Deck 9: Launching the New Ship of State

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Question
All of the following are guarantees provided by the Bill of Rights EXCEPT

A) the right to vote for all citizens.
B) freedom of speech.
C) freedom of religion.
D) freedom of the press.
E) right to a trial by a jury.
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Question
When the new government was launched in 1789

A) the nation's population was doubling about every 25 years.
B) most people lived in the fast-growing cities.
C) most people lived west of the Allegheny Mountains.
D) New York was the largest city in the nation.
E) Great Britain refused to establish diplomatic relations with the United States.
Question
Identify and state the historical significance of assumption.
Question
Identify and state the historical significance of Talleyrand.
Question
Identify and state the historical significance of The Whiskey Rebellion.
Question
Identify and state the historical significance of John Jay.
Question
Identify and state the historical significance of James Madison.
Question
Identify and state the historical significance of Thomas Jefferson.
Question
One of the major criticisms of the Constitution, as drafted in Philadelphia, was that it

A) was too long and detailed.
B) was far too short and required more detail.
C) failed to guarantee property rights.
D) failed to provide a mechanism for amendment.
E) did not provide guarantees for individual rights.
Question
Identify and state the historical significance of Alexander Hamilton.
Question
Identify and state the historical significance of John Adams.
Question
Identify and state the historical significance of "Mad Anthony" Wayne.
Question
Identify and state the historical significance of The Judiciary Act of 1789.
Question
All of the following cabinet level departments were created in the 20th century EXCEPT

A) defense
B) energy
C) labor
D) agriculture
E) education
Question
Identify and state the historical significance of Little Turtle.
Question
All of the following are accurate descriptions of the young American nation EXCEPT

A) its population was still about 90 percent rural, despite the flourishing cities.
B) the first official census of 1790 recorded almost four million people.
C) all but five percent of the people lived east of the Appalachian Mountains.
D) most of the population lived in the eastern seaboard cities.
E) foreign visitors looked down at the roughness and crudity of the pioneering life.
Question
The Bill of Rights was intended to protect ____ against the potential tyranny of ____.

A) the prerogatives of Congress, the president
B) the army and the navy, the national government
C) the South, the northern majority
D) individual liberties, a strong central government
E) civilian authorities, the military
Question
Identify and state the historical significance of Funding at par.
Question
Identify and state the historical significance of Citizen Edmond Genêt.
Question
Identify and state the historical significance of tariff.
Question
Hamilton expected that the revenue to pay the interest on the national debt would come from

A) sales taxes and licensing fees.
B) customs duties and excise tax.
C) income and property taxes.
D) western land sales and foreign loans.
E) foreign aid.
Question
All of the following were true of Alexander Hamilton EXCEPT

A) he served as the first Secretary of the Treasury.
B) his intelligence was constantly under question, but his loyalty to the republican experiment never wavered.
C) he would have been president if it were not for his ultraconservatism, a scandalous adultery, and a duelist's bullet.
D) his chief rival was Thomas Jefferson.
E) he claimed that the "British Government was the best in the world."
Question
The Whiskey Rebellion of 1794 arose in southwestern Pennsylvania when the federal government

A) levied an excise tax on whiskey.
B) tried to prohibit the sale of whiskey.
C) allowed the import of foreign whiskey.
D) halted the export of American whiskey.
E) tried to prohibit the manufacturing of whiskey.
Question
Which American political group was most alarmed by the Reign of Terror that occurred in France shortly after the French Revolution of 1789?

A) Jeffersonian Democratic-Republicans
B) Hamiltonian Federalists
C) African American slaves
D) Free African Americans
E) American Indian tribes on the western frontier such as the Miamis
Question
Political opponents of Treasury Secretary Alexander Hamilton asserted that his major economic programs infringed on

A) constitutional guarantees ofchecks and balances of political power and authority among the executive, legislative, and judicial branches of the central government.
B) national security.
C) states' rights, explicitly reserved to them by pending ratification of the 10th Amendment of the Constitution.
D) free enterprise.
E) federal authority.
Question
Which amendment guards against the danger that enumerating rights might lead to the conclusion that they were the only ones protected?

A) First
B) Second
C) Fifth
D) Ninth
E) Tenth
Question
The Founders had not envisioned the existence of permanent political parties because they

A) opposed anyone who disagreed with them.
B) were not part of the early colonial governments.
C) had existed in Britain.
D) saw them as a sign of disloyalty and lack of national unity.
E) had caused the fall of republican Rome.
Question
Match each political leader with his positions on public policy in the 1790s.
<strong>Match each political leader with his positions on public policy in the 1790s.  </strong> A) A-1, 2, 4, 6⎯B-3, 5, 7, 8 B) A-1, 5, 6, 7⎯B-2, 3, 4, 8 C) A-2, 3, 5, 8⎯B-1, 4, 6, 7 D) A-3, 6, 7, 8⎯B-1, 2, 4, 5 E) A-5, 2, 6, 3⎯B-1, 4, 7, 8 <div style=padding-top: 35px>

