chapter 7 nationalism and sectionalism page 228. industry and transportation section 1 all major...

47
Chapter 7 Nationalism and Sectionalism Page 228

Upload: suzan-hodges

Post on 12-Jan-2016

221 views

Category:

Documents


0 download

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: Chapter 7 Nationalism and Sectionalism Page 228. Industry and Transportation Section 1 All major cities and towns spring up on coast or by rivers U.S

Chapter 7Nationalism and Sectionalism

Page 228

Page 2: Chapter 7 Nationalism and Sectionalism Page 228. Industry and Transportation Section 1 All major cities and towns spring up on coast or by rivers U.S

Industry and TransportationSection 1

• All major cities and towns spring up on coast or by rivers

• U.S. needed to improve overland transportation- National Road Built- Turnpikes- roads that required a toll

Page 3: Chapter 7 Nationalism and Sectionalism Page 228. Industry and Transportation Section 1 All major cities and towns spring up on coast or by rivers U.S

Steamships

• American Robert Fulton- designed and operated Clermont- first steamship

• Burned wood or coal• Could go upriver much easier- ex.– New Orleans- 4 months to 20 days to 6– Unlocked potential of Mississippi– Also helped cross ocean

Page 4: Chapter 7 Nationalism and Sectionalism Page 228. Industry and Transportation Section 1 All major cities and towns spring up on coast or by rivers U.S

Canals

• By 1840, 3,300 miles of Canals built

• Erie Canal- competed in 1825, rand 363 miles from lake Erie to Hudson River

• $100 dollars in shipping now $4• Made New York a shipping center• Pop. Skyrocketed

Page 5: Chapter 7 Nationalism and Sectionalism Page 228. Industry and Transportation Section 1 All major cities and towns spring up on coast or by rivers U.S

Railroads

• Became more practical than Canals• 1830- 13 miles• 1860- 31,000 miles• Revolutionized transportation

• Overall- country being united by transportation

Page 6: Chapter 7 Nationalism and Sectionalism Page 228. Industry and Transportation Section 1 All major cities and towns spring up on coast or by rivers U.S

Industrial Revolution

• IR started in GB- powered mills with water, machines now doing the work

• Tried to protect secrets of first industrial machines

• Samuel Slater- brought textile technology to U.S.

• Revolution began- first factory- Pawtucket Rhode Island

• Francis Lowell- also stole secrets- started factories and Lowell girls

Page 7: Chapter 7 Nationalism and Sectionalism Page 228. Industry and Transportation Section 1 All major cities and towns spring up on coast or by rivers U.S

Changes

• Speed up production• Change lives of workers– 1,2,3

• Interchangeable parts- identical parts for a product. Benefits? Eli Whitney?

• Samuel F.B. Morse- invented Morse code- way of communicating over telegraph lines

• However, Agriculture remained strong in U.S. But, becoming more productive

Page 8: Chapter 7 Nationalism and Sectionalism Page 228. Industry and Transportation Section 1 All major cities and towns spring up on coast or by rivers U.S

Sectional DifferencesSection 2

• A: Northern Industry• Industrialization spread in the North for

several reasons– Wars cut off goods– Tariff of 1816– Available Capital– Cheap labor force– Rivers to power factories

Page 9: Chapter 7 Nationalism and Sectionalism Page 228. Industry and Transportation Section 1 All major cities and towns spring up on coast or by rivers U.S

B. Social Change

• Many workers formed labor unions to fight for better conditions

• 1834- Lowell Girls went on strike• However- most strikes failed– Courts backed businesses– Workers hired replacement workers

• A Middle class would emerge in Industrial society– Who were they? Where did they live?

Page 10: Chapter 7 Nationalism and Sectionalism Page 228. Industry and Transportation Section 1 All major cities and towns spring up on coast or by rivers U.S

C. Immigration

• Prior to 1840- most immigrants from North West Europe, protestant- English, French, Scotts

• 1830’s 600,000 arrive• 1840’s 1,500,000• 1850’s 2,800,000• However, new immigrants- Ireland, Germany,

poor, catholic or Jewish

Page 11: Chapter 7 Nationalism and Sectionalism Page 228. Industry and Transportation Section 1 All major cities and towns spring up on coast or by rivers U.S

C. Immigration

• Irish Potato Famine- mold disease keeps potatoes from growing

• Potato food of poor Irish• Million die, millions leave- come to U.S.• By 1840 -40% of New York immigrants• Nativists- called for an end to immigration- did

not like catholic or jews • Took jobs because they would work for less

Page 12: Chapter 7 Nationalism and Sectionalism Page 228. Industry and Transportation Section 1 All major cities and towns spring up on coast or by rivers U.S

