“Gouge Notes” – Unit 6: The American Civil War Secession During
... Lee struck northward into Pennsylvania in July 1863, but was again blocked by a strong Union defense. In the three-day Battle of Gettysburg, 90,000 Union soldiers battled 75,000 Confederates and secured a Union victory. The losses were ruinous to both sides: a total of 7,000 soldiers died on the fie ...
... Lee struck northward into Pennsylvania in July 1863, but was again blocked by a strong Union defense. In the three-day Battle of Gettysburg, 90,000 Union soldiers battled 75,000 Confederates and secured a Union victory. The losses were ruinous to both sides: a total of 7,000 soldiers died on the fie ...
CH 22 Part 1 Notes
... conditions and he is learning from trial and error how best to resolve the myriad of issues as time passes… Congress is involved during this period beginning in 1864 with the Wade-Davis Bill yet is ineffective due to Lincoln’s pocket veto of this bill and his firm grasp of War Policy as commander-in ...
... conditions and he is learning from trial and error how best to resolve the myriad of issues as time passes… Congress is involved during this period beginning in 1864 with the Wade-Davis Bill yet is ineffective due to Lincoln’s pocket veto of this bill and his firm grasp of War Policy as commander-in ...
Name: Period: Reconstruction Plans Lincoln`s Reconstruction
... - Military and Political leaders were not pardoned and were tried for treason (but many were actually pardoned) - 13th amendment which abolished slavery - Believed voting rights was an issue for the states - Appointed govt. officials that supported and passed Black Codes - Renewed the Freedman’s Bur ...
... - Military and Political leaders were not pardoned and were tried for treason (but many were actually pardoned) - 13th amendment which abolished slavery - Believed voting rights was an issue for the states - Appointed govt. officials that supported and passed Black Codes - Renewed the Freedman’s Bur ...
The Civil War
... “Malice towards none, with charity, to bind up the nation’s wounds.” Radical Republicans wanted to be more punitive towards the former Confederate states; the states were not allowed back into the Union immediately and were placed under the military occupation. Radical Republicans believed in aggres ...
... “Malice towards none, with charity, to bind up the nation’s wounds.” Radical Republicans wanted to be more punitive towards the former Confederate states; the states were not allowed back into the Union immediately and were placed under the military occupation. Radical Republicans believed in aggres ...
Reconstruction_PPT
... Republicans took control in the election of 1866 after riots in the South discredited Johnson’s views. Radicals now had the votes needed to pass the Reconstruction Acts. These laws put the southern states under U.S. military control and required them to draft new constitutions. Congress also passed ...
... Republicans took control in the election of 1866 after riots in the South discredited Johnson’s views. Radicals now had the votes needed to pass the Reconstruction Acts. These laws put the southern states under U.S. military control and required them to draft new constitutions. Congress also passed ...
Civil War and Reconstruction - The Official Site - Varsity.com
... northern state legislature, every northern governor's race, and more than a 2/3 majority in Congress, guaranteeing the ability to override Johnson’s vetoes. In the spring of 1866, the Republican Congress passed its most radical plan for Reconstruction, despite Johnson’s veto. ...
... northern state legislature, every northern governor's race, and more than a 2/3 majority in Congress, guaranteeing the ability to override Johnson’s vetoes. In the spring of 1866, the Republican Congress passed its most radical plan for Reconstruction, despite Johnson’s veto. ...
Unit 12 Targets dentify MAJOR ERAS AND EVENTS IN U.S.
... slaves free in the Confederate states in rebellion, but did not extend to border-states. After Lincoln’s assassination, President Andrew Johnson declared his own plan for Reconstruction which included the need for Confederate states to approve the 13th Amendment. The amendment, adopted in 1865, eigh ...
... slaves free in the Confederate states in rebellion, but did not extend to border-states. After Lincoln’s assassination, President Andrew Johnson declared his own plan for Reconstruction which included the need for Confederate states to approve the 13th Amendment. The amendment, adopted in 1865, eigh ...
Possible Questions You Will Find in Reading Quiz A
... b. Financial centralization (National Bank and the Greenback) c. Land grant program d. Protective tariff e. Transcontinental railroad on a Northern route A3 This was among the Republican measures that set the direction for the party and for the post-Civil War era. It provided public land to subsidiz ...
... b. Financial centralization (National Bank and the Greenback) c. Land grant program d. Protective tariff e. Transcontinental railroad on a Northern route A3 This was among the Republican measures that set the direction for the party and for the post-Civil War era. It provided public land to subsidiz ...
