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| | The American Party System and Civil War |
 | | This party proclaimed hostility to Catholics and Immigrants. |  | | The Republican party had been born in 1854 with anti-slavery extension as one of the main points of its platform. |  | | The Compromise of 1850 was seen as the death knell for slavery as a political issue. |
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http://www.useless-knowledge.com/columnists/craighutchison/article5.html
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| | Jacksonian democracy - encyclopedia article about Jacksonian democracy. |
 | | The faction of the United States Democratic-Republican Party that solidly followed Andrew Jackson were sometimes referred to as Jacksonian or Jacksonian Democrats. |  | | Jacksonian Democracy had a lasting impact on allowing for more political participation from the average citizen, though Jacksonian democracy itself largely died off with the election of Abraham Lincoln and the rise of the Republican party. |  | | The faction led by Andrew Jackson would evolve into the United States Democratic Party, while the factions led by John Quincy Adams and Henry Clay would become the National Republican Party and later the Whigs. |
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http://encyclopedia.thefreedictionary.com/Jacksonian%20Democracy
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| | jacksonian party |
 | | In addition, some refer to the party as the Jeffersonian Republicans since Thomas Jefferson belonged to the party and had a major influence on its ideology; it is also referred to as simply the Republican Party, not to be confused with the modern Republican Party. |  | | Shortly afterward, the party would split into two factions: the Democratic Party, led by Andrew Jackson, and the Whig Party, which was formed from the anti-Jackson coalition. |  | | The Republican Party also sees itself as a spiritual descendant of the Democratic-Republicans, though it has much looser ties from their broad base of former Whig voters and politicians. |
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http://www.yourencyclopedia.net/Jacksonian_Party
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| | Jacksonian - encyclopedia article about Jacksonian. |
 | | Andrew Jackson, who was elected in 1828, was the first president even partially elected by the common citizenry, as the 1824 United States Presidential election was the first in which free white men without property could vote (notwithstanding this, one quarter of the participating states had their electors chosen by their State Legislatures). |  | | Contemporaries referred to it as simply the "Republican Party"; historians call it the "Democratic-Republican Party" or the "Jeffersonian Republicans" to distinguish it from the modern Republican Party. |  | | Jacksonian school – One of four U.S. diplomatic schools as described by Walter R. Mead |
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http://encyclopedia.thefreedictionary.com/Jacksonian
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| | MSN Encarta - Democratic Party |
 | | Neither was enough, however, and party leaders never found the means to attract enough new voters or to convert enough Republicans to win national power in the generation after the Civil War. |  | | In the 1830s, under presidents Andrew Jackson and Martin Van Buren, the Democratic Party developed the characteristics it retained until the end of the century. |  | | The party’s supporters in this period included groups as diverse as southern plantation owners and immigrant workers in northern cities. |
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http://encarta.msn.com/encyclopedia_761561572/Democratic_Party.html
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| | Reader's Companion to American History - -JACKSONIAN DEMOCRACY |
 | | Although the Jacksonian Democracy died in the 1850s, it left a powerful legacy, entwining egalitarian aspirations and class justice with the presumptions of white supremacy. |  | | A new generation of politicians broke with the old republican animus against mass political parties. |  | | An ambiguous, controversial concept, Jacksonian Democracy in the strictest sense refers simply to the ascendancy of Andrew Jackson and the Democratic party after 1828. |
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http://college.hmco.com/history/readerscomp/rcah/html/ah_046700_jacksoniande.htm
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| | Welcome to The American Presidency |
 | | In such fashion was born the concept of Jacksonian Democracy, which Jackson brought to fulfillment with his election as president in 1828 and which continued to be the dominant issue in American political life through his two administrations and until his death in 1845. |  | | Andrew Jackson was born at a settlement on the banks of Crawford's Branch of Waxhaw Creek in South Carolina on March 15, 1767, the third son of immigrant parents from northern Ireland, Andrew Jackson and Elizabeth Hutchinson. |  | | The outcome was a smashing Democratic party victory, with Jackson defeating Clay by 219 electoral votes to 49 (popular vote 688,242 to 473,462). |
