T2 Exam History

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    Cheif Justice John Marshall

    He was part of the 3 branches and making them all have equal, especially the judicial branch
  • Delaware

    Delaware
    1st state to ratify the constitution
  • Pennsylvania

    Pennsylvania
    Pennsylvania is the first state of the fifty United States to list their web site URL on a license plate
  • New Jersey

    New Jersey
    New Jersey has the most dense system of highways and railroads in the U.S.
  • Georgia

    Georgia
    4th state to ratify the constitution, Georgia Tech once beat Cumberland University 222 - 0 in a football game, about 9.85 million people in population.
  • Connecticut

    Connecticut
    5th state to ratify the constitution. From 1703 to 1875, Connecticut had two capitals; sessions of the General Assembly met alternately in Hartford and New Haven.
  • Massachusetts

    Massachusetts
    The first U.S.Postal zip code in Massachusetts is 01001 at Agawam.
  • Maryland

    Maryland
    King Williams School opened in 1696 it was the first school in the United States
  • South Carolina

    South Carolina
    8th state to ratify the constitution. Chris Rock Comedian and actor is from South Carolina
  • New Hampshire

    New Hampshire
    Of the thirteen original colonies, New Hampshire was the first to declare its independence from Mother England -- a full six months before the Declaration of Independence was signed.
  • Virginia

    Virginia
    Virginia was named for England's "Virgin Queen," Elizabeth I.
  • New York

    New York
    11th state to ratify the constitution.
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    George Washington

    George Washington was president from April 30 1789 until March 4 1797, he served two terms until he took himself out of office.
  • North Carolina

    North Carolina
    Whitewater Falls in Transylvania County is the highest waterfall in the eastern United States
  • Rhode Island

    Rhode Island
    Rhode Island is the smallest state in size in the United States. It covers an area of 1,214 square miles. Its distances North to South are 48 miles and East to West 37 miles.
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    Whiskey Rebellion

    Farmers resisted a tax on distilled spirits and then rebelled. This showed that the government can suppress a rebellion .
  • Vermont

    Vermont
    Vermont was the first state admitted to the Union after the ratification of the Constitution.
  • Kentucky

    Kentucky
    The town of Murray is home to the Boy Scouts of America Scouting Museum located on the campus of Murray State University.
  • Tennessee

    Tennessee
    The city of Kingston served as Tennessee's state capital for one day (September 21, 1807) as a result of treaties negotiated with the Cherokee Indians. The two-hour legislative session passed two resolutions and adjourned back to Knoxville
  • Washingtons Farewell Adress

    George Washington didn't want the U.S to look like Englan, so he took himself out of office. He wanted to stay away from alliances.
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    John Adams

    John Adams was president from March 4 1797 until March 4 1809, he was the first Vice President of the United States.
  • Alien and Sedition Acts

    Alien and sedition acts were passed by the federalist congress in 1798 and signed into the law by president Adams. These laws included new powers to deport for foreigners as well as making it harder for new immigrants to vote. The alien and sedition acts were passed by congress in 1798 in preparation for an anticipation war with France.
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    Thomas Jefferson

    Thomas Jefferson was president from March 4 1801 until March 4 1809, he helped write e Declaration of Independence.
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    Louisiana Purchase

    land size 828,000 square miles long, The cost was 15 million dollars, the Louisiana purchase demonstrates Jefferson's ability to make pragmatic political decisions
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    Lewis and Clark

    Lewis and Clark went on a 4 year journey to go to the great ocean. (Pacific Ocean)
  • Marbury vs. Madison

    Marbury- argued that he was entitled to his commission and that the judicial act act of 1789 gave the supreme court of the United States original jurisdiction to issue a writ of mandamus
    Madison- was sued by Marbury and asked the Supreme Court of the United States to issue a writ of mandamus, a court order that requires an official to perform or refrain from performing a certain duty.
    President Thomas Jefferson and his Democratic-Republican followers launched a series of attacks against the
  • Ohio

    Ohio
    Ohio senator John Glenn became the oldest man to venture into outer space.On February 20, 1962 he was the first American to orbit the earth. In October of 1998 at age 77 he returned to the space program and traveled back into space
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    William Lloyd Harrsion

    The Liberator (1831-1865) was an abolitionist newspaper founded by William Lloyd Garrison and Isaac Knapp in 1831
    . He made quotes to support abolitionist. His goal was only to reduce the number of free blacks in the country and thus help preserve the institution of slavery
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    James Madison

    James Madison was president from March 4 1809 until March 4 1817, he was a Co-Author of the Federalist papers.
  • Louisiana

    Louisiana
    Louisiana was named in honor of King Louis XIV.
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    War of 1812

