
1 Standard 8.84 Lesson
... • A new state government could be formed when 10 percent of its voters pledged its allegiance to the United States. States could then elect Congressmen and participate in the national government. • Southern states admitted by this plan would need a plan to abolish slavery and deal with the freed sla ...
... • A new state government could be formed when 10 percent of its voters pledged its allegiance to the United States. States could then elect Congressmen and participate in the national government. • Southern states admitted by this plan would need a plan to abolish slavery and deal with the freed sla ...
the american civil war
... that these dead shall not have died in vain -- that this nation, under God, shall have a new birth of freedom -- and that government of the people, by the people, for the people, shall not perish from the ...
... that these dead shall not have died in vain -- that this nation, under God, shall have a new birth of freedom -- and that government of the people, by the people, for the people, shall not perish from the ...
Print › Unit 4: The Nation Tested | Quizlet
... law that excused a voter from literacy tests and poll taxes if his father or grandfather had been eligible to vote on January 1, 1867; kept many freedmen from voting ...
... law that excused a voter from literacy tests and poll taxes if his father or grandfather had been eligible to vote on January 1, 1867; kept many freedmen from voting ...
Reconstruction
... Granted Citizenship and equal protection under the law to African Americans 14th Amendment (not supported by Johnson) Constitutional Amendment equivalent to Civil Rights Act of ...
... Granted Citizenship and equal protection under the law to African Americans 14th Amendment (not supported by Johnson) Constitutional Amendment equivalent to Civil Rights Act of ...
Unit 5: The Civil War Name: Period________ Date: 1. The purpose of
... 31. How would the fighting in Georgia during the Civil War be described? 32. Who was the Confederate commander during the battle for Atlanta? 33. Who was the commander of the Confederate Army? The Union Army? 34. What contributed to the lack of success of the Union blockade? 35. After what battle wa ...
... 31. How would the fighting in Georgia during the Civil War be described? 32. Who was the Confederate commander during the battle for Atlanta? 33. Who was the commander of the Confederate Army? The Union Army? 34. What contributed to the lack of success of the Union blockade? 35. After what battle wa ...
AP US History Mr. Blackmon Chapter 16 Reconstruction 39 Which of
... It provided for the restoration of loyal governments for the erstwhile Confederate states now under Union control. Which of the following statements is true of the Wade-Davis Bill? A. It allowed restoration of a loyal government when as few as ten percent of a state s prewar registered voters swore ...
... It provided for the restoration of loyal governments for the erstwhile Confederate states now under Union control. Which of the following statements is true of the Wade-Davis Bill? A. It allowed restoration of a loyal government when as few as ten percent of a state s prewar registered voters swore ...
Uncle Tom`s Cabin
... Besides putting the South under the rule of federal soldiers, the Reconstruction Acts of 1867 required that all the reconstructed southern states must a) Give blacks the right to vote as a condition of readmission to the Union. b) Give blacks and carpetbaggers majority control of Southern legislatu ...
... Besides putting the South under the rule of federal soldiers, the Reconstruction Acts of 1867 required that all the reconstructed southern states must a) Give blacks the right to vote as a condition of readmission to the Union. b) Give blacks and carpetbaggers majority control of Southern legislatu ...
Possible Questions You Will Find in Reading Quiz A
... d. treatment of blacks after the Emancipation Proclamation. e. return of federal forts to Union control. A13 Which of the following is not descriptive of Reconstruction in the South? ...
... d. treatment of blacks after the Emancipation Proclamation. e. return of federal forts to Union control. A13 Which of the following is not descriptive of Reconstruction in the South? ...
Possible Questions You Will Find in Reading Quiz A
... d. treatment of blacks after the Emancipation Proclamation. e. return of federal forts to Union control. A13 Which of the following is not descriptive of Reconstruction in the South? ...
... d. treatment of blacks after the Emancipation Proclamation. e. return of federal forts to Union control. A13 Which of the following is not descriptive of Reconstruction in the South? ...
Congressional Reconstruction
... black workers from gaining skilled jobs or competing against white workers Black men could be forced into slavery as punishment for a crime or for not paying back debts ...
... black workers from gaining skilled jobs or competing against white workers Black men could be forced into slavery as punishment for a crime or for not paying back debts ...
Reconstruction
... free, they were not citizens, couldn’t vote, and had no protected rights. – In some states, they could not testify against whites in court, vote in elections, or join the army. – The codes promoted segregation and forced freedmen to work only as servants or as farm laborers. – Black codes also made ...
... free, they were not citizens, couldn’t vote, and had no protected rights. – In some states, they could not testify against whites in court, vote in elections, or join the army. – The codes promoted segregation and forced freedmen to work only as servants or as farm laborers. – Black codes also made ...
