MATERIAL FOR THE SECOND EXAM Pontiac s Rebellion Begins the first crisis Proclamation Line 1763 Indian Reserve East Florida, West

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MATERIAL FOR THE SECOND EXAM 1763-1776 1763 Pontiac s Rebellion Begins the first crisis Proclamation Line 1763 Indian Reserve East Florida, West Florida, Quebec Plan of 1764 Quartering Act 1765 Mercantilism 1764 Revenue Act Sugar Act Molasses Act 1733 Lower tax Writs of assistance search warrants Vice-admiralty courts Triangular trade Preamble Tax to regulate trades Tax to raise money No taxation without representation 1765 Stamp Act Revenue stamps 1/2p $5 gold Protect, defend and secure the colonies Sons of Liberty 1765 Virginia Resolves Circular letter Stamp Act Congress 1765 Virtual representation 1766 repealed the Stamp Act 1766 Declaratory Act Ended 1st crisis to revolution 1767 Charles Townsend Act John Dickinson Letters of a Pennsylvania Farmer 1768 External tax reg trade Internal tax raise revenue Dissolve the NY Legis 1767 Dissolve the GC of Mass 1768 Dissolve the HofB of Virg 1768 John Hancock The Liberty March 5, 1770 Boston Massacre Sam Adams End of the second crisis

Christopher Gadsden Patrick Henry Committees of Correspondence Dec. 16, 1773 Boston tea Party 5 Intolerable Acts Coercive Acts 1774 1. Boston Port Act 2. Massachusetts Government Act 3. Administration of Justice Act 4. Quartering Act 5. Quebec Act 1st Continental Congress 1774 Joseph Galloway Plan of Union 1774 Declaration of Rights and Grievances The Association George III 1760-1820 Lord North s Conciliatory Resolves Feb 1775 Lexington and Concord Gage 2nd Continental Congress 1775 1775 Bunker Hill George Washington July 4, 1776 January 1776 Thomas Paine, Common Sense Social contract theory Hessians July 4, 1776 June 7, 1776 Richard Henry Lee that these united colonies are and of a right ought to be free and independent states. July 2, 1776 July 4, 1776 Battle of Saratoga 1777 Treaty of Alliance 1778 Battle of Yorktown 1781 Treaty of Paris 1783 Prewar debts Loyalists Articles of Confederation Nov 1777 adopted; March 1781 1. States rights 2. Congress a. Delegates i. 2 to 7 delegates/ state

ii. 1 vote/state iii. Unanimous iv. Term limits 3y of 6y time span 1 yr term 3. Amendments unanimous consent 4. States control tax and trade 5. Powers central government Land Ordinance of 1784 Land Ordinance of 1785 Northwest Ordinance of 1787 1790 Southwest Ordinance Jay-Gardoqui Treaty 1785 Shays Rebellion 1786 Madison and House of Burghesses 1786 Annapolis Convention 1787 Philadelphia Constitutional Convention Edmund Randolph Va The Virginia Plan or Large State Plan National Ex National Jud National Legislature Bicameral Lower House pop; Upper House equal William Paterson NJ The New Jersey or Small State Plan Single house unicameral Legis Equal votes King Pin Clause supremacy clause Connecticut Compromise or Great Compromise 3/5th Compromise Federalists Federalist Papers Federalists Federalist Papers Hamilton Madison Jay Anti-Federalists Washington 1789-1797 Adams 1797-1801 Jefferson 1801-1809 Madison 1809-1817 Monroe 1817-1825 JQ Adams 1825-1829 Jackson 1829-1837 Van Buren 1837-1841 Jefferson SofS Hamilton SofT

Knox SofW Randolph AG Judiciary Act 1789 Organic Act 1789 Jefferson VA admires Fre supp agric as little govt states rights expert in everything but finance Hamilton NY admires Brit encourage manuf and ship strong central govt expert in finance Eco polit philo: 1. For and dom paid at par 2. War debt sts will assumed fed 3. Bank of US 4. Manuf and commerce tariffs protect infant industries Mar 1790 Jefferson SoS Jeffersonian Democrat Republicans 1792 1793-1797 Peace, union, justice 1778 Treaty of Alliance 1793 Neutrality Proclamation 1794 John Jay Treaty 1794 Battle of Fallen Timbers The Treaty of Greenville Pinckney Treaty 1795 Agree 31st parallel US navig Miss. R Rt of dep New Orl Whiskey Rebellion 1794 1796 Fed John Adams Pinckney Rep Jefferson Burr John Adams 1797-1801 1798 XYZ Affair Apr 1798 Sedition Act 1798 Alien Act Naturalization Act 1st States rights movement Va Legis and Kent Legis Nullification Convention of 1800 Oct 1, 1800 1800 Fed Adams and Pinckney Rep Jefferson and Burr

Pres Jefferson 1801-1809 VP Burr 1801-1805; George Clinton 1805-1809 Revolution of 1800 Sos Madison SoT Gallatin Louisiana Purchase Napoleon Ap 1803 Treaty of Cession Fed conspiracy Essex Junto and River Gods of Conn 1804 Burr-Hamilton Duel Marbury v. Madison 1803 case of the midnight judges John Marshall Precedent declared Judiciary Act 1789 unconst. Judicial review Samuel Chase SC Justice 1805-1809 Burr Conspiracy 1806 Marshall two witnesses to the same overt act of treason 1807 Chesapeake Affair Leopard Chesapeake 1807 Embargo Act peaceful coercion repealed Mr. 1809 1809 Force Act 1808 Madison 1809-1817 1809 Non-intercourse Act David Erskine 1809 Erskine Agreement impressment Geo. Canning 1810 Macon s Bill #2 West Florida 1810 Baton Rouge Territory of Orleans 1812 La statehood 1811 The President The Little Belt

June 16, 1812 June 18, 1812 War of 1812 War Hawks Henry Clay Ken; John Calhoun SC; John Sevier TN Expansionism 1811 Indiana Gen. William Henry Harrison def. Tecumseh and the Prophet Battle of Tippecanoe Hartford Convention 1814 1814 Treaty of Ghent 1815 commercial treaty Battle of New Orleans Andrew Jackson Henry Clay American System John Calhoun Second Bank of the US 1816 McCulloch v. Maryland 1819 Implied powers clause, elastic clause, necessary and proper clause 1816 Rep James Monroe 1817-1825 Era of Good Feelings Panic of 1819 Public Land Act of 1820 Missouri 1819 slave Tallmadge Amendment 1820 Missouri Compromise MO slave ME free 36 30

1817 Rush-Bagot Agreement 1818 Oregon Convention of 1818 Florida 1817 Gen. Jackson 1818 St. Marks John Quincy Adams S of S Latin America Monroe Doctrine 1823 1817 Chile Venezuela Mexico 1819 Adams-Onis Treaty 1821 Monroe Doctrine 1824 Treaty with Russia 54 40