Kennedy, The American Pageant Chapter 22
... Lincoln’s original plan for Reconstruction in 1863 was that a state could be re-integrated into the Union when 1. it repealed its original secession act and took its soldiers out of the Confederate army. 2. 10 percent of its voters took an oath of allegiance to the Union and pledged to abide by eman ...
... Lincoln’s original plan for Reconstruction in 1863 was that a state could be re-integrated into the Union when 1. it repealed its original secession act and took its soldiers out of the Confederate army. 2. 10 percent of its voters took an oath of allegiance to the Union and pledged to abide by eman ...
Presentation
... Federalists. They favored a strong national government led by the “rich, well born, and able.” The Federalist Party included many manufacturers, merchants, and bankers, especially in the urban Northeast who believed that manufacturing and trade were the basis of national wealth and power. Their oppo ...
... Federalists. They favored a strong national government led by the “rich, well born, and able.” The Federalist Party included many manufacturers, merchants, and bankers, especially in the urban Northeast who believed that manufacturing and trade were the basis of national wealth and power. Their oppo ...
Document
... reconstruction. Lincoln hoped the procedures he set forth during the war would provide a model for the postwar era, but nothing quite turned out as planned since the Border States seemed reluctant to adopt emancipation and the Union-occupied territories struggled to establish loyal governments.9 17. ...
... reconstruction. Lincoln hoped the procedures he set forth during the war would provide a model for the postwar era, but nothing quite turned out as planned since the Border States seemed reluctant to adopt emancipation and the Union-occupied territories struggled to establish loyal governments.9 17. ...
Presentation - National Humanities Center
... have no doubt would be more popular with some thoughtless people, than that which has been done! But I cannot assume this reckless position; nor allow others to assume it on my responsibility. You speak of it as being the only means of saving the government. On the contrary it is itself the surrende ...
... have no doubt would be more popular with some thoughtless people, than that which has been done! But I cannot assume this reckless position; nor allow others to assume it on my responsibility. You speak of it as being the only means of saving the government. On the contrary it is itself the surrende ...
short Chapterwalk18
... The Far West 23. What was the significance of the Battle of Pea Ridge? Ans: It gave the Union control over Missouri. Confederates continued to attack Union forces and raid towns in the region forcing Union commanders to keep troops stationed in the area. ...
... The Far West 23. What was the significance of the Battle of Pea Ridge? Ans: It gave the Union control over Missouri. Confederates continued to attack Union forces and raid towns in the region forcing Union commanders to keep troops stationed in the area. ...
16 - Coppell ISD
... borrow a book. He held many jobs before going into public service. Lincoln gained people’s respect by treating them fairly when he was a storekeeper and a lawyer in Illinois. Lincoln’s presidency began during a troubled time. The Civil War between Northern and Southern States started just five weeks ...
... borrow a book. He held many jobs before going into public service. Lincoln gained people’s respect by treating them fairly when he was a storekeeper and a lawyer in Illinois. Lincoln’s presidency began during a troubled time. The Civil War between Northern and Southern States started just five weeks ...
16 - Coppell ISD
... borrow a book. He held many jobs before going into public service. Lincoln gained people’s respect by treating them fairly when he was a storekeeper and a lawyer in Illinois. Lincoln’s presidency began during a troubled time. The Civil War between Northern and Southern States started just five weeks ...
... borrow a book. He held many jobs before going into public service. Lincoln gained people’s respect by treating them fairly when he was a storekeeper and a lawyer in Illinois. Lincoln’s presidency began during a troubled time. The Civil War between Northern and Southern States started just five weeks ...
War Brings Change - Teaching American History
... Draft (legal means of requiring people to serve in the military) – both sides passed draft laws in 1862 and 1863. Age range was 18-35 years of age. Wealthy bought their way out of it. In the North, these laws created violence and unrest in NYC. Riots and murders occurred. 105 people died in 1863. Th ...
... Draft (legal means of requiring people to serve in the military) – both sides passed draft laws in 1862 and 1863. Age range was 18-35 years of age. Wealthy bought their way out of it. In the North, these laws created violence and unrest in NYC. Riots and murders occurred. 105 people died in 1863. Th ...