Possible Questions You Will Find in Reading Quiz A
... b. Financial centralization (National Bank and the Greenback) c. Land grant program d. Protective tariff e. Transcontinental railroad on a Northern route A3 This was among the Republican measures that set the direction for the party and for the post-Civil War era. It provided public land to subsidiz ...
... b. Financial centralization (National Bank and the Greenback) c. Land grant program d. Protective tariff e. Transcontinental railroad on a Northern route A3 This was among the Republican measures that set the direction for the party and for the post-Civil War era. It provided public land to subsidiz ...
chapter 18 - the reconstruction era
... Set up 5 military districts…each ran by a military commander until new state govts. were formed Also guaranteed AfricanAmerican men the right to vote and banned former Confederate leaders from holding political office ...
... Set up 5 military districts…each ran by a military commander until new state govts. were formed Also guaranteed AfricanAmerican men the right to vote and banned former Confederate leaders from holding political office ...
A Military Choice (1120L)
... Under these conditions, Southern states simply refused to start enrolling voters, preferring to remain under military control rather than allow black voters to participate in their new governments. To secure the new constitutions, Congress had to pass three more Reconstruction acts. Even when the U. ...
... Under these conditions, Southern states simply refused to start enrolling voters, preferring to remain under military control rather than allow black voters to participate in their new governments. To secure the new constitutions, Congress had to pass three more Reconstruction acts. Even when the U. ...
Lincoln and Reconstruction Section Preview Section Preview
... Lincoln’s assassination took place before his plan for Reconstruction went into effect. Upon Lincoln’s death, Vice President Andrew Johnson, a North Carolinian, became the nation’s seventeenth president. Soon after taking office, he took on the responsibility for returning the former Confederate sta ...
... Lincoln’s assassination took place before his plan for Reconstruction went into effect. Upon Lincoln’s death, Vice President Andrew Johnson, a North Carolinian, became the nation’s seventeenth president. Soon after taking office, he took on the responsibility for returning the former Confederate sta ...
Three plans for Reconstruction Black Codes, Jim Crow Scalawags
... laws passed in Southern states after the Civil War that restricted travel and other activities of freed slaves. The laws varied, and some provided for limited rights. But generally, they deprived blacks of key civil rights. Many barred blacks from juries and from testifying against white people. Som ...
... laws passed in Southern states after the Civil War that restricted travel and other activities of freed slaves. The laws varied, and some provided for limited rights. But generally, they deprived blacks of key civil rights. Many barred blacks from juries and from testifying against white people. Som ...
IB HL Exam Questions on Civil War
... interfere with slavery, which the North opposed. Southerners sought to protect their sectional interests by supporting states rights and opposing federal government. Northeasterners and Westerners argued that what was good for their section was good for the nation and sought to further their interes ...
... interfere with slavery, which the North opposed. Southerners sought to protect their sectional interests by supporting states rights and opposing federal government. Northeasterners and Westerners argued that what was good for their section was good for the nation and sought to further their interes ...
The Civil War - Cloudfront.net
... – To win southern support, he suggested dropping the Missouri Compromise’s ban on slavery, in favor of popular sovereignty, where residents vote to decide on the issue. • In May 1854 the Kansas-Nebraska Act became law, which outraged northerners, weakened the Democrats, and destroyed the Whig Party. ...
... – To win southern support, he suggested dropping the Missouri Compromise’s ban on slavery, in favor of popular sovereignty, where residents vote to decide on the issue. • In May 1854 the Kansas-Nebraska Act became law, which outraged northerners, weakened the Democrats, and destroyed the Whig Party. ...
Reconstruction is the era from 1865 to 1877 when the U.S.
... 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 ...
Chapter 12 Test Review - Rockin American History (08-09)
... 1. Describe Lincoln's “Ten Percent Plan.” What conditions did a state need to meet in order to rejoin the Union and regain its representation in Congress? Was this plan overly strict or not? 2. Describe Johnson's plan for Reconstruction. What conditions did a state need to meet in order to re-join t ...
... 1. Describe Lincoln's “Ten Percent Plan.” What conditions did a state need to meet in order to rejoin the Union and regain its representation in Congress? Was this plan overly strict or not? 2. Describe Johnson's plan for Reconstruction. What conditions did a state need to meet in order to re-join t ...
Reconstruction
... elections. It also maintained that Reconstruction was a congressional, not an executive, function. The radicals solidified their position by winning the elections of 1866. When every Southern state (except Tennessee) refused to ratify the Fourteenth Amendment and protect the rights of its black citi ...
