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Transcript
Mr. Baker
APUSH 2012-2013
Unit 4: Civil War and Reconstruction, 1844-1877
Readings in America’s History, 6 ed. and Amsco
Chapter 12
Chapter 13
Chapter 14
Chapter 15
The South Expands, 1820-1860
The Crisis of the Union, 1844-1860
Two Societies at War, 1861-1865
Reconstruction, 1865-1877
Assessments
Unit DBQ: John Brown
Unit Project: TBA
Unit MC Test
Unit FRQ Test
Weekly reading quizzes
Unit Flashcards
Syllabus with Focus Questions
November 26 M
Unit 3 Exam Return
November 28 W
Introduce new unit
Creating the Cotton South
1. How did the South’s reliance on cotton and slavery affect development economically,
socially, and morally as well as the South’s relations with the North?
November 30 F
The African American World
December 3 M
Manifest Destiny North and South
War, Expansion, and Slavery (Mexican-American War)
(Compromise of 1850)
1. How were Manifest Destiny and western expansion portrayed in the 19C?
2. The War of 1812 and the Mexican-American War were both driven by Western needs and
demands. TWE was this true?
December 5 W
The End of the Second Party System
Abraham Lincoln and the Republican Triumph
1. Manifest Destiny and territorial expansion united, more than divided, the United States
in the period 1830-1860.
2. What were Lincoln’s views on race, slavery, and colonization?
December 7 F
In-class DBQ
Mr. Baker
APUSH 2012-2013
December 10 M
Amsco: Ch. 14 The Civil War: The War Begins,
First Years…, Foreign Affairs and Diplomacy
Article: Ramsdell, Charles. “The Natural Limits of Slavery Expansion.”
1. TWE was the Civil War about slavery?
December 12 W
Presidential Reconstruction
Radical Reconstruction
1. Analyze and evaluate President Lincoln’s Reconstruction plan and President Johnson’s
Restoration plan for the American South and the Radical Republicans’ challenge to those
programs.
December 14 F
The Undoing of Reconstruction
1. The North won the Civil War but the South won the Reconstruction. TWE is this true?
2. How do you account for the failure of Reconstruction (1865-1877) to bring social and
economic equality of opportunity to the former slaves?
January 9
W
Unit 4 MC and FRQ Test
January 11
F
Unit 4 Test Return
Glory
Cold Mountain
Popular Civil War and Reconstruction Films
Gone With the Wind
Birth of a Nation
On-line resources




http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/amex/lincolns/politics/es_shift.html
http://www.teacheroz.com/Civil_War_Causes.htm
http://caho-test.cc.columbia.edu/dbq/#I
http://www.impeach-andrewjohnson.com/
In addition to these assignments, we will be discussing the essential questions of the unit either as a
class, in small groups, using simulations, or on-line as resources become available.
Chapter summaries: 1845-1860
1.
Texas won its independence from Mexico in 1836 and asked the United States for
annexation as a state. The United States refused and Texas became an independent
Republic.
Mr. Baker
APUSH 2012-2013
2.
3.
4.
5.
6.
7.
8.
9.
10.
11.
Texas was annexed by the U.S. in 1845.
The U.S. government pursued a policy of “manifest destiny” to eventually take in land from
“sea to shining sea.”
The Oregon territory was acquired by the U.S. in the Oregon treaty of 1846.
President Polk created an incident on the Nueces River in 1846 that led to a declaration of
war against Mexico.
The Mexican War was settled by the Treaty of Guadelupe Hidalgo by which the U.S.
acquired west Texas, New Mexico, Arizona, California, and parts of Colorado.
By the Compromise of 1850, the north won California as a free state, while the south gained
a new fugitive slave law and the principle of popular sovereignty.
Senator Stephen Douglas attempted to turn the issue of popular sovereignty to his advantage
in the opening of Nebraska under the Kansas-Nebraska Act in 1854. Instead the issue
created the Republican Party, brought fighting to Kansas, and started the slide toward the
Civil War.
