Name__________________________ Period___ Civil War and
... A. The issue of slavery in new Western lands stayed in the background between 1820 (the year of the Missouri Compromise) and the 1840s. The proposal to add a new set of states and territories (Texas, New Mexico, and California) brought the issue to a head again. B. After winning independence from Me ...
... A. The issue of slavery in new Western lands stayed in the background between 1820 (the year of the Missouri Compromise) and the 1840s. The proposal to add a new set of states and territories (Texas, New Mexico, and California) brought the issue to a head again. B. After winning independence from Me ...
civil war to reconstruction
... Who wrote Uncle Tom’s Cabin? What’s the book about? What impact did it have? What did Lincoln say? Who wrote Impending Crisis in the South? How did the sections of the country react to it? ...
... Who wrote Uncle Tom’s Cabin? What’s the book about? What impact did it have? What did Lincoln say? Who wrote Impending Crisis in the South? How did the sections of the country react to it? ...
Reconstruction and Its Aftermath
... Johnson also appointed governors to Southern states and required them to hold elections for state constitutional conventions. Only whites who had sworn their loyalty and been pardoned would be allowed to vote. Johnson opposed granting all freed African Americans equal rights or letting them vote. He ...
... Johnson also appointed governors to Southern states and required them to hold elections for state constitutional conventions. Only whites who had sworn their loyalty and been pardoned would be allowed to vote. Johnson opposed granting all freed African Americans equal rights or letting them vote. He ...
Civil War
... 12. By February of 1861, who had joined them? (6) 13. What else occurred in February 1861? 14. What did they draft? 15. Whom did they elect as president of the CSA? 106 Fort Sumter: 1. What were Lincoln’s intentions at first with Fort Sumter? 2. Describe what occurred on April 12, 1861. 3. What was ...
... 12. By February of 1861, who had joined them? (6) 13. What else occurred in February 1861? 14. What did they draft? 15. Whom did they elect as president of the CSA? 106 Fort Sumter: 1. What were Lincoln’s intentions at first with Fort Sumter? 2. Describe what occurred on April 12, 1861. 3. What was ...
Reconstruction and Its Aftermath, 1865-1896
... Johnson also appointed governors to Southern states and required them to hold elections for state constitutional conventions. Only whites who had sworn their loyalty and been pardoned would be allowed to vote. Johnson opposed granting all freed African Americans equal rights or letting them vote. He ...
... Johnson also appointed governors to Southern states and required them to hold elections for state constitutional conventions. Only whites who had sworn their loyalty and been pardoned would be allowed to vote. Johnson opposed granting all freed African Americans equal rights or letting them vote. He ...
Chapter 17: Reconstruction and Its Aftermath, 1865-1896
... Johnson also appointed governors to Southern states and required them to hold elections for state constitutional conventions. Only whites who had sworn their loyalty and been pardoned would be allowed to vote. Johnson opposed granting all freed African Americans equal rights or letting them vote. He ...
... Johnson also appointed governors to Southern states and required them to hold elections for state constitutional conventions. Only whites who had sworn their loyalty and been pardoned would be allowed to vote. Johnson opposed granting all freed African Americans equal rights or letting them vote. He ...
File - Jerriann Garcia
... job was to provide relief to the thousands of people, black and white, who had been left homeless by the Civil War. It was also the Bureau’s job to supervise the affairs of newly freed slaves in the Southern states and to manage Confederate land seized during the war. Oliver O. Howard, a Union Civil ...
... job was to provide relief to the thousands of people, black and white, who had been left homeless by the Civil War. It was also the Bureau’s job to supervise the affairs of newly freed slaves in the Southern states and to manage Confederate land seized during the war. Oliver O. Howard, a Union Civil ...
Chapter 16: Reconstruction
... job was to provide relief to the thousands of people, black and white, who had been left homeless by the Civil War. It was also the Bureau’s job to supervise the affairs of newly freed slaves in the Southern states and to manage Confederate land seized during the war. Oliver O. Howard, a Union Civil ...
... job was to provide relief to the thousands of people, black and white, who had been left homeless by the Civil War. It was also the Bureau’s job to supervise the affairs of newly freed slaves in the Southern states and to manage Confederate land seized during the war. Oliver O. Howard, a Union Civil ...
