Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Sectionalism in 1800s America refers to the different lifestyles, social structures, customs, and the political values of the North and the South. [2] [3] Regional tensions came to a head during the War of 1812, resulting in the Hartford Convention which manifested New England's dissatisfaction with a foreign trade embargo that affected its industry disproportionately, as well as dilution of ...
Even as nationalism increased across the country, its effects were limited by a renewed sense of sectionalism. The New England states that had opposed the War of 1812 felt an increasing decline in political power with the demise of the Federalist Party. This loss was tempered with the arrival of a new industrial movement and increased demands ...
The Revolution of 1800: Democracy, Race, and the New Republic. University of Virginia Press. Schoen, Brian (2003). "Calculating the price of union: Republican economic nationalism and the origins of Southern sectionalism, 1790-1828". Journal of the Early Republic. 23 (2): 173– 206. doi:10.2307/3125035. JSTOR 3125035. Silbey, Joel H. (2014).
The Awakening of American Nationalism: 1815–1828 (1965). Howe, Daniel Walker. What Hath God Wrought: The Transformation of America, 1815–1848 (2008). Jenkins, Jeffery A., and Charles Stewart III. "Committee Assignments as Side Payments: The Interplay of Leadership and Committee Development in the Era of Good Feelings."
American nationalism is a form of civic, ethnic, cultural or economic influences [1] found in the United States. [2]
This spirit of nationalism was linked to the tremendous growth and economic prosperity of this postwar era. However in 1819, the nation suffered its first financial panic and the 1820s turned out to be a decade of political turmoil that again led to fierce debates over competing views of the exact nature of American federalism. The "extreme ...
The Tariff of 1816 eight years before had passed into law upon a wave of nationalism that followed the War of 1812. But by 1824, this nationalism was transforming into strong sectionalism. But by 1824, this nationalism was transforming into strong sectionalism.
"The Historian's Use of Nationalism and Vice Versa," American Historical Review, Vol. 67, No. 4 (July 1962), pp. 924–950 in JSTOR; The Background of the Civil War, National Council for the Social Studies, 1961. (With Manning) Nationalism and Sectionalism in America, 1775-1877, Holt, 1961.