D. Southern Agriculture

• Southern climate and soil more favorable to agriculture

• Eli Whitney- invented cotton gin- made slavery a must in South

• King Cotton- southern ag relied on cotton- however, required much labor

• Southern economy vulnerable to cotton prices• Cotton and slavery spread to new southern

states

Page 13: Chapter 7 Nationalism and Sectionalism Page 228. Industry and Transportation Section 1 All major cities and towns spring up on coast or by rivers U.S

• Industry does not develop in south• More profitable to plant cotton• Population spread out, no labor force available• Slaves don’t get paid, therefore they don’t buy

goods• South hated tariffs- made goods more

expensive

Page 14: Chapter 7 Nationalism and Sectionalism Page 228. Industry and Transportation Section 1 All major cities and towns spring up on coast or by rivers U.S

Racism

• Most southerners did not own more than 4-5 slaves if that

• Wealthy plantations made up little of population

• Why did so many poor white southerners support slavery?????

• Slave retribution• Racial superiority

Page 15: Chapter 7 Nationalism and Sectionalism Page 228. Industry and Transportation Section 1 All major cities and towns spring up on coast or by rivers U.S

The Era of NationalismSection 3

• Sectional differences would begin to cause problems in the U.S.

• Leaders would try to develop a sense of nationalism to prevent country from splitting up

• Nationalism- • Prez- Thomas Jefferson, James Madison,

James Monroe- almost no opposition • Era of good feelings?

Page 16: Chapter 7 Nationalism and Sectionalism Page 228. Industry and Transportation Section 1 All major cities and towns spring up on coast or by rivers U.S

A; American System

• This system called for the U.S. to rely less on foreign goods and more on American industry

• Henry Clay proponent of this system• Believed – National bank make financial system stronger,

must renew– Improve transportation to bolster industry– Raise tariffs – Self sufficiency

Page 17: Chapter 7 Nationalism and Sectionalism Page 228. Industry and Transportation Section 1 All major cities and towns spring up on coast or by rivers U.S

B; Marshall and Supreme court

• Marbury V. Madison• Darmouth College V. Woodward• McCullock V. Maryland• Gibbons v. Ogden

Page 18: Chapter 7 Nationalism and Sectionalism Page 228. Industry and Transportation Section 1 All major cities and towns spring up on coast or by rivers U.S

C: Economics

• Economy experiences booms and busts• Business expands during booms– Firms borrow money to expand– Over production leads to

• Busts: Companies over produce– Cut back production

• Panics: 1819, 1837, 1857

Page 19: Chapter 7 Nationalism and Sectionalism Page 228. Industry and Transportation Section 1 All major cities and towns spring up on coast or by rivers U.S

D: Culture

• Developing art and literature based on Americanism and nationalistic spirit

• Ex. First Professional American author- James Fenimore Cooper- wrote Leatherstocking tales

• Washington Irving was first “American Author” – Rip Van Winkle and Legend of Sleepy Hollow

Page 20: Chapter 7 Nationalism and Sectionalism Page 228. Industry and Transportation Section 1 All major cities and towns spring up on coast or by rivers U.S

E; Foreign Policy• Spain, because of foreign wars and internal

weaknesses was unable to hold on to their empire in the Americas

• Simon Bolivar and Jose de San Martin helped unite the people and defeat Spain in 1824

• All of Spanish South America became independent

Page 21: Chapter 7 Nationalism and Sectionalism Page 228. Industry and Transportation Section 1 All major cities and towns spring up on coast or by rivers U.S

Florida

• U.S. at War with Seminole Indians in Florida- owned by Spain

• Andrew Jackson invaded Florida to defeat the Seminoles

• Spain, rather than lose Florida to conquest, signed Adams-Otis treaty in 1819 selling Florida to the U.S. if the U.S. stopped insisting Texas part of Louisiana Purchase

Page 22: Chapter 7 Nationalism and Sectionalism Page 228. Industry and Transportation Section 1 All major cities and towns spring up on coast or by rivers U.S

F: Monroe Doctrine

• After defeat of Napoleon, Spain wants its American Empire back

• President Monroe didn’t want rivals in the Americas

• Monroe Doctrine- 1823- U.S. told European powers to stay out of the Americas

• How could we possibly enforce it

Page 23: Chapter 7 Nationalism and Sectionalism Page 228. Industry and Transportation Section 1 All major cities and towns spring up on coast or by rivers U.S

F: Compromise• Missouri seeks statehood in 1819• Would ruin balance between slave and free– At the time it was equal

