
Unit 7 Study Guide
... What was the purpose of the Ku Klux Klan? What actions did the Ku Klux Klan take? What was the Whiskey Ring Scandal? What was the Credit Moblier Scandal? How did political scandals impact President Grant and the Republican Party? How did the Panic of 1873 impact the country and the Republican Party? ...
... What was the purpose of the Ku Klux Klan? What actions did the Ku Klux Klan take? What was the Whiskey Ring Scandal? What was the Credit Moblier Scandal? How did political scandals impact President Grant and the Republican Party? How did the Panic of 1873 impact the country and the Republican Party? ...
New World and Colonization
... b) Farms, railroads, and factories were destroyed. c) Industry increased due to the lack of farmable land. d) The South remained the poorest section of the nation for many decades following the war. ...
... b) Farms, railroads, and factories were destroyed. c) Industry increased due to the lack of farmable land. d) The South remained the poorest section of the nation for many decades following the war. ...
No Slide Title
... • Reconstruction’s positive effects include the Freedmen’s Bureau’s assistance to former slaves. • Reconstruction had negative effects: by trying to help former slaves it encouraged a backlash that intensified racism and led to the rise of the Ku Klux Klan; by not offering land to former slaves, it ...
... • Reconstruction’s positive effects include the Freedmen’s Bureau’s assistance to former slaves. • Reconstruction had negative effects: by trying to help former slaves it encouraged a backlash that intensified racism and led to the rise of the Ku Klux Klan; by not offering land to former slaves, it ...
New Orleans` Creoles of Color:
... With the withdrawal of federal troops from the South in April, 1877, Reconstruction officially ended. With it went all federal mandates protecting Black citizenship rights. Democrat Francis Nicholls had been elected governor one year prior and promised to ensure the constitutional rights of Blacks. ...
... With the withdrawal of federal troops from the South in April, 1877, Reconstruction officially ended. With it went all federal mandates protecting Black citizenship rights. Democrat Francis Nicholls had been elected governor one year prior and promised to ensure the constitutional rights of Blacks. ...
Civil War
... declared that former slaves were citizens and required that states provide everyone equal protection under the ...
... declared that former slaves were citizens and required that states provide everyone equal protection under the ...
Emancipation Proclamation
... 1862, Lincoln began to believe that the only way to save the Union was to abolish slavery. In 1862, the war was not going well for the North. Lincoln had to find a way to stop the South’s war effort. He also wanted to make sure that European countries did not join the Confederate cause. On January 1 ...
... 1862, Lincoln began to believe that the only way to save the Union was to abolish slavery. In 1862, the war was not going well for the North. Lincoln had to find a way to stop the South’s war effort. He also wanted to make sure that European countries did not join the Confederate cause. On January 1 ...
The Civil War
... The End of Slavery Emancipation Proclamation (1/1/1863) • Lincoln had said that if states were still rebelling by new year’s 1863, he’d free the slaves in Southern States • U.S. gov’t recognizes those slaves as free • Still slavery in the border states, only in areas outside of Lincoln’s control • ...
... The End of Slavery Emancipation Proclamation (1/1/1863) • Lincoln had said that if states were still rebelling by new year’s 1863, he’d free the slaves in Southern States • U.S. gov’t recognizes those slaves as free • Still slavery in the border states, only in areas outside of Lincoln’s control • ...
The US Civil War in less than 80 - meister
... – Republicans dominated the south in the postwar period – Southern states were divided into military districts and run accordingly – Southern women acted out “political ventriloquism” through commemoration – “Radical Republicans” controlled congress and a Southern Republican controlled the executive ...
... – Republicans dominated the south in the postwar period – Southern states were divided into military districts and run accordingly – Southern women acted out “political ventriloquism” through commemoration – “Radical Republicans” controlled congress and a Southern Republican controlled the executive ...
Clara Barton
... could not in good conscience ally themselves with the Confederacy. • The South ignored the Emancipation Proclamation. • PLEASE REMEMBER: The Emancipation Proclamation did not free all slaves-The only real way to end slavery was to make a constitutional amendment that made slavery illegal in the U.S. ...
... could not in good conscience ally themselves with the Confederacy. • The South ignored the Emancipation Proclamation. • PLEASE REMEMBER: The Emancipation Proclamation did not free all slaves-The only real way to end slavery was to make a constitutional amendment that made slavery illegal in the U.S. ...
Goal 3 Study Guide
... 54. What did the 13th Amendment do, and how is it different from the Emancipation Proclamation? 55. What happened at Appomattox Courthouse? 56. What did John Wilkes Booth do? 57. Who has more power after the Civil War, the federal government or state governments? 58. What was “Reconstruction?” 59. W ...
... 54. What did the 13th Amendment do, and how is it different from the Emancipation Proclamation? 55. What happened at Appomattox Courthouse? 56. What did John Wilkes Booth do? 57. Who has more power after the Civil War, the federal government or state governments? 58. What was “Reconstruction?” 59. W ...
midterm study guide us history
... Slave owners in the South legally considered their slaves to be their property. During the presidential reconstruction phase, Andrew Johnson gave numerous pardons to those who participated in the government of the Confederation. The Battle of Gettysburg was significant in the history of the Civil Wa ...
... Slave owners in the South legally considered their slaves to be their property. During the presidential reconstruction phase, Andrew Johnson gave numerous pardons to those who participated in the government of the Confederation. The Battle of Gettysburg was significant in the history of the Civil Wa ...
the american people creating a nation and a society nash jeffrey
... While Virginia, Arkansas, Tennessee and North Carolina had joined the Confederacy by May 1861, Maryland remained on the fence When the 6th Massachusetts Regiment was attacked while walking through Baltimore, Lincoln agreed to route troops temporarily around the city in return for the governor callin ...
