Chapter 12: The Reconstruction Era
Constitutional provision forbidding any state to deny suffrage on the basis of race, color, or previous condition of:
15th Amendment
The Radical Republicans rejected the ten percent plan because they believed that
African Americans should be granted full citizenship
Laws that sought to limit the rights of African Americans:
Black codes
Agreement that led to the withdrawal of federal troops from the South:
Compromise of 1877
What action did Congress take to support Southern African Americans?
Congress overturned Johnson's vetoes on major Reconstruction legislation
Legislation making it a federal offense to interfere with a citizen's right to vote:
Enforcement Acts
How did Hayes's election effectively end Reconstruction?
Federal intervention ended in the South
Organization that provided food, clothing, healthcare, and education for Southern refugees:
Freedman's Bureau
During his presidency, Ulysses S. Grant
Gave high-level advisory posts to untrustworthy friends and acquaintances
Who ran against Grant in 1872 as the Liberal Republican Party candidate?
Horace Greeley
One success of Reconstruction was the
Introduction of a tax-supported public school system in the South
Which event led the House of Representatives to impeach President Johnson?
Johnson's attempt to fire Secretary of War Edwin Stanton
Organization that used violence to intimidate people:
Ku Klux Klan
Which of the following was a key problem with the sharecropping system?
Landowners could lie about expenses to keep sharecroppers in debt
Southern politicians who worked to unite white Southerners to regain power in Congress:
Redeemers
What did Republicans gain from the Compromise of 1877?
Rutherford B. Hayes became president
System in which landowners provided farmers with housing and supplies in exchange for a share of the crop raised:
Sharecropping
What was the outcome of the impeachment proceedings against President Johnson?
The House impeached the president, but the Senate failed to remove him
Why was a plan for reconstruction of the south needed?
The constitution provided no guidance on secession or readmission of states
By the end of the 1860s, Northern support for Reconstruction had faded because
The cost of military operations in the South worried many people
Which idea was a part of Lincoln's plan for Reconstruction?
The southern states had never really left the union
How were violators of the Enforcement Act of 1870 punished?
They were fined at least $500 and imprisoned for a minimum of one month.
What did Johnson require states to do to regain membership in the Union?
Voters had to ratify the Thirteenth Amendment, and state constitutions had to ban slavery.
Legislation requiring a majority of a state's prewar voters to swear loyalty to the Union before restoration could begin:
Wade-Davis Bill
In the years immediately following the Civil War, the South
became a stronghold of the Republican Party
Northerners who moved South to improve their economic or political situation:
carpetbaggers
In the system of share-tenancy, farmworkers
had more control over their crops and supplies than was true in sharecropping
The Republican party became strong in the South, in part because
millions of Southern African American men became voters
Southern Democrats appealed to small farmers by
pointing out that building roads and schools resulted in higher taxes
Reconstruction was successful in
raising African Americans' expectations of their right to citizenship
During Reconstruction, most African American families in the South
remained in rural areas, where they worked at jobs such as lumbering or farming
During the 1870s, Supreme Court decisions
restricted the scope of the 14th Amendment
One of President Lincoln's first major goals for Reconstruction was to
reunify the nation
The Fifteenth Amendment affected the women's suffrage movement by
splitting the movement
The ten percent plan required that
ten percent of a state's voters take a loyalty oath to the union
By the end of the Civil War,
the South's economy had been destroyed
What did the Enforcement Act of 1870 make illegal?
the use of force or coercion to prevent citizens from voting
During Reconstruction, groups such as the Ku Klux Klan
used violence to prevent freed people from voting
President Johnson's plan for Reconstruction required
wealthy planters and Confederate leaders to apply for pardons