The Dred Scott decision, which nationalized slavery, drove a deeper wedge between the
North and South, made Lincoln a national figure and heightened the split between N. and S.
John Brown’s raid on Harper’s Ferry Virginia turned him into a martyr and brought the
nation to the brink of war.
Lincoln was elected in 1860 with 40% of the popular vote making him a minority president,
yet defeating all three of his opponents. Many southerners backed secession as the only
response.
Study Questions:
1.
Who started the war with Mexico? Why did America fight this war?
2.
How was the agreement of 1850 a compromise? Did it solve problems or just make new
ones? Explain using examples.
3.
Why was Kansas bleeding? Explain.
4.
Was John Brown a murderer or a martyr? What is your opinion and why?
5.
Who were the Republicans and how were they formed? What was their platform in 1860?
Who was their constituency?
6.
The Lincoln/Douglas debates were in the state of Illinois. Why did they take on such a large
national interest? What issues came up in the debates and what does this tell you about
Lincoln?
7.
What did the events of the 1850’s do to the political party system? Explain.
8.
What legal and Constitutional arguments did the South make in support of secession?
What social and economic arguments?
 Define and discuss the phrase “Manifest Destiny.” Explain how this belief came to
divide the nation.
 How did THREE of the following lead to the secession of South Carolina in 1860?
-Nullification Crisis of 1832-1833
-Kansas-Nebraska Act of 1854 and its aftermath
-Dred-Scott Decision of 1857
-Lincoln-Douglas Debates 1858
-Election of Lincoln 1860
 Assess the moral arguments and political actions of those opposed to the spread of
slavery in the context of THREE of the following:
Mr. Baker
APUSH 2012-2013
-Missouri Compromise
-Mexican War
-Compromise of 1850
-Kansas-Nebraska Act
Chapter summaries: 1861-1877
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
6.
7.
8.
9.
10.
11.
12.
13.
14.
15.
16.
17.
Secession had taken peacefully until President Lincoln forced the issue and the South fired
on Fort Sumter, South Carolina.
Southern advantages in the Civil War included the sympathy of European upper classes, an
excellent officer corps, and the belief that they were fighting for their independence.
The North had many more material advantages than the South: wheat over cotton, the idea of
Union, more industry, manpower, capital, resources, and the moral objective of ending
slavery.
The Northern strategy, the Anaconda Plan, involved blockading the Southern coast, dividing
the West from the East by seizing the Mississippi, and dividing and conquering what
remained.
The North sustained continued losses in the East until the Battle of Antietam in the Fall of
1862.
Lincoln used this victory to issue the Emancipation Proclamation which only freed slaves in
rebel states. Slavery was still in effect in border and Union states. The effect however,
was that the EP stopped intervention by Europe and encouraged Confederate slaves to rebel
and join the Union armies.
The battles of 1863 virtually decided the war. Grant seized the Mississippi at Vicksburg,
cutting the South in half while Meade defeated lee at the famous three day Battle of
Gettysburg.
Many early soldiers on both sides were volunteers. After casualty lists grew, both the North
and the South resorted to conscription.
The North was able to financially fight the Civil War with increased tariffs, bond sales, and a
small income tax. Without the ability to tax, the Confederate economy collapsed and
inflation raged out of control after 1863.
The industrial North came out of the Civil War in the midst of a financial boom, the South
was destroyed.
Lincoln suspended Habeas Corpus and other civil liberties during the Civil War due to the
war itself and the large number of dissenters (Copperheads) during the war.
The war ended when Lee surrendered at Appomattox in 1865.
Reconstruction was the plan to bring the Southern states back into the Union.
There were three Reconstruction Plans: Lincoln’s, Johnson’s, and the Radical Republican
plans.
After the death of Lincoln, debate focused on the differences between the Presidential
Reconstruction Plan and the Congressional Reconstruction Plan.
Congressional Reconstruction, formed by the Radical Republicans, focused on punishing the
South for seceding from the Union and the damage caused during the War.
