Select the correct word, term, or phrase.
The provided an important source of credit and venture capital for financing the earliest phase of America's industrial revolution.
In spite of British laws forbidding it, brought the knowledge of how to build a cotton spinning machine to The United States and built the nation's first factory in 1790.
Most European immigrants to early nineteenth century America were attracted by opportunity, but the quest for political and religious freedom also acted as a magnet.
Native-born American workers resented Irish immigrants because of their willingness to work for low wages and because they were .
In the system, the owners hired single young women to work in the textile mills.
The , a group of merchants headed by Francis Cabot Lowell, established the Boston Manufacturing Company at Waltham, Massachusetts in 1813.
's invention of the cotton gin in 1797 led to an enormous expansion of cotton production and the revival of slavery.
The cultivation and marketing of was "the major expansive force" in the American economy for a generation following 1815.
The movement advocated the transportation of blacks, usually to Africa, and, in fact, it established a settlement in Liberia.
During the early nineteenth century cotton boom, slaves from the entered a highly profitable interstate slave trade to cotton boom states along the Gulf Coast.
The need for roads linking the Trans-Appalachian West with the eastern seaboard required aid from the national government, but, except for the , sectional rivalries prevented such action
With the coming of the freight rates fell, New Orleans emerged as one of the world's great ports, and the Old Northwest became part of the national market.
The tied the Great Lakes to the Hudson River, cemented New York's position as the national metropolis, and was an immediate financial success
Until his death in 1835, Chief Justice led the Supreme Court in a series of cases that upheld the sanctity of contracts and the supremacy of the federal government.
In McCulloch v. Maryland, the Supreme Court confirmed the constitutionality of the , thus strengthening the doctrine of implied powers.