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Opening Splash

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Title: Opening Splash


1
Jeopardy!
Begin
2
Hamilton
Embargo Act of 1807
1790s Part One
1790s Part Deux
1790s Foreign Policy
Jefferson
100
100
100
100
100
100
200
200
200
200
200
200
300
300
300
300
300
300
400
400
400
400
400
400
500
500
500
500
500
500
3
Jefferson Madison
War of 1812
Monroes Administration
Potpourri
Misc.
Jefferson Yet Again
200
200
200
200
200
200
400
400
400
400
400
400
600
600
600
600
600
600
800
800
800
800
800
800
1000
1000
1000
1000
1000
1000
4
FINAL JEOPARDY
  • George Washington

5
Final Jeopardy
  • No entangling alliances was the premise of this
    speech

Final
Washington's Farewell Address
6
Jefferson- 100
  • This voyage transpired to explore the Louisiana
    Territory

C1-100
Lewis and Clark Expedition
7
Jefferson- 200
  • When Jefferson took office he repealed these anti
    Republican acts set forth by the Federalists

C1-200
Alien and Sedition Acts
8
Jefferson- 300
  • This was Jeffersons attempt to preserve an
    agricultural society by making lands available
    for future generations

C1-300
Louisiana Purchase
9
Jefferson- 400
  • This action by Jefferson hurt the military
    strength of the United States

C1-400
Reduction of the Military
10
Jefferson- 500
  • We are all Republicans, we are all Federalist
    What event did Jefferson give this famous quote

C1-500
First Inaugural Address
11
Hamilton - 100
  • The creation of this caused much conflict between
    Jefferson and Hamilton

C2-100
Bank of the United States
12
Hamilton - 200
  • Hamilton took on these from the states to further
    obligate states to the federal government

C2-200
Debts
13
Hamilton - 300
  • Hamilton believed this was a blessing and it
    would cement the union

C2-300
National Debt
14
Hamilton - 400
  • Trade with this nation was very necessary to
    Hamilton

C2-400
Great Britain
15
Hamilton - 500
  • Hamilton believe that the government should
    encourage this part of the economy because it
    would have great advantages

C2-500
Manufacturing
16
Embargo Act of 1807 - 100
  • The act forbade this from the United States

C3-100
Export of Goods
17
Embargo Act of 1807 - 200
  • Jefferson wanted these two nations to respect
    U.S. maritime rights

C3-200
Britain and France
18
Embargo Act of 1807 - 300
  • The act greatly affected this area of the nation

C3-300
New England States
19
Embargo Act of 1807 - 400
  • This act ended the Embargo Act which formally
    reopened trade with all nations except France and
    Britain

C3-400
Non Intercourse Act
20
Embargo Act of 1807 - 500
  • Jefferson justified his position based on the
    Constitution that Congress had the right to
    regulate __________ which meant it could stop
    exports

C3-500
Commerce
21
1790s Part One - 100
  • The authority of state governments included the
    power to decide whether or not an act of Congress
    was constitutional were a part of these

C4-100
Virginia and Kentucky Resolutions
22
1790s Part One - 200
  • For its continued success, Hamiltons financial
    program relied heavily on trade with this nation

C3-200
Britain
23
1790s Part One - 300
  • Funding of the national debt, imposition of a tax
    on distilled liquor, establishment of the Bank of
    the United States, and assumption of all state
    debts were part of this plan

C3-300
Hamilton's Financial Plan
24
DAILY DOUBLE
25
1790s Part One - 400
  • George Washington's administration passed this
    act as a direct result of the European war of
    1793

C3-400
Neutrality Proclamation
26
1790s Part One - 500
  • A state may repeal any federal law that it deems
    unconstitutional is known as

C3-500
Doctrine of Nullification
27
1790s Part Deux - 100
  • He established many of the presidential
    traditions, including limiting a president's
    tenure to two terms. He was against political
    parties and strove for political balance in
    government by appointing political adversaries to
    government positions.

C4-100
George Washington
28
1790s Part Deux - 200
  • In 1793 this invention increased southern
    planters reliance on slaves

C4-200
Cotton Gin
29
1790s Part Deux - 300
  • The Federalist passed these to keep the
    popularity of the Republicans down

C4-300
Alien and Sedition Acts
30
1790s Part Deux - 400
  • Opening British colonial ports in Asia,
    evacuation of northwest forts, and compensation
    for ships seized in the West Indies were part of

C4-400
Jay's Treaty
31
1790s Part Deux - 500
  • In 1794, farmers in Pennsylvania rebelled against
    Hamilton's excise tax, and several federal
    officers were killed in the riots caused by their
    attempts to serve arrest warrants on the
    offenders. In October, 1794, the army, led by
    Washington, put down the rebellion. The incident
    showed that the new government under the
    Constitution could react swiftly and effectively
    to such a problem

C4-500
Whiskey Rebellion
32
1790s Foreign Policy - 100
  • A commission had been sent to France in 1797 to
    discuss the disputes that had arisen out of the
    U.S.'s refusal to honor the Franco-American
    Treaty of 1778. Talleyrands three secret agents
    told the American delegates that they could meet
    with Talleyrand only in exchange for a very large
    bribe

C4-100
XYZ Affair
33
1790s Foreign Policy - 200
  • This warned against the dangers of political
    parties and foreign alliances.

C4-200
Washington's Farewell Address
34
1790s Foreign Policy - 300
  • He was a French statesman who came to America in
    search of monetary aid.