Presidential Reconstruction focused on quickly returning the states to the Union and
ensuring support for the Republican Party.
Mr. Baker
APUSH 2012-2013
18.
19.
20.
21.
22.
23.
24.
25.
Black Americans enjoyed some freedoms during Reconstruction supported by the
Freedman’s Bureau, the 13th, 14th, and the 15th Amendments and the efforts of some
Northerners.
However, southern society for the blacks eventually became much like slavery due to
prejudice, black codes, tenant farming and the start of racist organizations such as the KKK.
Carpetbaggers and Scalawags represented Republicans who sought to make money on
reconstructing southern economy and government.
Industry and urbanization boomed as the South rebuilt itself after the destruction of the War.
Northern politicians argued over the requirements for southern readmission to the Union
government and the Radical Republicans attempted to impeach President Johnson for
opposing their efforts.
President Grant’s term in office was hi-lighted by corruption and mismanagement as
Reconstruction lost its focus and the Republican Party lost its dominance.
Reconstruction ended with the Compromise of 1877 after Hayes was elected during a
controversial vote.
As southern white power was returned to the governments of southern states, structural
racism was established by the courts in the Black Codes and Jim Crow Laws and through
white terrorism in acts such as lynchings.
Study Questions:
1.
Compare and contrast the free soil ideology of the North with the pro-slavery argument of
the South.
2.
What advantages did the Union have in the Civil War? How about the Confederacy?
2.
How did the Union propose to finance the war? The Confederacy? How successful were
they? What was the effect on each economy?
3.
How did each side raise troops? Who was more successful? What was the public’s
response to conscription?
4.
What factors brought about the Emancipation Proclamation? What did it accomplish? Was
it full emancipation?
5.
What effect did the Civil War have on women and blacks in the north? What part did they
play?
6.
Why was state’s rights the “great dividing force” in the Confederacy’s war effort? What
caused this division and what was the effect?
7. What were the foreign policy objectives of the Union and the Confederacy? How did each
attempt to achieve these objectives and which was more successful?
8. Why was 1863 the “Year of Decision?” What took place in 1863 to swing the advantage to the
Union? What did these events accomplish?
9. Did President Lincoln follow the Constitution during wartime? What liberties did he threaten?
Explain.
10.
Describe three reasons why the South lost. What were the biggest factors?
11. How was “Presidential” Reconstruction different than Congressional Reconstruction? Were
either successful?
12. What was the root cause of the impeachment of Andrew Johnson? Was the trial and the
outcome fair?
13. What major actions helped African Americans during Reconstruction?
Mr. Baker
APUSH 2012-2013
14. How did Reconstruction end? Explain.
15. Why was the South after Reconstruction called The New South? What economic, social, and
political changes had been made? How was it different than antebellum South?

What did the Civil War accomplish?

W.E.B. Dubois said that during Reconstruction, slaves had a brief moment in the sun,
then slipped back towards slavery. What does he mean?

Was Reconstruction successful?
DBQ: In what ways and to what extent did constitutional and social developments between 1860
and 1877 amount to a revolution?
Mr. Baker
APUSH
Past DBQs and FRQs:
1969 Were the principal causes of both the War of 1812 and the Mexican War to be
found in Western needs and demands?
1990 “Although Americans perceived Manifest Destiny as a benevolent movement, it
was in fact an aggressive imperialism pursued at the expense of others.” Assess
the validity of this statement with specific reference to American expansionism in
the 1840s.
1993 Compare the expansionist foreign policies of Presidents Thomas Jefferson and
James K. Polk. To what extent did their policies strengthen the United States?
2000 Assess the moral arguments and political actions of those opposed to the spread of
slavery in the context of TWO of the following.
Missouri Compromise
Mexican War
Compromise of 1850
Kansas-Nebraska Act
1996 DBQ In what ways and to what extent did constitutional and social developments
between 1860 and 1877 amount to a social revolution? Use the documents and
your knowledge of the period from 1860 to 1877 to answer the question.