A) A-1, 2, 4, 6⎯B-3, 5, 7, 8
B) A-1, 5, 6, 7⎯B-2, 3, 4, 8
C) A-2, 3, 5, 8⎯B-1, 4, 6, 7
D) A-3, 6, 7, 8⎯B-1, 2, 4, 5
E) A-5, 2, 6, 3⎯B-1, 4, 7, 8
Question
Jefferson's argument against the constitutionality of a Bank of the United States were based on the strict construction principles, especially embodied in the

A) Articles of Confederation.
B) "necessary and proper" clause of the Constitution.
C) Virginia and Kentucky Resolutions.
D) Tenth Amendment in the Bill of Rights.
E) restrictions on Congress's power in Article I, section 10 of the Constitution.
Question
The legal basis for Treasury Secretary Alexander Hamilton's Bank of the United States was

A) rejected by the House of Representatives and the Senate.
B) supported by Thomas Jefferson.
C) accepted by the bank's opponents, even if they disagreed with the goals and objectives of the bank on policy grounds.
D) based on the "necessary and proper," or "elastic," clause in the Constitution.
E) rejected by President George Washington.
Question
All of the following are true statements about the Whiskey Rebellion EXCEPT

A) backcountry pioneer folk saw whiskey not as a luxury but as an economic necessity and medium of exchange.
B) protesters felt burdened by Hamilton's economic programs.
C) President Washington responded to the Whiskey Rebellion by negotiating a peaceful resolution of the conflictwith the protestors.
D) protesters erected whiskey poles similar to liberty poles used against the Stamp Act in 1765.
E) whiskey rebels tarred and feathered revenue officers.
Question
Alexander Hamilton believed that a limited national debt

A) would do great harm to the nation's economy.
B) might lead to military weakness.
C) could persuade individuals and nations not to lend money to the United States.
D) was beneficial, because people to whom the government owed money would work hard to make the nation a success.
E) could help his economic plans but not his political plans.
Question
Opposition by Thomas Jefferson and James Madison to the financial plan of Alexander Hamilton resulted in

A) the formation of permanent political parties.
B) Hamilton's dismissal from the cabinet by George Washington.
C) politics drifting too far out of kilter with the wishes of the people.
D) the rejection of Hamilton's plan by Washington.
E) their dismissal from the cabinet of George Washington.
Question
The political party out of power in Congress and the executive branch of government that provided the loyal opposition to the party in power in the 1790s was the

A) Whigs.
B) Federalists.
C) Democratic-Republicans.
D) Whigs..
Question
Hamilton believed that, together, his funding and assumption programs would

A) gain the monetary and political support of the rich for the federal government.
B) restore the principles of state sovereignty.
C) be the quickest way to pay off the national debt.
D) guarantee the fairest treatment of the original holders of government bonds.
E) keep taxes low and therefore create a feeling of loyalty to the new federal government.
Question
The ____ Amendment might rightly be called the states' rights amendment.

A) First
B) Sixth
C) Eighth
D) Ninth
E) Tenth
Question
Alexander Hamilton's financial program for the economic development of the United States favored

A) agricultural interests.
B) trade with France.
C) the wealthier class.
D) the poor.
E) the middle class.
Question
As secretary of the treasury, Alexander Hamilton's first objective was to

A) help the wealthy.
B) bring more industry to the United States.
C) see that more agricultural products were exported.
D) bolster the national credit.
E) put the country on the gold standard.
Question
All of the following were part of Alexander Hamilton's economic program EXCEPT

A) the creation of a national bank.
B) funding the entire national debt at par.
C) vigorous foreign trade.
D) protective tariffs.
E) paying only domestic debts but not foreign debts.
Question
The aspect of Hamilton's financial program that received the least support in Congress, because of its heavy agricultural and commercial interests, was

A) funding at par.
B) assumption.
C) the National Bank.
D) a protective tariff.
E) excise taxes.
Question
Hamilton's position on the war between Britain and France in 1793 was primarily influenced by

A) his commitment to the Franco-American alliance of 1778.
B) the threat of British naval action against the American coast.
C) the national government's dependence on customs collections for revenue and the promotion of international trade with favored partners.
D) his personal commitment to democratic government as a world ideal.
E) his connection to the French foreign minister Citizen Edmond Genêt.
Question
The formal Franco-American political and military defense alliance of 1778

A) was ended by mutual agreement in 1789.
B) bound the United States to neutrality in the event of war between France and Britain.
C) was weakened significantly by the issuance of President Washington's Neutrality Proclamation of 1793.
D) was invoked by the French to obtain American aid in France's war with Britain after 1793.
E) led the United States to war with Great Britain in 1812.
Question
Arrange the following events in chronological order:
(A) XYZ affair, (B) Neutrality Proclamation, (C) Jay's Treaty, and (D) Kentucky and Virginia resolutions.

