1. ______ is a word of Algonkian origin meaning "one who advises"; as a political term, it was part of the American vocabulary by the nineteenth century.
2. Andrew Jackson's chief rival as the chief spokesman for the trans-Appalachian West was __________.
3. A New Yorker, Stephen Van Rensselaer, cast the key vote that made _________________ president of the United States.
4. ______________ won more popular and electoral votes in 1824 than the man who was actually elected to the presidency.
5. ________________, an ambitious New Yorker, helped Andrew Jackson win electoral support in the Northeast, where Jackson had been weak in 1824.
6. The section of the United States in which duels were most common was _________.
7. The ____________ party was the first to choose its candidates in a national party convention.
8. _______________, vice president during Andrew Jackson's first term, broke with the president over the tariff issue.
9. An apparent murder precipitated the founding of a briefly significant political party, the ____________party.
10. John C. Calhoun spelled out his view of the relationship between federal and state authority in a pamphlet entitled ________________________________________.