1992 Discuss the political, economic, and social reforms introduced in the South
between 1864 and 1877. To what extent did these reforms survive the
Compromise of 1877?
1988
“I am not, nor ever have been, in favor of bringing about in any way the social
and political equality of the white and black races.” How can this 1858 statement
of Abraham Lincoln be reconciled with his 1862 Emancipation Proclamation?
1981 DBQ John Brown’s raid on the federal armory at Harpers Ferry, Virginia, in
October 1859, involved only a handful of abolitionists, freed no slaves, and was
over in two days. Although many Northerners condemned the raid, by 1863 John
Brown had become a hero and martyr in the North.
--To what extent and in what ways do the views about John Brown expressed in
the documents illustrate changing North-South relations between 1859 and 1863?
1978 “The unpopular ideas and causes of one period often gain popularity and support
in another, but the ultimate price of success is usually the altercation of
subversion of the original ideas and programs. For the period 1830-1877, discuss
this statement with reference to both a) the ideas and activities of abolitionism and
b) the policies of the Republican Party.
Mr. Baker
APUSH
1968 “The status of the Negro in the Republic was the central issue in American
politics from 1846 to 1877.” Assess the validity of this generalization.
Manifest Destiny North and South
Preston Brooks Affair
Manifest Destiny
Texas
The Alamo
Great American Desert
Stephen F. Austin
Sectional Conflict and Compromise
The Mexican-American War
Compromise of 1850
John Tyler
James K. Polk—D expansionist president 1845-1849
John C. Calhoun—American System.
49th Parallel—Final division of Oregon Territory between BR and US to avoid war in 18
54’40” or Fight—slogan calling for war with Br in order to take all of disputed Oregon Terr. Up to
the Russian Alaskan border
Walker Tariff 1846—designed to lower tariffs in order to encourage trade. Western states outvoted
northern because they wanted to export more grain. The tariff did increase exports and
benefited relations with Br that had been strained over Oregon Terr. The lowering of tariffs
would continue until 1857.
John C Fremont—Pathfinder who was directed by Polk to enter California to explore but whose
presence encouraged American rebellion against Mexican rule. Would later run as Free Soil
candidate.
Alta California—upper California including California, New Mexico, and the Southwest. See the
Absolut ad
Slidell Mission 1845—mission sent by President Polk to offer to purchase Alta California
Zachary Taylor –rough and ready nominated 1848 by Whigs in 1848 after having lost on tariff,
bank, and internal improvements. Southern and frontier background, Whigs nominated
Millard Fillmore NY and free-soiler for VP
Bear Flag Republic (California)—The name of independent California of 1846
Conscience Whigs—northern whigs who opposed slavery in the territories. The Democratic party
was dominated by southern and pro-slavery forces. Most conscience whigs joined newly
formed Republicans.
Wilmot Proviso –no new slave territories could be formed out of any territory taken from Mexico.
Rio Grande/Nueces The contested boundary of Texas with Mexico
Treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo 1848—Mexico surrendered California, Texas and New Mexico
Territory for cash
Mr. Baker
APUSH
Mexican-American War 1846-1848
Popular sovereignty—voters in each state should be allowed to decide for themselves to permit
slavery or not
Old Rough and Ready—John Tyler’s nickname from 40 years of military service
James Buchanan
Common Property Doctrine—the territories belong to all of the states. Congress cannot deny
slavery in territories (strict interpretation) because slaves are like any other form of property.
Would nullify Missouri Compromise.
Missouri Compromise line and California—how would Alta California be divided regarding slavery
and the Missouri compromise?