• Henry Clay comes up with compromise• Missouri Compromise– Missouri enters a slave state– Maine-part of Massachusetts becomes free state– Boundary of slavery set at 36 degrees 30’ N• North free, south slave

– Solved crisis- for now

Page 24: Chapter 7 Nationalism and Sectionalism Page 228. Industry and Transportation Section 1 All major cities and towns spring up on coast or by rivers U.S

Section 4The Age of Jackson

page379

Page 25: Chapter 7 Nationalism and Sectionalism Page 228. Industry and Transportation Section 1 All major cities and towns spring up on coast or by rivers U.S

Growing differences

• The Era of Good Feelings was coming to an end

• North- Relied on manufacturing and trade• South- Agricultural economy and slavery

• Sectionalism- loyalty to local interest in one’s part of the country

Page 26: Chapter 7 Nationalism and Sectionalism Page 228. Industry and Transportation Section 1 All major cities and towns spring up on coast or by rivers U.S

Election of 1824• 4 candidates– John Quincy Adams- North– William Crawford- South– Andrew Jackson- West– Henry Clay- West

• Jackson gets most electoral votes, but not majority

• Congress votes on top three• Henry Clay, out of running, supports Adams• Adams becomes Prez and makes Clay

Secretary of State- Jackson was furious

Page 27: Chapter 7 Nationalism and Sectionalism Page 228. Industry and Transportation Section 1 All major cities and towns spring up on coast or by rivers U.S

Election of 1828

• Jackson takes on Adams• This time wins in a landslide• Had the support of ordinary Americans • Jacksonian democracy- new spirit of

democracy were average voter mattered• Democracy expands as property requirement

for voting is eliminated

Page 28: Chapter 7 Nationalism and Sectionalism Page 228. Industry and Transportation Section 1 All major cities and towns spring up on coast or by rivers U.S

Jackson Takes Office

• Whitehouse was flooded on Jackson’s inauguration day by thousands of supporters

• Jackson fired many government officials and replaced them with his political supporters

• Became known as the spoils system- to the victor go the spoils

Page 29: Chapter 7 Nationalism and Sectionalism Page 228. Industry and Transportation Section 1 All major cities and towns spring up on coast or by rivers U.S

Jackson’s Indian Policy

• U.S. demand for more land would push the Natives West

• A. Cherokee Nation– U.S. policy- encourage the Natives to move west– 1817- Jackson offered Cherokee option of moving

west or settling on 640 acres of land– To everybody’s surprise, they chose to settle

Page 30: Chapter 7 Nationalism and Sectionalism Page 228. Industry and Transportation Section 1 All major cities and towns spring up on coast or by rivers U.S

Cherokee Adapt

• Cherokee did their best to make themselves “White”

• Sequoya- Cherokee must read and write- invented Cherokee alphabet

• Had own newspapers, and translated Bible• Adopted constitution based on U.S.• Owned slaves• However, no matter what they did, still would

not be accepted by whites

Page 31: Chapter 7 Nationalism and Sectionalism Page 228. Industry and Transportation Section 1 All major cities and towns spring up on coast or by rivers U.S

Indian Removal Act

• Congressed passed in 1830• Required all Natives to move West of the

Mississippi• The law was harsh, arrogant, racist, and

inevitable

Page 32: Chapter 7 Nationalism and Sectionalism Page 228. Industry and Transportation Section 1 All major cities and towns spring up on coast or by rivers U.S

Resistance

• Cherokee sue in the Supreme court for right to stay – And they WIN

• However, Jackson said, “now let the Supreme Court enforce it.” He moves Indians anyway

Page 33: Chapter 7 Nationalism and Sectionalism Page 228. Industry and Transportation Section 1 All major cities and towns spring up on coast or by rivers U.S

Black Hawk War

• Black Hawk War- Sauk Chief Black Hawk tries to return from Iowa- defeated by U.S. Army

Page 34: Chapter 7 Nationalism and Sectionalism Page 228. Industry and Transportation Section 1 All major cities and towns spring up on coast or by rivers U.S

Seminoles

• Seminoles refuse to leave Florida• Fight till the “last drop of Seminole blood has

moistened the earth”• Leader Osceola is captured after a flag of truce

is displayed by U.S. forces• Dies in prison• Seminoles fought for seven years. Almost

completely wiped out

Page 35: Chapter 7 Nationalism and Sectionalism Page 228. Industry and Transportation Section 1 All major cities and towns spring up on coast or by rivers U.S

Trail of Tears

• 1838 some Cherokee still in Southeast• Jackson orders them out• U.S. army moves 15,000 Cherokee in the dead

of winter• ¼ of that group would die on way to Indian

territory• Called the Trail of Tears • https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yUILURVoPhw