A) C, B, A, D
B) B, A, C, D
C) B, C, A, D
D) C, B, D, A
E) A, B, D, C
Question
The High Federalists were

A) political supporters of Adams and were led by Hamilton.
B) political supporters of Jefferson.
C) supporters of the war faction of the Federalist party.
D) Federalists who voted for the Republicans in the election of 1800.
E) backcountry supporters of the Whiskey Rebellion living in southwestern Pennsylvania and near the Indian frontier in the Old Northwest.
Question
John Jay's 1794 treaty with Britain

A) increased George Washington's huge popularity.
B) provided further evidence of American support for France.
C) alienated America from Spain.
D) created deeper splits between Federalists and Democratic-Republicans.
E) led to the election of Thomas Jefferson.
Question
In the election campaign of 1796, the Democratic-Republicans made their primary issue

A) the content of Washington's Farewell Address.
B) Washington's refusal to consult Congress before issuing the Neutrality Proclamation.
C) the terms of Jay's Treaty and the crushing of the Whiskey Rebellion.
D) the terms of the Pinckney Treaty.
E) Alexander Hamilton's idea for a national bank.
Question
Among the handicaps John Adams faced upon assuming the presidency were all of the following EXCEPT

A) trying to fill the popular George Washington's shoes.
B) Hamilton's hatred of him and efforts to undermine him.
C) his ambivalent positions on the critical political, economic, and foreign policy issues of the day.
D) his demeanor as an intellectual and elite, which made him unappealing to the masses.
E) his narrow victory in his bid for office.
Question
One of George Washington's most significant contributions as president was

A) keeping the nation out of foreign wars.
B) the signing of Jay's Treaty.
C) his advice against forming permanent alliances with foreign nations.
D) securing a pledge from Britain to stop arming Indians on the western lands.
E) establishing the political party system.
Question
The French grew angry with the United States shortly after 1794 because

A) of Jay's Treaty.
B) Congress appointed second-rate ambassadors.
C) of the XYZ affair.
D) John Adams had been elected president.
E) Thomas Jefferson was removed as ambassador.
Question
Washington's Farewell Address in 1796

A) warmly endorsed the appearance of two contending political parties in America.
B) warned against the dangers of permanent foreign alliances.
C) was delivered to a joint session of Congress by Washington himself.
D) proposed a two-term limitation on the presidency.
E) called for the country to rally behind the political party of the Jeffersonian-Republicans.
Question
Washington's decision to retire from the presidency in 1797

A) paved the way for Thomas Jefferson to step into the presidency.
B) established a two-term tradition for American presidents.
C) was capped off with a powerful Farewell Address, delivered before thousands of people.
D) had political leaders singing his praises for his accomplishments and dedication.
E) led England to see the fledgling nation as vulnerable.
Question
The United States acquired free navigation of the Mississippi River, the rights of deposit at New Orleans, and the large disputed territory north of Florida in

A) the Treaty of Greenville.
B) Jay's Treaty.
C) the Convention of 1800.
D) the Pinckney Treaty.
E) the Treaty of Paris.
Question
In Jay's Treaty, the British

A) pledged to stop seizing American ships.
B) released Americans from their pre-Revolutionary War debt obligations to British merchants.
C) promised to evacuate the chain of forts in the Old Northwest.
D) refused to pay damages for seizures of American ships.
E) were denied most favored nation status.
Question
The 1796 presidential campaign focused heavily on

A) the Bank of the United States.
B) the candidates' personalities.
C) slavery.
D) foreign trade.
E) real issues.
Question
Britain made neutrality very difficult for the United States during the French and British conflicts of the 1790s by

A) granting America numerous trade privileges.
B) seizing American merchant ships in the West Indies.
C) leaving frontier outposts on American soil.
D) helping to relieve tensions between Indians and Americans.
E) blocking the major United States' seaports.
Question
The Treaty of Greenville signed in August with the Miami Confederation of Indian nations resulted in all of the following EXCEPT

A) giving to the United States vast tracts of land in the Old Northwest.
B) the anticipated recognition of the sovereign status on the Miami Confederation of Indian nations.
C) an annual annuity of $9,000 to the Indians.
D) the right of the Indians to hunt the land they had ceded.
E) fair and reasonable financial compensation to the Miamis in exchange for an iron-clad promise from the U.S. government to restrict further westward expansion along the Old Northwest frontier.
Question
During its first quarter-century as a nation, one of the most vexing problems facing America was

A) developing and implementing a foreign policy strategy that would prevent the United States from entangling itself in the rivalry and warfare between France and Britain.
B) a lack of good political leadership.
C) the continued fighting between the United States and the Armed Neutrality League.
D) managing Indian affairs and wars throughout the country.
E) separation of church and state.
Question
Jay's Treaty contained all of the following provisions EXCEPT

A) a British promise to evacuate its chain of forts on U.S. soil.
B) British consent to pay damages for the recent seizure of American ships.
C) that Americans were bound to pay debts still owed to British merchants on pre-Revolutionary accounts.
D) no promise by the British to pay for future seizure of American ships.
E) a promise by the British to stop selling arms to the Indians.
Question
Washington's Neutrality Proclamation of 1793

A) was based on calculations of American self-interest.
B) fulfilled America's obligations under the Franco-American Treaty.
C) was opposed by both Alexander Hamilton and Thomas Jefferson.
D) dealt a severe blow to French military and naval strategists.
E) had little impact on future American foreign policy.
Question
When the French Revolution developed into a war with Britain, George Washington and the American government

A) supported Britain.
B) assisted France militarily.
C) tried to capture French possessions in North America and the West Indies.
D) remained neutral.
E) captured British possessions in North America.
Question
As a result of the Sedition Acts,

