1/99
Looks like no tags are added yet.
Name | Mastery | Learn | Test | Matching | Spaced |
---|
No study sessions yet.
What was a popular Northern song during the war?
Hang Jeff Davis to a Sour Apple Tree
How long would Jefferson Davis be imprisoned?
What along with him would be released?
two years
fellow "conspirators"
When were all rebel leaders pardoned and by who?
Christmas time 1868
President Johnson
What were the economic effects of the war in the South?
Banks, businesses, factories were shut down
Transportation system was completely ruined
Where were five different railroads line converged on before the war?
How far away was the nearest connected track?
Columbia, South Carolina
29 miles
What was the economic lifeblood of the South?
Agriculture
When did cotton production return to same production level as in 1860?
1870
How much was the planter aristocrats slavery investment worth? What evaporated this value?
2 billion
The Emancipation Proclamation
Who would refuse to pray for Johnson even though he needed divine guidance?
Southern Bishop
How many times did one North Carolina slave celebrate his freedom?
12 times
What would newly emancipated slaves join Union troops in?
How did one Virginia slave group react when freed?
pillaging masters' possessions
whipped owner with 20 lashes- dose of his own favorite medicine
What did some slaves do when they were freed?
changed name, demanded to me called Mr or Mrs by former owners, abandoned cotton clothings, sought out silk, satins and other finery
What did many newly freed men and women formalize?
slave marriages
From 1878 to 1880, how many freed slaves moved to Kansas? Where did a majority move from? What were they called?
25,000
Louisiana, Texas, and Mississippi
Exodusters
What became the focus of the black community life in the years following emancipation?
The church
How many members did the black Baptist Church gain from 1850 to 1870?
350,000
150,000 to 500,000 members
What happened to the size of the African Methodist Episcopal Church?
Quadrupled
100,000 to 400,000 members
What did one North Carolinian claim would be the first proof of black independence?
Schoolhouse (education)
With the lack of black teachers, who were sent to teach the black population? By who were they sent?
Northern white women
American Missionary Association
What was created to solve the problem of lack of experience and skills of freed blacks? When was it created?
Freedmen's Bureau
March 3, 1865
What was the Freedmen's Bureau intended to be? Who headed the Freedmen's Bureau? What did he later found and what did he serve as?
Primitive Welfare Agency
General Oliver O. Howard
Howard University
President of the university
How many blacks were taught to read by the bureau?
200,000
In one elementary class in North Carolina, how many generations of the same family would they sit and teach? What was the age range of the family?
four
6 to 75 years old
How many acres of land was the bureau authorized to settle former slaves?
Where was the land confiscated from?
40 acres
Confederates
What was the biggest failure of bureau?
Who would repeatedly try to kill the bureau?
When would it expire?
Failed to give blacks land
President Andrew Johnson
1872
What group was the biggest opposition to the bureau? What political figure shared this group's opinion?
White supremacists
President Andrew Johnson- tried to kill the bureau multiple times- expired in 1872
Where was Andrew Johnson from?
What color was his hair?
Tennessee
Black
Who was Andrew Johnson born to and where? What was President Johnson at the age of 10? Who taught him how to write and do simple math?
impoverished parents in North Carolina
Tailor's apprentice
his wife
Where did Johnson first show political interest? How old was he when he moved there? What political occupation would he later hold in this state?
Tennessee
17
Congressman
What was Andrew Johnson appointed after Tennessee was partially redeemed?
war governor
What group supported Johnson?
War Democrats
What was Johnson afflicted with at the vice-presidential inaugural ceremonies? What was he urged by his friends to take leading to unfortunate results?
Typhoid fever
whiskey
What was Johnson a dogmatic champion of?
States Rights and the Constitution
What was Johnson buried with? What'd it acted as?
The Constitution
A pillow
What required 10% of a state's total voters to take an oath of allegiance to the United States and pledged to abide by emancipation to be reintegrated into the Union? Who proclaimed it?
"10 percent" Reconstruction plan
Lincoln
What required that 50% of voters must take the oath of allegiance? When was it rammed through Congress?
Wade-Davis Bill
1864
What state did Republicans refuse to seat delegates from as they went in accordance with Lincoln's 10 percent plan instead of the Wade-Davis Bill?