Page 36: Chapter 7 Nationalism and Sectionalism Page 228. Industry and Transportation Section 1 All major cities and towns spring up on coast or by rivers U.S

Section 5Constitutional Disputes and Crises

• Every part of the country seemed to want something different as conflict between North and South deepened

Page 37: Chapter 7 Nationalism and Sectionalism Page 228. Industry and Transportation Section 1 All major cities and towns spring up on coast or by rivers U.S

North

• Depended on good, cheap transportation, trade, and cheap labor– Wanted gov’t to improve transportation– High tariffs to protect American goods– High prices of western land so workers stayed in

east

Page 38: Chapter 7 Nationalism and Sectionalism Page 228. Industry and Transportation Section 1 All major cities and towns spring up on coast or by rivers U.S

South

• Relied on Agriculture and trade with foreign nations

• Wanted– Low tariffs- get rid of tariff of abomination – Didn’t want to spend federal money on anything

so opposed construction of roads– Supported States rights- states had right to decide

if it would remain in union or not, or follow federal laws or not

• John C. Calhoun of SC- Jackson’s VP- strong supporter of southern agenda

Page 39: Chapter 7 Nationalism and Sectionalism Page 228. Industry and Transportation Section 1 All major cities and towns spring up on coast or by rivers U.S

West

• Needed people and development to grow• Wanted– Cheap land– Lots of new roads– Encourage settlement

Page 40: Chapter 7 Nationalism and Sectionalism Page 228. Industry and Transportation Section 1 All major cities and towns spring up on coast or by rivers U.S

Doctrine of Nullification

• John C. Calhoun- believed the states had the right to declare a law null and void

• Basically decide if they had to follow federal laws or not

• Jackson and Daniel Webster opposed- Union is more important- states couldn’t just decided to leave

• South Carolina threatened to leave union- secede

• Jackson threatened to send in military• Issued solved when they lowered the tariff

Page 41: Chapter 7 Nationalism and Sectionalism Page 228. Industry and Transportation Section 1 All major cities and towns spring up on coast or by rivers U.S

Daniel Webster

• From Massachusetts and proponent of nationalism

• “Liberty and Union now and forever, one and inseparable”

• This is a nation, not collection of States

Page 42: Chapter 7 Nationalism and Sectionalism Page 228. Industry and Transportation Section 1 All major cities and towns spring up on coast or by rivers U.S

Jackson kills the National Bank

• Jackson hated the National Bank• Gave too much power to bankers and big

businessmen • Ordered all money out of Federal Banks and

put them into pet banks• Jackson’s veto’s the banks renewal killing the

national bank

Page 43: Chapter 7 Nationalism and Sectionalism Page 228. Industry and Transportation Section 1 All major cities and towns spring up on coast or by rivers U.S

New Political Parties

• Jackson is considered the founder of the Democratic Party

• Stressed connection with common people• Against strong federal gov’t• Wanted low tariffs and endorsed states rights• Support in the South and West

Page 44: Chapter 7 Nationalism and Sectionalism Page 228. Industry and Transportation Section 1 All major cities and towns spring up on coast or by rivers U.S

Whigs

• When emerge to oppose the Democrats• Supported mostly in the North and Northeast• Wanted High Tariffs• Wanted Strong National Gov’t

Page 45: Chapter 7 Nationalism and Sectionalism Page 228. Industry and Transportation Section 1 All major cities and towns spring up on coast or by rivers U.S

Prosperity and Panic

• Andrew Jackson leaves presidency at age 70• Martin Van Buren becomes the next president

in 1836• Jackson’s popularity gets Van Buren elected• Jackson’s only two regrets- not shooting Henry

Clay and hanging John C. Calhoun

Page 46: Chapter 7 Nationalism and Sectionalism Page 228. Industry and Transportation Section 1 All major cities and towns spring up on coast or by rivers U.S

Prosperity turns to Panic

• People had money to spend on luxury goods in early 1830’s

• However, Panic of 1837 strikes. Caused by a loss in faith in paper money

• People exchange paper for gold and silver• Banks fail• Depression hits- 90% of businesses fail

Page 47: Chapter 7 Nationalism and Sectionalism Page 228. Industry and Transportation Section 1 All major cities and towns spring up on coast or by rivers U.S

Election of 1840

• Van Buren does nothing to fix the economy and ease the suffering

• Whigs pick William Henry Harrison to run for prez- hero of Tippecanoe

• John Tyler VP- Tippecanoe and Tyler too• Harrison wins, but in the first month of being

prez he dies • Tyler becomes prez