UNIT 4 APUSH VOCAB
54-40’ or Fight!, Battle of the Alamo, Aaron Burr, Cherokee Nation v. Georgia, American System, Election of 1824, American Antislavery Society, Embargo Act, “Boom and bust,” Lewis & Clark Expedition, American Colonization Society, Force Bill, “Corrupt bargain,” Nat Turner’s Rebellion, Andrew Jackson, Hartford Convention, Cult of domesticity, Nullification Crisis, Charles Finney, Indian Removal Act, Era of Good Feelings, Panic of 1819, David Walker, Louisiana Purchase, Gag rule, Panic of 1837, Democrat Party, Marbury v. Madison, Impressment, Seneca Falls Convention, Democratic-Republican Party, McCulloch v. Maryland, Jacksonian Democracy, Seminole Wars, Dorothea Dix, Missouri Compromise, Judicial review, Trail of Tears, Eli Whitney, Non-Intercourse Act, Labor unions, War of 1812, Federalist Party, Oregon Treaty, Manifest Destiny, Frederick Douglass, Second Bank of the United States, Monroe Doctrine, Freedmen, Specie Circular, “Pet” banks, Harriet Tubman, Tariff of 1828 (Tariff of Abominations), Revivalism, Henry Clay, Worcester v. Georgia, Second Great Awakening, Henry David Thoreau, Spoils system, Horace Mann, States’ rights, Hudson River School, Temperance, James K. Polk, Places, Transcendentalism, John C. Calhoun, Brook Farm, Underground Railroad, John Marshall, Erie Canal, Universal male suffrage, John Quincy Adams, Lowell, Massachusetts, Utopian communities, John Tyler, National Road, Nationalism, Martin Van Buren, Oregon Territory, Sectionalism, Mormons, Republic of Texas, Ralph Waldo Emerson, Samuel Slater, Shakers, Sojourner Truth, Tecumseh, War Hawks, Whig Party, William Henry Harrison, William Lloyd Garrison, Nat Turner.
54-40’ or Fight!, Battle of the Alamo, Aaron Burr, Cherokee Nation v. Georgia, American System, Election of 1824, American Antislavery Society, Embargo Act, “Boom and bust,” Lewis & Clark Expedition, American Colonization Society, Force Bill, “Corrupt bargain,” Nat Turner’s Rebellion, Andrew Jackson, Hartford Convention, Cult of domesticity, Nullification Crisis, Charles Finney, Indian Removal Act, Era of Good Feelings, Panic of 1819, David Walker, Louisiana Purchase, Gag rule, Panic of 1837, Democrat Party, Marbury v. Madison, Impressment, Seneca Falls Convention, Democratic-Republican Party, McCulloch v. Maryland, Jacksonian Democracy, Seminole Wars, Dorothea Dix, Missouri Compromise, Judicial review, Trail of Tears, Eli Whitney, Non-Intercourse Act, Labor unions, War of 1812, Federalist Party, Oregon Treaty, Manifest Destiny, Frederick Douglass, Second Bank of the United States, Monroe Doctrine, Freedmen, Specie Circular, “Pet” banks, Harriet Tubman, Tariff of 1828 (Tariff of Abominations), Revivalism, Henry Clay, Worcester v. Georgia, Second Great Awakening, Henry David Thoreau, Spoils system, Horace Mann, States’ rights, Hudson River School, Temperance, James K. Polk, Places, Transcendentalism, John C. Calhoun, Brook Farm, Underground Railroad, John Marshall, Erie Canal, Universal male suffrage, John Quincy Adams, Lowell, Massachusetts, Utopian communities, John Tyler, National Road, Nationalism, Martin Van Buren, Oregon Territory, Sectionalism, Mormons, Republic of Texas, Ralph Waldo Emerson, Samuel Slater, Shakers, Sojourner Truth, Tecumseh, War Hawks, Whig Party, William Henry Harrison, William Lloyd Garrison, Nat Turner.