CWRT NewsLetter march 2013 - Harpers Ferry Civil War Round
... conventions, and in the columns of a newspaper, the Western Empire, which he edited at Dayton, Ohio, in 1847-49. He was elected to the United States House of Representatives in 1857, opposed from the beginning to the policies of the newly-formed Republican Party, especially as they related to slaver ...
... conventions, and in the columns of a newspaper, the Western Empire, which he edited at Dayton, Ohio, in 1847-49. He was elected to the United States House of Representatives in 1857, opposed from the beginning to the policies of the newly-formed Republican Party, especially as they related to slaver ...
14: The Civil War - apush-xl
... 16. How did Lincoln treat the civil rights of dissenters during the Civil War? A) He did everything in his power to preserve their rights because he was devoted to individual freedom. B) He suspended the writ of habeas corpus in critical areas and applied martial law freely. C) He prohibited any fr ...
... 16. How did Lincoln treat the civil rights of dissenters during the Civil War? A) He did everything in his power to preserve their rights because he was devoted to individual freedom. B) He suspended the writ of habeas corpus in critical areas and applied martial law freely. C) He prohibited any fr ...
05 APUSH (18-22) (1848-1877) (Checklist)
... Slavocracy theorists said, "There goes the South again, always trying to get more slave land." D. Despite disagreement, the Kansas-Nebraska Act passed in 1856, repealed the Missouri Compromise, and opened Kansas and Nebraska to popular sovereignty. XIV. Congress Legislates a Civil War A. The Kansas- ...
... Slavocracy theorists said, "There goes the South again, always trying to get more slave land." D. Despite disagreement, the Kansas-Nebraska Act passed in 1856, repealed the Missouri Compromise, and opened Kansas and Nebraska to popular sovereignty. XIV. Congress Legislates a Civil War A. The Kansas- ...
Abraham Lincoln - educatorworksheets.com
... and for learning. Lincoln made great efforts to attain knowledge while working on his farm, splitting rails for fences, and keeping store at New Salem, Illinois. Lincoln married Mary Todd, daughter of a slave-owning family from Kentucky. The couple had four sons. Robert Todd Lincoln was their only c ...
... and for learning. Lincoln made great efforts to attain knowledge while working on his farm, splitting rails for fences, and keeping store at New Salem, Illinois. Lincoln married Mary Todd, daughter of a slave-owning family from Kentucky. The couple had four sons. Robert Todd Lincoln was their only c ...
Civil War Powerpoint
... of the Civil War: –618,000 troops were dead; More than any other U.S. war –The 13th Amendment was ratified in 1865 ending slavery –The war forever ended the states’ rights argument –The South was destroyed; A plan was needed to admit Southern states back into the Union ...
... of the Civil War: –618,000 troops were dead; More than any other U.S. war –The 13th Amendment was ratified in 1865 ending slavery –The war forever ended the states’ rights argument –The South was destroyed; A plan was needed to admit Southern states back into the Union ...
Pretest #6 - Civil War
... a) slavery should be prohibited in lands acquired as a result of the Mexican War b) no lands should be annexed to the US as a result of the Mexican War c) California should be a free state while the rest of the Mexican cession should be slave d) the status of slavery in the Mexican cession should be ...
... a) slavery should be prohibited in lands acquired as a result of the Mexican War b) no lands should be annexed to the US as a result of the Mexican War c) California should be a free state while the rest of the Mexican cession should be slave d) the status of slavery in the Mexican cession should be ...
The Union in Peril Chapter 4 - Welcome to American Studies
... The Politics of Reconstruction cont. Johnson’s Plan for Reconstruction • Andrew Johnson, Lincoln’s successor, forms own plan • Excludes Confederate leaders, wealthy landowners • Congress rejects new Southern governments, congressmen ...
... The Politics of Reconstruction cont. Johnson’s Plan for Reconstruction • Andrew Johnson, Lincoln’s successor, forms own plan • Excludes Confederate leaders, wealthy landowners • Congress rejects new Southern governments, congressmen ...
The Civil War and Reconstruction
... Civil War: Civil War Ends • The war ended in April 1865, but because of Texas’s location, the news of the war ending did not reach Texas until June 19, 1865. Why did it take so long for Texans to hear this news? ...
... Civil War: Civil War Ends • The war ended in April 1865, but because of Texas’s location, the news of the war ending did not reach Texas until June 19, 1865. Why did it take so long for Texans to hear this news? ...
