History Final- Chapter 16
Which of the following was true of Andrew Johnson?
Although from Tennessee, he remained in the Senate after his state seceded from the Union
Which of the following is viewed by modern scholars as President Johnson's most serious and indictable offense
His systematic efforts to block enforcement of the Reconstruction Act of 1867
Which of the following was true of sharecropping when it originated?
It gave African Americans freedom from daily supervision by white landowners or overseers
Which of the following is true of Johnson's impeachment trial?
Johnson's acquittal by the Senate established the idea that Congress could not use impeachment as a political weapon against the President
Which of the following is true concerning African Americans who won public office during Reconstruction?
Many came from the prewar educated African American elite
Which of the following statements is true concerning the experience of freedmen on the Sea Islands near the end of the Civil War?
Northern reformers and government tax officials gave little or no help to former slaves who wanted to obtain land
Which of the following correctly states the belief of Thaddeus Stevens and other congressional Republicans who criticized Lincoln's approach to Reconstruction?
The Confederate states, by seceding and making war against the United States, lost their status as states and should now be treated as conquered territories
President Johnson's refusal to allow any change in his Reconstruction policies caused which of the following?
The influence of the Radical Republican faction grew among conservative and moderate republicans
"Members [of Congress] joined in the shouting and kept it up for some minutes. Some embraced one another, others wept like children. I have felt ever since the vote, as if I were in a new country." This statement was made in response to
approval of the proposed Thirteenth Amendment to the Constitution
After the Civil War, most African American farmers eventually worked
as sharecroppers
Andrew Johnson's initial plan for Reconstruction
attempted, at least temporarily, to deny power to wealthy southern planters
The section of the fourteenth amendment that had the greatest legal significance in subsequent years was the section that
conferred citizenship on freedmen and prohibited states from abridging of their constitutional rights
Many freedmen saw emancipation as the opportunity to
create their own institutions free of white control
In response to the Panic of 1873, many debtors and unemployed workers advocated
easy money policies, which they hoped would spur economic expansion
The refusal of most of the former Confederate states to ratify the Fourteenth Amendment in 1866
forced congressional Republicans to abolish the "Johnson governments" in the South, form new governments, and extend the vote to freedmen
Passed by Congress over President Johnson's veto, the Civil Rights Act of 1866
forced state courts in the South to practice equality by placing them under the watchful eye of the federal judiciary
Soon after proposing his initial plan for Reconstruction, Andrew Johnson surprisingly helped subvert his own plan by
granting pardons to many wealthy southerners
The First Reconstruction Act
guaranteed freedmen the right to vote in elections for state constitutional conventions
African American leaders in the South during Reconstruction
led efforts to establish public schools in the region
The term scalawag was used to describe
native white southerners who cooperated with the Republicans
In the Slaughter-House cases, the Supreme Court held that the Fourteenth Amendment
only prohibited the states from abridging those rights associated with US citizenship
In decisions after the Civil War, the Supreme Court
participated in the northern retreat from the Reconstruction commitment to equality for the freedmen
In an attempt to limit President Johnson's powers and safeguard its own Reconstruction plan, Congress
passed legislation requiring the president to issue military orders through the General of the Army
When Congress, in 1866, decided to base its Reconstruction plan on the ratification of the Fourteenth Amendment by the former Confederate states, the amendment was
rejected by all southern legislatures except Tennessee's
The outcome of the congressional elections of 1866
represented an endorsement of the Reconstruction plan of the Republican congressional leaders
In Congressional debates concerning Reconstruction of the former Confederate states, Thaddeus Stevens argued that
southern property should be confiscated and used to give freedmen homesteads and a chance at economic independence
In Bradwell v. Illinois the Supreme Court held that
state laws barring women from certain occupations did not violate the privileges and immunities clause of the Fourteenth Amendment
The Fifteenth Amendment
stipulated that states could not deny the right to vote on the basis of race, color, or previous condition of servitude
With respect to the question of black suffrage in the South, Andrew Johnson believed that
the federal government could never force the southern states to extend voting rights to African Americans
The 1868 indictment handed down by the House Judiciary Committee against President Johnson concentrated on his
violation of the Tenure of Office Act