Compromise of 1850-Five parts: Fugitive Slave law, California a free state,
Fugitive Slave Law –runaway slaves to north would be returned with federal assistance
Death of the Whigs
“Forty-niners” and gold—gold was discovered in California in 49 setting off a settlement frenzy
Stephen A. Douglas D Illinois Senator
Read Celebrated Jumping Frog… for 1850 Compromise
1850 Compromise Final PPT for key vocabulary
Democrats of the 1850s
Sectional Strife and the Third Party System
“Bleeding Kansas”
Free-Soil Party 1848 formed from dissatisfied Dems. Van Buren nominated but won no states in
November election, though took more votes in NY from Cass (Whig). Taylor won NY because
Dems were split and therefore Taylor won the general election.
Know-Nothings—Anti-immigration party
Barnburners—Van Buren Dems who supported the Wilmot Proviso
John Brown
Pottawatomie massacre—John Brown, a Freesoiler, committed murder during the Bleeding Kansas
crisis
Dred Scott v. Sandford 1857
Panic of 1857
Fifth Amendment
Lecompton Constitution
John C. Fremont
Uncle Tom’s Cabin
Personal liberty laws
Franklin Pierce
Gadsden Purchase
Kansas-Nebraska Act
Bleeding Kansas
Sumner-Brooks affair
Republican Party
John Brown’s Raid 1859
Mr. Baker
APUSH
Abraham Lincoln and the Breaking of the Union
Secession and Stalemate, 1861-1863
Election of 1860
Crittenden Compromise
Constitutional Union Party
Jefferson Davis
Robert E. Lee
General McClellan
Clara Barton
National Union Party
Battles of Bull Run
Gettysburg 1863
Merrimack/Monitor
New York Draft Riots
“Billy Yank/Johnny Reb”
Antietam
Rutherford Hayes
Thaddeus Stevens
Hiram Revels
Andrew Johnson
George McClellan
Fort Sumter
Anaconda Plan
Emancipation Proclamation
Conscription
Vicksburg 1863
greenbacks
National Banking System
Copperheads
Union Victorious, 1864-1865
54th Massachusetts Infantry
March to the Sea—total war conducted
General Sherman
in Georgia
U.S. Grant
Election of 1864
Fall of Atlanta
Appomattox Courthouse—surrender of
Lee and his army to Grant
Presidential Restoration
13th Amendment—End of slavery
Freedmans’ Bureau The Bureau of Refugees, Freedmen and Abandoned Lands, popularly
known as the Freedmen's Bureau was an agency. Its main purpose was to help the newly-freed
former slaves acquire some of the things that they had previously been denied, such as at least a
rudimentary education and an opportunity to learn jobs skills outside manual labor.
Presidential Reconstruction—Lincoln’s 10 percent plan and Johnson’s plan
Radical Reconstruction
Mr. Baker
APUSH
The Counter Revolution
The North During Reconstruction
Grantism
Credit Mobilier
KKK
Force Acts of 1870/71
Compromise of 1877
Homestead Act
Whiskey Ring
Jim Crow laws
Minstrel show
Reconstruction Glossary
President Ulysses S. Grant was elected for two terms in office: 1869-1877. While a respected
general, his presidency is noteworthy for the scandals that took place amongst his top officials.
Greenbacks are currency that are accepted on faith and not instead of precious metals. Used in
the Civil War by the Northern government and created under the Legal Tender Act of 1862.
National Banking System founded under the National Banking Acts of 1863 and 1864. Banks
could receive national charters and then issue national banknotes. These banks would have to
purchase bonds to receive banknotes, which would consume one-third of their revenues. This
allowed the government to more closely regulate banks and establish a more modern banking
system.
13th Amendment abolished slavery.
14th Amendment the due process and equal protection clauses (Section 1). It was proposed on
June 13, 1866, and ratified on July 9, 1868.