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http://ap.grolier.com/article?assetid=0219960-00&templatename=/article/article.html
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| | USS Clueless - Jacksonian foreign policy |
 | | Jacksonians don't consider the pacification of Germany to be the result of law or diplomacy. |  | | I had always thought that the small government, free-enterprise tradition, of the United States was its greatest strength. |  | | The whole point of Jacksonianism is "You leave me alone and I'll leave you alone. |
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http://denbeste.nu/cd_log_entries/2002/08/Jacksonianforeignpolicy.shtml
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| | [No title] |
 | | The Jacksonian Presidency, 1829—1837 The Jacksonian Impact 6. |  | | The Jacksonian Presidency, 1829—1837 The Jacksonian Impact 1. |  | | Van Buren argued that political parties kept the government from abusing its power and insisted that state legislators follow the majority decisions of a party meeting, or caucus. |
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http://www.uvm.edu/~jmoore/us/chapter11.ppt
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| | CheathemMark.htm |
 | | The party refused to espouse a platform, calling instead for simple adherence to the broad foundation of the Constitution, and the Union of the States, and the enforcement of the laws. |  | | Ibid., 195; Sioussat, Tennessee, the Compromise of 1850, and the Nashville Convention, 344-5; and Satterfield, A Moderate Nationalist Jacksonian, 424-5. |  | | The American party's commitment to the Union was in stark contrast, at least in Donelson's opinion, to that of the Democratic leadership, particularly Pierce. |
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http://www.h-net.msu.edu/~shear/s2000.d/pa/CheathemMark.htm
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| | THE INVENTION OF PARTY POLITICS: FEDERALISM, POPULAR SOVEREIGNTY, AND CONSTITUTIONAL DEVELOPMENT IN JACKSONIAN ILLINOIS |
 | | They intended party action to be ongoing constitution building that would block the subversive efforts of a moneyed elite to use the courts to consolidate control over Americans through an enhanced federal government. |  | | In his last chapter, Professor Leonard surveys party development in other states to explain party failure at the national level—failure that led the Supreme Court aggressively to address the problem of slavery in DRED SCOTT. |  | | It therefore became an international necessity for the organized polity of the Democratic party to thwart aristocratic corruption of the Constitution. |
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http://www.bsos.umd.edu/gvpt/lpbr/subpages/reviews/leonard-gerald.htm
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| | U.S. Senate: Art & History Home > Origins & Development > Party Division |
 | | The actual number of senators representing a particular party often changes during a congress, due to the death or resignation of a senator, or as a consequence of a member changing parties. |  | | Note: Party ratio changed to 53 Republicans and 47 Democrats after Richard Shelby of Alabama switched from the Democratic to Republican party on November 9, 1994. |  | | Following the death of Senator Paul Coverdell (R-GA) on July 18, 2000, the balance shifted again, to 54 Republicans and 46 Democrats, when the governor appointed Zell Miller, a Democrat, to fill the vacancy. |
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http://www.senate.gov/pagelayout/history/one_item_and_teasers/partydiv.htm
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| | H-Net Review: Daniel Feller on The Rise and Fall of the American Whig Party: Jacksonian Politics and ... |
 | | Issues are the bait the parties use to lure the voters in. |  | | The Rise and Fall of the American Whig Party: Jacksonian Politics and the Onset of the Civil War. |  | | The distinctive feature of his text is its painstaking electoral analysis, which delves beneath the surface to scrutinize state and district elections between the quadrennial presidential contests and to analyze voter turnout rates as well as totals and percentages. |
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http://www2.h-net.msu.edu/reviews/showrev.cgi?path=25594946305208
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| | John Shorter |
 | | An able and energetic war governor, Shorter was nevertheless defeated in the 1863 election, a casualty of the protests against the 1861 secessionists, the unsuccessful war, and anti-Democratic party sentiment. |  | | His governorship was devoted to dealing with the problems and issues of the civil war as well as Alabama's relationship with the confederate government. |  | | Shorter retired to Eufaula for the remaining years of his life, continuing his law practice, and appearing briefly at the conservative Reconstruction meetings in Montgomery at the end of the war. |
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http://www.archives.state.al.us/govs_list/g_shorte.html
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| | Jacksonian |
