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284 PART 3 REVOLUTION AND REPUBLICAN CULTURE, 1754%u20131800Jefferson and the Republicans promoted a westward movement that transformed the agricultural economy and sparked new wars with Native American peoples. Expansion westward also shaped American diplomatic and military policy, leading to the Louisiana Purchase, the War of 1812, and the treaties negotiated by John Quincy Adams.Finally, there was the unexpected rise of the First Party System. As Hamilton%u2019s policies split the political elite, the French Revolution divided Americans into hostile ideological groups. The result was two decades of bitter conflict and controversial measures: the Federalists%u2019 Sedition Act, the Republicans%u2019 Embargo Act, and Madison%u2019s decision to go to war with Britain. Although the Federalist Party faded away, it left as its enduring legacy Hamilton%u2019s financial innovations and John Marshall%u2019s constitutional jurisprudence.Chapter 7 ReviewCONTENT REVIEW Answer these questions to demonstrate your understanding of the chapter%u2019s main ideas.1. What were the most important differences between Federalists and Republicans in the 1790s?2. How were the principles of the Jeffersonian Republicans reflected in this era of dramatic growth and development?3. What elements of Federalist political philosophy survived the end of the First Party System?TERMS TO KNOW Identify and explain the significance of each term below.Key Concepts and EventsJudiciary Act of 1789%u00a0 (p. 257)Bill of Rights%u00a0(p. 257)Report on the Public Credit%u00a0(p. 257)Bank of the United States%u00a0(p. 259)Report on Manufactures%u00a0 (p. 259)Proclamation of Neutrality%u00a0(p. 260)French Revolution%u00a0(p. 260)Whiskey Rebellion%u00a0(p. 260)Jay%u2019s Treaty%u00a0(p. 262)Haitian Revolution%u00a0(p. 262)XYZ Affair%u00a0(p. 264)Naturalization, Alien, and Sedition Acts%u00a0(p. 264)Virginia and Kentucky Resolutions%u00a0(p. 264)Treaty of Greenville%u00a0(p. 266)Marbury v. Madison(1803)%u00a0(p. 270)Louisiana Purchase%u00a0 (p. 272)Embargo Act of 1807%u00a0 (p. 274)Battle of Tippecanoe%u00a0 (p. 275)Treaty of Ghent%u00a0(p. 280)McCulloch v. Maryland(1819)%u00a0(p. 280)Adams-On%u00eds Treaty%u00a0 (p. 282)Monroe Doctrine%u00a0 (p. 282)Key PeopleAlexander Hamilton%u00a0 (p. 256)Thomas Jefferson%u00a0(p. 256)John Adams%u00a0(p. 257)Little Turtle%u00a0(p. 266)John Marshall%u00a0(p. 270)Sacagawea%u00a0(p. 273)Tecumseh%u00a0(p. 275)Henry Clay%u00a0(p. 275)John Quincy Adams%u00a0 (p. 280)%u00a9 Bedford, Freeman & Worth Publishers. For review purposes only. Do not distribute.