A) illegal immigrants were deported.
B) newspaper editors critical of the Adams administration were indicted, tried, convicted, and sent to jail.
C) many Americans, staging political protests, found their Constitutional right to peaceful assembly was violated.
D) the nation implemented its first military draft.
E) citizens' rights to trial by jury were suspended.
Question
Jeffersonian Republicans believed in all of the following EXCEPT

A) opposition to a national debt.
B) agriculture as the ideal occupation.
C) every adult white male's right to vote.
D) freedom of speech.
E) central authority should be kept to a minimum.
Question
According to the compact theory advocated by Jefferson and Madison

A) the national government was the creation of the 13 sovereign states.
B) nullification was an invalid policy.
C) the Virginia and Kentucky resolutions were illegal.
D) legislation such as the Alien and Sedition Acts was proper.
E) individuals, not the states, created the federal government.
Question
President Adams sought a peaceful solution to the undeclared war with France in order to

A) ensure his chances of reelection in 1800.
B) align himself with the Hamiltonian wing of the Federalist party.
C) save the Franco-American alliance of 1778.
D) prevent the outbreak of a full-scale war.
E) keep trade with France in place.
Question
Hamiltonian Federalists advocated

A) a preference for promoting agriculture over manufacturing in the United States.
B) a strong central government.
C) a full-blown democracy.
D) strong ties with France.
Question
Thomas Jefferson appealed to all of the following groups EXCEPT

A) small shopkeepers.
B) small yeoman farmers.
C) the middle class.
D) manufacturers.
E) artisans.
Question
The Sedition Act

A) threatened First Amendment freedoms of speech and press.
B) established criteria for deporting dangerous foreigners.
C) changed naturalization requirements for new citizens.
D) was never enforced.
E) was found by the Supreme Court to be unconstitutional.
Question
Federalists strongly supported

A) law and order.
B) states' rights.
C) strict construction of the Constitution.
D) popular democracy.
E) a weak military.
Question
The Federalist-dominated Congress enacted the Alien Laws, which were aimed at ____; whereas, the Sedition Act was primarily aimed at ____.

A) rebellious slaves; Jeffersonian newspapers and other outspoken political opponents of the Federalists
B) recent immigrants; Jeffersonian newspapers and other outspoken political opponents of the Federalists
C) recent immigrants; merchants
D) merchant smuggling; rebellious slaves
E) Indians; farmers
Question
Jeffersonian Republicans favored a political system in which

A) the central government possessed the bulk of the power.
B) cities were the primary focus of political activity.
C) a large standing army ensured peace.
D) the states retained the majority of political power.
E) manufacturing interests dominated.
Question
The main purpose of the Alien Laws and Sedition Acts was to

A) capture French and British spies.
B) control the Federalists.
C) silence and punish critics of the Federalists.
D) keep Thomas Jefferson from becoming president.
E) provide support for the Democratic-Republican party.
Question
To the Jeffersonian Republicans, the ideal citizen of a republic was a(n)

A) seaboard merchant.
B) town artisan.
C) indentured servant.
D) independent farmer.
E) industrialist.
Question
Thomas Jefferson argued that the emergence of a large landless class of white citizens could be avoided in part by

A) a redistribution of land.
B) a reduced property tax.
C) abolishing the property qualification to vote.
D) continuing slavery.
E) restricting the amount of property owned by each citizen.
Question
The immediate cause of the undeclared war between the United States and France was

A) the XYZ affair.
B) the Genêt mission.
C) the Neutrality Proclamation.
D) Washington's Farewell Address.
E) Jay's Treaty.
Question
The Virginia and Kentucky resolutions were written in response to

A) the XYZ affair.
B) Thomas Jefferson's presidential candidacy in 1800.
C) the Alien and Sedition Acts.
D) the compact theory of government.
E) the Federalist papers.
Question
Foreign relations between the United States and France deteriorated in the late 1790s over

A) the deportation of Citizen Genêt.
B) French seizure of American merchant ships.
C) the adjustment of the Florida boundary.
D) America's unilateral withdrawal from the Franco-American alliance.
E) Pinckney's Treaty.
Question
The United States finally negotiated a peace settlement with France in 1800 mainly because Napoleon

A) had also reached a peace agreement with Britain.
B) wanted to concentrate on gaining more power and territory in Europe.
C) realized that the French could not win a military victory over the American forces.
D) had been convinced by the Democratic-Republican pleas for cooperation.
E) had been removed from power.
Question
Federalists advocated rule by

A) the majority.
B) elites uninfluenced by the informed masses or "the best people."
C) farmers.
D) industrial workers.
E) native-born citizens only.
Question
For its continued success, Hamilton's financial program relied heavily on

A) foreign trade with Britain and Europe.
B) removal of the Spanish from the Mississippi Valley.
C) aid from France.
D) retiring the national debt.
E) high taxes.
Question
According many Federalists, the duty of judging the unconstitutionality of legislation passed by Congress lay with

A) state legislatures.
B) the president.
C) state supreme courts.
D) the Supreme Court.
E) the people.
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Deck 9: Launching the New Ship of State
1
All of the following are guarantees provided by the Bill of Rights EXCEPT