The amendment provides a broad definition of national citizenship, overturning a central holding
of the Dred Scott case. It requires the states to provide equal protection under the law to all
persons (not merely citizens) within their jurisdictions. At the time of adoption, the main intent
was to ensure equal protection regardless of race, including some protection of the right to vote
in section 2. Wkipedia.com
15th Amendment This amendment prohibits the states or the federal government from using a
citizen's race, color, or previous status as a slave as a voting qualification. Its basic purpose was
to enfranchise former slaves. But it was not really until the Voting Rights Act in 1965, almost a
century later, that this purpose was actually achieved in all states. Wikipedia.com
Civil Rights Acts of 1866 This act was the Republicans' counterattack against the Black Codes
in the South. Included in these were the rights to: make contracts, sue, witness in court, and own
private property. President Andrew Johnson vetoed the bill, saying that blacks were not qualified
for United States citizenship and that the bill would "operate in favor of the colored and against
the white race." The Republicans in Congress overrode the presidential veto on April 9, 1866.
The act declared that all persons born in the United States were now citizens, without regard to
race, color, or previous condition. As citizens they could make and enforce contracts, sue and be
sued, give evidence in court, and inherit, purchase, lease, sell, hold, and convey real and
Mr. Baker
APUSH
personal property.
Wade-Davis Bill It would have allowed seceded states to reenter the union after the United
States Civil War if 50 percent of a state's voters took an oath of allegiance to the United States
and the state submitted an acceptable constitution. It also demanded stronger safeguards for
emancipation.
Tenure of Office Act, passed over the veto of President Andrew Johnson on March 2, 1867,
provided that all federal officials whose appointment required Senate confirmation could not be
removed without the consent of the Senate. When the Senate was not in session, the Act
allowed the President to suspend an official, but if the Senate upon its reconvening refused to
concur in the removal, the officila must be reinstated in his position. It was not entirely clear
whether the Act applied to cabinet officials appointed by a previous president, such as Secretary
of War Edwin Stanton, a Lincoln appointee.
Carpetbaggers were Northerners who traveled to the South looking for economic and political
opportunities during Reconstruction.
Scalawags were Southerners who joined with the Northern Republicans during Reconstruction
or worked for the Freedman’s Bureau.
Crop-Lien System was related to share cropping in which a farmer took a loan with the local
store in against the crops to be grown in order to buy supplies. The store owner would have a
say in what might be grown. It was often cotton.
Tenant Farming The prewar slave plantation was replaced by sharecropping, tenant farming,
and the convict lease system. In some cases the ex-slave was provided with land, tools, and seed
by plantation owner who, in turn, was to get a share of the crop at the end of the season. His
share was always so large that the cropper remained permanently in his debt. Similarly, tenant
farmers paid rent for their land and were extended loans by the storekeeper for their provisions.
Interest rates ran so high that they too remained in permanent bondage. Finally, some plantation
owners leased convicts from the state and worked them in chain gangs that most closely
resembled the prewar slave system. In every case, the result was that black farm laborers
remained members of a permanent peasant class. Grantism was the term used to refer to greed
and corruption following the scandals of the Grant Administration.
Credit Mobilier The company was the sole bidder for certain construction contracts from Union
Pacific and in 1864 was given 1,074 km of the Transcontinental Railroad to build, with the hefty
fees being paid by federal subsidies.
In 1867 Durant was replaced as head of the firm by Representative Oakes Ames. In that year
Ames allowed members of Congress to purchase shares at face rather than market value, the
same people who voted the government funds to cover the inflated charges of Crédit Mobilier.
Ku Klux Klan is a name used by a number of past and present fraternal organizations in the
United States that have advocated white supremacy and, in the past century, anti-Semitism, antiCatholicism, and nativism.
Force Acts of 1870/1871 and Ku Klux Klan Act of 1871 authorized the president to use federal
prosecutions, military force, and martial law to break organized attempts to prevent the
implementation of civil rights for Freemen. Private criminal acts came under the jurisdiction of
federal law.
Compromise of 1877 was a compromise made necessary by the disputed Election of 1876.