C4-300
Citizen Genet
35
1790s Foreign Policy - 400
  • Treaty between the U.S. and Spain which gave the
    U.S. the right to transport goods on the
    Mississippi river and to store goods in the
    Spanish port of New Orleans

C4-400
Pickney's Treaty
36
1790s Foreign Policy - 500
  • This was the right to pass through a port and
    trade goods without paying taxes. Westerners
    wanted this privilege at the port of New Orleans

C4-500
Right of Deposit
37
Jefferson Yet Again- 200
  • What river did Jefferson want control over

Mississippi
38
Jefferson Yet Again- 400
  • Jefferson want this type of economy for the
    United States

Agrarian
39
Jefferson Yet Again- 600
  • Jefferson wanted to acquire a port to provide an
    outlet for western crops so he bought this

Louisiana Purchase
40
Jefferson Yet Again- 800
  • The election of 1800 was called this because the
    party in power stepped down after losing the
    election

Revolution of 1800
41
Jefferson Yet Again- 1000
  • This group opposed the purchase of Louisiana
    because they felt Jefferson overstepped his
    Constitutional powers by making the purchase

Federalist
42
Jefferson and Madison - 200
  • The Lewis and Clark expedition made it all the
    way to this body of water

Pacific Ocean
43
Jefferson and Madison - 400
  • This act issued by Jefferson forbade American
    trading ships from leaving the U.S. It was meant
    to force Britain and France to change their
    policies towards neutral vessels by depriving
    them of American trade

Embargo of 1807
44
Jefferson and Madison - 600
  • This act allowed Americans to trade with all
    foreign nations, this act only forbade trade with
    France and Britain. It protected American
    maritime rights

Non Intercourse Act
45
Jefferson and Madison - 800
  • Forbade trade with Britain and France, but
    offered to resume trade with whichever nation
    lifted its neutral trading restrictions first.
    France quickly changed its policies against
    neutral vessels, so the U.S. resumed trade with
    France, but not Britain.

Macon's Bill No. 2
46
Jefferson and Madison - 1000
  • A Shawnee chief who, along with his brother,
    Tenskwatawa, a religious leader known as The
    Prophet, worked to unite the Northwestern Indian
    tribes. The league of tribes was defeated by an
    American army led by William Henry Harrison at
    the Battle of Tippecanoe in 1811.

Tecumseh
47
War of 1812 - 200
  • British seamen often deserted to join the
    American merchant marines. The British would
    board American vessels in order to retrieve the
    deserters, and often seized any sailor who could
    not prove that he was an American citizen and not
    British.

Impressment
48
War of 1812 - 400
  • The American ship Chesapeake refused to allow the
    British on the Leopard to board to look for
    deserters. In response, the Leopard fired on the
    Chesapeake. As a result of the incident, the U.S.
    expelled all British ships from its waters until
    Britain issued an apology

Chesapeake - Leopard Affair
49
War of 1812 - 600
  • This ended the War of 1812

Treaty of Ghent
50
War of 1812 - 800
  • They wanted to ally themselves with the British
    in the war of 1812 because they wanted to stop
    American settlers from taking their lands

Native Americans
51
War of 1812 - 1000
  • New England Federalist who opposed the Embargo
    and other trade restriction, and the War of 1812.
    They proposed some Amendments to the Constitution
    and advocated the right of states to nullify
    federal laws. They also discussed the idea of
    seceding from the U.S. if their desires were
    ignored.

Hartford Convention
52
Monroes Administration - 200
  • After the War of 1812 this surged all over
    America well into Monroes administration

Nationalism
53
DAILY DOUBLE
54
Monroes Administration - 400
  • With the help of Andrew Jacksons military
    victories, Monroe purchased this land from Spain

Florida
55
Monroes Administration - 600
  • This established the boundary between the United
    States and Canada

The Convention of 1818
56
Monroes Administration - 800
  • This was the first depression in the United States

Panic of 1819
57
Monroes Administration - 1000
  • This treaty between the U.S. and Great Britain
    (which controlled Canada) provided for the mutual
    disarmament of the Great Lakes. This was later
    expanded into an unarmed Canada/U.S. border.

Rush-Bagot Agreement
58
Potpourri - 200
  • In this battle after the War of 1812 ended,
    Andrew Jackson led the United States to an
    overwhelming victory

Battle of New Orleans
59
Potpourri - 400
  • The debate over the ______________ was
    significant because it raised the issue of how
    strictly the Constitution should be interpreted

Bank of the United States
60
Potpourri - 600
  • Establish the State Department, pass a tariff for
    the purpose of raising revenue, draft a bill of
    rights and send it to all the states for
    ratification, and organize a federal court system
    under the Supreme Court were the actions of

The First Congress
61
Potpourri - 800
  • These were the beginning of the decline of the
    Federalists

Alien and Sedition Acts
62
Potpourri - 1000
  • In the 1790s this characterized the philosophy of
    the Federalists towards the Constitution

Loose or Broad Construction
63
Misc.- 200
  • This Supreme Court case established the
    principle of judicial review

Marbury v. Madison
64
Misc. - 400
  • This provided that Missouri be admitted as a
    slave state, Maine be admitted as a free state,
    and all of the Louisiana Territory north of
    36?30 be closed to slavery.

Missouri Compromise
65
Misc. - 600
  • This stated the rest of the world should stay out
    of the western hemisphere

Monroe Doctrine
66
Misc. - 800
  • This Chief Justice of the Supreme Court
    established the principle of judicial review

John Marshall
67
DAILY DOUBLE
68
Misc. - 1000
  • Records of shipbuilding activity in a New England
    state from 1805-1810 would be useful in analyzing
    the effects of this major event in the U.S.
    economy

Embargo of 1807
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