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Warm-Up: Let’s Review! Have your COMPOSITION NOTEBOOKS out & use them to answer the following questions: 1. What legal concept was the result of the Supreme Court decision in Marbury v. Madison? 2. The debate over what 2 issues led to the formation of the first political parties in the United States? 3. Name 2 of the warnings in George Washington’s “Farewell Address.” 4. What British policy contributed directly to the War of 1812? 5. The XYZ Affair was a result of tension between diplomats of the United States and what country?

Warm-Up: Let’s Review!

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Warm-Up: Let’s Review!. Have your COMPOSITION NOTEBOOKS out & use them to answer the following questions: What legal concept was the result of the Supreme Court decision in Marbury v. Madison ? - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Warm-Up: Let’s Review!

Warm-Up: Let’s Review!Have your COMPOSITION NOTEBOOKS out & use them to answer the following questions:

1. What legal concept was the result of the Supreme Court decision in Marbury v. Madison?

2. The debate over what 2 issues led to the formation of the first political parties in the United States?

3. Name 2 of the warnings in George Washington’s “Farewell Address.”

4. What British policy contributed directly to the War of 1812?5. The XYZ Affair was a result of tension between diplomats of

the United States and what country?

Page 2: Warm-Up: Let’s Review!

A Look Ahead…

• Today we will start Unit 2: Expansion & Reform

• Next class I will have a Unit Calendar for you to glue in your Comp. Book

• Attendance bonuses start this week!

• IF TIME, you may see your SCORE from TEST 1

Page 3: Warm-Up: Let’s Review!

Today:I. Warm Up

II. Life in America PowerPoint

III.Postcard Activity

Page 4: Warm-Up: Let’s Review!

Composition Books

• We will be using these everyday for Warm-Ups, Notes, Activities, and Reflections• You can leave them in the box under the front

table IF YOU WANT• YOU are responsible for having it with you

everyday• On each test day, I will check your Composition

Books for completion

Page 5: Warm-Up: Let’s Review!

Essential Questions:

1. What did life look like for Americans in the early years of our nation?

2. What led to the regional differences that ultimately defined the Civil War?

Page 6: Warm-Up: Let’s Review!

Today:• Open up your composition notebook to the first full page (you

will need BOTH sides)• Fold both the LEFT & RIGHT sheets in half, “hot-dog” style• On the LEFT PAGE:• Label one column: “North”• Label one column: “South”

• On the RIGHT PAGE:• Label one column: “Urban”• Label one column: “Rural”

• You will use these categories to organize your notes today• By the end of the period, your notes should include at least all

of the terms & concepts listed on the board

Page 7: Warm-Up: Let’s Review!

What do you already know?

•What sort of economy was MOST common

in the North?

•What about the South?

• How did their economies influence the

regions ideas about slavery?

Page 8: Warm-Up: Let’s Review!

Industrial Revolution• First begins in Great Britain during the

late 1700s• One of the most dramatic changes in

HUMAN HISTORY!• Mechanization of labor• Use of machines or manually-run

machines in place of human craftsmanship

• Energy & transportation were key• Turning coal into iron & steel• Railroads, canals, etc. allow for trade

and movement of goods• Steam power and water wheels

• Puts North ahead of South due to fast moving rivers

Page 9: Warm-Up: Let’s Review!

……in the United States• For much of it’s early history, the

United States economy was based on agriculture in the North & South• Two events are going to spur the

Industrial Revolution 1. Jefferson’s Embargo Act of 18072. War of 1812

1. Why might these events encourage industry and manufacturing?

Page 10: Warm-Up: Let’s Review!

Mass Production

• Eli Whitney’s interchangeable parts will transform manufacturing as we know it• Presents his musket to President

Adams in 1801• Make the same product, over and over

again, with more speed & efficiency• No longer need skilled craftsmen, but

laborers• Leads to a growth in factories, for a

variety of products

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New England• New England – in the North – is going to enjoy the greatest

benefits from the Industrial Revolution• Agriculture had not been as profitable as it was in the South• Turned to shipping & trade• After War of 1812, turns to manufacturing

• Samuel Slater• British Immigrant• Lived in Rhode Island• Establishes mechanized factory• First to succeed• Made thread only• 1793

Page 13: Warm-Up: Let’s Review!

