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APUSH Content Review #4. Civil War & Reconstruction Gilded Age, Populism, Overseas Expansion. Civil War & Reconstruction Review. At the outset, President Lincoln held that the Civil War was being fought to . 0. end all state sovereignty carry out the goals of abolitionists
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APUSH Content Review #4 Civil War & Reconstruction Gilded Age, Populism, Overseas Expansion
At the outset, President Lincoln held that the Civil War was being fought to 0 • end all state sovereignty • carry out the goals of abolitionists • free the slaves • preserve the Union
The major Civil War battle in the West which split the Confederacy in half was 0 • the Battle of the Wilderness • Vicksburg • Gettysburg • Antietam
During the Civil War, the U.S. Congress 0 • could do little because of the absent southern representatives • neglected legislation not related to the war due to a lack of funds • played a major role in choosing generals to lead the Union forces • adopted a tariff, a homestead law, and a transcontinental railroad.
Suspension of the writ of habeas corpus for all people living between Washington and Philadelphia is evidence that 0 • local law enforcement collapsed in many northern states • Union generals often usurped presidential power • presidential power increased during the Civil War • Congressional power increased during the Civil War
The key event that guaranteed Lincoln's re-election in 1864 was the 0 • fall of Vicksburg to General Grant • capture of New Orleans by Admiral Farragut • defeat of Lee's army by General Meade at Gettysburg • fall of Atlanta to General Sherman
The Battle of Antietam was 0 • the bloodiest single day's fighting of the Civil War • a victory for General Lee's Army of Northern Virginia • a proof to Lincoln of the good leadership of General McClellan • The event that brought France into the war along side the Confederacy
What was Jefferson Davis' central problem during the Civil War? 0 • He did not get along with his generals • In a society that prized states' rights, Davis had to centralize authority • Davis was a grand strategist who did not focus on military details • Davis could not generate support for the war in the South
During the Civil War, the term "Copperhead" referred to: 0 • Northerners who supported slavery • Southerners who opposed the Confederacy • Southerners who called for the abolition of slavery • Northerners who opposed the war
The Battle of Gettysburg was significant because it: 0 • led to an immediate end to the war • opened an invasion route to the North • inflicted a major loss on General Lee's army • cut off supplies to Confederate states west of the Mississippi River
Whose reconstruction plan allowed former Confederates to gain power in the reconstructed southern governments? 0 • Ulysses S. Grant • Abraham Lincoln • Radical Republicans • Andrew Johnson
During Reconstruction, laws that kept freemen in an economically dependent and legally inferior status were called 0 • Jim Crow laws • black codes • poll taxes • grandfather clauses
In the presidential election of 1868, Ulysses S. Grant: 0 • transformed his personal popularity into a large majority in the popular vote • owed his victory to the votes of former slaves • gained his victory by winning the votes of the majority of whites • Became the first, and only, third-party candidate to win the presidency
In the years after the Civil War, most freedmen ended up working as 0 • farmers on land they owned • farmers under a sharecropper system • wage laborers in the new textile mills • itinerant day laborers in domestic and service jobs
Why did Republicans turn against President Johnson? 0 • He vetoed the Freedmen's Bureau bill and Civil Rights Act of 1866 • Discovery that Johnson was delaying re-admission of former Confederate states • His proposal for an agency that would provide relief for poor southerners • A desire to show Democrats that they could work together to rebuild the South
The purpose of the Freedman's Bureau was to 0 • gain the vote for all freed slaves • feed and educate the former slaves to help them adjust to freedom • provide 40 acres and a mule for each slave • get radical Republicans in positions of power in the South
The "Compromise of 1877" did which of the following? 0 • gained political rights for freedmen • granted political amnesty to former Confederate leaders • ended federal military support of Republican gov’ts in the South • restored the Southern states to the Union
the Constitution prohibited states from denying a citizen the right to vote based on race, color, or former slavery: 0 • 13th • 14th • 15th • 16th
Emancipation in 1863 In 1863, Lincoln issued the Emancipation Proclamation which freed the slaves in the South; this made the Civil War about slavery
Created 5 military districts to enforce acts Created 5 military districts to enforce Reconstruction But, Radical Reconstruction was not adequate to enforce equality in the South
U.S. policy towards Indians changed with the Dawes Act 1887 because this act 0 • treated the tribes as independent nations • wiped out tribal ownership of property and granted 160 acres to heads of families • established new and larger reservations for all tribes • forbade selling alcohol or guns on reservations
The historian Frederick Jackson Turner argued that the frontier shaped America by 0 • killing off many of the most adventurous individuals • stimulating individualism, nationalism, and democracy • producing governments very much like those of Europe • creating new opportunities for women
The outlawing of the Indian Sun (Ghost) Dance in 1890 resulted in the 0 • Battle of Little Big Horn • Battle of Potowanamie Creek • Massacre at Sand Creek. • Battle of Wounded Knee.
