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Ch 12 Test

1.

The Treaty of 1818 with Great Britain

Called for ten-year joint occupation of the Orgean country by both americans citizens and British subjects

2.

Post-war of 1812 nationalism could be seen in all of the following except

a revival of american religion

3.

All the time it was issued, the Monroe Doctrine was

incapable of being enforced by the united states

4.

The doctrine of non-colonization in the monroe doctrine was

a response to the apparent designs of the Russians in Alaska & Oregon

5.

The Rush-Bagot agreement

limited naval armaments on the Great Lakes

6.

The outcome of the War of 1812 was

a stimulus to patriotic nationalism in the United States

7.

Latin Americas reaction to the Monroe Doctrine can be best described as

unconcerned or unimpressed

8.

At the end of the War of 1812, British manufacturers

began dumping their goods in America at extremely low prices.

9.

The British attack on Baltimore

inspired the writing of "The Star-Spangled Banner"

10.

At the peace conference at Ghent, the British began to withdraw many of its earlier demands for all of the following reasons except

The American victory at New Orleans

11.

Spain sold florida to the united states because it

could not defend the area and would lose it in any case

12.

People moved into the Old Northwest for all of the following reasons except

as a haven for runaway slaves

13.

The War of 1812 was one of the worst fought wars in American history for all of the following reasons except that

the militia was never called up to supplement the regular army.

14.

In inerpreting the Constitution, John Marshall

favored a "loose construction"

15.

After the war of 1812, Europe

returned to conservation, illiberalism, and reaction

16.

Britain opposed Spain's reestablishing its authority in Latin American countries that had successfully revolted because

the ports of these nations were now open to lucrative trade.

17.

New England opposed the notion of federally constructed roads because

they would drain away population and create competing states in the West.

18.

When the House of Representatives passed the Tallmadge Amendment in response to Missouri's request for admission to the Union, the South thought that the amendment

would threaten the sectional balance.

19.

The monroe doctorine was

an expression of the illusion of deepening American isolationism from world affairs

20.

The Era of Good Feelings

was actually a troubled period

21.

The battle of New Orleans

saw the british troops defeated by Andrew jacksons soldiers

22.

The resolutions from the Hartford Convention

helped to cause the death of the Federalist party

23.

The panic of 1819 brought with it all of the following except

inflation

24.

Henry Clay's call for federally funded roads and canals received whole-hearted endorsement from

the west

25.

The performance of the United States' Navy in the War of 1812 could be best described as

much better than that of the army

26.

Perhaps the key battle of the War of 1812, because it protected the United States from full-scale invasion and possible dissolution, was the Battle of

Plattsburgh

27.

One of the major causes of the Panic of 1819 was

over-speculation in frontier lands

28.

All of the following were results of the Missouri Compromise except that

sectionalism was reduced

29.

Andrew Jackson's military exploits were instrumental in the United States gaining

possession of florida

30.

The Tariff of 1816 was the first in American history

that aimed to protect American industry

31.

In McCulloch v. Maryland, Cohens v. Virginia, and Gibbons v. Ogden, Chief Justice Marshall's rulings limited the extent of

states rights

32.

In diplomatic and economic terms, the War of 1812

could be considered the Second War for American Independence

33.

From a global perspective, the War of 1812 was

of little importance

34.

The United States' most successful diplomat in the Era of Good Feelings was

John Quincy Adams

35.

One of the nationally recognized American authors in the 1820s was

Washington Irving