Chapter Twelve

Chapter 12: Reform and Politics in the Age of Jackson 1824-1845
Vocabulary: utopian, nullification, temperance
ID's
Revivalism
The Am. Female Reform Society
The Am. Society for the Promo. Of Temp.
The Asylum Movement
Public Schools
American Renaissance
Transcendentalism
The Amer. Anti-Slavery Society
Elijah Lovejoy
Gradualists vs. Immediatists
Lucretia Mott
The Am. Colonization Society
Black Abolitionists
William Wells Brown
The Presidential Election of 1824
President John Quincy Adams
The Presidential Election of 1828
The Jacksonian Democrats
The Spoils System
The Tariff of Abominations 1828
Exposition and Protest
The Tariff of 1832
The Force Act
The 2nd Bank of the US
Anti-masonry
Presidential Election of 1832
The Deposit Act of 1836
The Second Party System
The Presidential Election of 1836
The Pres. Election of 1840
John Tyler
Nightly Readings
Pgs. 289-294
Pgs. 294-301
Pgs 301-310
The Second Great Awakening
The Penitentiary Movement
The Anti-masonry Movement
Horace Mann
Nathaniel Hawthorne
Emerson, Thoreau
Wm. Lloyd Garrison The Liberator
The Gag Rule
Elizabeth Cady Stanton
The Declaration of Sentiments
Lane Debates & Oberlin College
Richard Allen, David Walker
Frederick Douglass
The Corrupt Bargain
Andrew Jackson
The Kitchen Cabinet
The Maysville Road Veto
The Doctrine of Nullification
The Webster-Hayne Debate
The Nullification Crisis
The Tariff of 1833
2nd Bank Rechartering Veto
The Convention System
“King Andrew “
The Specie Circular
The Whig Party
Martin Van Buren
William Henry Harrison
QUESTIONS
1. Discuss the causes and consequences of the various reform movements.
2. Discuss the forces in American society that led to the women’s movement.
3. If you had been alive in the early 1800’s, would you have supported Andrew Jackson?
What were the issues that united Democrats behind Jackson and Whigs against him?
4. Compare the “Second Party System” to the first.