Standard 9 - bervelynbenson
... Greatest General for the Union/North Victory in Vicksburg cut Confederacy in two Victory over Lee ends the Civil War His policy of “unconditional surrender” earned him the nickname – US Grant ...
... Greatest General for the Union/North Victory in Vicksburg cut Confederacy in two Victory over Lee ends the Civil War His policy of “unconditional surrender” earned him the nickname – US Grant ...
Finance and States, Rights
... ]ackson and many other Americans believed that the Bank favored the rich and hurt everyday people. For example, the Bank sometimes limited the amount of money that state banks coulcl lend. in the South and West, the Banft was blamed for the economic crisis of 1819, which cost many people their farms ...
... ]ackson and many other Americans believed that the Bank favored the rich and hurt everyday people. For example, the Bank sometimes limited the amount of money that state banks coulcl lend. in the South and West, the Banft was blamed for the economic crisis of 1819, which cost many people their farms ...
File
... EMANCIPATION PROCLAMATION – an executive order given by President Lincoln ORDERING the freeing all slaves in the Confederate states Did not free any slaves but helped war effort ...
... EMANCIPATION PROCLAMATION – an executive order given by President Lincoln ORDERING the freeing all slaves in the Confederate states Did not free any slaves but helped war effort ...
Diagnostic Questions- Key
... 33. Before the Civil War, slavery expanded in the South rather than in the North because: a) geographic conditions in the South encouraged the development of large plantations b) Northern states passed affirmative action legislation c) the Constitution contained a clause that outlawed the importatio ...
... 33. Before the Civil War, slavery expanded in the South rather than in the North because: a) geographic conditions in the South encouraged the development of large plantations b) Northern states passed affirmative action legislation c) the Constitution contained a clause that outlawed the importatio ...
File
... 33. Before the Civil War, slavery expanded in the South rather than in the North because: a) geographic conditions in the South encouraged the development of large plantations b) Northern states passed affirmative action legislation c) the Constitution contained a clause that outlawed the importatio ...
... 33. Before the Civil War, slavery expanded in the South rather than in the North because: a) geographic conditions in the South encouraged the development of large plantations b) Northern states passed affirmative action legislation c) the Constitution contained a clause that outlawed the importatio ...
U.S. History Final Exam Review In what ways did industrialization
... a. Abraham Lincoln b. Jefferson Davis c. William Yancey d. Robert E. Lee 34. Who was the president of the Confederacy? a. Abraham Lincoln b. Jefferson Davis c. William Yancey d. Robert E. Lee 35. The worst confederate prison was located in: a. Atlanta, Georgia b. Jackson, Mississippi c. Andersonvill ...
... a. Abraham Lincoln b. Jefferson Davis c. William Yancey d. Robert E. Lee 34. Who was the president of the Confederacy? a. Abraham Lincoln b. Jefferson Davis c. William Yancey d. Robert E. Lee 35. The worst confederate prison was located in: a. Atlanta, Georgia b. Jackson, Mississippi c. Andersonvill ...
Unit 7 – Crisis, Civil War, and Reconstruction - slloyd
... – Slave-holding interests were minority in state legislatures – “Border States” 2. Which Union State did not exist at the beginning of the Civil War? – West Virginia – had few slaves; did not want to fight for slavery; letter to Lincoln asking to become separate state; Congress approved – Seceded fr ...
... – Slave-holding interests were minority in state legislatures – “Border States” 2. Which Union State did not exist at the beginning of the Civil War? – West Virginia – had few slaves; did not want to fight for slavery; letter to Lincoln asking to become separate state; Congress approved – Seceded fr ...
chapter 20 notes
... 2. Lincoln sends badly needed provisions to Fort Sumter, South Carolina (1 of 2 southern US forts) 3. Confederates sees it as an act of aggression and bombards it (April 12th, 1861) 4. Lincoln called for 75,000 militiaman/volunteers (turned some away!) to blockade southern seaports 5. Lincoln is fig ...
... 2. Lincoln sends badly needed provisions to Fort Sumter, South Carolina (1 of 2 southern US forts) 3. Confederates sees it as an act of aggression and bombards it (April 12th, 1861) 4. Lincoln called for 75,000 militiaman/volunteers (turned some away!) to blockade southern seaports 5. Lincoln is fig ...
his 201 class 14
... and proclaimed a new nation—The Confederate States of America—in addition they made Jefferson Davis its president ...
... and proclaimed a new nation—The Confederate States of America—in addition they made Jefferson Davis its president ...
Monday, Nov
... Explain how the firing on Fort Sumter and Lincoln's call for troops galvanized both sides for war: Context: By the time Abraham Lincoln took office in March of 1861, seven southern states had already seceded. In his inaugural address he said there would be “no conflict unless the South provoked it.” ...
... Explain how the firing on Fort Sumter and Lincoln's call for troops galvanized both sides for war: Context: By the time Abraham Lincoln took office in March of 1861, seven southern states had already seceded. In his inaugural address he said there would be “no conflict unless the South provoked it.” ...
events_leading_to_the_civil_war_powerpoint
... efforts to limit the spread of slavery in the western territories ...
... efforts to limit the spread of slavery in the western territories ...
Chapter_19_E-notes
... 2. Slaves could not be taken away from owners w/o due process of law. As private property (5th Amendment) slaves could be taken into any territory and held there. 3. The Missouri Compromise was ruled unconstitutional; Congress could not forbid slavery in territories even if states wanted to. (KS-NB ...