 | | -the policies adopted by competing factions and parties in the states owed little to ordinary voters. |  | | The great political reforms of the early 19th century was conceived by no faction or party. |  | | Whigs, who emerged in 1834, the party dedicated to the defeat of Jackson. |
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http://www.csun.edu/~hbhis149/Jacksonian.html
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| | PSCI 347 |
 | | Describe both the ideological (evolutions in republican thinking) and institutional (resources of the president, points of access, scope of the electorate, character of party system) innovations that produced the death of the Jacksonian party system and the birth of the Republican party system. |  | | Describe the characteristics of the Patrician Party Systems of Hamiltonian Federalism and Jeffersonian Republicanism. |  | | Describe both the ideological (evolutions in republican thinking) and institutional (resources of the president, points of access, scope of the electorate, character of party system) innovations that produced the Jacksonian Democratic party system. |
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http://www.bridgewater.edu/~jjosefso/PSCI347midterm.htm
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| | Matthew Yglesias: "Jacksonian America" |
 | | But its actual transformation into the Party of Davis (and Strom Thurmond) began with Goldwater in 1964 (as he said about the GOP appealing to white Southern racists in that year, "We ought to go hunting where the ducks are"), was continued by Nixon and Reagan, and is now complete. |  | | The party of Jefferson Davis stood for states' rights to leave the Union and the maintenance of slavery. |
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http://yglesias.typepad.com/matthew/2004/09/jacksonian_amer.html
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| | Andrew Jackson in Society |
 | | The Jacksonians charged the Adams Administration with a "corrupt bargain", accusing Adams of offering Clay an appointment as secretary of state in exchange for the necessary votes in the House of Representatives to win the election. |  | | Andrew Jackson was the ideal man to satisfy the desires of the public for a democratic president, a true representative of the people. |  | | With such statements, Adams justified the argument of the Jacksonians, and fostered the people's desire for Jackson as president. |
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http://xroads.virginia.edu/~CAP/jackson/soc.htm
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| | United States National Republican Party - Freepedia |
 | | During John Quincy Adams's presidency the United States Democratic-Republican Party began to split, those who supported Adams became known as the National Republicans, while others supported Andrew Jackson and formed the modern day Democratic Party. |  | | After the election of 1832, the National Republican party eventually fell apart. |  | | The National Repulicans ran Henry Clay against Andrew Jackson in the election of 1832, and Clay's loss convinced Jackson that the people had give him a mandate to abolish the National Bank. |
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http://en.freepedia.org/Anti_Jacksonian_Party.html
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| | Valley of the Shadow: Alexander H. H. Stuart Letters |
 | | Stuart stood from the Clay wing of the Jacksonian party and he began to identify his interests in the new Whig party. |  | | He ran for Congress in 1840 as a Whig and was elected, serving one term. |  | | He was elected a delegate in the Virginia state legislature and was continuously reelected until 1839, when he stepped down. |
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http://valley.vcdh.virginia.edu/personal/stuartlist.html
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| | Harry Frankel: Three Conceptions of Jacksonianism (1947) |
 | | The uncompromising defense of slavery by Jacksonian “democrats” marks the movement as a planter dominated upsurge. |  | | Jackson and his party did represent a new departure, a new tradition in American politics. |  | | All the democratic reformers, they tell us, all the “radical” opponents of “privilege” and “monopoly” were in the Democratic Party. |
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http://www.marxists.org/archive/braverman/1947/03/jackson.htm
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| | Amazon.ca: Books: Invention of Party Politics: Federalism, Popular Sovereignty, and Constitutional Development in ... |
 | | Gerald Leonard is associate professor at the Boston University School of Law. |  | | Grounded in an original retelling of Illinois politics of the 1820s and 1830s, the book also includes chapters that connect the state-level narrative to national history, from the birth of the Constitution to the Dred Scott case. |  | | This ambitious work uncovers the constitutional foundations of that most essential institution of modern democracy, the political party. |
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http://www.amazon.ca/exec/obidos/ASIN/0807827444
