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                                    CHAPTER 7 Review 285MAKING CONNECTIONS Recognize the larger developments and continuities within and across chapters by answering these questions.1. In Chapter 6, thirteen former British colonies cooperated in war and established new republican institutions of self-government. After 1789, unforeseen divisions developed in American politics. Why did Hamiltonians and Jeffersonians disagree so sharply on key questions of national policy? Which of the factions in the First Party System%u2014Federalists or Republicans%u2014best embodied the principles of the Revolution? How did westward expansion and international relations force the United States to modify its Revolutionary republican ideals? Make an argument about changes to and continuity of American Revolutionary ideals and support it with specific evidence.2. In Chapters 3, 4, and 5, we traced the growing competition among Britain, France, and Spain for claims to North American territory. What allowed the United States%u2014newly formed and relatively weak%u2014to enter into this competition and succeed in claiming so much of the continent%u2019s territory? What military and diplomatic initiatives secured American boundaries, and why did the nations of Europe choose to concede so many of their claims to the new nation? Be sure to include the global context in your answer.KEY TURNING POINTS Refer to the timeline at the start of the chapter for help in answering the following questions.The sham Native American treaties (1784%u20131789), Kentucky and Tennessee join the Union (1792, 1796), and Jefferson is elected president (1800): How were developments in the West tied into national politics in the 1790s? Why did the Federalists steadily lose ground to the Republicans?%u00a9 Bedford, Freeman & Worth Publishers. For review purposes only. Do not distribute. 
                                
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