Reconstruction1strevised choice
... Offered amnesty upon simple oath to all except Confederate civil and military officers and those with property over $20,000 (they could apply directly to Johnson) In new constitutions, they must accept minimum conditions repudiating slavery, secession and state debts. Named provisional governo ...
... Offered amnesty upon simple oath to all except Confederate civil and military officers and those with property over $20,000 (they could apply directly to Johnson) In new constitutions, they must accept minimum conditions repudiating slavery, secession and state debts. Named provisional governo ...
The Union In Peril: Civil War and Reconstruction
... issue. Was masking issues of power of states and self-determination vs. federal government control. ...
... issue. Was masking issues of power of states and self-determination vs. federal government control. ...
R E A D T H I S F I R S T !
... sovereignty would be used in the territory, slave trade was banned in Washington D.C., California was added as a free state, a more strict fugitive slave law was created. What was the Kansas-Nebraska Act? - Overturned the MO Compromise introduced popular sovereignty in Kansas and Nebraska. Helped l ...
... sovereignty would be used in the territory, slave trade was banned in Washington D.C., California was added as a free state, a more strict fugitive slave law was created. What was the Kansas-Nebraska Act? - Overturned the MO Compromise introduced popular sovereignty in Kansas and Nebraska. Helped l ...
The Road to Revolution – Ch
... Many Southerners appreciated the assassination while others realized the other options for US leadership after the war were harsher than Lincoln’s plans Conclusion Civil War produced 620,000 recorded soldiers’ deaths; over 1 million overall casualties (dead, wounded, missing) – bloodiest war in Amer ...
... Many Southerners appreciated the assassination while others realized the other options for US leadership after the war were harsher than Lincoln’s plans Conclusion Civil War produced 620,000 recorded soldiers’ deaths; over 1 million overall casualties (dead, wounded, missing) – bloodiest war in Amer ...
Study Guide - Unit 5a - Manifest Destiny thru
... 122) Radical Reconstruction (esp. Johnson’s role in forcing Rad. Recon.) 123) Thaddeus Stevens 124) Charles Sumner 125) O.O. Howard 126) Political fight b/w Johnson & Congress 127) Civil Rights Act of 1866 128) 14th Amendment (roots, passage & enforcement) 129) Congressional Election of 1866 130) Co ...
... 122) Radical Reconstruction (esp. Johnson’s role in forcing Rad. Recon.) 123) Thaddeus Stevens 124) Charles Sumner 125) O.O. Howard 126) Political fight b/w Johnson & Congress 127) Civil Rights Act of 1866 128) 14th Amendment (roots, passage & enforcement) 129) Congressional Election of 1866 130) Co ...
Jim Crow laws
... The period after the Civil War is called Reconstruction. During this period, the Southern states were brought back into the Union. It lasted until 1876. People in the North disagreed on how to treat the Southern states. President Andrew Johnson set out certain conditions that each state had to meet ...
... The period after the Civil War is called Reconstruction. During this period, the Southern states were brought back into the Union. It lasted until 1876. People in the North disagreed on how to treat the Southern states. President Andrew Johnson set out certain conditions that each state had to meet ...
The Road to War Civil War and Reconstruction
... The Tide Turns in 1863 – By early 1863, the North & South both faced morale problems: South—economic & diplomatic collapse, runaway slaves, & many yeomen refused to fight North—consistent losses against Lee, draft riots in NYC, anti-war “Copperheads” played on war failures & racial anxieties Fight t ...
... The Tide Turns in 1863 – By early 1863, the North & South both faced morale problems: South—economic & diplomatic collapse, runaway slaves, & many yeomen refused to fight North—consistent losses against Lee, draft riots in NYC, anti-war “Copperheads” played on war failures & racial anxieties Fight t ...
Civil Rights and Race Relations
... Presidential Reconstruction and then for his unsuccessful opposition to Radical Reconstruction. As a firm believer in states’ rights, he was content to see the re-establishment of the Southern white Confederate elite and white supremacy in 1865. As a ...
... Presidential Reconstruction and then for his unsuccessful opposition to Radical Reconstruction. As a firm believer in states’ rights, he was content to see the re-establishment of the Southern white Confederate elite and white supremacy in 1865. As a ...