... 2. Slaves could not be taken away from owners w/o due process of law. As private property (5th Amendment) slaves could be taken into any territory and held there. 3. The Missouri Compromise was ruled unconstitutional; Congress could not forbid slavery in territories even if states wanted to. (KS-NB ...
Class Notes File - Eastchester High School
... and unjust as to defeat and do away the good effects of all that can be attempted for them, by their best friends, under it.” Harriet Beecher Stowe, from the preface of the first edition ...
... and unjust as to defeat and do away the good effects of all that can be attempted for them, by their best friends, under it.” Harriet Beecher Stowe, from the preface of the first edition ...
Unit 4 spring 2009x
... sharecroppers- paid their rent with a portion of their crops They often were charge 40% interest on materials and supplies. Debt peonage – trapped sharecroppers on the land - could not pay their debts and leave. Some forced into labor New Freedoms African Americans had gained during reconstruction n ...
... sharecroppers- paid their rent with a portion of their crops They often were charge 40% interest on materials and supplies. Debt peonage – trapped sharecroppers on the land - could not pay their debts and leave. Some forced into labor New Freedoms African Americans had gained during reconstruction n ...
Politics in the Gilded Age
... Enforce Southern loyalty to the Union Punish Confederate leaders who violated the Constitution Emancipate slaves and integrate AfricanAmericans into society Provide cheap labor source for cotton production and supply to Northern factories Rebuild infrastructure: roads, railroads, cities, ports, scho ...
... Enforce Southern loyalty to the Union Punish Confederate leaders who violated the Constitution Emancipate slaves and integrate AfricanAmericans into society Provide cheap labor source for cotton production and supply to Northern factories Rebuild infrastructure: roads, railroads, cities, ports, scho ...
The Legacy of War
... • in 1865, Radical Republicans disputed Johnson’s claims that reconstruction was over, many southern states were the same as they were when the war ended • Congress voted to expand the Freedmen’s Bureau – organization that assisted formed slaves and poor whites by distributing food, clothing & sett ...
... • in 1865, Radical Republicans disputed Johnson’s claims that reconstruction was over, many southern states were the same as they were when the war ended • Congress voted to expand the Freedmen’s Bureau – organization that assisted formed slaves and poor whites by distributing food, clothing & sett ...
Chapter 20: Drifting Toward Disunion 1854-1861
... A. South Carolina (1860) led Alabama, Mississippi, Florida, Georgia, Louisiana, and Texas into secession (followed by 4 more for total of 11) B. 1st 7 met in Montgomery, Alabama (February 1861) to create a government for the Confederate States of America 1. President Jefferson Davis (Mississippi U.S ...
... A. South Carolina (1860) led Alabama, Mississippi, Florida, Georgia, Louisiana, and Texas into secession (followed by 4 more for total of 11) B. 1st 7 met in Montgomery, Alabama (February 1861) to create a government for the Confederate States of America 1. President Jefferson Davis (Mississippi U.S ...
Standard 9
... Although most slaves were not freed immediately, the Proclamation brought freedom to thousands of slaves the day it went into effect in parts of nine of the ten states to which it applied. The Proclamation provided the legal framework for the emancipation of nearly all four million slaves as the ...
... Although most slaves were not freed immediately, the Proclamation brought freedom to thousands of slaves the day it went into effect in parts of nine of the ten states to which it applied. The Proclamation provided the legal framework for the emancipation of nearly all four million slaves as the ...
Civil War Activity
... 34. What was the executive order, which promised to free all slaves in the Confederate territory, issued by President Lincoln on January 1, 1863? _______________________________________________________________________________________ 35. By the end of the war, about how many black soldiers fought fo ...
... 34. What was the executive order, which promised to free all slaves in the Confederate territory, issued by President Lincoln on January 1, 1863? _______________________________________________________________________________________ 35. By the end of the war, about how many black soldiers fought fo ...
Reconstruction Unit Test 1 What impact did the event portrayed
... d African Americans were not allowed to vote. 12. What was the North’s point of view on slavery by the 1850s? f. Most Northern states had outlawed slavery. g. Most Northern states supported slavery. h. Most Northern factories hired slaves for workers. i. Slaves were found only on farms in the North. ...
... d African Americans were not allowed to vote. 12. What was the North’s point of view on slavery by the 1850s? f. Most Northern states had outlawed slavery. g. Most Northern states supported slavery. h. Most Northern factories hired slaves for workers. i. Slaves were found only on farms in the North. ...
Grade 8 Sample Lesson: Growing Tensions
... The Territory of New Mexico and the Territory of Utah were established under “popular sovereignty” which allowed the people who lived there the right to decide if slavery would or would not be allowed there. The Fugitive Slave Act of 1850 strengthened existing laws about runaway slaves, requirin ...
... The Territory of New Mexico and the Territory of Utah were established under “popular sovereignty” which allowed the people who lived there the right to decide if slavery would or would not be allowed there. The Fugitive Slave Act of 1850 strengthened existing laws about runaway slaves, requirin ...
Emancipation Proclamation
... Northern Democrats opposed it because they only wanted to restore the Union, not to end slavery Abolitionists argued that Lincoln had not gone far enough still leaving “slavery, as a system . . . , still to exist in all the so-called loyal Slave States.” ...
... Northern Democrats opposed it because they only wanted to restore the Union, not to end slavery Abolitionists argued that Lincoln had not gone far enough still leaving “slavery, as a system . . . , still to exist in all the so-called loyal Slave States.” ...
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"".