Presidents of the United States

Similar documents
U.S. TAKS Review. 11th

Washington, Jefferson, Madison, Monroe, Jackson, and Polk Presidencies

U.S. History Final Exam - Review Guide Semester 1

Museum of World Treasures

Imperialism by the US

Review. Geographic Change Essay. Essay Blocking. Possible Thematic Essays 6/7/2013

7 th Grade Review Sheet for Final Exam.1) What you need to know: What is History? Why do people study history?

Essential Question: & Latin America? Clicker Review. What role did the United States play as an imperial power in Asia. CPWH Agenda for Unit 10.

The Role of Politics in Sectionalism

The United States Lesson 2: History of the United States

What four men ran for president and what parts of the country did they represent?

BECOMING A WORLD POWER

The First Five Presidents. Domestic and Foreign Policy

Sectionalism The Mexican American War and the Kansas Nebraska Act. APUSH Period 5 Notes

EOC Test Preparation: Expansion and the Antebellum Period

COMPREHENSION AND CRITICAL THINKING

U. S. History Mini-Mester. Chronology. Chapter Financial Panic and Depression. Dred Scott decision Lincoln-Douglas debates

U. S. History Mini-Mester Chronology

Review. Declaration of Independence

Writing Prompts US History

Unit 6: A New Role in the World

Binder Page Name Period Andrew Jackson and the Growth of American Democracy

Age of Jackson. 7 pages

Letter from President Fillmore asking Japan. American ships to stop for supplies safety reasons

Expansion, Nationalism,& Sectionalism ( )

United States History and Government

Early to Mid 1800's Practice Quiz

The Americans (Survey)

Nuts and Bolts of Civil War/Reconstruction Unit

Jacksonian Democracy

Grade Eight: US History Semester Two REVIEW PACKET. Student Final Exam Study Sheet

US History Module 1 (A) Lesson 3. A New Nation

Academic Calendar: (In alignment with Civics Content Expectations)

Chapter 16 - Reconstruction

REVIEW FOR CHAPTERS 15, 16, AND 17 TEST

The Americans (Reconstruction to the 21st Century)

Unit 4: { Politics Economics Society

JEFFERSONIAN DEMOCRACY ( ) ELECTION OF 1800 ELECTION OF 1800 JEFFERSON S PHILOSOPHY EXAMPLE POLICIES A NATION OF FARMERS

Reconstruction s Presidents

Unit 4 Graphic Organizer

The term Era of Good Feelings refers to the period of American history when there seemed to be political harmony during the Monroe administration.

Grade 8 Plainwell Social Studies Curriculum Map

19 th Amendment. 16 th Amendment 17 th Amendment 18 TH Amendment established direct election of United States Senators by popular vote

Imperialism. U.S. Foreign Policy. U.S. Foreign Policy 10/30/13. Chapter 10. Monroe Doctrine. Many Spanish colonies revolting

Industrial Revolution

Describe why the election of 1824 was called a Corrupt Bargain by Jackson supporters. Explain one way in which voting rights were expanded.

Chapter 17 - Reconstruction

US History Georgia Standards of Excellence. by Semester/Unit. US History (Fall Semester)

David Miller American History Curriculum Map & Pacing Guide

US Survey Course. Introduction. Essential Questions

Chapter 10. The Triumph of White Men s Democracy APUSH, Mr. Muller

Key Concept 4.3, I: The US needed a foreign policy and an expansion policy

Name: 8 th Grade U.S. History. STAAR Review. Early Republic

Presidents of the United States

Chapter 7 Quiz. 1. The stalemate over the assumption of state debts was broken when

Level 2. Manifest Destiny and the Acquisition of Land

Transformations Around the Globe. Ch

What were the Reconstruction goals of the Radical Republicans? (p.425-6) What organization helped increase literacy rates by 20%? (p.

American History I Can Statements

History 11-U.S. Colonial History Final Study Guide-Chronology. Hopi and Zuni tribes establish towns Columbus first voyage to New World 1492

Issues that Challenged Old Hickory

Unit 3 Test Review (Study Guide) 1) Who were some of the important figures in George Washington's administration?

Army Heritage Center Foundation. PO Box 839, Carlisle, PA ;

CHAPTER 4: FEDERALISM. Section 1: Dividing Government Power Section 2: American Federalism: Conflict and Change Section 3: Federalism Today

SAS Pacing Guide (Sept June 2018 ) Subject:Social Studies Student Target Outcomes and Goals

UNIT II: Civil War and Reconstruction Notes page 3. PART II: RECONSTRUCTION 6. When was and what was Reconstruction?

Why did competing political parties develop during the 1790s?

DIOCESE OF HARRISBURG SOCIAL STUDIES CURRICULUM GRADE 7/8 United States History: Westward Expansion to Present Day

Bush, Clinton, Bush, & Obama Administrations

The United States Expands West. 1820s 1860s

STAAR BLITZ: IMPERIALISM, SPANISH-AMERICAN WAR, WWI APRIL 22, 2015

1. How did the colonists protest British taxes? Pg They boycotted, petitioned the English government, and signed nonimportation

Issues Facing the New Government

Progressive Era, Imperialism, and World War 1

Answers to Review Timeline

Unit 11 Part 1-Spanish American War

Empire and Expansion. Chapter 27

SSUSH8 Explore the relationship

FB/CCU U.S. HISTORY COURSE DESCRIPTION / LEARNING OBJECTIVES

The Collapse of Reconstruction. The Americans, Chapter 12.3, Pages

Washington s Presidency

MANIFEST DESTINY WESTWARD EXPANSION

WARM UP: Today s Topics What were the major turning points. in WW2? How did the Allies compromise with one another?

