13.The excerpt could best be used by historians studying which of the following?The development of new transportation technologiesThe emergence of nativist political parties
The relocation of Native Americans from the SouthThe growth of the abolition movement in the United States14.Rhetoric in the excerpt would most likely have been interpreted as promoting which of thefollowing?The creation of societies to send formerly enslaved people to Africa
The encouragement of enslaved people to take up arms and revolt15.Ideas in the excerpt would most likely have influenced which of the following?
CABAttempts to convince plantation owners to stop farming cash cropsEfforts at assisting enslaved people in escaping from the South16.Which of the following developments most directly related to the increased sectional strifeimmediately prior to the election of 1860?
CThe differing viewpoints over the use of the tariff to protect domestic industryThe legal ruling that denied African Americans rights of citizenship17.The passage of the Kansas-Nebraska Act was intended to resolve debates about which of thefollowing issues in the 1850s?
ACThe increase in immigrationThe expansion of slaveryThe fate of the Second Party system
DBCThe growth of low-wage factory labor18.Which of the following developments was most directly connected to the collapse of the WhigParty in United States politics during the 1850s?The escalation of tension between proslavery and antislavery factions
DDisagreement over the constitutionality of federal internal improvements funding“What fault has there been on the part of the General Government of the United States? Why break upthis Union? Will any gentleman be so kind as to particularize a single instance worthy of debate, in whichthe Federal Government has been derelict [negligent] in the discharge of its duty, or has failed toaccomplish the purposes of its organization? . . .“I am not here . . . to defend the election of Abraham Lincoln. I believe that his election was virtually afraud upon the people of the United States . . . nominated, as he was, by a sectional party, and upon asectional platform, with no representation in the body which nominated him from the South; but he wasnominated and elected according to the forms of law. . . .“Let us lookat the evils that must result from secession. The first, in my opinion, would be that ourcountry would not only be divided into a Northern Confederacy and into Southern Confederacy, but, soon
ACDBCDor later it would be divided into sundry [several] petty Confederacies. We would have a Central
27.The excerpt could best be used by historians studying which of the following?What prevented European powers from supporting the SouthHow Lincoln used executive powers to initiate wartime policyWhat motivated African Americans during the war
How Confederate strategy prevented a rapid Union victory
ABThomas Nast, “Uncle Sam’s Thanksgiving Dinner,” 1869, drawn in support of the Fifteenth Amendmentto the United States ConstitutionCourtesy of the Library of Congress28.Which of the following developments most likely influenced the argument expressed in the image?The continued westward movement of settlers increased agricultural production.
Get answer to your question and much more
DThe invention of new sailing technologies made international trade easier.29.People who shared the views expressed in the image most likely supported which of the following?
Get answer to your question and much more
DABThe enforcement of temperance laws in the North30.The artist who created the image would have most likely opposed which of the followingdevelopments?The construction of canals and railroads
Get answer to your question and much more
DThe passage of laws promoting economic development in the West“Forces committed to restoring White supremacy launched a ruthless, bloody campaign of terror andintimidation against freedpeople and their White allies in the South. As young southern units of theRepublican Party broke under those blows and the Republicans of the North retreated and grew moreconservative, Reconstruction collapsed. With it went many . . . gains. A resurgent southern elite onceagain set about imposing White supremacy and tyrannical labor discipline while stripping freedpeople ofmany of their civic and political rights.”Bruce Levine, historian, The Fall of the House of Dixie, 2013“For many poor Whites throughout the South, Jim Crow laws alone could not ease their most persistentfear. In regions like northern Louisiana, with little but pine trees rising from its barren soil, White men
BCDABDfound themselves competing with [formerly enslaved people], and during the dozen years ofReconstruction they had not known which race would prevail.“Such men had dropped away from the Ku Klux Klan after President Grant’s crackdown, but theirsimmering resentments had grown. With control of the South passing again to the Democrats, powerlessWhites were joining plantation owners to ensure that Black workers remained without their basic rights.”A. J. Langguth, historian, After Lincoln, 2014
Upload your study docs or become a
Course Hero member to access this document
End of preview. Want to read all 19 pages?
Upload your study docs or become a
Course Hero member to access this document