Sample Responses Q1 - AP Central
... general Robert E. Lee surrenders to Union general Ulysses S. Grant. ...
... general Robert E. Lee surrenders to Union general Ulysses S. Grant. ...
9. Secession, the EU, and Lessons from the U.S.
... dangers, though hardly all, were centered on the issue of slavery. The Union might cause the economic death of slavery, or might emancipate the slaves with or without compensation. Protecting their “slave property” was one reason Southerners contemplated secession. Further, most Southerners and many ...
... dangers, though hardly all, were centered on the issue of slavery. The Union might cause the economic death of slavery, or might emancipate the slaves with or without compensation. Protecting their “slave property” was one reason Southerners contemplated secession. Further, most Southerners and many ...
Nov. 16 Emancipation
... after the Battle of Gettysburg in Pennsylvania. Before Union troops restored order, black homes and institutions were burned, and nearly 100 African Americans were killed in the largest civil insurrection in the nation’s history. ...
... after the Battle of Gettysburg in Pennsylvania. Before Union troops restored order, black homes and institutions were burned, and nearly 100 African Americans were killed in the largest civil insurrection in the nation’s history. ...
MP 1 Powerpoint 2016
... destroy the political power of former slaveholders. • They also wanted African Americans to be given full citizenship and the right to vote. ...
... destroy the political power of former slaveholders. • They also wanted African Americans to be given full citizenship and the right to vote. ...
Lincoln Essay Contest Name: Raylin Xu Age: 15 Years Old Grade
... September 22, 1862, Lincoln announced his decision to abolish slavery in the states that claimed secession, and on January 1, 1863, Lincoln formally signed the Emancipation Proclamation. With this law, all slaves in the Confederacy were freed, and later those in the Border States and Union states we ...
... September 22, 1862, Lincoln announced his decision to abolish slavery in the states that claimed secession, and on January 1, 1863, Lincoln formally signed the Emancipation Proclamation. With this law, all slaves in the Confederacy were freed, and later those in the Border States and Union states we ...
The Emancipation Proclamation
... The 54th Massachusetts One unit that insisted on fighting without pay was the 54th Massachusetts Regiment, one of the first African-American regiments organized in the North. The soldiers of the 54th—among whom were two sons of Frederick Douglass—soon made the regiment the most famous of the Civil W ...
... The 54th Massachusetts One unit that insisted on fighting without pay was the 54th Massachusetts Regiment, one of the first African-American regiments organized in the North. The soldiers of the 54th—among whom were two sons of Frederick Douglass—soon made the regiment the most famous of the Civil W ...
Chapter 19 Drifting Toward Disunion I. Stowe and Helper: Literary
... This party arose due to the division in the nation. They offered the Constitution, only, as their platform since all could agree to that. He was a compromise candidate. Abraham Lincoln – Lincoln was nicknamed "Old Abe" and "Honest Abe" and was born in Kentucky to impoverished parents and was mainly ...
... This party arose due to the division in the nation. They offered the Constitution, only, as their platform since all could agree to that. He was a compromise candidate. Abraham Lincoln – Lincoln was nicknamed "Old Abe" and "Honest Abe" and was born in Kentucky to impoverished parents and was mainly ...
Rigorous Curriculum Design
... Vicksburg, fall of Atlanta) Emancipation Proclamation role of African Americans in the war (i.e. 54th Massachusetts) Gettysburg Address election of 1864 Appomattox Court House military leadership (i.e. Ulysses Grant, William Tecumseh Sherman, Robert E. Lee, Thomas “Stonewall” Jackson) aspects of mod ...
... Vicksburg, fall of Atlanta) Emancipation Proclamation role of African Americans in the war (i.e. 54th Massachusetts) Gettysburg Address election of 1864 Appomattox Court House military leadership (i.e. Ulysses Grant, William Tecumseh Sherman, Robert E. Lee, Thomas “Stonewall” Jackson) aspects of mod ...
Kennedy Assessment Index
... 3. Explain THREE distinct reasons that Reconstruction came to an end in 1877. a. SYN: “What is more remarkable than its eventual collapse was the genuine idealism and determination that sustained the Radical Republican vision for more than a decade within a national political atmosphere that was gen ...
