Southern planters generally opposed tariffs for all of the following reasons EXCEPT
They believed tariffs would prevent westward expansion.
The election of 1824 became controversial for all of the following reasons EXCEPT
It was clear Adams and Clay had abused the system.
One of the easiest ways to mobilize new voters during this period was for politicians to arouse their anger towards
Rhe monied aristocracy.
The map of the population trend in westward expansion shows that in 1830
The central areas of Ohio, Kentucky, and Tennessee had populations comparable to the East.
The tendency to reform society in Jacksonian America can be seen in all of the following cultural productions EXCEPT
The biography of Washington by Parson Weems.
The individual who best appealed to the new democratic spirit of the age was
Andrew Jackson
Of the following politicians, the man who became known as the great advocate for the West was
Henry Clay.
The correct chronological order of the following events is
Dartmouth College v. Woodward, Indian Removal Act, Nullification Crisis, Specie Circular.
The Whig Party and a second two-party system developed
In opposition to Jackson's acts based on claims of greater presidential power.
The Second Bank of the United States became a divisive political issue because
Jackson portrayed the Bank as the enemy of the people and a tool of the elite.
The removal of the Indians to west of the Mississippi
Revealed how harsh majority rule could be.
Southerners were particularly angry about the Tariff of Abominations in 1828 because
It was used as a means of gaining support for Jackson in the presidential race.
The Eaton Affair
Showed how Jackson treated disagreements as personal attacks.
The Panic of 1837
Was partly the result of Jackson killing the Second Bank of the United States and then issuing the Specie Circular.
In cases such as Gibbons v. Ogden, the Marshall Court
Used the principle that the forces of supply and demand should determine outcomes.
In the election of 1828,
The Democrats won by gaining support in the North, South, and West.
The presidential candidates in 1824 included all of the following EXCEPT
Andrew Johnson.
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