Midterm Review - Study Questions Flashcards

1
Q

Why was the Bill of Rights adopted?

A

Because the Antifederalists refused to ratify the Constitution until the basic rights of people were protected from the power of the Federal Government

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2
Q

What do we call it when one branch of government holds another accountable for overstepping their bounds?

A

Check and balances

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3
Q

What did John Locke’s call his idea that governments get their power from the people that they govern?

A

Social Contract

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4
Q

Why was Alexander Hamilton’s plan for a national bank an example of a “loose interpretation” of the Constitution?

A

The Constitution did not specifically say that Congress had the power to create a national bank - but it didn’t prohibit it from creating one either

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5
Q

How is “Judicial Review” an example of “checks and balances?”

A

The Supreme Court has the power to determine if laws passed by Congress and signed by the President are Constitutional - when it does this it’s checking to make sure they didn’t overstep their bounds.

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6
Q

Why was the Declaration of Independence written?

A

To explain to the world - and colonists who didn’t agree - what the King George III had done to deprive the colonies of their life, liberty, and pursuit of happiness. This would explain why they were declaring themselves free and independent of Britain.

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7
Q

Were the American colonists against paying taxes?

A

NO! Every colony allowed their legislature to tax them - they just didn’t want England to tax with without any representatives from the colonies to present their opinion on the matter.

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8
Q

South Carolina, North Carolina, Virginia, and Georgia are all examples of colonies from which region?

A

The South

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9
Q

New York, Maryland, Pennsylvania, and New Jersey are all examples of colonies from which region?

A

Mid-Atlantic

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10
Q

Massachusetts, Rhode Island, Vermont, and New Hampshire are all examples of colonies from which region?

A

New England

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11
Q

Why was Pennslvania founded?

A

William Penn, a Quaker, wanted to create a religiously tolerant society.

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12
Q

The Central Conflict between Hamilton and Jefferson was over what idea?

A

How to interpret the Constitution - Loosely or Strictly?

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13
Q

What is Judicial Review?

A

The Power of the Supreme Court to declare that a law is NOT Constitutional - this strikes the law down. This power was added to the Supreme Court when John Marshall was the chief justice.

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14
Q

Why did the Articles of Confederation give so much power to individual states?

A

Americans were afraid that a strong central government would end up abusing the people like England had, so they didn’t create one.

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15
Q

The Marshall Court (the court under John Marshall’s leadership) is best known for consistently doing what?

A

Strengthening the power of the Federal Government

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16
Q

How did Shay’s Rebellion demonstrate a need for a stronger central government?

A

It proved that the Central government under the Articles of Confederation wasn’t strong enough to keep its promises to its people - it couldn’t even pay veterans their pensions!

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17
Q

How did the French-Indian War lead to the American Revolution?

A

Parliament taxed the colonists without their consent to pay for the war. The protests grew louder and stronger until war became inevitable.

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18
Q

Why did James K. Polk want to go to war with Mexico over the Southwest and almost go to war with England over the Oregon Territory?

A

He had promised the country that he would complete Manifest Destiny if he were elected President

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19
Q

Why did many people migrate westward during the early 1800’s?

A

LOTS of cheap land - especially for farming - was available.

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20
Q

How did westward expansion impact democracy in America?

A

Many people could now afford land - which was a requirement for voting at the time. So many people owned land that that requirement was dropped.

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21
Q

Who won the first election after the landowning requirement for voting was dropped?

A

Andrew Jackson

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22
Q

Which regions supported the “tariff of abominations?”

A

North & West

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23
Q

How did most northerners feel about slavery during the early Antebellum period?

A

Indifferent - The abolition movement didn’t grow until after the 2nd Great Awakening

24
Q

What state believed that it was the State’s Right to nullify laws it didn’t like - like the “Tariff of Abominations”?

A

South Carolina

25
Q

The main idea behind the Monroe Doctrine was that?

A

Countries in the eastern hemishpere could no longer claim land in the western hemisphere

26
Q

What was the immediate cause of the Mexican-American War?