A) the right to vote for all citizens.
B) freedom of speech.
C) freedom of religion.
D) freedom of the press.
E) right to a trial by a jury.
the right to vote for all citizens.
2
When the new government was launched in 1789

A) the nation's population was doubling about every 25 years.
B) most people lived in the fast-growing cities.
C) most people lived west of the Allegheny Mountains.
D) New York was the largest city in the nation.
E) Great Britain refused to establish diplomatic relations with the United States.
the nation's population was doubling about every 25 years.
3
Identify and state the historical significance of assumption.
Federal government move to take on the debts of the states. This had the impact of improving confidence in the new government.
4
Identify and state the historical significance of Talleyrand.
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5
Identify and state the historical significance of The Whiskey Rebellion.
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6
Identify and state the historical significance of John Jay.
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7
Identify and state the historical significance of James Madison.
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8
Identify and state the historical significance of Thomas Jefferson.
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9
One of the major criticisms of the Constitution, as drafted in Philadelphia, was that it

A) was too long and detailed.
B) was far too short and required more detail.
C) failed to guarantee property rights.
D) failed to provide a mechanism for amendment.
E) did not provide guarantees for individual rights.
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10
Identify and state the historical significance of Alexander Hamilton.
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11
Identify and state the historical significance of John Adams.
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12
Identify and state the historical significance of "Mad Anthony" Wayne.
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13
Identify and state the historical significance of The Judiciary Act of 1789.
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14
All of the following cabinet level departments were created in the 20th century EXCEPT

A) defense
B) energy
C) labor
D) agriculture
E) education
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15
Identify and state the historical significance of Little Turtle.
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16
All of the following are accurate descriptions of the young American nation EXCEPT

A) its population was still about 90 percent rural, despite the flourishing cities.
B) the first official census of 1790 recorded almost four million people.
C) all but five percent of the people lived east of the Appalachian Mountains.
D) most of the population lived in the eastern seaboard cities.
E) foreign visitors looked down at the roughness and crudity of the pioneering life.
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17
The Bill of Rights was intended to protect ____ against the potential tyranny of ____.

A) the prerogatives of Congress, the president
B) the army and the navy, the national government
C) the South, the northern majority
D) individual liberties, a strong central government
E) civilian authorities, the military
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18
Identify and state the historical significance of Funding at par.
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19
Identify and state the historical significance of Citizen Edmond Genêt.
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20
Identify and state the historical significance of tariff.
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21
Hamilton expected that the revenue to pay the interest on the national debt would come from

A) sales taxes and licensing fees.
B) customs duties and excise tax.
C) income and property taxes.
D) western land sales and foreign loans.
E) foreign aid.
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22
All of the following were true of Alexander Hamilton EXCEPT

A) he served as the first Secretary of the Treasury.
B) his intelligence was constantly under question, but his loyalty to the republican experiment never wavered.
C) he would have been president if it were not for his ultraconservatism, a scandalous adultery, and a duelist's bullet.
D) his chief rival was Thomas Jefferson.
E) he claimed that the "British Government was the best in the world."
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23
The Whiskey Rebellion of 1794 arose in southwestern Pennsylvania when the federal government

A) levied an excise tax on whiskey.
B) tried to prohibit the sale of whiskey.
C) allowed the import of foreign whiskey.
D) halted the export of American whiskey.
E) tried to prohibit the manufacturing of whiskey.
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24
Which American political group was most alarmed by the Reign of Terror that occurred in France shortly after the French Revolution of 1789?

A) Jeffersonian Democratic-Republicans
B) Hamiltonian Federalists
C) African American slaves
D) Free African Americans
E) American Indian tribes on the western frontier such as the Miamis
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25
Political opponents of Treasury Secretary Alexander Hamilton asserted that his major economic programs infringed on

A) constitutional guarantees ofchecks and balances of political power and authority among the executive, legislative, and judicial branches of the central government.
B) national security.
C) states' rights, explicitly reserved to them by pending ratification of the 10th Amendment of the Constitution.
D) free enterprise.
E) federal authority.
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26
Which amendment guards against the danger that enumerating rights might lead to the conclusion that they were the only ones protected?

A) First
B) Second
C) Fifth
D) Ninth
E) Tenth
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27
The Founders had not envisioned the existence of permanent political parties because they

A) opposed anyone who disagreed with them.
B) were not part of the early colonial governments.
C) had existed in Britain.
D) saw them as a sign of disloyalty and lack of national unity.
E) had caused the fall of republican Rome.
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28
Match each political leader with his positions on public policy in the 1790s.
<strong>Match each political leader with his positions on public policy in the 1790s.  </strong> A) A-1, 2, 4, 6⎯B-3, 5, 7, 8 B) A-1, 5, 6, 7⎯B-2, 3, 4, 8 C) A-2, 3, 5, 8⎯B-1, 4, 6, 7 D) A-3, 6, 7, 8⎯B-1, 2, 4, 5 E) A-5, 2, 6, 3⎯B-1, 4, 7, 8

