79.8k views
4 votes
Fill the question out in your own words!

1. What shifts in population might be attributed to advances in technology and changes in regional economies during the early Industrial Revolution?

2. How was the American System expected to unite the nation’s economic interests?

3. What was the significance of the Monroe Doctrine?

4. Why were the agreements reached at the Missouri Compromise important for America at that time?

5. If you were a citizen in 1828, would you vote for Quincy-Adams or Jackson? Why?

6. What factors set the stage for the Indian Removal Act?

7. How did the North and South start to develop differently from 1815-1840?

8. Why were there so many economic crises between 1830 and 1840?

User MoSheikh
by
5.3k points

1 Answer

1 vote

Answer:

1. The population would have grown in the cities and decreased in the countries. This would have impacted the advancement of technology in a good way because more people were working together toward advancement. The econimies of the countryside would likley decrease and be less productive.

2. President Madison presented this plan to Congress and hoped it would both unite the different regions of the country and create a stable economy that would make the nation self-sufficient ex - developing transportation systems and other internal improvements, establishing a protective tariff, resurrecting the national bank

3. The Monroe Doctrine established precedence for American foreign policy in regard to the nations of Europe and their imperialistic desires.

4. cant answer this one

5.The land that the tribes inhabited was fertile and the southern settlers were wanting to move to these areas. In addition, since Georgia was fighting with the Cherokee tribes over a land claim at the time, President Jackson was hoping that moving them out of the south would resolve this issue. The discovery of gold in Georgia in 1828 expedited the process, as well.

6.Voter participation in political campaigns and elections increased due to the new party system, new campaigning methods, and new topics of debate during the Era of Good Feelings are the ways, forces and events that led to the changes of participation in political campaigns and elections in the United States changed between 1815 and 1840.

they're not in order

Step-by-step explanation:

User Greg Ellis
by
5.3k points