... 3. Explain THREE distinct reasons that Reconstruction came to an end in 1877. a. SYN: “What is more remarkable than its eventual collapse was the genuine idealism and determination that sustained the Radical Republican vision for more than a decade within a national political atmosphere that was gen ...
18R-Civil_War_Politics_and_Economics
... of total Union enlistments; 38,000 died during the war Most came from slave states but many came from northern states as well. 2. Black volunteers were initially rejected. a. The initial war aim of the Union was not to end slavery (but to preserve the Union). b. Many whites were overcome by racism ...
... of total Union enlistments; 38,000 died during the war Most came from slave states but many came from northern states as well. 2. Black volunteers were initially rejected. a. The initial war aim of the Union was not to end slavery (but to preserve the Union). b. Many whites were overcome by racism ...
Lsn 22 Federal Home
... hostilities toward blacks to create the New York Draft Riot of 1863 – White workingmen were manipulated by agitators such as Democratic Congressman Samuel Cox of Ohio who warned that blacks would take their civilian jobs because of the draft – Irish immigrants in New York were especially vulnerable ...
... hostilities toward blacks to create the New York Draft Riot of 1863 – White workingmen were manipulated by agitators such as Democratic Congressman Samuel Cox of Ohio who warned that blacks would take their civilian jobs because of the draft – Irish immigrants in New York were especially vulnerable ...
Objective: Students will be able to describe the differences in the
... Congress shall have power to enforce this article by appropriate legislation. ...
... Congress shall have power to enforce this article by appropriate legislation. ...
414 - apel slice
... "forever free." With that, Lincoln glanced at his signature, looked up, smiled, and modestly said, "That will do." What Lincoln's proclamation did—and did not do—has been debated ever since. Some argue that the Emancipation Proclamation did little. After all, it ordered slaves freed only in the stat ...
... "forever free." With that, Lincoln glanced at his signature, looked up, smiled, and modestly said, "That will do." What Lincoln's proclamation did—and did not do—has been debated ever since. Some argue that the Emancipation Proclamation did little. After all, it ordered slaves freed only in the stat ...
USHC - 4.3
... Lincoln made it impossible for the British, whose population was strongly opposed to slavery, to continue to support the Southern war effort. ...
... Lincoln made it impossible for the British, whose population was strongly opposed to slavery, to continue to support the Southern war effort. ...
Politics and Economics during the Civil War
... of total Union enlistments; 38,000 died during the war Most came from slave states but many came from northern states as well. 2. Black volunteers were initially rejected. a. The initial war aim of the Union was not to end slavery (but to preserve the Union). b. Many whites were overcome by racism ...
... of total Union enlistments; 38,000 died during the war Most came from slave states but many came from northern states as well. 2. Black volunteers were initially rejected. a. The initial war aim of the Union was not to end slavery (but to preserve the Union). b. Many whites were overcome by racism ...
CONTESTED VISIONS: THE CIVIL WAR AND RECONSTRUCTION
... case rehiring the General and then firing him a second time. So let's turn now to a strategic overview of the conflict. When analyzing any war, it is important to recognize the need to coordinate your military strategy with your political goals. Let me explain. If you were part of the Confederate le ...
... case rehiring the General and then firing him a second time. So let's turn now to a strategic overview of the conflict. When analyzing any war, it is important to recognize the need to coordinate your military strategy with your political goals. Let me explain. If you were part of the Confederate le ...
The Civil War, 1861-1865 - AP United States History
... Pressured by public opinion, President Lincoln, and Congress, McClellan, in the spring of 1862, led his army of more than 100,000 men into Virginia. Approaching the Confederate capital on the peninsula southwest of Richmond, McClellan’s advance was ably deflected by Lee in a series of battles, forci ...
... Pressured by public opinion, President Lincoln, and Congress, McClellan, in the spring of 1862, led his army of more than 100,000 men into Virginia. Approaching the Confederate capital on the peninsula southwest of Richmond, McClellan’s advance was ably deflected by Lee in a series of battles, forci ...