USA Studies Weekly
... • A tug of war between Congress and the President took place. • The Radicals divided the South into five military districts ruled by the U.S. Army. • Tennessee was readmitted into the Union in 1866. • The remaining 10 rebel states had to formally accept the 14th and 15th amendments in order to be re ...
... • A tug of war between Congress and the President took place. • The Radicals divided the South into five military districts ruled by the U.S. Army. • Tennessee was readmitted into the Union in 1866. • The remaining 10 rebel states had to formally accept the 14th and 15th amendments in order to be re ...
Ch. 17: Reconstruction and Its Aftermath 1865-1896
... require them to hold elections for state constitutional conventions. – 4. Only whites that swore their loyalty and had been pardoned would be allowed to vote. – 5. Before states could reenter the Union, its constitutional convention had to denounce secession and abolish slavery. – 6. States had to r ...
... require them to hold elections for state constitutional conventions. – 4. Only whites that swore their loyalty and had been pardoned would be allowed to vote. – 5. Before states could reenter the Union, its constitutional convention had to denounce secession and abolish slavery. – 6. States had to r ...
Chapter 11 The Civil War Guided Notes
... One of the top ___ Presidents in U.S. History Issues the Emancipation Proclamation Free the slaves ______________________________ Does not free slaves in the border states ___________________________ and __________________ reasons Lincoln suspends _____________________________ Court order to d ...
... One of the top ___ Presidents in U.S. History Issues the Emancipation Proclamation Free the slaves ______________________________ Does not free slaves in the border states ___________________________ and __________________ reasons Lincoln suspends _____________________________ Court order to d ...
STAAR FACTS REVIEW (100 +FACTS)
... THE SIXTEENTH PRESIDENTOF THE UNITED STATES WHO SUCCESSFULLY PUT THE UNION BACK TOGETHER AND WAS ASSASSINATED FIVE DAYS AFTER THE CIVIL WAR ENDED. ...
... THE SIXTEENTH PRESIDENTOF THE UNITED STATES WHO SUCCESSFULLY PUT THE UNION BACK TOGETHER AND WAS ASSASSINATED FIVE DAYS AFTER THE CIVIL WAR ENDED. ...
Indicate the answer choice that best completes the
... 6. What did small factories in Austin and Tyler help manufacture for the Confederate soldiers? a. uniforms and cloth b. weapons and ammunition c. tents d. bedding and blankets 7. How did Texas's Constitution of 1866 fail to grant African Americans equal rights? a. It did not grant them the right to ...
... 6. What did small factories in Austin and Tyler help manufacture for the Confederate soldiers? a. uniforms and cloth b. weapons and ammunition c. tents d. bedding and blankets 7. How did Texas's Constitution of 1866 fail to grant African Americans equal rights? a. It did not grant them the right to ...
File
... i. On April 14, 1965, President Lincoln was assassinated by _______________________________. He was an actor that supported the _________________________________. d. Effects of the War i. In the South farms, _________________________, and _______________________ were ruined. ii. Enslaved people were ...
... i. On April 14, 1965, President Lincoln was assassinated by _______________________________. He was an actor that supported the _________________________________. d. Effects of the War i. In the South farms, _________________________, and _______________________ were ruined. ii. Enslaved people were ...
American Civil War: War Erupts Cornell Notes
... Southern soldiers would fight fiercely to defend the Confederacy ...
... Southern soldiers would fight fiercely to defend the Confederacy ...
Name
... 1.What major advantage did the conquistadors have over Native Americans? 2.The early settlers of Jamestown survived with the help of the______________________. 3.What was the first direct tax the British imposed that enraged the colonists? 4.Which colony offered a new chance to the poor who had been ...
... 1.What major advantage did the conquistadors have over Native Americans? 2.The early settlers of Jamestown survived with the help of the______________________. 3.What was the first direct tax the British imposed that enraged the colonists? 4.Which colony offered a new chance to the poor who had been ...