American Foreign Policy, : The Good, the Bad, & the Ugly.

Name: Review Quiz Which heading best completes the partial outline below?

Henry Clay met with Adams, and said he would use his influence as Speaker of the House to elect Adams if Adams named him Sec. of State Adams was

8-4.3 Notes - Causes of Secession: Why South Carolina Left the Union

SAS Curriculum 8 th Grade Social Studies Activities by Strand

Abraham Lincoln. Copyright 2009 LessonSnips

STAAR STUDY GUIDE 2. Designated materials are the intellectual property of s3strategies, LLC. Permission is granted for internal district use only.

US Early Test #1 TEST A

1st Nine Weeks 2nd Nine Weeks 3rd Nine Weeks 4th Nine Weeks. Unit 1 Unit 2 Unit 3 Unit 4 Unit 5 Unit 6 Unit 7 Unit 8 Unit 9

Civics (History and Government) Questions for the Naturalization Test

Civics (History and Government) Items for the Redesigned Naturalization Test

Analyse the reasons why slavery in the Americas was supported by different social and economic groups. 99

1970S: THE NIXON PRESIDENCY ( )

The Treaty of Ghent War of 1812 is considered a stalemate Dec. 1814

The Politics of Reconstruction

Russian History. Lecture #1 Ancient History The Romanov s

AP US HISTORY HOMEWORK SHEET #2. Textbook: Carnes C. Mark & John A. Garraty. The American Nation: A History of the United States

Transcription:

Presidents of the United States Match each fact card to the correct president. Known as the father of our country he established many precedents for presidents. Signed the Alien and Sedition Acts and engaged in a Quasi-War with France. Doubled the country s size with the Louisiana Purchase. Led the U.S. into the 1812 war with Great Britain. Wrote a doctrine opposing European interference in the western hemisphere.

Led an ambitious campaign to modernize American roads, canals, and education, nevertheless paying off most of the national debt. He supported and signed the Indian Removal Act which led to the Cherokee Trail of Tears. He was blamed for the Depression of 1837 and failed to win a second term. He died of pneumonia after only 32 days in office, sparking a constitutional crisis about succession. Firmly believed in Manifest Destiny and sought territorial expansion of the United States, especially the annexation of Texas. Led the U.S. into a war with Mexico over the annexation of Texas.

Elected president on the strength of his status as a Mexican-American War hero, he had no interest in politics at all (he had never even voted) and only ran reluctantly. Supported the Compromise of 1850 which made half of the new states slave and half free and staved off the Civil War for a time. Signed the Kansas- Nebraska Act which nullified the Missouri Compromise and led to violence over the question of slavery. On his watch the Southern states seceded from the Union. Led the United States through the Civil War, preserved the Union, and ended slavery. Began Reconstruction in the South and bungled it so badly that he was impeached by Congress, but acquitted by one vote.

Vigorously enforced voting and civil rights of newly freed slaves with the Justice Department and the army and prosecuted members of the KKK. Very concerned with equal rights and rewards based on merit, he tried, mostly unsuccessfully, to clean up corruption in government and end institutional racism in the South. Strongly supported civil rights of former slaves, cleaned up corruption in the Post Office, but was assassinated after only a few months in office. During his presidency a surplus of tax money was a problem. He balanced the budget by abolishing excise taxes on everything except alcohol. A strict classical liberal, he vetoed more unconstitutional bills than any president before, including a bill to buy seed for farmers hurt by a drought in Texas. Signed the Sherman Antitrust Act which allowed the federal government to break up monopolies. Also staunchly supported civil rights for black Americans.

Led the U.S. in the Spanish- American war to ensure Cuban independence. Acquired Puerto Rico, Philippines, and Guam. Annexed Hawaii. Established the National Park system and promised Americans a Square Deal. Passed the Sixteenth Amendment, making it legal for the federal government to levy income taxes on citizens. Oversaw the American entry into WWI and asked congress to make the world safe for democracy. His administration was exposed for taking bribes to give exclusive rights to private companies for access to Navy oil reserves in the Teapot Dome Scandal. Known for his anti-social demeanor, he lowered taxes, favored business, and presided over the Roaring Twenties.

He combated the crash of 1929 with public works projects and increased taxes, which created the Great Depression. Promised the country a New Deal to lead them to economic prosperity, but was only successful with the outbreak of WWII. Forced the surrender of Japan by dropping two atomic bombs on them, thus ending the war in the Pacific. Very concerned with defense, he launched the federal highway system. He also sent troops to forcibly desegregate schools in the South. Challenged the country to put a man on the moon before the Soviets in order to win the Space Race. Started the war in Viet Nam and the War on Poverty, greatly expanding social programs in the U.S.

Best known for his role in the Watergate Scandal in which illegal spying on the political opposition was discovered; he was forced to resign the presidency. Attempted to battle high inflation and high unemployment by raising taxes and asking people to not buy so much stuff with his Whip Inflation Now slogan. Created the Department of Energy and the Department of Education. Famously commanded Mr. Gorbachev, tear down this wall! at a speech in Berlin. Conducted military operations in Panama and won the 1990 Gulf War in Iraq. Though impeached during office for perjury he rode it out to emerge with high approval ratings partly because of the great economy he presided over.

Launched the War on Terror following the 9/11 terrorist attacks. Signed into law the first ever national health care program. Known for outspoken brazenness. He was a successful businessman and TV personality before being elected president.