The two factors that did most to stimulate rapid western settlement were 0 • the gold rush and cattle economy • the Homestead Act and the railroad • removal of the buffalo and Native Americans from the plains • the removal of the Indians and the gold rush
Open-range ranching came to an end due to 0 • overproduction of beef and declining prices • federal support for irrigated agriculture • the range wars between cattlemen and sheepherders • fencing of the plains with barbed wire
Which of the following was NOT a goal of the Populist party? 0 • government regulation of railroads • increasing the money supply by coining silver • defeating the Sherman Silver Purchase Act of 1890 • direct election of U. S. senators
Supporters of the Populist Party included all of the following groups EXCEPT: 0 • mid-western family farmers • southern tenant farmers • western miners • eastern labor union members
One of the most significant aspects of the Interstate Commerce Act was that it 0 • revolutionized the business system • failed to end the worst abuses of big business, such as pools & rebates • actually did nothing to control the abuses of big business • represented the first attempt by the federal gov’t to regulate business
In its approach to union organization, the Knights of Labor officially: 0 • organized workers by their skilled craft • welcomed both skilled & unskilled workers • encouraged the use of the strike • discriminated against blacks & women
The "Gospel of Wealth," as advanced by Andrew Carnegie, promoted the concept that people with wealth should: 0 • give aid directly to the poor • devote time to the public welfare • donate the bulk of their wealth to religious institutions • use their resources to help society
Which of the following best accounts for the success of Standard Oil: 0 • interlocking directorate • trust • vertical integration • horizontal integration
The first "big business" in America, at least in terms of finance, labor relations, and management, was 0 • the oil refining industry • the textile industry • the steel industry • the railroad industry
The Interstate Commerce Act of 1887 and the Sherman Anti-Trust Act of 1890 had in common the fact that they: 10 • convinced the Populists that they had achieved their goals • were strengthened by the Supreme Court in the years after they were passed • ended the Republican domination of the U. S. Senate • were intended to do away with the spoils system in politics
In 1890, Jacob Riis vividly portrayed life in an American urban slum in: 0 • The Jungle • Ragged John • How the Other Half Lives • Maggie, Girl of the Streets
Which population trend occurred in the U.S. from 1860 to 1920? 0 • decline in the number of Eastern & Southern European immigrants • shift of the majority of the urban population from city to suburbs • significant shift of the population from the North to the South • growth in the cities & decline in rural areas of America
Which group would have been most likely to support Tammany Hall? 0 • industrial and business leaders • poor urban immigrants • middle-class shop owners • wealthy rural landowners
Jane Addams is most associated with: 0 • temperance reform • the settlement house movement • higher education for women • women's suffrage
Europeans who came to the U.S. after 1880 were called "new" immigrants because they 10 • were considered physically superior workers to earlier immigrants • arrived before the closing of the frontier & settled farms in the West • came chiefly from northern and western Europe • came generally from different countries than most earlier immigrants
The major point of difference between Booker T. Washington & W. E. B. Du Bois was over their view of: 0 • the need for education • the need for immediate equality for blacks • aiding efforts for independence in Africa • using white assistance to help blacks
The Supreme Court decision in the case of Plessy v. Ferguson upheld which principle? 0 • "Clear and present danger“ • "With all deliberate speed“ • "Separate but equal“ • "Without redeeming social value"
By the end of his presidency, Ulysses S. Grant's popularity had declined substantially because of 10 • the corruption in his administration • his brutal policies toward the South • his support for "greenback" monetary policies • his refusal to support the Radical Republicans in Congress
Why did President Cleveland intervene with troops in the Pullman Strike of 1894? 0 • the governor of Illinois requested federal troops be sent • the strike endangered the national health and safety • the strike interfered with the U.S. mail and interstate trade • federal property was being destroyed
“If the gold delegates dare to defend the gold standard as a good thing, we will fight them to the uppermost.” William Jennings Bryan's famous "Cross of Gold" speech called for?: • the unlimited coinage of silver • lower tariffs • greenback paper currency • renewed religious commitment for all Americans
USA in the Gilded Age: 1870-1920 Industrialization Ranching, Mining, Farming Reconstruction
America in the Gilded Age: 1865-1918 The South: Still recovering from the Civil War but no longer forced to “reconstruct”