Louisiana
What did many in Congress believe the confederate states should be readmitted as? What did they claim the South did when seceded from the Union?
"Conquered provinces"
"Commited suicide"- forfeited all rights
What was a nickname for Andrew Johnson used by radicals?
"Old Andy" Johnson
When did Johnson issue his own Reconstruction Proclamation?
Who especially of leading Confederates did the Reconstruction Proclamation disfranchise?
May 29, 1865
those with more than $20,000 taxable property
What laws were designed to regulate the affairs of the emancipated blacks? Where and when were the first ones passed?
Black Codes
Mississippi, November 1865
What state enforced the Black Codes the harshest? Most lenient?
Mississippi
Georgia
How long would blacks labor contracts commit them to work for the same employer for? Who could drag violators of labor contracts back to work?
a year
A Negro-catcher
What did all the Black Codes in all states forbid black do?
What did the states with harsher Black Codes bar?
serve on Jury;
renting or leasing land
Who were Southerners electing to represent them in the Capitol? What positions did they hold in the confederacy? Who held the highest rank out of all? What were they called?
Former Confederate leaders
Four generals, five colonels, and various members of the Richmond cabinet of the Confederacy
Alexander Stephens; ex-vice president of Confederacy
"Whitewashed rebels"
What acts were able to be passed with ease while the south was out of the Union from 1861 to 1865?
Morrill Tariff, Pacific Railroad Act, and the Homestead Act
On what date did Republican members of Congress shut the door in the face of newly elected Southern delegations?
December 4, 1865
Before the Civil War, how much of a person were slaves represented as in the population? How many votes did the South gain after the war from population increase?
3/5
12 votes
When did President Johnson announce the Union was restored?
December 6, 1865
What conferred on blacks the privileges of American citizenship and struck at the Black Codes? When was it passed?
Civil Rights Bill
March 1866
What nicknames were Johnson given after his veto of the Civil Rights Bill? What did one critic call Johnson?
"Sir Veto" and "Andy Veto"
The dead dog of the white house
What did lawmakers undertake and rivet the principles of the Civil Rights Bill into the Constitution as? When was it approved by Congress and sent to the states? When was it ratified?
The Fourteenth Amendment
June 1866
1868
What did the Fourteenth Amendment do?
1. conferred civil rights, including citizenship
2. reduced proportionality of the representation of a state in Congress
3. disqualified from federal and state office former Confederates who had sworn "to support the Constitution of the United States" (specifically those who served in Civil War)
4. Guaranteed federal debt, while repudiating all Confederate debts
What were the eleven states that seceded called? What state would it exclude later?
"sinful eleven"
Tennessee
What was the root of controversy between Congress and Johnson?
Black Codes
Who did Johnson honor with a monument in Chicago?
Stephen A. Douglas
What was Johnson's speaking tour called? What kind of speeches did he give?
Swing 'round the circle
Give 'em hell speeches
What did cry did Johnson's inept speaking heighten?
"Stand by Congress" against the "Tailor of the Potomac"
Who led the radicals in the Senate?
Charles Sumner
Who was the most powerful radical in the House? How old was he in 1866? What did he have covering his bald spot?
Thaddeus Stevens
74
black wig
What was Stevens a leading figure on?
Joint (House-Senate) Committee on Reconstruction
What divided the South into several military districts?
How many districts? When was it passed? What would each district be commanded by? How many blue-clad soldiers would police the districts?
Reconstruction Act
5
March 2, 1867
Union General
20,000
What provided constitutional protection for the suffrage provisions? When was it passed? When was it ratified by the required number of states?
Fifteenth Amendment
1869
1870
What case ruled that military tributes could not try civilians, even during wartime, in areas where the civil courts were open?
Ex Parte Milligan (1866)
What was a nickname for Union soldiers? What were the usually called?
Bluebellies
"radical" regimes
When federal troops finally left a state, its government was passed back into the hands of who? What were they also known as? When did the last federal muskets leave the South?
Redeemers
"Home Rule" regimes
1877
What were the three amendments passed during this chapter called?
Reconstruction-era Amendments
Who were the feminist leaders who fought for women's rights but suspended their own demands and worked for the cause of black emancipation?
