Game quiz on Early 19th Century American History
American  history in the early 19th century
                               Louisiana  Purchase
                               The purchase of  land in Louisiana was a royal right in the United States to purchase the  western half of the Mississippi River from France in 1803. The Convention gives  the United States the sole right to acquire property from its citizens through  a treaty or alliance to overcome.
                               Lewis and Clark  Expedition
                               Lewis and  Clark's voyage from August 31, 1803, to September 25, 1806, also known as the  Discovery Expedition, was a voyage across the Western United States where the  United States bought land in Louisiana. Discovery Corps is a select group of  U.S. Army and civilian volunteers led by Captain Meriwether Lewis and  Lieutenant William Clark. The voyage headed west, crossing the American Continental  Divide and reaching the Pacific coast. The journeys ran from May 1804 to  September 1806. They did not find their way across the Mississippi River to the  Pacific Ocean, but they list more than 100 new animals and 178 species of  plants, providing 140 maps of the area.
                               War 1812:  Causes
                               Many historians  find that there was no single cause for the 1812 war, but several related  reasons. Each party tried to weaken the economy of its allies by banning and  confiscating the sale of goods. The United States is trying to remain  politically neutral. All of this led to forming a small but charismatic group  called the War Hawks, led by Henry Clay of Kentucky, who was elected to  Congress in 1810. The War Hawks wanted war with Britain.
                               War 1812:  Events and Consequences
                               The war of 1812  changed American history. With the United States on the verge of a war against  the world's most powerful military force, it has won international acclaim. In  addition, this encouraged their citizens to be patriotic. Britain controls most  of Canada, and most Americans want to expel the British from North America and  expand the borders of the United States. The United Kingdom has enacted a  series of bans to curb trade between the United States and France.
                               Antebellum  Period: economies of the North and South
                               Before the war,  the essential thing in the American economy was that growth and development  took place in two forms: the slave economy in the southern hemisphere and the  family farm and the payment of wealth in the North Free State. A pre-war southern  culture was the use and cultivation of slavery. With the era's growth, southern  students and leaders gradually shifted away from the protection of slavery as a  temporary disgrace, saw slavery as a benefit, and strongly condemned the  abolitionist movement.
                               Antebellum  Period: abolitionist and proslavery perspectives
                               The female  group is made up of a complete team. Well-known reformer and former slave  Frederick Douglass (Frederick Douglass) attended the 1848 Conference and spoke.  Both programs promoted American commitment to freedom and equality-commitment  to African Americans and women.
                               Antebellum  Period: slavery and politics part I
                               Ten years  before the American Civil War (1861-65), two former parties, the Whig Party and  the Democratic Party, underwent a dramatic change, leading to the end of the  Whig Party in 1860 and the rise of the Republican Party.
                               Antebellum  Period: slavery and politics part II
                             The pre-war  party, called the "Old Southern", is an event at the university. In  ancient times, it was neither the time to fight nor the time to plant. This was  a period in American history from the late 18th century until the beginning of  the American Civil War. 1861. The pre-war period marked the growth of the  southern economy, mainly as a result of slavery.