Across
- 3. This was Henry Clay's plan to fulfill the dreams of Hamilton
- 5. This ideological notion placed national political import on women’s roles as wives and, perhaps more importantly, as mothers.
- 7. This was a nickname for the three most important politicians who never served as president during this period (after Hamilton's death)
- 10. Hamilton and Clay wanted to promote this revolutionary process in America, to make it independent from the bullying that comes with foreign trade
- 11. Jeffersonian Republicans believed that this ideal was better than the centralized government of the Federalists
- 12. We developed over 30,000 miles of this industrial form of transportation by 1860
- 14. This was a national highway developed to connect Maryland with Illinois
- 19. He contended that a state could not tax a federal agency (a branch of the Bank of the United States), for the power to tax was a “power to destroy.”
- 20. Clay wanted to use this type of tax to pay for the construction of canals and roads that would benefit farmers, merchants, and factory owners
- 21. This was constructed between 1817-1825 to connect Americans to the Hudson River with greater ease.
- 22. This was the most popular type of boat used on the Great Lakes
- 23. This type of road helped New York expand from 1,000 miles to 4,000 miles of road in 10 years
- 24. This was the primary industry developed during the Market Revolution - it relied on southern cotton and norther nimmigrant workers
Down
- 1. We use this term to describe the development of a middle class and a wage-earning class tied to factory production.
- 2. This was a second, and far less accepted, rationale for slavery - one that said people should be thankful for slavery
- 4. He pressured Congress to abolish the direct tax of 1798 and to repeal the Alien and Sedition Acts, which were still in operation. To emphasize his opposition to the acts, he personally pardoned the ten victims of those laws who were still in prison.
- 6. He became a leader of an anti-British group of Congressmen known as the War Hawks while a U.S. Representative and Speaker of the House from 1811 to 1814.
- 8. He championed states’ rights and slavery and was a symbol of the Old South.
- 9. These were the agrarian heroes of the Roman Republic, according to Jefferson.
- 13. The (mostly) Southern agrarian republicans shared with their (mostly) New England classic republican compatriots a belief that widely-shared land ownership is most conducive to private _____. However, they parted ways on the connection between private and public ______ as crucial to the survival of republican government.
- 15. Only three states had this type of voting at the beginning of this era
- 16. This 1790 law limited citizenship to free whites.
- 17. This was the primary type of boat used for river transport
- 18. The presidential election of 1800 provided him, the former secretary of the treasury, with a dilemma: a tie between Thomas Jefferson, a man whose principles were in direct opposition to his own, and Aaron Burr, a man Hamilton believed to have no principles at all.