    The United Kingdom of Great Britain and Iceland, it's North American colonies and its American Indian allies. And the destruction of the powers of tribes and American fears of native Americans
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    Elizabeth Cady Stanton

    She helped organize the first women's rights convention held in Seneca Falls on July 19 and 20. Over 300 people attended. Stanton drafted a Declaration of Sentiments, which she read at the convention.
  • Indiana

    Indiana
    Abraham Lincoln moved to Indiana when he was 7 years old. He lived most of his boyhood life in Spencer County with his parents Thomas and Nancy
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    James Monroe

    James Monroe was president from March 4 1817 until March 4 1825, there was a completion of the Adams-Onis treaty ended the tensions with Spain.
  • Mississippi

    Mississippi
    The first nuclear submarine built in the south was produced in Mississippi.
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    Frederick Douglass

    “What to a Slave is the 4th of July?” - Speech God speed the year of jubile. Frederick Douglass and the anti slavery movement. His role was to travel and deliver speeches, distribute pamphlets and get subscribers
  • Illinois

    Illinois
    The world's first Skyscraper was built in Chicago, 1885.
  • Dartmouth College v. Woodward

    In 1769 the King of England granted a charter to Dartmouth College. This document spelled out the purpose of the school, set up the structure to govern it, and gave land to the college. In 1816, the state legislature of New Hampshire passed laws that revised the charter. These laws changed the school from private to public. They changed the duties of the trustees. They changed how the trustees were selected.http://www.americanbar.org/groups/public_education/initiatives_awards/students_in_action/
  • Transcontinental Treaty

    Adams used the Jackson’s military action to present Spain with a demand to either control the inhabitants of East Florida or cede it to the United States. Minister Onís and Secretary Adams reached an agreement whereby Spain ceded East Florida to the United States and renounced all claim to West Florida.
  • McCullouch v. Maryland

    In McCulloch v. Maryland (1819) the Supreme Court ruled that Congress had implied powers under the Necessary and Proper Clause of Article I, Section 8 of the Constitution to create the Second Bank of the United States and that the state of Maryland lacked the power to tax the Bank.
  • Alabama

    Alabama
    Alabama workers built the first rocket to put humans on the moon.
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    Susan B. Anthony

    She gave rights to all women over 21
  • Missouri Comprimise

    Congress passed a bill granting Missouri statehood as a slave state under the condition that slavery was to be forever prohibited in the rest of the Louisiana Purchase north of the 36th parallel, which runs approximately along the southern border of Missouri. The Compromise resolved the conflict over the admission of Missouri by allowing that territory to become a slave state.
  • Maine

    Maine
    Maine is the only state in the United States whose name has one syllable.
  • Missouri

    Missouri
    Missouri is known as the "Show Me State".
  • Monroe Doctrine

    James Monroe gave a speech. The United States would remain neutral in European affairs and not get involved in European conflicts
  • Gibbons v. Ogden

    As the American frontier moved west and settlers pushed beyond the Appalachians into the Ohio and Mississippi river valleys, the question of commercial development became very important.Public reaction to Gibbons v. Ogden was overwhelmingly positive. Within a month of Marshall's decision, twenty steamboats were operating in New York waters, many from other states. Chief Justice Marshall delivered the opinion of a unanimous (6-0) Court siding
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    John Quincy Adams

    JQ Adams was president from March 4 1825 until March 4 1829, he was a better Secretary of State then he was a president.
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    Andrew Jackson

    Andrew Jackson was president from March 4 1829 until March 4 1837, he faced South Carolina in the Nullification Crisis when the government had the right to nullify tariff legislation.
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    Abolitionists Movement

    Was an attempt to abolish slavery
  • Nat Turners Rebellion

    In 1831 a slave named Nat Turner led a rebellion in Southhampton County, Virginia. A religious leader and self-styled Baptist minister, Turner and a group of followers killed some sixty white men, women, and children on the night of August 21. He was captured and enslaved. He and his men managed to killed 55 white southerners.
  • Horace Mann’s campaign for free compulsory public education

    1833 book Report on the Condition of Public Instruction in Germany. He/ they wanted education to be free for all students.
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    Manifest Destiny

    Manifest Destiny is a term for the attitude prevalent during the 19th century period of American expansion that the United States not only could, but was destined to, stretch from coast to coast.
  • Michigan

    Michigan
    Detroit is known as the car capital of the world.
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    Trail of Tears

    In 1838 and 1839, as part of Andrew Jackson's Indian removal policy, the Cherokee nation was forced to give up its lands east of the Mississippi River and to migrate to an area in present-day Oklahoma.
  • Arkansas

