A.
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A conflict in which President James Madison, dissatisfied with President Thomas Jefferson’s economic methods, attempted to use the American navy to stop Great Britain from waylaying American merchant ships and from impressing American sailors into the British navy.
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B.
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An uprising in which a slave population, spurred by the language of freedom espoused by the Americans and the French during their wars, achieved liberty through the use of arms. Their victory inspired the hopes for freedom among slaves in the United States.
C. The two increasingly coherent political parties that appeared in Congress.
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D.
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A law that banned American vessels sailing for foreign ports. Although designed to create a trade war with Great Britain and to increase trade among the colonies, the law revived memories of the Intolerable Acts of 1774, with the navy sealing off ports and seizing goods without warrants and the army arresting accused smugglers.
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E.
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An uprising that broke out when backcountry Pennsylvania farmers sought to block collection of a new tax on distilled spirits. The dissidents invoked the symbols of the Revolutionary War and took up arms against the federal government. President Washington dispatched 13,000 militiamen and led them part of the way to the scene of the disturbances.
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F.
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A military battle fought after the U.S. and Great Britain had signed the Treaty of Ghent, a pact that ended the war with the status quo: no territory exchanged hands, nor did any provisions relate to impressment or neutral shipping rights.
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G.
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The author of “On the Equality of the Sexes,” which argued that women had as much right as men to exercise all their talents and should be allowed equal educational opportunities to enable them to do so. Women’s apparent mental inferiority to men, the author insisted, simply reflected the fact that they had been denied “the opportunity of acquiring knowledge.”
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H.
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A court decision in which the Supreme Court had assumed the right to determine whether an act of Congress violates the Constitution—a power known as “judicial review.” This right was later extended to state laws.
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I. The British navy’s practice of kidnapping sailors, including American citizens of British origin, and forcing them to serve in the British navy.
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J. an excursion by military individuals and intended to establish trading relations with western Native Americans and to locate a water route to the Pacific Ocean. The participants returned having succeeded in the first and have failed in the second, but also with an immense amount of information about the region as well as numerous plant and animal specimens.
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K.
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A scandal in which French officials presented American diplomats with a demand for bribes before negotiations could proceed.
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L.
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A conflict that ended the federal government’s practice of paying hundreds of thousands of dollars in ransom and agreeing to paying annual sums to purchase peace. Instead, by using the expanded navy that Adams had criticized, Jefferson was able to set the path toward guaranteeing the freedom of American commerce in the Mediterranean Sea.
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M.
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Legal opinions on the state level that attacked the Sedition Act as an unconstitutional violation of the First Amendment. The opinions called on the federal courts to protect free speech. Many, though, were horrified by the idea of state action that might endanger the Union.
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N.An agreement that was supposed to gain British concessions on impressment or the rights of American shipping, but that instead canceled the American-French alliance and recognized British economic and naval supremacy as unavoidable facts of life.
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O.
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Members of the Shawnee tribe. One was a chief who had refused to sign the Treaty of Greenville and the other was a religious prophet who called for complete separation from whites, the revival of traditional Indian culture, and resistance to federal policies. While the two attempted to revive a pan-Indian alliance, the American military wiped out their followers in the Battle of Tippecanoe.
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P.
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The acquisition by President Thomas Jefferson of a territory of land that stretched from the Gulf of Mexico to Canada and from the Mississippi River to the Rocky Mountains. To take advantage of this opportunity, Jefferson had to abandon his conviction that the federal government was limited to powers specifically mentioned in the Constitution, since the document said nothing about buying territory from a foreign power.
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Q.
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The peaceful transition of control of the government from the Federalist party to the Democratic Republican party.
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R.
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A financial establishment proposed by Alexander Hamilton and that would serve as the nation’s main financial agent. This proposal would benefit the manufacturing northern states by increasing financial and trade connections with European nations. The southern states opposed the idea as they believed that the U.S.’s future lay in westward and agricultural expansion.
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S.
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law passed by Congress for the purpose of silencing critics of the Federalist government. The law authorized the prosecution of virtually any public assembly or publication that was critical of the government. It also extended the period of time that it took for immigrants to acquire American citizenship. These laws thrust freedom of expression to the center of discussions of American liberty.
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T.
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A meeting of the Federalist part in which the participants called for amending the Constitution to eliminate the three-fifths clause that strengthened southern political power, and to require a two-thirds vote of Congress for the admission of new states, declaring war, and laws restricting trade—all of which were aimed at actions by Democratic Republican presidents Jefferson and Madison. The Federalists could not free themselves from the charge of lacking patriotism. Within a few years, their party no longer existed.
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U.
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An American military victory in which U.S. forces repulsed a British assault on Baltimore.
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V.
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American supporters of the French Revolution and critics of the Washington administration. These individuals toasted French and American liberty. Federalists saw these groups as another example of how liberty was getting out of hand.
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W.
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An uprising in which a slave population, spurred by the language of freedom espoused by the Americans and the French during their wars, attempted to achieve liberty through the use of arms. The participants had hoped to force abolition of all slaves. However, the legislature tightened controls over the African American population.
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