Chapter 7 Review
Chapter 7 Review You will work in teams of 3 to compete in
this game.
Each team will be given a Whiteboard!
When each question is posted, you will write either TRUE or FALSE on the whiteboard.
If your answer is correct you will get a point.
If the answer is False you will need to make it true in the following question!
GOOD LUCK!
QUESTION #1
The Rush-Bagot Agreement gave the United States fishing rights off parts of the
Newfounland and Labrador coasts. False
NOW MAKE IT TRUE!
THE RUSH-BAGOT TREATY EVENTUALLY LED THE UNITED STATES AND
CANADA TO COMPLETELY DEMILITARIZE THEIR COMMON BORDER.
QUESTION #2
The Monroe Doctrine warned European countries not to
establish colonies in the Americas. TRUE
QUESTION #3The Missouri
Compromise required that Maine enter the Union as a free state
to maintain the balance of slave and
free states in the Union.
TRUE
QUESTION #4
Some white voters benefited from the expansion of voting rights in the 1820s. TRUE
QUESTION #5
As president, Andrew Jackson rewarded
those who supported him during the campaign with
government jobs. TRUE
QUESTION #6
Northerners, with industries to protect,
were especially angered by the Tariff
of Abominations. FALS
E
NOW MAKE IT TRUE! SOUTHERNERS WERE
ESPECIALLY ANGERGED BY THE TARIFF OF ABOMINATIONS BECAUSE THEY FELT THE
NORTH WAS GETTING RICH AT THE EXPENSE OF THE SOUTH.
QUESTION #7
The nullification crisis sparked a dispute over the
right of the states to reject a federal law as unconstitutional. TRUE
QUESTION #8Andrew Jackson, who had supported federal
authority in the nullification crisis, also
felt that the federal government should have the power to
control the banking system.
FALS
E
NOW MAKE IT TRUE!
ANDREW JACKSON, WHO HAD SUPPORTED FEDERAL AUTHORITY
IN THE NULLIFICATION CRISIS, STATED THE NATIONAL CONTROL OF THE BANKING SYSTEM WOULD
HAVE AN UNFAIR ADVANTAGE OVER OTHER BANKS.
QUESTION #9
In Worcester vs. Georgia, the Cherokee Nation did not win recognition as a distinct
political community.FALS
E
NOW MAKE IT TRUE!
In Worcester vs. Georgia, the Cherokee Nation finally
won recognition as a distinct political
community.
QUESTION #10
Interchangeable parts were not important to the Industrial Revolution
because using them caused a set-back to production
and limited mass production of goods. FA
LS
E
NOW MAKE IT TRUE!
INTERCHANGEABLE PARTS WERE IMPORTANT TO THE INDUSTRIAL REVOLUTION
BECAUSE USING THEM ALLOWED FOR UNIFORM PARTS TO MAKE MASS PRODUCTION
EASIER.
Part II: Vocabulary
I will post a definition of a word on the board, with your team write down the term it
corresponds to.
If your team gets the answer right you will receive a point.
Question #1A major political party in the United States established in 1836. This party was anti-
Jackson and represented a variety of regional interests.
The Whig
Party
Question #2
A famous lawyer/Congressman of Massachusetts. Favored the federal government in debates with John C.
Calhoun and Robert Hayne.
Daniel
Webster
Question #3After the Cherokee Indians were forced to leave their lands, they traveled a 800
mile route where thousands of Cherokee
died, outlaws stole their livestock and government officials stole their money.
The Trail o
f
Tears
Question #4
The 7th President of the United States. Andrew
Jackson
Question #5
A strong feeling of pride in and devotion to one's
country
Nationalis
m
Question #6
The name of the system introduced by Henry Clay and supported by John Q. Adams, Daniel Webster and the Whig Party. The Americ
an
System
Question #7
In 1828 this raised the tariff on imported
manufactured goods. The tariff protected the North
but harmed the South.The Tariff
of
Abominations
Question #8
(1819) Spain ceded Florida to the United States and gave up its claims to the
Oregon TerritoryThe Adams-
Onis Treaty
Question #9
The 1819 Supreme Court case that established
federal supremacy over the state governments.McCullo
ch
vs.
Maryland
Question #10
(1830) A Congressional Act that authorized the removal of Native
Americans who lived east of the Mississippi River.The In
dian
Removal
Act
Question #11
Andrew Jackson's vice-president. He was a
spokesman for the South and states' rights.John C.
Calhoun
Question #12
The first President to die in office. His death created a brief Constitutional crisis,
but ultimately resolved many questions about presidential succession
William
Henry
Harrison
Question #13
An American inventor who developed the cotton gin.
Also contributed to the concept of interchangeable
parts that were exactly alike and easily assembled
or exchangedEli Whitn
ey
Question #14
Process of making large quantities of a product
quickly and cheaplyMass
Production
Question #15
First building project funded by Congress. It
made travel and transportation of goods much easier because it
was one continuous road that was in good condition.
The
National
Road
Question #161st protective tariff; helped protect American
industry from competition by raising the prices of British manufactured
goods, which were often cheaper and of higher
quality than those produced in the U.S.
The Tariff
of 1816
Question #17
Supreme Court decision that ruled that The
Constitution gave control of interstate commerce to the U.S. Congress, not the individual states through
which a route passed.Gibbons vs.
Ogden
Question #18
Secretary of State under James Monroe, he largely formulated the Monroe
Doctrine. He was the sixth president of the United
States. John Quincy
Adams
Question #19
It was decided Missouri entered as a slave state and Maine entered as a free state and all states
North of the 36th parallel were free states and all South were slave states.
The
Missouri
Compromis
e
Question #20
The practice of winning candidates’ rewarding their supporters with
government jobs!The Spoils
System
Question #20A term used by Jackson's
opponents to describe the state banks that the federal
government used for new revenue deposits in an attempt to destroy the Second Bank of the United States; the practice continued after the charter for
the Second Bank expired in 1836.
Pet Banks
Question #21
He had only been chosen to balance the Whig ticket with no expectation he would ever have
power. Many Whig Party members began calling him “His
Accidency” John Tyler