    Arkansas
    Famous singer Johnny Cash was born in Kingsland Arkansas.
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    Martin VanBuren

    Martin VanBuren was president from March 4 1837 until March 4 1841, he Advocated lower tariffs and free trade to pleasure the South.
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    William Henry Harrison

    William Harrison was president March 4 1841 until April 4 1841, he had the shortest term of 32 days because he gave a long speech out side with out a jacket. He got ammonia because of this.
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    John Tyler

    John Tyler was president from April 4 1841 to March 4 1845, he vetoed Wig Bills to recreate a national bank.
  • Sojourner Truth

    Sojourner truth became a Methodist, she gave speeches on abolishing slavery also on the basics of life
  • Florida

    Florida
    Greater Miami is the only metropolitan area in the United States whose borders encompass two national parks. You can hike through pristine Everglades National Park or ride on glass-bottom boats across Biscayne National Park
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    James K. Polk

    James K. Polk was president from March 4 1845 to March 4 1849, he claimed the Oregon territory after a treaty with England.
  • Texas

    Texas
    Texas is popularly known as The Lone Star State
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    Mexican American War

    The war was primarily a territorial dispute caused by the United States' policy of manifest destiny. President Polk and the American citizens wanted to expand their nation by acquiring all of the land on the North American continent regardless of the native people already residing on the land.
  • Iowa

    Iowa
    Strawberry Point is the home of the world's largest strawberry.
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    James Buchanan

    James Buchanan was president from March 4 1857 to March 4 1861, he vetoed bills concerning the establishment of college thought that there were already enough educated mind in America.
  • Wisconsin

    Wisconsin
    Wisconsin visitors and residents enjoy the state's 7,446 streams and rivers. End-to-end they'd stretch 26,767 miles.
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    Seneca Falls Convention

    The convention was organized by Lucretia Mott and Elizabeth Cady Stanton, two abolitionists who met at the 1840 World Anti-Slavery Convention in London.
    In July of 1848, Elizabeth Cady Stanton and Lucretia Mott spearheaded the first women's rights convention in American history.
    The first woman's rights
  • Seneca Falls Resoluton

    The primary goal was to discuss the rights of women.In 1848 and into the future", according to Judith Wellman, a historian of the convention.
    Declaration of Sentiments (what were the sentiments)- The Declaration of Sentiments, offered for the acceptance of the Convention, was then read by E. C.
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    Zachary Taylor

    Zachary Taylor was president from March 4 1849 to July 9 1850, he was elected on his war experience.
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    Millard Fillmore

    Millard Fillmore was president from July 9 1850 to March 4 1853, he had support of the fugitive slave act caused Whig party to split In two and caused the downfall of his national political career.
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    Susan B. Anthony Events

    1851- Susan B Anthony travels to Syracuse, N.Y., anti-slavery convention. She visits Amelia Bloomer, hears William Lloyd Garrison and George Thompson, and meets Elizabeth Cady Stanton.
    1856 - Anthony becomes agent for the American Anti-Slavery Society.
    1898 - The Life and Work of Susan B. Anthony, A Story of the Evolution of the Status of Women is published. Anthony establishes a press bureau to feed articles on woman suffrage to the national and
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    Franklin Pierce

    Franklin Pierce was president from March 4 1853 to March 4 1857, he was president at a critical time in american history the country and as becoming more polarized into northern and southern interests.
  • Harriet Tubman and the under ground rail road

    Information of Underground Railroad- After Harriet Tubman escaped from slavery, she returned to slave-holding states many times to help other slaves escape. She led them safely to the northern free states and to Canada. It was very dangerous to be a runaway slave. Tubman: Conductor of the Underground Railroad
    Tubman made 19 trips to Maryland and helped 300 people to freedom.
  • Dred Scott vs. Sanford

    By the mid-1850s, sectional conflict over the extension of slavery into the Western territories threatened to tear the nation apart. The Supreme Court ruled that Americans of African descent, whether free or slave, were not American citizens and could not sue in federal court. The Court decided 7-2 in favor of the slave owner. Every justice submitted an individual opinion justifying his position, with Chief Justice Tane
  • Minnesota

    Minnesota
    The Mall of America in Bloomington is the size of 78 football fields --- 9.5 million square feet.
  • Oregon

    Oregon
    Oregon has more ghost towns than any other state.
  • John Brown and the armed resistance

    Why was he upset? Because he wanted to start a liberation movement among enslaved African Americans in Harpers Ferry, Virginia. he was found guilty and executed for killing slave owners.he got hung
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    Abraham Lincolm

    Abraham Lincoln was president from March 4 1861 until his assassination in April 15 1865, he issued the Emancipation Proclamation which began the process of freedom for America's slaves