Lowell Mill• Three men from Boston will almost single-handedly change

the American textile industry• Francis Cabot Lowell, Nathan Appleton, Patrick Tracy Jackson

• In 1813, they will open the first factory that will produce all of the stages in making textile (cloth)

• Lowell, Massachusetts• Named after Francis Cabot Lowell

• Lowell Mill is the symbol of Industrial Revolution in US

Page 14: Warm-Up: Let’s Review!
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Lowell Girls

• Thousands of people would move to Lowell in search of work in the mills• Mostly young women who came due to family farms

struggling• Lived in “boarding houses”• Strict curfews• Behavior closely monitored• Church attendance was taken!• Conditions in the mills were bad (dark, damp, dangerous!)

• By 1838, 95% of New England’s work force in the mills was women

• Why women?

Page 16: Warm-Up: Let’s Review!

Quote from Lowell Girl

“…we have to go to bed about 10. o'clock. At half past 4 in the morning the bell rings for us to get up and at five for us to go

into the mill. At seven we are called out to breakfast are allowed half an hour between bells and the same at noon till the first of

May when we have three quarters [of an hour] till the first of September. We have dinner at half past 12 and supper at seven.”

-Mary Paul, letter to father, 1846

Sounds like the good life, right? … Maybe not

Page 17: Warm-Up: Let’s Review!

“Cotton is King”

• At this time, the South has little reason to industrialize.• Cash crops were becoming highly

lucrative• Sugar, cotton, tobacco

• COTTON GIN (1793)• Eli Whitney – again!• Short for “cotton engine”• Short-staple cotton• Easier to grow, but hard to “clean”• Whitney solves this dilemma!

Page 18: Warm-Up: Let’s Review!
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Slavery• The cotton gin does great things for

the Southern economy, but it will also lead to an expansion in slavery• Plantation owners can now grow

more and more cotton, needing more slaves to pick and clean the cotton• Cotton gin also made farming easier

for poor, non-slaveholder farmers• “Cotton Kingdom” will grow in

states like Alabama, Mississippi, and Louisiana• Cotton production UP = Slave

population UP

Page 20: Warm-Up: Let’s Review!

“American System”• As we have seen, the North and South are becoming more and

more different• “How can we unify?”

• In 1815, President James Madison presents an economic plan to congress• TRANSPORTATION & INFRASTRUCTURE;

• Define infrastructure• PROTECTIVE TARIFF;

• What is a tariff?• RESTORE NATIONAL BANK (had weakened during Jefferson)

• Henry Clay dubs this the “American System”

Page 21: Warm-Up: Let’s Review!

Infrastructure• Railroads• 1st steam engine is

built in 1825• Advantages of rail?

• National Road• Federal government

“experiment”• Began in 1811• Connects Maryland to

Illinois in 1838

• Erie Canal• Ushers in the

beginning of American engineering• Links Hudson River to

Lake Erie• Atlantic Ocean to Great

Lakes• Completed in 1825

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Tariffs & National Bank• After War of 1812, British goods were available MUCH

CHEAPER than American goods• Tariff is a way to “even the playing field”• Tariff = tax on IMPORTS

• Tariff of 1816• Who will most likely support a tariff?• Who will oppose it?

• Second Bank of the United States (1816)• Less controversial• Make nationwide currency available

• Leads to “Era of Good Feelings”• Madison was a Dem.-Rep. from Virginia but well liked even in

Federalist New England!

Page 25: Warm-Up: Let’s Review!

Immigrants• European immigration will continue to increase throughout

the 19th century• Usually avoid the South

• Why?

• Great Potato Famine in Ireland• Irish immigrants are most prominent during this period• Settle in New England cities like New York City and Boston• Face bitter prejudice

• Roman Catholic

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Youth• In both the cities and on farms, most youth

activity was work-oriented• Energy & perseverance!• Adults at 14?

• School is not required until mid-1800s• Rural = One room school house• Only go when not needed on the farm

• City = some were tutored or went to private schools; most went to work in the city• Apprentices – later factory workers• No child labor laws at this time

Page 27: Warm-Up: Let’s Review!

Postcard Activity

• On your own…• Imagine that you are currently living in the United States

during this period. You have a friend or relative who lives in another part of the country.• You must:• Choose a region & occupation (job)• Ex. Female textile worker

• Write a short note (about 5 sentences) to your friend or relative that demonstrates your understanding of BOTH regions• What would your life look like? What might theirs be like?

• Draw and illustrate a picture or scene that represents the region you are writing from (ex. Lowell Mill)