Conflicts Ooer
... slavery allowed in the territories and in new states formed from the territories. They did not want free states to become a majority in Congress because the balance.of power would shift to the North. The Northern states did not want slavery to expand. Abraham Lincoln, a Northern Republican who oppos ...
... slavery allowed in the territories and in new states formed from the territories. They did not want free states to become a majority in Congress because the balance.of power would shift to the North. The Northern states did not want slavery to expand. Abraham Lincoln, a Northern Republican who oppos ...
Reconstruction_Review_CPS
... role African Americans had after the Civil War? A. They worked as slaves on plantations B. They began to have more power in the government because they could vote C. They established the Freedmen’s Bureau to help northerners D. They sold their plantations for money ...
... role African Americans had after the Civil War? A. They worked as slaves on plantations B. They began to have more power in the government because they could vote C. They established the Freedmen’s Bureau to help northerners D. They sold their plantations for money ...
Reconstruction - Suffolk Public Schools Blog
... The Provost Guard in New Orleans rounding up vagrant former slaves, 1864. What alarmed many Radical Republicans about the state governments created under Andrew Johnson's Reconstruction plans was their treatment of newly freed African Americans. Such persons' freedom was sharply curtailed in states ...
... The Provost Guard in New Orleans rounding up vagrant former slaves, 1864. What alarmed many Radical Republicans about the state governments created under Andrew Johnson's Reconstruction plans was their treatment of newly freed African Americans. Such persons' freedom was sharply curtailed in states ...
Johnson`s Plan
... state agency - not federal believed the Civil Rights Act was unconstitutional angers more Repubs now ...
... state agency - not federal believed the Civil Rights Act was unconstitutional angers more Repubs now ...
Reconstruction
... The Provost Guard in New Orleans rounding up vagrant former slaves, 1864. What alarmed many Radical Republicans about the state governments created under Andrew Johnson's Reconstruction plans was their treatment of newly freed African Americans. Such persons' freedom was sharply curtailed in states ...
... The Provost Guard in New Orleans rounding up vagrant former slaves, 1864. What alarmed many Radical Republicans about the state governments created under Andrew Johnson's Reconstruction plans was their treatment of newly freed African Americans. Such persons' freedom was sharply curtailed in states ...
Reconstruction - Lake Chelan School District
... •Would go after President Johnson through the impeachment process after he vetoes the Civil Rights Act of 1866. ...
... •Would go after President Johnson through the impeachment process after he vetoes the Civil Rights Act of 1866. ...
Reconstruction
... •Would go after President Johnson through the impeachment process after he vetoes the Civil Rights Act of 1866. ...
... •Would go after President Johnson through the impeachment process after he vetoes the Civil Rights Act of 1866. ...
File - Ms. Albu`s Class Site
... congressional election was complete, the Republicans won more than the two-thirds majority in the House and the Senate that they needed to override any presidential vetoes. If the southern states had been willing to adopt the Fourteenth Amendment, coercive measures might have been avoided. On March ...
... congressional election was complete, the Republicans won more than the two-thirds majority in the House and the Senate that they needed to override any presidential vetoes. If the southern states had been willing to adopt the Fourteenth Amendment, coercive measures might have been avoided. On March ...
APUSH Talking Points 10.1 The Election of 1864, Surrender and
... #1 be a representative, republican government #2 recognize the free status of former slaves and other Blacks #3 provide Blacks with an education (plan did not require a state to give Blacks the right to vote) By Jan 1864 – Tennessee, Louisiana and Arkansas had met the requirements and applied to be ...
... #1 be a representative, republican government #2 recognize the free status of former slaves and other Blacks #3 provide Blacks with an education (plan did not require a state to give Blacks the right to vote) By Jan 1864 – Tennessee, Louisiana and Arkansas had met the requirements and applied to be ...
THE AMERICAN CIVIL WAR
... • After the Emancipation Proclamation blacks began to join the Union Army • Initially they were only used for manual labor • Eventually, Blacks saw live combat • 54th regiment out of Massachusetts ...
... • After the Emancipation Proclamation blacks began to join the Union Army • Initially they were only used for manual labor • Eventually, Blacks saw live combat • 54th regiment out of Massachusetts ...
chapter_4_powerpoint
... The South went through significant changes after the war The economy was in ruins and they lost hundreds of thousands of young men Republicans now dominated politically, but often with ...
... The South went through significant changes after the war The economy was in ruins and they lost hundreds of thousands of young men Republicans now dominated politically, but often with ...
reconstruction of the south 1865-1877
... if Northern and Southern Democrats should become united as they were before the war. 2) Conflict over the authority of the President was another cause of opposition to Lincoln. Many congressmen were convinced that the President had exceeded his authority during the war and afterwards in assuming con ...
... if Northern and Southern Democrats should become united as they were before the war. 2) Conflict over the authority of the President was another cause of opposition to Lincoln. Many congressmen were convinced that the President had exceeded his authority during the war and afterwards in assuming con ...