While an Electoral Commission awarded the election to Rutherford B. Hayes, Southern
Democrats planned to block the Commission's report via filibuster. The compromise resolved
the constitutional crisis through a series of secret negotiations involving Republican and
Mr. Baker
APUSH
Democratic politicians, and various interest groups, most notably the railroad companies. The
compromise stipulated that the South would acknowledge Hayes as President if the Republicans
acceded to various demands, including:
 the removal of Federal troops from the former Confederate states (Troops only remained
in Louisiana, South Carolina, and Florida, but the Compromise finalized the process.)
 the appointment of at least one Southern Democrat to Hayes' cabinet (David M. Key of
Tennessee was appointed Postmaster General.)
 the construction of a transcontinental railroad in the South
 legislation to help industrialize the South
 This compromise effectively ended Reconstruction in the former Confederacy, and the
autonomy of the Democratic party in the South was cemented with the ascent of the
"Redeemer" governments that displaced the Republican "carpetbagger" governments.
President Rutherford Hayes In order to win the election of 1876, the candidates had to muster
185 electoral votes: Tilden was short just one, with 184 votes, Hayes had 165, with 20 votes
representing four states which were contested. To make matters worse, three of these states
(Florida, Louisiana, and South Carolina) were in the South, which was still under military
occupation, the fourth being Oregon.
After months of deliberation and bargaining, Southern Democrats were assured that if Hayes
were elected, he would pull federal troops out of the South and end Reconstruction. An
agreement was made between them and the Republicans -- if Hayes' cabinet consisted of at least
one Southerner and he withdrew all Union troups from the South, then he would become
president. This is sometimes considered to be a second Corrupt Bargain.
The Homestead Act is a piece of U.S. legislation which gave one quarter of a section of a
township (160 acres, or about 65 hectares) of undeveloped land in the American West to any
family head provided he lived on it for five years, or allowed the family head to buy it for $1.25
per acre ($308/km²) after six months.
The act was signed into law by President Lincoln on May 20, 1862.
Whiskey Ring was a scandal, exposed in 1875, involving diversion of tax revenues in a
conspiracy among government agents, politicians, whiskey distillers, and distributors. The
Whiskey Ring began in St. Louis but was also organized in Chicago, Milwaukee, Cincinnati,
New Orleans, and Peoria.
Before they were caught, a group of mostly Republican politicians were able to siphon off
millions of dollars in federal taxes on liquor; the scheme involved an extensive network of bribes
involving tax collectors, storekeepers, and others.
Jim Crow laws were made to enforce racial segregation, and included laws that would prevent
African Americans from doing things that a white person could do. For instance, Jim Crow laws
regulated separate use of water fountains and separate seating sections on public transport. Jim
Crow laws varied among communities and states. The term is not applied to all racist laws, but
only to those passed post-Reconstruction starting in about 1890, the start of a period of
worsening race relations in the United States.
Thaddeus Stevens Leader of the Radical Republicans
Hiram Revels was the first African American to serve in the U.S. Senate representing
Mississippi in 1870.
Andrew Johnson became president following Lincoln’s assassination in 1865. He offers a third
reconstruction plan that is similar to Lincoln’s. He is challenged by the Radical Republicans
Mr. Baker
APUSH
with their Tenure of Office Act. When Johnson knowingly violated the act, Congress moved
to impeach him.
George McClellan was a Major General of the Union Army during the American Civil War. He
played an important role in raising a well trained and organized army for the Union, but his
leadership skills in battle were questioned, and he was accused of being incompetent and overly
cautious. While skilled in organization, he did not seem to have the decisive drive of Lee, Grant,
or Sherman, willing to risk a major battle even when all preparations were not perfect. He also
seemed never to grasp that he needed to maintain the trust of President Abraham Lincoln, but
instead proved to be frustratingly insubordinate to his Commander in Chief. In 1864 he runs
against Lincoln and loses.
Impeachment is the bringing of charges against a president or other high government official.
If it is found that the charges are valid, a trial will be held which can result in the removal of that
government official.
America’s History
Wikipedia.com
http://www.u-s-history.com/pages/h234.html
http://uts.cc.utexas.edu/~walkerj/reconstright.htm
http://www.law.umkc.edu/faculty/projects/ftrials/impeach/imp_tenure.htm