Unit 3: Political and Sectional divisions 1790-1877 Flashcards
(70 cards)
1
Q
Manifest Destiny
A
2
Q
Nat Turner’s Rebellion
A
3
Q
Dred Scott Decision
A
4
Q
Uncle Tom’s Cabin
A
5
Q
John Brown’s Raid
A
6
Q
Bleeding Kansas
A
7
Q
Fugitive Slave Act
A
8
Q
Missouri Compromise
A
9
Q
Free Soil Party
A
10
Q
Kindergarten
A
11
Q
Catholic Parochial Schools
A
12
Q
Gold Rush
A
13
Q
Compromise of 1850
A
14
Q
Fugitive Slave Act of 1850
A
15
Q
Harriet Tubman and the Underground Railroad
A
16
Q
Anti-slavery points of view
A
17
Q
William Lloyd Garrison and The Liberator
A
18
Q
Frederick Douglass and the Anti-Slavery Society
A
19
Q
Elijah Lovejoy
A
20
Q
Abraham Lincoln
A
21
Q
Gettysburg
A
22
Q
Emancipation Proclamation
A
23
Q
John C. Calhoun
A
23
Q
Charles Sumner
A
24
Sherman's March to the Sea
24
Secession
25
Neutral States
26
Neutral States
27
West Virginia
28
New York City Draft Riots
29
Lincoln and Habeas Corpus
30
Lincoln's 10% Plan
31
Johnson's Reconstruction Plan
32
Radical Republican's Reconstruction Plan
33
13th Amendment
34
14th Amendment
35
15th Amendment
35
Sharecropping or Tenant Farming
35
Black Codes
36
Freedmen's Bureau
37
Scalawags
37
Johnson's impeachment
38
Reconstruction Act of 1867
39
Carpetbaggers
40
Enforcement Act
41
Importance of the church for American Americans
42
Ku Klux Klan
43
White League
44
Panic of 1873
45
Compromise of 1877
46
Home rule and Southern occupation
47
Booker T. Washington
48
W.E.B Dubois
49
Jim Crow Laws
50
Plessy vs. Ferguson
51
Peonage
52
Vagrancy Laws
53
Describe how the desire for mineral resources, the hope of many settlers for economic opportunities, and ideology fueled westward expansion.
54
How did the North and South’s economic systems continue to grow differently (reliance on free-labor manufacturing vs. slave-based agriculture and slow population growth)? How did this difference lead to the creation of the Republican Party?
55
How did anti-slavery activists differ in their approaches?
56
How did Radical Abolitionists, despite being a minority, mount a highly visible campaign against slavery?
57
Why and how did the South defend slavery as a positive good through States’ rights, religion, and racist stereotyping?
58
Describe the national proposals proposed to resolve the issue of slavery in the territories. To what degree did they exacerbate the issue?
59
What effects did Lincoln’s election have on Southern leaders?
60
How did the Emancipation Proclamation change the purpose of the war?
61
How did Lincoln seek to reunify the country and use speeches, such as Gettysburg, to
portray the struggle against slavery as the fulfillment of America’s founding democratic ideals?
62
To what degree did the 13th,14th, and 15th Amendments change the political, economic, and social situations of African-Americans?
63
Describe the efforts by moderate and radical Republicans to reconstruct the defeated South, change the balance of power between the President and Congress, and reunite the Union.
64
To what degree did the Civil War amendments establish judicial principles that were later stalled for many decades?
65
Describe the strategies used by African American activists to articulate visions of political, social, and economic equality.