File
... Lee sent wave after wave of soldiers at the Union, but kept getting shot down 52,000 men were killed over 3 days “The beginning of the end” for the Confederacy: they lost their best and brightest in Vicksburg and Gettysburg, and would never again attack the North ...
... Lee sent wave after wave of soldiers at the Union, but kept getting shot down 52,000 men were killed over 3 days “The beginning of the end” for the Confederacy: they lost their best and brightest in Vicksburg and Gettysburg, and would never again attack the North ...
Ch 13 Lecture Part 2
... decision • North refused to enforce Fugitive Slave Law • Free states pass personal liberty laws. • Republicans claim the decision is not binding • Southerners call on the North to accept the decision if the South is to remain in the Union. Chart/Effect of ScoD ...
... decision • North refused to enforce Fugitive Slave Law • Free states pass personal liberty laws. • Republicans claim the decision is not binding • Southerners call on the North to accept the decision if the South is to remain in the Union. Chart/Effect of ScoD ...
Reconstruction Debate - Have you ever had a teacher who helped
... He married young. She was a remarkably fine girl, congressmen who opposed the Kansas-Nebraska Bill, and this made him unpopular with the Southern slave interests. When the border states left the Union after Lincoln’s call for 75,000 volunteers to suppress the secession move, Johnson, now a senator, ...
... He married young. She was a remarkably fine girl, congressmen who opposed the Kansas-Nebraska Bill, and this made him unpopular with the Southern slave interests. When the border states left the Union after Lincoln’s call for 75,000 volunteers to suppress the secession move, Johnson, now a senator, ...
ROAD TO CIVIL WAR, 1848-1860 I. Popular Sovereignty
... 1. Dred Scott was a black slave and not a citizen and could not sue in federal courts. -- As a result, all blacks, north & south, were no longer citizens. 2. Slaves could not be taken away from owners without due process of law. -- As private property (5th Amendment) slaves could be moved into any t ...
... 1. Dred Scott was a black slave and not a citizen and could not sue in federal courts. -- As a result, all blacks, north & south, were no longer citizens. 2. Slaves could not be taken away from owners without due process of law. -- As private property (5th Amendment) slaves could be moved into any t ...
Causes of the Civil War!
... • The Civil War began on Wilmer McLean’s farm in Manassas Junction, Virginia, with the First Battle of Bull Run. A Union shell exploded in his kitchen. Wilmer McLean moved his family to get away from the ...
... • The Civil War began on Wilmer McLean’s farm in Manassas Junction, Virginia, with the First Battle of Bull Run. A Union shell exploded in his kitchen. Wilmer McLean moved his family to get away from the ...
The American Civil War 1860 – 1865 The Sectional Conflict Widens
... 2. Which side planned a defensive war? a. Union b. Confederacy c. Mexico 3. At the end of 1862 __________. a. the Union was winning b. the Confederacy was winning c. both sides were locked in a stalemate 4. This act by President Lincoln freed all slaves in states of the Confederacy not under Union r ...
... 2. Which side planned a defensive war? a. Union b. Confederacy c. Mexico 3. At the end of 1862 __________. a. the Union was winning b. the Confederacy was winning c. both sides were locked in a stalemate 4. This act by President Lincoln freed all slaves in states of the Confederacy not under Union r ...
Chapter 4 PowerPoint
... with them because he didn’t seem as forgiving as Lincoln. • As a Tennessean from a poor family, Johnson didn’t dislike the South, just wealthy planters. • Johnson’s plan was similar to Lincoln’s, with a few changes. ...
... with them because he didn’t seem as forgiving as Lincoln. • As a Tennessean from a poor family, Johnson didn’t dislike the South, just wealthy planters. • Johnson’s plan was similar to Lincoln’s, with a few changes. ...
Blank Jeopardy
... The idea, set forth by President Monroe, that said European countries could no longer set up new territories in the Western Hemisphere; any new colonies would be considered an act of war against the United States ...
