a pipe. First 'Toga Party' at the
President's House First to use the
pocket veto First to ride on a train
First to be convicted of a contempt
of court charge - in 1815 Andrew Jackson was
fined 1,000 for contempt of court for refusing
to lift martial law before receiving
confirmation of peace. First former
POW (Revolutionary War) Last
Revolutionary War Veteran Only
president to pay off the national debt
Only veteran who served in both the
Revolutionary War and the War of 1812
Wounded in a duel at the age of 39, Jackson
carried the bullet, lodged near his heart, to
his grave One of four presidents to
have a state capital named for him -- Jackson,
Mississippi Jefferson, MissouriMadison,
Wisconsin and Lincoln, Nebraska
75
Election of 1824
  • Andrew Jackson receives the most popular votes
  • John Quincy Adams defeats Henry Clay and General
    Andrew Jackson
  • Election is decided in the House of
    Representatives
  • Corrupt Bargain Jackson accuses Adams and Clay
    of corruption House of Representatives decided
    Clay delivered KY for Adams Adams made Clay
    Secretary of State

76
2 New Political Parties
  • Election of 1824
  • The Corrupt Bargain - Why is it called this?

77
Two Political Parties
  • National Republicans Adams and Clay
  • Want strong federal government canals, roads,
    bridges, universities
  • Want protective tariffs to help American
    industry, favored a national bank, and tended to
    be middle-class Protestants
  • Jacksonian Democrats wanted Jeffersons idea of
    limited government and individual freedoms
    against strong federal government, wanted states
    to build infrastructure, against national bank,
    tended to be slaveholders, small farmers,
    non-Protestants, and working class

78
Election of 1828
  • John Quincy Adams versus Andrew Jackson
  • More than twice as many men voted than in 1824
  • Jackson wins with large vote by common people,
    especially from the West

79
Spoils System
  • Patronage practice of hiring political
    supporters as government workers
  • Spoils system under Jackson the spoils (jobs)
    were given to party supporters and friends
  • Veto Power
  • -Jackson believed in limited government
  • -Vetoed more acts of Congress than the six
    previous Presidents combined

80
Changes
  • Growing power of the West first President from
    west of the Appalachian Mountains
  • Common white man could now vote in many states
    laws requiring voters to be property owners
    repealed

81
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Progress Monitoring Transparency
82
The National Bank
TRANSPARENCY
83
Indian Removal Act
  • Five Civilized Tribes Cherokee, Creek,
    Choctaw, Chickasaw, and Seminole farmed whites
    wanted the land
  • Authorized Jackson to give land in the Louisiana
    Purchase for land in East
  • Worcester v. Georgia
  • -Marshall ruled that Georgia had no authority
    over Cherokee territory Georgia ignored the
    ruling
  • -Jackson supported Georgia

84
Infographic The Trail of Tears
The Trail of Tears
INFOGRAPHIC
85
Trail of Tears
  • In 1838, Cherokees began a 116-day forced march
    in groups of 1,000
  • One-forth of the Cherokee died
  • Received only 3 million

86
Progress Monitoring Transparency Section 4
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87
Note Taking Reading Skill Understand Effects
Reading Skill Understand Effects
NOTE TAKING
88
Constitutional Disputes and CrisesSection 5
  • What major political issues emerged during the
    1830s?
  • Terms and people
  • Tariff of Abominations
  • John C. Calhoun
  • nullification
  • Whig

89
Constitutional Disputes and Crises
The Nullification Crisis Main Idea In general,
the industrial North favored protective tariffs,
while the agricultural South disliked them. The
Bank War Main Idea Jackson longed to revive
Jeffersons ideal of an agrarian republic, in
which almost all white men owned farms and
enjoyed a rough equality. But growing
industrialization worked against that vision.
Politics After Jackson Main Idea Economic
trouble spread as private banks, free from
federal regulation, flooded the economy with
paper money, or bank notes. The face value of
bank notes rose significantly however, the true
value of this money was uncertain.
90
Tariff of 1828
  • Heavy tax on imports to encourage American
    manufacturing
  • South called it the Tariff of Abomination
  • In 1832 South Carolina declared tariffs null and
    void John C. Calhoun, Jacksons Vice President,
    opposed the tariff
  • SC threatened to secede or withdraw from the
    Union
  • Daniel Webster of Massachusetts defends the Union
  • Tariff is reduced and Force Bill is passed,
    giving Jackson authority to use troops in SC, if
    necessary

91
The Nullification Crisis of 1833
DIAGRAM
92
Note Taking Reading Skill Compare
Reading Skill Compare
NOTE TAKING
93
Bank War
  • Bank of U.S. could operate until 1836 under its
    charter
  • Clay, Webster, and banker Nicholas Biddle decided
    to recharter it in 1832
  • Jackson believed that the bank favored the rich
  • Business leaders believed that provided a stable
    currency
  • Jackson vetoed the bill and won reelection in
    1832, defeating Henry Clay

94
Whig Party Forms
  • Henry Clay and Daniel Webster formed the Whigs,
    taken from a British political party, to oppose
    Jackson
  • Nationalists who wanted a strong federal
    government to manage the economy
  • Wanted protective tariffs, internal improvements,
    and a national bank

95
Election of 1832
  • Jackson defeats Henry Clay to be reelected
  • National Republicans (Whigs) called Jackson King
    Andrew I
  • Cartoon page 237
  • Jackson withdrew federal money from the Bank of
    the U.S. and placed it in state banks
  • Result was inflation

96
Analyze Political Cartoons King Andrew Jackson
Political Cartoons King Andrew Jackson
ANALYZE
97
Jacksons Successors
  • Martin Van Buren elected 1836 not as popular
  • Jackson put federal funds into pet banks that
    printed and lent paper money recklessly
  • Panic of 1837 Specie Circular stated that
    federal government would only take gold or silver
    for land
  • Thousands lost their jobs

98
Panic of 1839
  • Continued the depression, throwing thousands out
    of work
  • Bad times continued into the Election of 1840

99
Election of 1840
  • William Henry Harrison ran for Whigs
  • Van Buren defeated
  • Harrison died after one month and John Tyler
    becomes president

100
John Tyler
101
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