A) A-1, 2, 4, 6⎯B-3, 5, 7, 8
B) A-1, 5, 6, 7⎯B-2, 3, 4, 8
C) A-2, 3, 5, 8⎯B-1, 4, 6, 7
D) A-3, 6, 7, 8⎯B-1, 2, 4, 5
E) A-5, 2, 6, 3⎯B-1, 4, 7, 8
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29
Jefferson's argument against the constitutionality of a Bank of the United States were based on the strict construction principles, especially embodied in the

A) Articles of Confederation.
B) "necessary and proper" clause of the Constitution.
C) Virginia and Kentucky Resolutions.
D) Tenth Amendment in the Bill of Rights.
E) restrictions on Congress's power in Article I, section 10 of the Constitution.
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30
The legal basis for Treasury Secretary Alexander Hamilton's Bank of the United States was

A) rejected by the House of Representatives and the Senate.
B) supported by Thomas Jefferson.
C) accepted by the bank's opponents, even if they disagreed with the goals and objectives of the bank on policy grounds.
D) based on the "necessary and proper," or "elastic," clause in the Constitution.
E) rejected by President George Washington.
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31
All of the following are true statements about the Whiskey Rebellion EXCEPT

A) backcountry pioneer folk saw whiskey not as a luxury but as an economic necessity and medium of exchange.
B) protesters felt burdened by Hamilton's economic programs.
C) President Washington responded to the Whiskey Rebellion by negotiating a peaceful resolution of the conflictwith the protestors.
D) protesters erected whiskey poles similar to liberty poles used against the Stamp Act in 1765.
E) whiskey rebels tarred and feathered revenue officers.
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32
Alexander Hamilton believed that a limited national debt

A) would do great harm to the nation's economy.
B) might lead to military weakness.
C) could persuade individuals and nations not to lend money to the United States.
D) was beneficial, because people to whom the government owed money would work hard to make the nation a success.
E) could help his economic plans but not his political plans.
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33
Opposition by Thomas Jefferson and James Madison to the financial plan of Alexander Hamilton resulted in

A) the formation of permanent political parties.
B) Hamilton's dismissal from the cabinet by George Washington.
C) politics drifting too far out of kilter with the wishes of the people.
D) the rejection of Hamilton's plan by Washington.
E) their dismissal from the cabinet of George Washington.
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34
The political party out of power in Congress and the executive branch of government that provided the loyal opposition to the party in power in the 1790s was the

A) Whigs.
B) Federalists.
C) Democratic-Republicans.
D) Whigs..
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35
Hamilton believed that, together, his funding and assumption programs would

A) gain the monetary and political support of the rich for the federal government.
B) restore the principles of state sovereignty.
C) be the quickest way to pay off the national debt.
D) guarantee the fairest treatment of the original holders of government bonds.
E) keep taxes low and therefore create a feeling of loyalty to the new federal government.
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36
The ____ Amendment might rightly be called the states' rights amendment.

A) First
B) Sixth
C) Eighth
D) Ninth
E) Tenth
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37
Alexander Hamilton's financial program for the economic development of the United States favored

A) agricultural interests.
B) trade with France.
C) the wealthier class.
D) the poor.
E) the middle class.
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38
As secretary of the treasury, Alexander Hamilton's first objective was to

A) help the wealthy.
B) bring more industry to the United States.
C) see that more agricultural products were exported.
D) bolster the national credit.
E) put the country on the gold standard.
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39
All of the following were part of Alexander Hamilton's economic program EXCEPT

A) the creation of a national bank.
B) funding the entire national debt at par.
C) vigorous foreign trade.
D) protective tariffs.
E) paying only domestic debts but not foreign debts.
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40
The aspect of Hamilton's financial program that received the least support in Congress, because of its heavy agricultural and commercial interests, was

A) funding at par.
B) assumption.
C) the National Bank.
D) a protective tariff.
E) excise taxes.
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41
Hamilton's position on the war between Britain and France in 1793 was primarily influenced by

A) his commitment to the Franco-American alliance of 1778.
B) the threat of British naval action against the American coast.
C) the national government's dependence on customs collections for revenue and the promotion of international trade with favored partners.
D) his personal commitment to democratic government as a world ideal.
E) his connection to the French foreign minister Citizen Edmond Genêt.
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42
The formal Franco-American political and military defense alliance of 1778

A) was ended by mutual agreement in 1789.
B) bound the United States to neutrality in the event of war between France and Britain.
C) was weakened significantly by the issuance of President Washington's Neutrality Proclamation of 1793.
D) was invoked by the French to obtain American aid in France's war with Britain after 1793.
E) led the United States to war with Great Britain in 1812.
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43
Arrange the following events in chronological order:
(A) XYZ affair, (B) Neutrality Proclamation, (C) Jay's Treaty, and (D) Kentucky and Virginia resolutions.

