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The Rise of Nationalism

The Rise of Nationalism. Objectives: The characteristics of the new American culture How nationalism influenced domestic policy How nationalism guided foreign policy The Missouri Compromise. How the U.S. Defied Europe.

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The Rise of Nationalism

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  1. The Rise of Nationalism Objectives: The characteristics of the new American culture How nationalism influenced domestic policy How nationalism guided foreign policy The Missouri Compromise

  2. How the U.S. Defied Europe • In the early 1800s Spanish colonies in South America were declaring independence. Although officially neutral, the US supplied the rebels & gave the new nations diplomatic recognition. But there were fears that France would try to reconquer these colonies. Meanwhile, Russia claimed much of NA’s Pacific Coast. President James Monroe’s secretary of state, John Quincy Adams, urged Monroe to demand an end to further European colonization in the Americas. Monroe agreed, & the MONROE DOCTRINE was born.

  3. A New American Culture • Fewer than 10 million Americans at the time; overwhelming majority of them still lived in rural areas along or near the East coast. • Largest City: New York 120,000 people • Next largest: Philadelphia and Baltimore; half the size of New York City

  4. How would you define culture? • The way of life of a particular group of people. • Includes the group’s language, art, music, clothing, food, and other aspects of daily life. • The rise of a distinctly American culture during the early 1800s is important. Why? • Because it still influences the way Americans live today. • Alexis de Tocqueville: French philosopher. One of the most insightful observers of the American culture • Author of Democracy in America, in which he wrote of the seemingly limitless energy of Americans.

  5. “[Americans] all consider society as a body in a state of improvement…in which nothing is, or ought to be, permanent...America is a land of wonders, in which everything is in constant motion and every change seems an improvement.” • Alexis de Tocqueville, Democracy in America

  6. American Art and Literature • Became more important, artists and writers were given more respect than they had before. • Americans’ unique version of the English language earned respect. • In 1828, this new American English was published by lexicographer Noah Webster in An American Dictionary of the English Language.

  7. Nationalism Influences • Nationalism is the belief that the interests of the nation as a whole are more important than regional interests or the interest of other countries. • Replaced the tendency toward sectionalism (the belief that one’s own section, or region, of the country is more important than the whole.)

  8. How do the following cartoons depict the conflict between states and the federal government?

  9. The American System • Perhaps the most nationalistic domestic policy of the early 1800s. • Proposed by Henry Clay, the Speaker of the U.S. House of Representatives • Several policies to unify the young country • A tariff to protect American industries • The sale of government lands to raise money for the national government • The maintenance of a national bank • Government funding of internal improvements or public projects such as roads and canals

  10. Foreign Affair • 1816: James Monroe elected president served from 1817 to 1825 • During presidency, the economy grew rapidly , and a spirit of nationalism and optimism prevailed. • John Quincy Adams: 1819 Secretary of State • Important agreement with Spain • Adams-Onis Treaty, the U.S. acquired Florida and established a firm boundary b/w the Louisiana territory and Spanish territory farther to the west.

  11. Monroe Doctrine • European countries were thinking about retaking control of their former colonies. • American lawmakers wanted to deter any foreign country from taking lands in the Americas that the United States might someday claim, such as the Pacific Northwest. • Monroe Doctrine: a policy that states that the U.S. would view any European attempts to further colonize the Americas as a threat to U.S. interests

  12. Missouri Compromise • In 1819, there were 22 states in the Union. 11 were “slave” states, 11 were “free” states (slavery illegal). • Equal balance=equal representation. • If Missouri were admitted as a slave state, the balance would be upset. • Missouri Compromise (1820): Missouri was admitted to the Union as a slave state and Maine was to be admitted as a free state. • Banned slavery in the northern part of the Louisiana territory • Feelings of sectionalism in the North and South beginning to emerge

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