Henry Clay.
Congress passed the compromise Tariff of 1833
Clay and Calhoun worked out a compromise tariff.
In 1828 whencongress passed the tariff of abominations, calhoun joined his fellow southerners in protest.
A forty-five percent tax of all goods from all countries.
The Nullification Crisis was a sectional crisis during the presidency of Andrew Jackson created by the Ordinance of Nullification, an attempt by the state of South Carolina to nullify a federal law passed by the United States Congress. The highly protective Tariff of 1828 (also called the "Tariff of Abominations") was enacted into law in 1828 during the presidency of John Quincy Adams. Opposed in the South and parts of New England, the expectation of the tariff's opponents was that with the election of Jackson the tariff would be significantly reduced.President Andrew Jackson was prepared to use troops to enforce federal laws, because South Carolina was making a threat that they would secede from the United States.
A compromise tariff, supported by President Jackson, was passed.
Congress made a compromise tariff to satisfy southern states.
Congress passed the compromise Tariff of 1833
the Nullification Crisis was put to an end by the Great Compromiser himself, Henry Clay, with the Compromise Tariff of 1833.
Study Island - Congress made a compromise tariff to satisfy southern states.
He proposed the Tariff of 1833, to ease the nullification crisis. what it basically did was lower the tax prices year by year.
The compromise of 1833, also called the Tariff of 1833, was a bill proposed to resolve the Nullification Crisis. It gradually reduced tariff rates after southern states objected to previous tariff bills.
the tariff of 1833, which presented a sort of gradual relief as it got lower every year
the nullification process
Henry Clay, along with John C. Calhoun, proposed the Compromise Tariff of 1833 in resolve the Nullification Crisis. This was intended to prevent South Carolina's initial threat of succession.
The highest tariff ever passed in the nation's peacetime history was the Compromise Tariff(tariff of 1833) proposed by John C. Calhoun and Henry Clay to resolve the Nullification Crisis.
Tariff policy