... While Virginia, Arkansas, Tennessee and North Carolina had joined the Confederacy by May 1861, Maryland remained on the fence When the 6th Massachusetts Regiment was attacked while walking through Baltimore, Lincoln agreed to route troops temporarily around the city in return for the governor callin ...
Civil War and Reconstruction
... d. Explain the importance of Fort Sumter, Antietam, Vicksburg, Gettysburg, and the Battle for Atlanta and the impact of geography on these battles. e. Describe the significance of the Emancipation Proclamation. SSUSH10 The student will identify legal, political, and social dimensions of Reconstructi ...
... d. Explain the importance of Fort Sumter, Antietam, Vicksburg, Gettysburg, and the Battle for Atlanta and the impact of geography on these battles. e. Describe the significance of the Emancipation Proclamation. SSUSH10 The student will identify legal, political, and social dimensions of Reconstructi ...
For Starters
... The Southern Economy • The South had to deal with the cost of the war, the loss of the cotton trade, and severe shortages due to Union blockades, which left their economy in ruins. • To raise money the South not only imposed an income tax but also required farmers to turn over 10% of their crops (t ...
... The Southern Economy • The South had to deal with the cost of the war, the loss of the cotton trade, and severe shortages due to Union blockades, which left their economy in ruins. • To raise money the South not only imposed an income tax but also required farmers to turn over 10% of their crops (t ...
SS 1st 9 weeks
... 5.SS.19 Draw on information from multiple print or digital I can use information from multiple print and/or digital resources to describe the impact of resources to describe the impact of the assassination of Abraham Lincoln’s assassination on the United States. Abraham Lincoln on the nation. 5.SS.2 ...
... 5.SS.19 Draw on information from multiple print or digital I can use information from multiple print and/or digital resources to describe the impact of resources to describe the impact of the assassination of Abraham Lincoln’s assassination on the United States. Abraham Lincoln on the nation. 5.SS.2 ...
VUS 7 a & b Civil War
... Lincoln easily won a majority of electoral votes (but only 40% of the popular vote) and became the sixteenth president of the United States. Abraham Lincoln served as President of the United States during the Civil War. Lincoln opposed secession and insisted that the Union be held together, by force ...
... Lincoln easily won a majority of electoral votes (but only 40% of the popular vote) and became the sixteenth president of the United States. Abraham Lincoln served as President of the United States during the Civil War. Lincoln opposed secession and insisted that the Union be held together, by force ...
How the Enemies of Reconstruction Created Reconstruction Edward
... main characters seem to come and go. After a dramatic cameo as the villain, even Andrew Johnson seems to fade away and Thaddeus Stevens dies halfway through. The Radical Republicans, the carpetbaggers, the scalawags, despite their evocative nicknames, remain largely faceless and nameless. The story ...
... main characters seem to come and go. After a dramatic cameo as the villain, even Andrew Johnson seems to fade away and Thaddeus Stevens dies halfway through. The Radical Republicans, the carpetbaggers, the scalawags, despite their evocative nicknames, remain largely faceless and nameless. The story ...
3.2 Essential to Know
... initially hesitated to free the slaves because he feared this would undermine the unity of the North by antagonizing the border states, those slave states that did not secede from the Union. When emancipation was announced, it was promoted as a ‘military measure’ against the Confederacy. However, th ...
... initially hesitated to free the slaves because he feared this would undermine the unity of the North by antagonizing the border states, those slave states that did not secede from the Union. When emancipation was announced, it was promoted as a ‘military measure’ against the Confederacy. However, th ...
Carl Schurz, Report on Conditions in the South (1865)
... period of transition, the power which originated the revolution is expected to turn over its whole future development to another power which from the beginning was hostile to it and has never yet entered into its spirit, leaving the class in whose favor it was made completely without power to protec ...
... period of transition, the power which originated the revolution is expected to turn over its whole future development to another power which from the beginning was hostile to it and has never yet entered into its spirit, leaving the class in whose favor it was made completely without power to protec ...
Chapter 9 - Reconstruction
... officially over. How long did the Reconstruction Era take in Georgia? The Democratic party regained control of the General Assembly in the 1870 election. From Dec. 1871 through 2003- Georgia’s governor was always a Democrat. Anti-south policies were identified with the Republican party. ...
... officially over. How long did the Reconstruction Era take in Georgia? The Democratic party regained control of the General Assembly in the 1870 election. From Dec. 1871 through 2003- Georgia’s governor was always a Democrat. Anti-south policies were identified with the Republican party. ...
SSUSH8: EXPLAIN THE RELATIONSHIP BETWEEN GROWING
... 12. What advantages did the North have at the beginning of the war? What advantages did the South have at the beginning of the war? SSUSH10: IDENTIFY LEGAL, POLITICAL, AND SOCIAL DIMENSIONS OF RECONSTRUCTION Compare and contrast Presidential Reconstruction with Radical Republican Reconstruction. 13. ...
... 12. What advantages did the North have at the beginning of the war? What advantages did the South have at the beginning of the war? SSUSH10: IDENTIFY LEGAL, POLITICAL, AND SOCIAL DIMENSIONS OF RECONSTRUCTION Compare and contrast Presidential Reconstruction with Radical Republican Reconstruction. 13. ...
CW lecture-1 - WordPress.com
... Any attempt at compromise would have had to recognize both a property ...
... Any attempt at compromise would have had to recognize both a property ...
Reconstruction and Impeachment – The Political Issues Behind the
... usually has the power to appoint the officials of these agencies. Therefore, Congress' intentions can be undermined or blocked if the President's officials do not like those intentions. ...
... usually has the power to appoint the officials of these agencies. Therefore, Congress' intentions can be undermined or blocked if the President's officials do not like those intentions. ...