A) C, B, A, D
B) B, A, C, D
C) B, C, A, D
D) C, B, D, A
E) A, B, D, C
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44
The High Federalists were

A) political supporters of Adams and were led by Hamilton.
B) political supporters of Jefferson.
C) supporters of the war faction of the Federalist party.
D) Federalists who voted for the Republicans in the election of 1800.
E) backcountry supporters of the Whiskey Rebellion living in southwestern Pennsylvania and near the Indian frontier in the Old Northwest.
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45
John Jay's 1794 treaty with Britain

A) increased George Washington's huge popularity.
B) provided further evidence of American support for France.
C) alienated America from Spain.
D) created deeper splits between Federalists and Democratic-Republicans.
E) led to the election of Thomas Jefferson.
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46
In the election campaign of 1796, the Democratic-Republicans made their primary issue

A) the content of Washington's Farewell Address.
B) Washington's refusal to consult Congress before issuing the Neutrality Proclamation.
C) the terms of Jay's Treaty and the crushing of the Whiskey Rebellion.
D) the terms of the Pinckney Treaty.
E) Alexander Hamilton's idea for a national bank.
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47
Among the handicaps John Adams faced upon assuming the presidency were all of the following EXCEPT

A) trying to fill the popular George Washington's shoes.
B) Hamilton's hatred of him and efforts to undermine him.
C) his ambivalent positions on the critical political, economic, and foreign policy issues of the day.
D) his demeanor as an intellectual and elite, which made him unappealing to the masses.
E) his narrow victory in his bid for office.
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48
One of George Washington's most significant contributions as president was

A) keeping the nation out of foreign wars.
B) the signing of Jay's Treaty.
C) his advice against forming permanent alliances with foreign nations.
D) securing a pledge from Britain to stop arming Indians on the western lands.
E) establishing the political party system.
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49
The French grew angry with the United States shortly after 1794 because

A) of Jay's Treaty.
B) Congress appointed second-rate ambassadors.
C) of the XYZ affair.
D) John Adams had been elected president.
E) Thomas Jefferson was removed as ambassador.
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50
Washington's Farewell Address in 1796

A) warmly endorsed the appearance of two contending political parties in America.
B) warned against the dangers of permanent foreign alliances.
C) was delivered to a joint session of Congress by Washington himself.
D) proposed a two-term limitation on the presidency.
E) called for the country to rally behind the political party of the Jeffersonian-Republicans.
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51
Washington's decision to retire from the presidency in 1797

A) paved the way for Thomas Jefferson to step into the presidency.
B) established a two-term tradition for American presidents.
C) was capped off with a powerful Farewell Address, delivered before thousands of people.
D) had political leaders singing his praises for his accomplishments and dedication.
E) led England to see the fledgling nation as vulnerable.
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52
The United States acquired free navigation of the Mississippi River, the rights of deposit at New Orleans, and the large disputed territory north of Florida in

A) the Treaty of Greenville.
B) Jay's Treaty.
C) the Convention of 1800.
D) the Pinckney Treaty.
E) the Treaty of Paris.
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53
In Jay's Treaty, the British

A) pledged to stop seizing American ships.
B) released Americans from their pre-Revolutionary War debt obligations to British merchants.
C) promised to evacuate the chain of forts in the Old Northwest.
D) refused to pay damages for seizures of American ships.
E) were denied most favored nation status.
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54
The 1796 presidential campaign focused heavily on

A) the Bank of the United States.
B) the candidates' personalities.
C) slavery.
D) foreign trade.
E) real issues.
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55
Britain made neutrality very difficult for the United States during the French and British conflicts of the 1790s by

A) granting America numerous trade privileges.
B) seizing American merchant ships in the West Indies.
C) leaving frontier outposts on American soil.
D) helping to relieve tensions between Indians and Americans.
E) blocking the major United States' seaports.
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56
The Treaty of Greenville signed in August with the Miami Confederation of Indian nations resulted in all of the following EXCEPT

A) giving to the United States vast tracts of land in the Old Northwest.
B) the anticipated recognition of the sovereign status on the Miami Confederation of Indian nations.
C) an annual annuity of $9,000 to the Indians.
D) the right of the Indians to hunt the land they had ceded.
E) fair and reasonable financial compensation to the Miamis in exchange for an iron-clad promise from the U.S. government to restrict further westward expansion along the Old Northwest frontier.
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57
During its first quarter-century as a nation, one of the most vexing problems facing America was

A) developing and implementing a foreign policy strategy that would prevent the United States from entangling itself in the rivalry and warfare between France and Britain.
B) a lack of good political leadership.
C) the continued fighting between the United States and the Armed Neutrality League.
D) managing Indian affairs and wars throughout the country.
E) separation of church and state.
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58
Jay's Treaty contained all of the following provisions EXCEPT

A) a British promise to evacuate its chain of forts on U.S. soil.
B) British consent to pay damages for the recent seizure of American ships.
C) that Americans were bound to pay debts still owed to British merchants on pre-Revolutionary accounts.
D) no promise by the British to pay for future seizure of American ships.
E) a promise by the British to stop selling arms to the Indians.
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59
Washington's Neutrality Proclamation of 1793

A) was based on calculations of American self-interest.
B) fulfilled America's obligations under the Franco-American Treaty.
C) was opposed by both Alexander Hamilton and Thomas Jefferson.
D) dealt a severe blow to French military and naval strategists.
E) had little impact on future American foreign policy.
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60
When the French Revolution developed into a war with Britain, George Washington and the American government

