Chapter 17 - Boone County Schools
... legislatures passed a series of laws called black codes. Key parts of these laws aimed to control freed men and women and to enable plantation owners to exploit African American workers. Modeled on laws that had regulated free African Americans before the Civil War, the black codes of each Southern ...
... legislatures passed a series of laws called black codes. Key parts of these laws aimed to control freed men and women and to enable plantation owners to exploit African American workers. Modeled on laws that had regulated free African Americans before the Civil War, the black codes of each Southern ...
Reconstruction and Its Aftermath, 1865-1896
... legislatures passed a series of laws called black codes. Key parts of these laws aimed to control freed men and women and to enable plantation owners to exploit African American workers. Modeled on laws that had regulated free African Americans before the Civil War, the black codes of each Southern ...
... legislatures passed a series of laws called black codes. Key parts of these laws aimed to control freed men and women and to enable plantation owners to exploit African American workers. Modeled on laws that had regulated free African Americans before the Civil War, the black codes of each Southern ...
Davids museum
... volunteered were only training for 90 days. On July 16, McDowell marched his poorly trained army to Virginia. The Confederates were camped along Bull Run, and that is how this battle got its name. General Irvin McDowell’s army seemed to be winning after hours of ...
... volunteered were only training for 90 days. On July 16, McDowell marched his poorly trained army to Virginia. The Confederates were camped along Bull Run, and that is how this battle got its name. General Irvin McDowell’s army seemed to be winning after hours of ...
The Long Road to Antietam
... limited war policy and tactics that the Union had pursued for the first year and half, and, based upon his astute understanding of political, economic, social, and military factors, began to implement an uncompromising strategy of total war. Slotkin contends that Jefferson Davis also changed Confede ...
... limited war policy and tactics that the Union had pursued for the first year and half, and, based upon his astute understanding of political, economic, social, and military factors, began to implement an uncompromising strategy of total war. Slotkin contends that Jefferson Davis also changed Confede ...
Play Civil War Jeopardy
... abolish a government that denies the rights of its citizens…” Quotes ...
... abolish a government that denies the rights of its citizens…” Quotes ...
Chapter 19—Drifting Toward Disunion, 1854
... c. foreshadowed an ominous sectional clash over slavery in the election of 1860. d. marked the end of Senator Stephen Douglas's presidential hopes. e. signalled the demise of the Know-Nothing (American) Party. ANS: C ...
... c. foreshadowed an ominous sectional clash over slavery in the election of 1860. d. marked the end of Senator Stephen Douglas's presidential hopes. e. signalled the demise of the Know-Nothing (American) Party. ANS: C ...
February 21, 1919 Surgeon, Spy, Suffragette, Prisoner of War
... On the right is Custer as a lieutenant. On the left is his West Point classmate, James Washington of the Confederate Army, who had just been captured. ...
... On the right is Custer as a lieutenant. On the left is his West Point classmate, James Washington of the Confederate Army, who had just been captured. ...
Reconstruction_PPT
... ill will toward southerners. He supported states’ rights and limits on government power. Johnson’s plan added to Lincoln’s list of exceptions. Wealthy southerners would have to apply for pardons, but there was no set percentage of loyal voters. It required a convention to be called to repeal secessi ...
... ill will toward southerners. He supported states’ rights and limits on government power. Johnson’s plan added to Lincoln’s list of exceptions. Wealthy southerners would have to apply for pardons, but there was no set percentage of loyal voters. It required a convention to be called to repeal secessi ...
the emancipation proclamation
... – “I am loath to close. We are not enemies, but friends. We must not be enemies. Though passion may have strained, it must not break, our bonds of affection.” ...
... – “I am loath to close. We are not enemies, but friends. We must not be enemies. Though passion may have strained, it must not break, our bonds of affection.” ...
January - b/g micah jenkins
... Commanding General had been false to the flag under which he fought.” Although the accusations plagued Pemberton for the remainder of his life, it was the charge of incompetence that became inseparably attached to his reputation. While the accusation of false loyalty was unfounded, undoubtedly promp ...
... Commanding General had been false to the flag under which he fought.” Although the accusations plagued Pemberton for the remainder of his life, it was the charge of incompetence that became inseparably attached to his reputation. While the accusation of false loyalty was unfounded, undoubtedly promp ...
resolution of the [confederate] congress [in kentucky]
... WnEREAS, The majority of the Legislature of Kentucky have violated their most solemn pledges, made before the election, and deceived and betrayed the people; have abandoned the position of neutrality assumed by themselves and the people, and invited into the State the organized armies of Lincoln; ha ...
... WnEREAS, The majority of the Legislature of Kentucky have violated their most solemn pledges, made before the election, and deceived and betrayed the people; have abandoned the position of neutrality assumed by themselves and the people, and invited into the State the organized armies of Lincoln; ha ...
Total War and the American Civil War
... prevailing opinion that “the war must be fought on „different principles‟; the time for „white kidglove warfare‟ was past.”45 Wiping out slavery once and for all would, according to the North‟s abolitionist movement, end the South‟s rebellion and allow for reunification of the country without the “c ...
... prevailing opinion that “the war must be fought on „different principles‟; the time for „white kidglove warfare‟ was past.”45 Wiping out slavery once and for all would, according to the North‟s abolitionist movement, end the South‟s rebellion and allow for reunification of the country without the “c ...
Frances Ellen Watkins Harper Timeline
... 28 October, Statue of Liberty dedicated in New York Harbor. 1887/88 Harper, poems "The Jewish Grandfather's Story," "Out in the Cold," "Save the Boys," 'Nothing and Something," "Wanderer's Return," Fishers of Men" and "Signing the Pledge" Sketches on a Southern Life, another edition Harper, "Fo ...
... 28 October, Statue of Liberty dedicated in New York Harbor. 1887/88 Harper, poems "The Jewish Grandfather's Story," "Out in the Cold," "Save the Boys," 'Nothing and Something," "Wanderer's Return," Fishers of Men" and "Signing the Pledge" Sketches on a Southern Life, another edition Harper, "Fo ...
Jeopardy
... $500 Answer from Miscellaneous They were against tariffs because it caused the price of their crops to decline and required them to pay more for the goods bought overseas. ...
... $500 Answer from Miscellaneous They were against tariffs because it caused the price of their crops to decline and required them to pay more for the goods bought overseas. ...
chapter 16 - apel slice
... The North also faced disadvantages. Bringing the Southern states back into the Union would be difficult. The North would have to invade and hold the South—a large area filled with a hostile population. Furthermore, the Southern people's support for the war remained strong. Recalling the example of t ...
... The North also faced disadvantages. Bringing the Southern states back into the Union would be difficult. The North would have to invade and hold the South—a large area filled with a hostile population. Furthermore, the Southern people's support for the war remained strong. Recalling the example of t ...
United States presidential election, 1860
The United States presidential election of 1860 was the 19th quadrennial presidential election. The election was held on Tuesday, November 6, 1860, and served as the immediate impetus for the outbreak of the American Civil War. The United States had been divided during the 1850s on questions surrounding the expansion of slavery and the rights of slave owners. In 1860, these issues broke the Democratic Party into Northern and Southern factions, and a new Constitutional Union Party appeared. In the face of a divided opposition, the Republican Party, dominant in the North, secured a majority of the electoral votes, putting Abraham Lincoln in the White House with almost no support from the South. Before Lincoln's inauguration, seven Southern states declared their secession and formed the Confederacy.