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| CHAPTER 8 | THE FEDERALIST ERA | OVERVIEW |
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CHAPTER TIMELINE |
| April 1789 |
Inauguration of Washington |
| 17901791 |
Hamilton’s Reports |
| 1791 |
Ratification of the Bill of Rights |
| 1791 |
Creation of the Bank of the United States |
| 1793 |
Citizen Genêt Affair |
| 1794 |
Jay’s Treaty |
| 1794 |
Whiskey Rebellion |
| 1795 |
Pinckney’s Treaty |
| 1796 |
Washington’s farewell address |
| 1796 |
John Adams elected |
| 1797 |
XYZ Affair |
| 1798 |
Alien and Sedition Acts |
| 1800 |
Election of Jefferson |
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CHAPTER OBJECTIVES |
After you finish reading and studying this chapter, you should be able to: |
- Explain the challenge that confronted the Washington administration in
creating a new government.
- Name and summarize the three major proposals presented by Alexander
Hamilton for establishing the new government on a sound financial basis.
- Analyze the conflict of philosophy between Hamilton and Jefferson over the
constitutionality of the national bank and explain how that conflict led to the
development of two political parties.
- Account for the diplomatic problems with Britain, France, and Spain that
buffeted the new nation, and explain the resolution of each.
- Assess the differing roles played by Adams, Hamilton, and Washington in
Federalist politics and describe their effects on Adams’s administration.
- Understand the significance of the elections of 1796 and 1800.
- Explain the importance of the Alien and Sedition Acts and the Kentucky and
Virginia Resolutions as parts of continuing conflicts between individual
liberty and governmental authority, and states’ rights versus national
governmental authority.
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