A

Mexican soldiers fired on American troops in a territory that both sides claimed was theirs.

27
Q

Was Texas added to the US BEFORE or AFTER the Mexican-American War?

A

Before

28
Q

Why didn’t Southerners support the “Tariff of Abominations”?

A

It would have raised the price of most of the goods they bought and wouldn’t benefit them at all.

29
Q

What did the Cherokee do to try and keep their land before Jackson forced them on the “Trail of Tears”?

A

They assimilated into white culture (changed their clothes, religion, education, etc.)

30
Q

What economic activities flourished in the North during the antebellum period?

A

Shipping, banking, industries

31
Q

What part of the Continental US was the LAST to be settled?

A

The west

32
Q

Why did the South want to go to war with Mexico?

A

If we won land from Mexico, the South assumed those lands would become slave states. When they sent representatives to Congress, they would always side with the South.

33
Q

What did the Supreme Court decide in the Dredd Scott decision?

A

That slaves were PROPERTY - not citizens (So Dredd Scott couldn’t even sue for his freedom)

34
Q

What was the intent of the Kansas-Nebraska Act?

A

To allow Kansas & Nebraska to vote to decide if they would be free or slave states

35
Q

When did the Civil War take place?

A

1861-1865

36
Q

When did Reconstruction take place?

A

1865-1877

37
Q

What event led to SC’s secession from the Union?

A

Abraham Lincoln being elected to the presidency

38
Q

What belief drove John Brown?

A

That slavery was evil and should be ended by any means necessary

39
Q

What major advantages did the Union have at the beginning of the Civil War?

A

More people, a strong navy, more railroad & telegraph cable, etc.

40
Q

What major advantages did the Confederacy have at the beginning of the Civil War?

A

Better generals, wiser use of the Railroad (at the beginning), King Cotton, etc.

41
Q

The Confederacy is another name for the?

A

South

42
Q

The Union is another name for?

A

The North

43
Q

Why was the Battle of Bull Run significant?

A

The north thought they would easily win the battle & the war. When they lost, they realized that the war would be much more difficult than they thought.

44
Q

Sherman’s March to the Sea went from ___________ to ____________

A

Atlanta to Savannah

45
Q

Which state was the first to secede from the Union?

A

South Carolina

46
Q

What were the main purposes of the Emancipation Proclamation?

A

To encourage Southern states to return to the Union, to keep England from supporting the Confederacy, to keep northern states that still had slaves from joining the South, and to allow AA’s to join the union armies

47
Q

What battle allowed the Union to control the Mississippi River?

A

Vicksburg

48
Q

What northern group was angry with Andrew Johnson for not being harsher with the South during Reconstruction?

A

The Radical Republicans

49
Q

How did the South try to hold on to their way of life during Reconstruction?

A

By passing the Black Codes, Jim Crow Laws, poll taxes, and literacy tests to keep African Americans out of southern white society

50
Q

These were some of the major issues the Progressives cared about.

A

Women’s suffrage, greater regulation of large industries, direct election of senators, and income tax

51
Q

These were some of the major issues the Populists cared about

A

Causing inflation, adding silver to the gold standard, regulating interstate commerce

52
Q

How did the government encourage the building of the transcontinental RR?

A

By granting land to RR companies for free.

53
Q

How did the transcontinental RR impact the Native Americans?

A

Killed the buffalo and brought whites west - often to claim land that had previously been used by Native Americans.

54
Q

When workers and management had conflicts, which side did the federal government usually side with in the late 1800’s?

A

Management (For example, the army was often called out to put down strikes)

55
Q

Where did most European immigrants settle when they came to the US?

A

Port cities like New York - they often stayed where they landed

56
Q

What was the attitude of the government toward unions in the late 1800’s?

A

Unfavorable. The army was often sent out to put down strikes and union leaders were often arrested.

57
Q

How did the government ensure that there would be enough industrial workers in the US?

A

By allowing more immigration whenever there was a labor shortage.