APUSH Chapter 22 true and false
Andrew Johnson's first Reconstruction actions pleased radical Republicans by harshly punishing Southern leaders and refusing to grant them pardons
false
During Reconstruction, blacks controlled most of the Southern state legislatures
false
Most white southerners recognized that secession had been a mistake and welcomed returning to the United States as American citizens
false
Radical Republicans succeeded in their goal of redistributing land to the former slaves
false
The Black Codes, enacted by the Johnson-established southern state governments, provided freed slaves with basic political rights but not social integration
false
The federal government made no effort to attempt to suppress the violent white supremacists in the Ku Klux Klan
false
The newly established Freedmen's Bureau proved effective as a social agency providing economic opportunity as well as food, clothing, and medical care to emancipated blacks
false
Congressional Republicans demanded that the Southern states ratify the Fourteenth Amendment in order to be readmitted to the Union
true
Lincoln's 10 percent Reconstruction plan was designed to return the Southern states to the Union quickly and with few restrictions
true
Many newly emancipated slaves undertook travel to demonstrate their freedom or to seek separated loved ones
true
Many women felt betrayed when the Fifteenth Amendment gave voting rights to black males but not to women
true
Most of the aristocratic southern plantation owners lost their wealth during the Civil War
true
The Republicans impeached Andrew Johnson essentially because of his opposition to their Reconstruction policies and not on the basis of "high crimes and misdemeanors."
true
The focus of black community life after emancipation became the black church
true
The sharecropping system, developed during Reconstruction, trapped most blacks and many poor whites in a condition of perpetual debt to their creditors
true