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  1. State Nullification

    state nullification Impact of a State's Right to Nullification Wei S. Zhuang Grade 10 US HistoryI-H Period 4 5/8/05 Wei S. Zhuang Grade 10 US History Period

  2. Road To Civil War

    the tariffs of 1828 and 1832 and to forbid the collection of duties within the state. Jackson insisted that nullification was treason and that its adherents were

  3. Constitutional And Social Developments Between 1860 And 1877

    period of 1860 to 1877. Issues of concentrated power, interpretations of the constitution, state nullification, and currency issues all affected the American society.

  4. Andrew Jackson

    were highlighted by the frustration of sectional attempts to weaken the central government by state nullification of federal law, and by his confrontation with the

  5. America

    states to oppose oppressive or unacceptable federal legislation without open rebellion or state nullification. In the Virginia and Kentucky Resolutions, nullification

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State Nullification

Submitted by Ice3691006 on May 22, 2005

Category: American History
Words: 1543 | Pages: 7
Views: 182
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Impact of a State's Right to Nullification

Wei S. Zhuang
Grade 10
US HistoryI-H
Period 4
5/8/05

Wei S. Zhuang
Grade 10
US History
Period 4
5/8/05
Impact of a State's Right to Nullification
The impact of a state's right to nullification can ultimately cause a great deal of damage to the country that it resides in. To describe the impacts one would need to take a look back into history when the Nullification Crisis took place. South Carolina had economic hard times after the war of 1812. Cotton prices started to drop and South Carolina was in a state of depression. Southerners however tend to blame their economic woes on the policies of the national government. (Goode 87). The Tariff of Abominations was a series of high taxes that was placed on incoming foreign goods. The South disagreed with this proposal because they thought that the federal government was trying to tax one part of the country to benefit the wealth of another which is the North. Thomas Cooper, the president of the South Carolina College said "Is it worth while to continue in this union of states, where the north demands to be our masters and we are required to be their tributaries."(Goode 89) John C. Calhoun being Vice President and was from South Carolina strongly disagreed with this Tariff of Abominations. He even wrote "South Carolina Exposition" which used the constitution as an argument against the tariff. Then, there was the Haynes and Webster Debate. They both defended and attacked on the Nullification topic in congress. In 1832 Congress released another tariff that replaced the Tariff of Abominations, but the South Carolinians weren't still happy. The climax of this nullification swirl happened at Jackson's birthday dinner where everyone gathered to give speeches. Andrew told everybody in that room what he thought of State Nullification with one simple line: "Our...

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