... The idea, set forth by President Monroe, that said European countries could no longer set up new territories in the Western Hemisphere; any new colonies would be considered an act of war against the United States ...
1865-1877 How do we put our country back together after the Civil
... newly freed AFrican Americans prohibited blacks from renting land or borrowing money to buy land forced blacks to sign work contracts prohibited blacks from testifying against whites in court ...
... newly freed AFrican Americans prohibited blacks from renting land or borrowing money to buy land forced blacks to sign work contracts prohibited blacks from testifying against whites in court ...
The Civil War
... The North and South started a bloody Civil War The North and South fought in the most important battle in Gettysburg. The purpose was that the North and South disagreed that slaves should be allowed in new territories and states. ...
... The North and South started a bloody Civil War The North and South fought in the most important battle in Gettysburg. The purpose was that the North and South disagreed that slaves should be allowed in new territories and states. ...
Study Questions for Chapter 21 and 22 Test
... 3. What happened at Bull Run? 4. Who helped to ruin the North’s chances at the Battle of Bull Run? 5. What happened at the Battle of Antietem? 6. What happened at Gettysburg? 7. Who gave the Gettysburg address and why? 8. What were the Monitor and the Merrimac? 9. What was the siege of Vicksburg? 10 ...
... 3. What happened at Bull Run? 4. Who helped to ruin the North’s chances at the Battle of Bull Run? 5. What happened at the Battle of Antietem? 6. What happened at Gettysburg? 7. Who gave the Gettysburg address and why? 8. What were the Monitor and the Merrimac? 9. What was the siege of Vicksburg? 10 ...
United States History Your Compromises Period: ______ Name
... Issue #2: The Compromise of 1850 It is 1850. Congress is in an uproar over California and slavery. You will need all your skills as a compromiser to settle this conflict and keep the union from division. The North’s Starting Position: Supports statehood for California as a free state. Wants to ...
... Issue #2: The Compromise of 1850 It is 1850. Congress is in an uproar over California and slavery. You will need all your skills as a compromiser to settle this conflict and keep the union from division. The North’s Starting Position: Supports statehood for California as a free state. Wants to ...
Chapter 10 Vocabulary
... civil rights and voting rights for Freedmen (recently freed slaves). 6. Wade-Davis Bill of 1864 - was a program proposed for the Reconstruction of the South written by two Radical Republicans, Senator Benjamin Wade of Ohio and Representative Henry Winter Davis of Maryland. In contrast to President A ...
... civil rights and voting rights for Freedmen (recently freed slaves). 6. Wade-Davis Bill of 1864 - was a program proposed for the Reconstruction of the South written by two Radical Republicans, Senator Benjamin Wade of Ohio and Representative Henry Winter Davis of Maryland. In contrast to President A ...
The Civil War
... All slaves in areas that had not yet been captured by the Union army were free. These states, still under the control of the Confederacy, did not obey the Union president. ...
... All slaves in areas that had not yet been captured by the Union army were free. These states, still under the control of the Confederacy, did not obey the Union president. ...
Issues of the American Civil War
Issues of the American Civil War include questions about the name of the war, the tariff, states' rights and the nature of Abraham Lincoln's war goals. For more on naming, see Naming the American Civil War.The question of how important the tariff was in causing the war stems from the Nullification Crisis, which was South Carolina's attempt to nullify a tariff and lasted from 1828 to 1832. The tariff was low after 1846, and the tariff issue faded into the background by 1860 when secession began. States' rights was the justification for nullification and later secession. The most controversial right claimed by Southern states was the alleged right of Southerners to spread slavery into territories owned by the United States.As to the question of the relation of Lincoln's war goals to causes, goals evolved as the war progressed in response to political and military issues, and can't be used as a direct explanation of causes of the war. Lincoln needed to find an issue that would unite a large but divided North to save the Union, and then found that circumstances beyond his control made emancipation possible, which was in line with his ""personal wish that all men everywhere could be free"".