Elizabeth Cady Stanton and Susan B. Anthony
What group gathered many signatures asking Congress to pass an amendment prohibiting slavery? How many?
Woman's Loyal League
400,000
What did Frederick Douglass call this time period?
the Negro's hour
When the Fifteenth amendment was proposed it would prohibit denial of the vote on the basis of "race, color, or previous condition of servitude". What did Stanton and Anthony want added to the list?
sex
How long did it take for women to receive the right to vote after the fifteenth amendment was passed?
50 years (1920)
Who was a prominent suffragist and abolitionist that outraged over the proposed exclusion of women from the 14th Amendment?
Susan B. Anthony
What was considered the heart of the Republican program for reconstruction?
14th Amendment
What would be the Southern blacks primary vehicle as they had gained their right to suffrage? What was it originally? Who were they assisted by and what did they turn the league into a network of?
Union League
pro-Union organization based in the North
Northern blacks; political clubs that educated members in their civic duties and campaigned for Republican candidates
The Union league's mission expanded to include
building black churches and schools, representing black grievances before local employers and government, and recruiting militias to protect black communities from white retaliation
How many black Congressmen served in Washington D.C. between 1868 and 1876? How many black senators would serve in Washington D.C.? Who were the two black senators?
14;
2;
Hiram Revels and Blanche Bruce (from Mississippi)
What did bitter southerners call former Unionists and Whigs?
What did bitter southerners call sleazy Northerners who traveled to the South seeking personal power and profit?
scalawags
carpetbaggers
What were two states with "radical" governments?
South Carolina and Louisiana
One carpetbag governor in a single year "saved" $_____________ from a salary of $______________
100,000; 8,000
Where were scams and felonies apparent in the North?
Boss Tweed's New York
What was the most notorious secret organization that resented alleged "corruption"? What was it it also called? Where was it founded? What were many of them?
Ku Klax Klan
The Invisible Empire of the South
Tennessee
Besheeted nightriders
What did one thirsty horseman declare about the last time he had drunk water?
first water he tasted since killed at Battle of Shiloh
In one Louisiana parish in 1868, how many whites were killed in two days by the Ku Klux Klan?
200
25 bodies found half-buried in woods
In response to nightriders in the KKK, What acts would congress pass?
Force Acts of 1870 and 1871
What did many of the outlawed groups (KKK) continue their tactics in the guise of?
dancing clubs, missionary societies, and rifle clubs
What was President known as by radicals?
What did they falsely accuse him of?
drunken tailor
maintaining there a harem of "dissolute women_
What is the new law that required the president to secure the consent of the Senate before he could remove his appointees once they had been approved by that body? What was one purpose of this act?
Tenure of Office Act
freeze into the cabinet the secretary of war, Edwin Stanton
What was Edwin Stanton secretly serving as?
a spy and informal for radicals
What was the vote in the House of Representatives to impeach Johnson?
What would they impeach him for?
126 to 47
"high crimes and misdemeanors"
How many tickets were printed in the prosecution of Jackson that would prove to be the largest show of 1868?
1000
How many years later would the arguments of whether the Tenure of Office Act was constitutional indirectly in favor of Johnson?
58 years
Who were the House prosecutors in the Johnson impeachment trial?
Benjamin F. Butler and Thaddeus Stevens
What was the first day of the first voting in senate against Johnson? How many resistant Republican senators voted "not guilty" to not impeach Johnson? How many votes did they win by?
May 16, 1868
seven
one
Who would have been President Johnson's successor if he was impeached? What was he at the time?
Benjamin Wade
president pro tempore (for the time being) of the Senate
What did prosecutor Thaddeus Stevens call out after the verdict was given that Johnson wasn't going to be removed?
The Country is going to the Devil!
What did Johnson's administration achieved its most enduring success in?
foreign relations
Why did Russia want to sell Alaska specifically to the United States? Who was the secretary of state that secured Alaska from Russia?
wanted to strengthen them as a barrier against Britain
William Seward
How much was Alaska transferred to the United States for? What was Alaska purchase known as?
7.2 million
Seward's Folly (aka "Seward's Icebox", "Frigidia", "Walrussia"
What was the nickname for Alaska?
Seward's Polar Bear Garden