A) supported Britain.
B) assisted France militarily.
C) tried to capture French possessions in North America and the West Indies.
D) remained neutral.
E) captured British possessions in North America.
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61
As a result of the Sedition Acts,

A) illegal immigrants were deported.
B) newspaper editors critical of the Adams administration were indicted, tried, convicted, and sent to jail.
C) many Americans, staging political protests, found their Constitutional right to peaceful assembly was violated.
D) the nation implemented its first military draft.
E) citizens' rights to trial by jury were suspended.
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62
Jeffersonian Republicans believed in all of the following EXCEPT

A) opposition to a national debt.
B) agriculture as the ideal occupation.
C) every adult white male's right to vote.
D) freedom of speech.
E) central authority should be kept to a minimum.
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63
According to the compact theory advocated by Jefferson and Madison

A) the national government was the creation of the 13 sovereign states.
B) nullification was an invalid policy.
C) the Virginia and Kentucky resolutions were illegal.
D) legislation such as the Alien and Sedition Acts was proper.
E) individuals, not the states, created the federal government.
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64
President Adams sought a peaceful solution to the undeclared war with France in order to

A) ensure his chances of reelection in 1800.
B) align himself with the Hamiltonian wing of the Federalist party.
C) save the Franco-American alliance of 1778.
D) prevent the outbreak of a full-scale war.
E) keep trade with France in place.
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65
Hamiltonian Federalists advocated

A) a preference for promoting agriculture over manufacturing in the United States.
B) a strong central government.
C) a full-blown democracy.
D) strong ties with France.
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66
Thomas Jefferson appealed to all of the following groups EXCEPT

A) small shopkeepers.
B) small yeoman farmers.
C) the middle class.
D) manufacturers.
E) artisans.
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67
The Sedition Act

A) threatened First Amendment freedoms of speech and press.
B) established criteria for deporting dangerous foreigners.
C) changed naturalization requirements for new citizens.
D) was never enforced.
E) was found by the Supreme Court to be unconstitutional.
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68
Federalists strongly supported

A) law and order.
B) states' rights.
C) strict construction of the Constitution.
D) popular democracy.
E) a weak military.
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69
The Federalist-dominated Congress enacted the Alien Laws, which were aimed at ____; whereas, the Sedition Act was primarily aimed at ____.

A) rebellious slaves; Jeffersonian newspapers and other outspoken political opponents of the Federalists
B) recent immigrants; Jeffersonian newspapers and other outspoken political opponents of the Federalists
C) recent immigrants; merchants
D) merchant smuggling; rebellious slaves
E) Indians; farmers
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70
Jeffersonian Republicans favored a political system in which

A) the central government possessed the bulk of the power.
B) cities were the primary focus of political activity.
C) a large standing army ensured peace.
D) the states retained the majority of political power.
E) manufacturing interests dominated.
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71
The main purpose of the Alien Laws and Sedition Acts was to

A) capture French and British spies.
B) control the Federalists.
C) silence and punish critics of the Federalists.
D) keep Thomas Jefferson from becoming president.
E) provide support for the Democratic-Republican party.
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72
To the Jeffersonian Republicans, the ideal citizen of a republic was a(n)

A) seaboard merchant.
B) town artisan.
C) indentured servant.
D) independent farmer.
E) industrialist.
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73
Thomas Jefferson argued that the emergence of a large landless class of white citizens could be avoided in part by

A) a redistribution of land.
B) a reduced property tax.
C) abolishing the property qualification to vote.
D) continuing slavery.
E) restricting the amount of property owned by each citizen.
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74
The immediate cause of the undeclared war between the United States and France was

A) the XYZ affair.
B) the Genêt mission.
C) the Neutrality Proclamation.
D) Washington's Farewell Address.
E) Jay's Treaty.
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75
The Virginia and Kentucky resolutions were written in response to

A) the XYZ affair.
B) Thomas Jefferson's presidential candidacy in 1800.
C) the Alien and Sedition Acts.
D) the compact theory of government.
E) the Federalist papers.
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76
Foreign relations between the United States and France deteriorated in the late 1790s over

A) the deportation of Citizen Genêt.
B) French seizure of American merchant ships.
C) the adjustment of the Florida boundary.
D) America's unilateral withdrawal from the Franco-American alliance.
E) Pinckney's Treaty.
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77
The United States finally negotiated a peace settlement with France in 1800 mainly because Napoleon

A) had also reached a peace agreement with Britain.
B) wanted to concentrate on gaining more power and territory in Europe.
C) realized that the French could not win a military victory over the American forces.
D) had been convinced by the Democratic-Republican pleas for cooperation.
E) had been removed from power.
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78
Federalists advocated rule by

A) the majority.
B) elites uninfluenced by the informed masses or "the best people."
C) farmers.
D) industrial workers.
E) native-born citizens only.
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79
For its continued success, Hamilton's financial program relied heavily on

A) foreign trade with Britain and Europe.
B) removal of the Spanish from the Mississippi Valley.
C) aid from France.
D) retiring the national debt.
E) high taxes.
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80
According many Federalists, the duty of judging the unconstitutionality of legislation passed by Congress lay with

A) state legislatures.
B) the president.
C) state supreme courts.
D) the Supreme Court.
E) the people.
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