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Front Page Titles (by Subject) ERA OF GOOD FEELING - Cyclopaedia of Political Science, Political Economy, and of the Political History of the United States, vol. 2 East India Co. - Nullification
ERA OF GOOD FEELING - John Joseph Lalor, Cyclopaedia of Political Science, Political Economy, and of the Political History of the United States, vol. 2 East India Co. - Nullification [1881]Edition used:Cyclopaedia of Political Science, Political Economy, and of the Political History of the United States by the best American and European Authors, ed. John J. Lalor (New York: Maynard, Merrill, & Co., 1899). Vol 2 East India Co. - Nullification
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- Volume II: East India Company - Nullification
- E
- East India Company
- East Indies
- Economy, Political . (see Political Economy.)
- Ecuador.
- Education and the State
- Education, Bureau of
- Education, Compulsory
- Egypt
- Elections, Primary . (see Primary Elections)
- Elective Judiciary. (see Judiciary.)
- Electoral College
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- Emanciption, Political and Religious
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- Embargo
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- Emigration and Immigration
- Eminent Domain
- Emperor
- Encouragement of Industry By the State
- Enemy
- England. (see Great Britain.)
- English. Wm. H.
- Entrepreneur
- Equity
- Era of Good Feeling
- Essex Junto
- Estates
- Europe
- Everett, Edward
- Exchange
- Exchange and "foreign Exchanges."
- Exchange of Prisoners
- Exchange, Rate of . (see Bill of Exchange.)
- Exchange of Wealth
- Excise
- Excise Law. (see Whisky Insurrection.)
- Excommunication
- Executive
- Exequatur
- Exports and Imports
- Expositions
- Ex Post Facto Laws
- Expulsion. (see Parliamentary Law.)
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- F
- Faction
- Factory Laws
- Fair Trade
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- Family
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- Farmers General
- Farming, Large and Small . (see Agriculture.)
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- Fine Arts
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- Flag
- Florida
- Foot's Resolution
- Force Bill. (see Nullification, Reconstruction, Ku-klux Klan.)
- Forestry
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- Franklin, State Of. (see Tennessee.)
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- G
- Gag Laws.. (see Petition.)
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- Gambettism
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- Gerrymander
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- Granger, Francis
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- Greenbacks. (see U. S. Notes.)
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- H
- Habeas Corpus (in U. S. History)
- Habeas Corpus
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- Halifax Fishery Commission. (see Treaties, Fishery.)
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- Hamlin, Hannibal,
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- Hanseatic League
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- Harrison, William Henry
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- History
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- Independent In Politics. (see Primary Elections.)
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- Interest, After the Historical Method .
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- Interior, Department of the
- Internal Improvements
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- International Law. (see Law, International.)
- Interpellation
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- Iowa
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- Jackson, Andrew
- Japan
- Jay, John
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- L
- Labor
- Labor, the Right to (in French Politico-economic History).
- Laissez Faire—laissez Passer
- Lamaism.
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- Land Office. (see Public Lands.)
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- Lane, Joseph
- La Plata. (see Argentine Confederation.)
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- Mace. (see Parliamentary Law.)
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- Magna Charta
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- Malthus, Thomas Robert
- Malthusians. (see Population.)
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- Market. (see Outlet.)
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- Morton, Oliver Perry
- Mosaism
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- Mutsuhito (meek Or Peaceful Man)
- N
- Nation, Definition of
- Nation, What Is a ?
- Nation, the (in U.s. History).
- National Banks. (see Banking In U.s. and Bank Controversies.)
- National Capital. (see Capital, National.)
- National Cemeteries
- National Debt. (see Debts.)
- National Party. (see Greenback Labor Party.)
- National Republican Party. (see Whig Party)
- Nationalities, Principle of
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- Nature of Things
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- Nicaragua.
- Nihilism
- Nobility.
- Nominating Conventions
- Non-intercourse. (see Embargo.)
- North Carolina
- Northwest Boundary
- Norway.
- Note, Diplomatic
- Nullification
ERA OF GOOD FEELING
ERA OF GOOD FEELING (IN U. S. HISTORY),a period (1817-23) when the contests of national parties were practically suspended, partly through the exhaustion of one party (the federal party) and partly through the extinction of the surface issues of the past. The termination of the war of 1812 had put an end to every question which had divided the parties since 1800; it left the democrats a triumphant majority, and the federalists a discredited minority; and the new policy of internal improvements and a protective tariff had not yet been developed so far as to form a party issue. Neither of these last projects was supported generally or with any interest by the federalists, but both found their warmest supporters in the northern section of the democratic party.
—The inaugural address of Monroe, in 1817, was exceedingly well calculated to soothe the feelings of the hopeless minority of federalists. It spoke warmly of their peculiar interests commerce and the fisheries; it congratulated the country on the restoration of "harmony"; and it promised the diligent efforts of the president to increase the harmony for the future. The inaugural was a harbinger of a tour which he made through New England during the year, and he was received with enthusiasm by a section which had not seen a president or heard such conciliatory language from a president, since Washington. Party feeling was laid aside, and the leaders of both parties joined in receiving the president and in announcing the arrival of an "era of good feeling." The "good feeling" lasted long enough to give Monroe an almost unanimous re-election in 1820, Plumer of New Hampshire being the only elector to vote against him; but it did not induce Monroe to take any federalists into his cabinet, as Jackson advised and urged him to do.
—The era of good feeling was terminated by the election of John Quincy Adams to the presidency in 1824, the opposition which was formed during his administration, and the development of two opposing national parties. (See DISPUTED ELECTIONS, II.; DEMOCRATIC-REPUBLICAN PARTY, IV.; WHIG PARTY, I) During its existence no characteristic is more striking than the torpor which seemed to affect principle in politics, and the extent to which personal feeling seemed for the time to have superseded it. The several factions which supported Jackson, Adams, Crawford and Clay for the presidency, in 1824, hardly pretended to assign to their candidates any distinctive political principles, and one of the candidates, Jackson, was most earnestly supported for his supposed liking for internal improvements and a protective tariff, to which, as president, he proved to be a consistent opponent.
—The best medium for getting the spirit of the "era of good feeling" is 10-24 Niles' Weekly Register; see also 6 Hildreth's United States, 623; 3 Spencer's United States, 309.
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