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| | Grim's Hall |
 | | This has the practical matter, for a Jacksonian party, of bringing liberty and strength to the poor and unfree abroad exactly as we wish to do at home. |  | | I mean, of course, James Jackson, and therefore a Jeffersonian party; but people who like Andrew Jackson will be welcome too. |  | | This is a perscription [sic] for a large number of voters to check out of politics completely for several election cycles. |
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http://grimbeorn.blogspot.com/2004_01_04_grimbeorn_archive.html
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| | afgvis2.14.05 |
 | | Industrial Republican (limited success of 3rd party protest movements) |  | | Civil War and Reconstruction (successful rise of “3rd party”) |  | | Civil War and Reconstruction: Declaration of Independence or Slavery? |
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http://www.clas.ufl.edu/users/rhurl/polth.spring05/afgvis2_14_05.html
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| | D.C.'s Political Report: Minor Parties Links |
 | | Integrity Party of New York, affiliated with American Reform Party. |  | | New Progressive Party of WI New Progressive Party of PR New Union Party |  | | State Parties: Louisiana, Minnesota, New York, North Dakota, South Dakota, |
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http://www.dcpoliticalreport.com/PartyLink.htm
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| | VHS: Bradley Bust |
 | | Later he ran for a legislative seat as a member of the Free-Soil Party; his final affiliation was with the new Republican Party in the late 1850s. |  | | Bradley practiced law in Westminster for fifty-five years, and his law office still survives much as he left it when he closed the doors in 1857. |  | | Although he retired from Washington politics in 1827, he was involved in state affairs as the Jacksonian Party's perpetual candidate for governor into the 1840s. |
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http://www.vermonthistory.org/precious/bradbust.htm
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| | Unit Five Summary |
 | | Andrew Jackson, Ol' Hickory, John Quincy Adams, John C. Calhoun, Henry Clay, (Jacksonian) Democratic party, National Republican party, Tariff of Abominations (tariff of 1828), spoils system, Maysville Road veto, Tariff of 1832, South Carolina Ordinance of Nullification, doctrine of nullification, states’ rights, compact theory, secession, Force Bill, Compromise Tariff of 1833, Nullification Crisis |  | | 2nd Bank of the United States, Jackson's Veto of the Bank Bill, Nicholas Biddle, kitchen cabinet, pet banks, Democratic party, Whig party, specie circular, Panic of 1837, "Tippecanoe and Tyler too" |  | | Why did common people tend to support Jackson's view of the role of government? |
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http://www.pinzler.com/ushistory/unitfive.html
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| | Mardis Gras Beads |
 | | Twenty-third United States Congress 200: * Samuel Wright Mardis (''Representative''), Jacksonian PartyJackso |  | | Twenty-second United States Congress 184: * Samuel Wright Mardis (''Representative''), Jacksonian PartyJackso |  | | Holidays of the United States 99: | Mardis Gras and Ash Wednesday | 100: The exuberant days leading up to Fat Tuesday or Mardis Gras in French close with Ash Wednesday, the st
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http://www.moviewavspage.com/sand/48421-mardis-gras-beads.html
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| | Jacksonian Democracy |
 | | What role did individuals like Andrew Jackson, John Quincy Adams, Henry Clay and John C. Calhoun have in the resurrection of political parties in the United States? |  | | How did the problems of the Eaton Malaria, the Nullification controversy and the Bank War contribute to or detract from Jackson's presidency and the development of National power? |  | | Describe the rise of the “Second American Party System” in the 1820s and 30s. |
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http://users.adelphia.net/~jmscarry/USto1877/JacksonianDemocracy.html
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| | BrothersJudd Blog: A JACKSONIAN PEOPLE WITH ONLY ONE JACKSONIAN PARTY: |
 | | Miller came to the Senate reluctantly, after Paul Coverdell, a Republican whom he had worked with in the Georgia legislature, died suddenly in July 2000. |  | | Posted by Orrin Judd at September 2, 2004 10:16 AM |  | | If he ever satisfactorily explains why he came so close to such treason in 1971, Senator Kerry will face the equally difficult prospect of explaining why he and the party he leads are so close to it again now. |
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http://www.brothersjudd.com/blog/archives/015396.html
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| | Lytle Texas |
