Study Guide: Final Exam
The final exam will be held . The format will be as follows: a short-answer section and an essay section. For the short answers, you will be given 16 terms from the list below and identify 10, briefly describing: a) who, what, when (generally speaking), where; and b) what, in brief, is the subject's historical significance? Three to four sentences should suffice. For the essays, you will see the two questions on the back of this page and answer one. Like the papers, the best essays will demonstrate a command of the readings and class material while also making a coherent argument based on evidence. The more specific examples you can give, the better you will do.
Short IDs
Charles Sumner
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Corrupt Bargain
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John Calhoun
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Cult of Domesticity
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Dred Scott v Sandford
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Slave Power
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William Lloyd Garrison
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resident masters
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David Walker
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Trail of Tears
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Louisiana Purchase
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2nd Great Awakening
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Funding and Assumption
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Wilmot Proviso Kansas-
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Manifest Destiny
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Nebraska Act Lincoln-
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Sabbatarian Movement
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Douglas Debates Know-
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Nat Turner
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Nothing Party Liberty
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Erie Canal
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Party
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Missouri Compromise
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James Henry Hammond
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Panic of 1819
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Compromise of 1850
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American System
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Maine Law
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Martin Van Buren
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Charles G. Finney
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Monster Bank
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Tenskwatawa
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Battle of New Orleans
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Hartford Convention
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Whiskey Rebellion
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Prudence Crandall
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Northwest Ordinance
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Angelina Grimke
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