... elections. It also maintained that Reconstruction was a congressional, not an executive, function. The radicals solidified their position by winning the elections of 1866. When every Southern state (except Tennessee) refused to ratify the Fourteenth Amendment and protect the rights of its black citi ...
Civil War and Reconstruction 1861-1877
... It is easy to forget how decentralized the United States was in 1861, and how limited were the powers of the federal government. There was no national banking system, no national railroad gauge, no national tax system, not even reliable maps of the areas where the war would take place. The army in 1 ...
... It is easy to forget how decentralized the United States was in 1861, and how limited were the powers of the federal government. There was no national banking system, no national railroad gauge, no national tax system, not even reliable maps of the areas where the war would take place. The army in 1 ...
Possible Questions You Will Find in Reading Quiz A
... b. Financial centralization (National Bank and the Greenback) c. Land grant program d. Protective tariff e. Transcontinental railroad on a Northern route Tip on Taking Quizzes: Notice this and the next three questions. This repeating of a list of the same answers with different questions is the best ...
... b. Financial centralization (National Bank and the Greenback) c. Land grant program d. Protective tariff e. Transcontinental railroad on a Northern route Tip on Taking Quizzes: Notice this and the next three questions. This repeating of a list of the same answers with different questions is the best ...
UNIT 6 Study Guide
... Indicate how the Whig party’s disintegration over slavery signaled the end of nonsectional political parties. Describe the nature and purpose of Douglas’s Kansas-Nebraska Act, and explain why it fiercely rekindled the slavery controversy that the Compromise of 1850 had been designed to settle. Enume ...
... Indicate how the Whig party’s disintegration over slavery signaled the end of nonsectional political parties. Describe the nature and purpose of Douglas’s Kansas-Nebraska Act, and explain why it fiercely rekindled the slavery controversy that the Compromise of 1850 had been designed to settle. Enume ...
PPT regarding Reconstruction era in the United States
... • Because of hatred toward Lincoln and Grant voters in the South rejected Republican candidates after the Civil War. • Democrats could rely on Southern votes in both state and national elections. • Every presidential election from 1876 to 1948 went solidly Democratic [Southern states only voted for ...
... • Because of hatred toward Lincoln and Grant voters in the South rejected Republican candidates after the Civil War. • Democrats could rely on Southern votes in both state and national elections. • Every presidential election from 1876 to 1948 went solidly Democratic [Southern states only voted for ...
Chapter 4 Notes
... hospitals, legal protection, education for former slaves and poor whites in the South. Lincoln’s Plan: Amnesty for all, malice for none. Andrew Johnson succeeds Lincoln Vetoes Freedman’s Bureau Act and Civil Rights Act ...
... hospitals, legal protection, education for former slaves and poor whites in the South. Lincoln’s Plan: Amnesty for all, malice for none. Andrew Johnson succeeds Lincoln Vetoes Freedman’s Bureau Act and Civil Rights Act ...
Radical Republican
The Radical Republicans were a faction of American politicians within the Republican Party from about 1854 (before the American Civil War) until the end of Reconstruction in 1877. They called themselves ""Radicals"" and were opposed during the war by the Moderate Republicans (led by Abraham Lincoln), by the Conservative Republicans, and by the pro-slavery Democratic Party. After the war, the Radicals were opposed by self-styled ""conservatives"" (in the South) and ""liberals"" (in the North). Radicals strongly opposed slavery during the war and after the war distrusted ex-Confederates, demanding harsh policies for the former rebels, and emphasizing civil rights and voting rights for freedmen (recently freed slaves).During the war, Radical Republicans often opposed Lincoln in terms of selection of generals (especially his choice of Democrat George B. McClellan for top command) and his efforts to bring states back into the Union. The Radicals passed their own reconstruction plan through Congress in 1864, but Lincoln vetoed it and was putting his own policies in effect when he was assassinated in 1865. Radicals pushed for the uncompensated abolition of slavery, while Lincoln wanted to pay slave owners who were loyal to the Union. After the war, the Radicals demanded civil rights for freedmen, such as measures ensuring suffrage. They initiated the Reconstruction Acts, and limited political and voting rights for ex-Confederates. They bitterly fought President Andrew Johnson; they weakened his powers and attempted to remove him from office through impeachment, which failed by one vote. The Radicals were vigorously opposed by the Democratic Party and often by moderate and Liberal Republicans as well.