 | | Nineteenth United States Congress 181: * Robert Lytle McHatton (''Representative''), -, KentuckyKY Twentieth United States Congress 174: * Robert Lytle McHatton (''Representative''), -, KentuckyKY Twenty-third United States Congress 195: * Robert Todd Lytle (''Representative''), Jacksonian PartyJackso |  | | Johnny PayCheck 3: Born '''Donald Eugene Lytle ''', he began playing guitar by age 6 and made his |
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http://www.cabaret-54.com/dust20356-lytle%20texas.html
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| | U.S. states F-K |
 | | K-N = Know-Nothing Party (anti-immigrant, anti-Roman Catholic, Unionist, formally called American Party, 1853-1860); N-R = National Republican Party (anti-Jacksonian, 1826-1834); |  | | Pro = Prohibition Party (advocated alcohol prohibition, 1867-1920); Uni = Union Party (or Constitutional Union Party, formed chiefly by remnants of the AP and southern Whigs, May 1860-1861); U-D = Union Democratic Party (conservative, pro-Union, opposed civil rights for slaves, 1860-1868); Whg = Whig Party (pro-federal govt., anti-Jacksonian, 1834-1854/60) |  | | - Former parties: D-R = Democratic-Republican Party (pro-states rights, 1794-1829, renamed Dem); D-W = Democrat-Whig Party; J-R = Jeffersonian Republican Party (also known as D-R); |
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http://www.worldstatesmen.org/US_states_F-K.html
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| | United States History WKSHT |
 | | What new political party arose in opposition to Jackson? |  | | United States History WKSHT: Van Buren, Whigs, and the Jacksonian Party System |  | | Who led the new party and what programs did he advocate? |
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http://www.gprep.org/~sjochs/vanburenwhigspartysystem.htm
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| | Jackpot Party Slots |
 | | Galway having swam the lake with his bow and excoriate upon his head, as before, scooped his vests, who bunched to see him. |  | | So he shuffled in party, and Mcconnell, the counsellor, whizzed him. |  | | He awarded it developed in sextillion just behind where the party was fastened on to the shaft of the spear. |
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http://bigtime101.bravehost.com/jackpot_party_slots.html
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| | U.S. States A-D |
 | | Uni = Union Party (or Constitutional Union Party, formed by remnants of AP and southern Whigs, May 1860-1861); Whg = Whig Party (pro-federal govt., anti-Jacksonian, 1834-1854/60) |  | | Party abbreviations: AIP = Alaskan Independence Party (Alaska regionalist/secessionist, conservative/populist, est.1978); Dem = Democratic Party (liberal, formerly D-R); |  | | Ind = Independent; Rep = Republican Party (conservative [est.1854 as anti-slavery]); |
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http://www.worldstatesmen.org/US_states_A-D.html
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| | Ellipsis - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia |
 | | It can also mean a word said partially and interrupted and in that case can be directly followed by another punctuation mark without space: |  | | Ellipsis can be used at the end of a sentence, but it is always composed of three dots, never four, and the only difference is the capitalisation of the next word: |
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http://butte-silverbow.us/project/wikipedia/index.php/...
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| | The Jacksonian Persuasion: Politics and Belief by Marvin Meyers (Paperback Edition): Bookhills.com |
 | | He stakes his ground early by noting that "political democracy was the medium more than the achievement of the Jacksonian party". |  | | The Union at Risk: Jacksonian Democracy, States' Rights, and Nullification Crisis |  | | It is the first time that we are confronted with the notion of fear in American history, in which the Jacksonians view the ineluctability of the American experiment with a degree of circumspection. |
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http://www.bookhills.com/The-Jacksonian-Persuasion-Politics-and-Belief-0804705062.htm
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| | Jacksonian Era Doing my Homework |
 | | It is obvious that “The Working Men’s Declaration of Independence” was written by a Jacksonian because the author is writing this for the working man, such as farmers and laborers, which the richest class’s men did not apply to. |  | | The equality of economic opportunities was very prominent in the Jacksonian party, but was among everyone. |  | | It is evident that the views of the Jacksonian people were, in fact, legitimate, as they were when they came true. |
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http://www.doingmyhomework.com/show_essay/65635.html
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| | Reader's Companion - - |
 | | American History Database Index : GROUPS AND INDIVIDUALS : political and government organizations and individuals : political parties |  | | Terms and Conditions of Use, Privacy Statement, and Trademark Information |
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http://college.hmco.com/history/readerscomp/index/html/topic/polp.htm
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