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4-1 The Nation Splits Apart
4-1 The Nation Splits Apart

... Where were the first shots of the Civil War fired? What did Lincoln call for as a result of the attack? Maryland, Kentucky, and Missouri were examples of what? At the outbreak of the Civil War, which state was President Lincoln most concerned about preventing from seceding, because of its location n ...
Matching: Print Upper Case Letters.
Matching: Print Upper Case Letters.

... A Confederate state could re-enter the Union 10 percent of the states already included in the United States agreed that it could enter. A Confederate state could re-enter the Union whenever it repaid 10 percent of the damages that were suffered in the state during the Civil War. A Confederate state ...
Reconstruction - Humanities for Wisdom
Reconstruction - Humanities for Wisdom

... Blood on the leaves and blood at the root, Black bodies swinging in the Southern breeze, Strange fruit hanging from the poplar trees. Pastoral scene of the gallant South, The bulging eyes and twisted mouth, The scent of magnolias, sweet and fresh, Then the sudden smell of burning flesh. Here is a fr ...
Reconstruction
Reconstruction

... compromise, Republican candidate Hayes was declared the winner, in exchange for a promise to end Reconstruction. Upon taking office in 1877, Hayes removed the remaining federal troops from the South. With no one left to enforce the Reconstruction reforms, Reconstruction was over. White conservative ...
Chapters 11-12
Chapters 11-12

... Vice-President Andrew Johnson becomes president (War Democrat)-champion of poor whites ...
Name
Name

... faced by a slave family in the South. 21. Though she was white and had never seen a slave, her book motivated many people in the North to support the abolition of slavery. John Brown’s Raid 22. One of the most radical white abolitionists was John Brown 23. In October of 1859, Brown had is followers ...
22 - Immaculateheartacademy.org
22 - Immaculateheartacademy.org

... most of the Southern leaders were tainted by active association with the “lost cause.” Among them were four former Confederate generals, five colonels, and various members of the Richmond cabinet and Congress. Worst of all, it included Alexander Stephens, ex–vice president of the Confederacy, still ...
Draft Riot and Emancipation Reading
Draft Riot and Emancipation Reading

... wages, often less than $500 a year, they were particularly antagonized by the federal provision allowing more affluent draftees to buy their way out of the Federal Army for $300. Minor riots occurred in several cities, and when the drawing of names began in New York on July 11, 1863, mobs (mostly of ...
In the course of the American Civil War, in four occupied southern
In the course of the American Civil War, in four occupied southern

... policy was a proper one. The peculiarities of each state asked for differentiated handling. Louisiana and Arkansas were chosen for their abysmally different social, economic and political features yet common war experience. In terms of wealth, density of population, and share of slaves in its number ...
United States History I
United States History I

... instead of punishing it for treason. ...
black codes - Greensburg Salem School District
black codes - Greensburg Salem School District

... bill promoting civil rights. !hese are rights granted to all citizens. The Civil Rights A.ct of 1865 declared that . all persons born in the United States were citizens. The act also stated th~t all citizens were entit).ed to equal rights regardless of their race. President Johnson rejected, or veto ...
SS8H6abc
SS8H6abc

... were territories applying for statehood. Ignoring the Missouri Compromise 36 degree latitude policy the US government allowed citizens in these territories the opportunity to vote on whether slavery would be legal or illegal. This was known as popular sovereignty. After bloody conflicts between pros ...
Dr. Manassa Thomas Pope was able to receive a voter registration
Dr. Manassa Thomas Pope was able to receive a voter registration

... soldiers kept order, and army officers were appointed to be governors. Southern military leaders were not allowed to hold office or to vote. Before any Southern state could reestablish its state government, it had to write a new state constitution giving all men, both black and white, the right to ...
16. Abraham Lincoln
16. Abraham Lincoln

... • Sectionalism was the real winner in the election of 1860. With four candidates running, a divided Democratic party, and Stephen Douglas as his chief opponent Lincoln won the popular vote with approximately 39%. Since the majority of the country clearly wanted someone else Lincoln’s presidency woul ...
United States History I
United States History I

... instead of punishing it for treason. ...
Growth and Conflict
Growth and Conflict

... Before his death, Lincoln had laid out a plan for reconciling the country in his Proclamation of Amnesty and Reconstruction. Instead of punishing the South for treason, amnesty was offered to all Southerners who took an oath of Loyalty to the United States and accepted the proclamation concerning s ...
Unit 6 Study Guide
Unit 6 Study Guide

... 59. How did Rutherford Hayes election bring an end to Reconstruction? 37. What as the importance of the “Gettysburg Address”? 38. Who was given command of all Union forces in March 1864? 39. Why was General Sherman’s army so harsh as it marched through South Carolina? 40. Where did Lee surrender to ...
Reconstruction Quiz
Reconstruction Quiz

... Write the letter of the best answer. Where noted, there is more than one answer. 1. Which president vetoed both the Freedmen's Bureau Act and the Civil Rights Act of 1866? a. Abraham Lincoln b. Andrew Johnson c. Ulysses S. Grant d. Rutherford B. Hayes 2. These members of the Republican Party left th ...
Reconstruction
Reconstruction

... loyalty oath, and prove they had never been disloyal to the Union; or taken up arms against the Union; disloyal people lose Vote This eliminated almost all southerners and especially all the antebellum Slavocracy. ...
Reconstruction Notes
Reconstruction Notes

... 2. More African Americans in government: Hiram Revels became one of the first African American Senators. Blanch Bruce became a Senator from Mississippi. ...
M / C Review Chapter 16
M / C Review Chapter 16

... right to vote within a given Southern state before that state could be readmitted to the Union. B. It allowed the rights of citizenship only to those Southerners who could take an oath that they had never been disloyal to the Union. C It allowed high-ranking rebel officials to regain the right to vo ...
Quiz: Lincoln and the Politics of the Civil War – Team 6
Quiz: Lincoln and the Politics of the Civil War – Team 6

... Write the word from the word bank on the line that makes each sentence true. Not all words will be used. WORD BANK Thirteenth Confederate Union Sixteenth 3. In 1860, Abraham Lincoln was elected the ______ President of the United States of America. 4. During the Civil War, the Northern states were kn ...
Chapter 17 Reconstruction and the New South (1865
Chapter 17 Reconstruction and the New South (1865

... • Except Confederate leaders • 1864- 3 states under Union occupation (Louisiana, Arkansas, and Tennessee) set up governments under the plan • But the Congress refused to seat the states’ representatives ...
ch17s1 - Team8-0
ch17s1 - Team8-0

... • Except Confederate leaders • 1864- 3 states under Union occupation (Louisiana, Arkansas, and Tennessee) set up governments under the plan • But the Congress refused to seat the states’ representatives ...
9. Which view of Reconstruction would agree with Abraham
9. Which view of Reconstruction would agree with Abraham

... To understand Reconstruction though, one must understand the time period and the economic impact that the Civil War had. Southern states were left devastated by the war! Farms, railroads, and factories were destroyed throughout the South! Many towns and cities (Richmond, VA; Atlanta, GA) lay in ruin ...
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Reconstruction era

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