| A | B |
| first women's rights convention | Seneca Falls Convention |
| worked to reform prisons and help the mentally ill | Dorothea Dix |
| colony establish in Africa for the return of slaves | Liberia |
| author of Uncle Tom's Cabin | Harriet Beecher Stowe |
| reform movement that wanted to outlaw alcohol | temperence |
| free black that spoke eloquently against slavery | Fredrick Douglass |
| worked to establish public education | Horace Mann |
| prohibited antislavery petition from being read or acted upon in the House of Representatives | gag rule |
| Supreme Court case that ruled that Congress had the power to charter banks | McCullough v. Maryland |
| powerful chief justice of the Supreme Court | John Marshall |
| won the election of 1824 | John Quincy Adams |
| won the election of 1828 | Andrew Jackson |
| had a "corrupt bargain" with John Quincy Adams | Henry Clay |
| exchanged tribal lands for western lands | Indian Removal Act |
| rewards campaign workers with government jobs | spoils system |
| means to withdraw from the union | secede |
| elected in 1836 with Jackson's support | Martin vanBuren |
| highest tariff in the history of the US | Tariff of 1828 |
| warned Europe to stay out of the Western hemisphere | Monroe Doctrine |
| threatened to secede over the tariff | South Carolina |
| where Jackson placed the federal government's money after removing it form the Bank of the US | state "pet" banks |
| idea that spiritual discovery and insight could lead a person to truth | transcendentalism |
| section that favored a high tariff | Northeast |
| led a slave rebellion in Southhampton County, Virginia | Nat Turner |
| case that ruled that states could not regulate commerce on interstate waterways | Gibbons v. Ogden |
| author of the Theory of Nullification | John C. Calhoun |
| the forced relocation of the Cherokee to Oklahoma | Trail of Tears |
| case in which the court rules that Geogia has no authority over the Cherokee land | Cherokee v. Georgia |
| deal which gave JQ Adams the presidency in1824 | "corrupt bargain" |
| political party which disappeared in the early 1800's | Federalist |
| chooses a president if the electoral college fails to | House of Representatives |
| fought against slavery | abolitionists |
| right to vote | suffrage |
| another name for the spoils system | patronage |
| idea that a state can declare a federal law null and void | Theory of Nullification |
| used by Jackson after he fired his cabinet | "Kitchen Cabinet" |