AP Quiz Ch. 18

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In the debates of 1850, Senator William H. Seward, as a representative of the northern Young Guard, argued that

Christian legislators must obey God

The man who opened Japan to the United States was

Matthew Perry

Stephen A. Douglas's plans for deciding the slavery question in the Kansas-Nebraska scheme required repeal of the

Missouri Compromise

For a short time in the 1850's, William Walker, an American adventurer, seized control of

Nicaragua

A scheme to acquire Cuba from Spain in the 1850s was known as the

Ostend Manifesto

Which of the following was not among the issues that concerned southerners in 1849-1850?

There was a growing chance that a constitutional amendment would abolish slavery.

Of those people going to California during the gold rush

a distressingly high proportion were lawless men

In order to maintain the two great political parties as vital bonds of national unity, party leaders

avoided public discussion of slavery

Harriet Tubman gained fame

by helping slaves to escape to Canada

Most American leaders believed that the only way to keep the new Pacific Coast territories from breaking away from the United States control was to

construct a transcontinental railroad

In light of future evidence, it seems apparent that in the Compromise of 1850 the South made a tactical blunder by

demanding a strong fugitive-slave law

An event that helped the cause of compromise in 1850, was when President Zachary Taylor

died suddenly and Millard Fillmore became president

The event that threatened to destroy the longstanding equality of free and slave states in the United States Senate was the

discovery of gold in California

The public liked popular sovereignty because it

fit in with the democratic tradition of self-determination

The election of 1852 was significant because it

marked the end of the Whig party

Stephen A. Douglas proposed that the question of slavery in the Kansas-Nebraska territory be decided by

popular sovereignty

The Wilmont Proviso, if adopted, would have

prohibited slavery in any territory acquired in the Mexican War

Many northern states passed personal liberty laws in response to the Compromise of 1850's provision regarding

runaway slaves

The fatal split in the Whig party in 1852 occurred over

slavery

The South grew increasingly worried about the future of slavery because

the admission of California might permanently tip the political balance against them

The most alarming aspect of the Compromise of 1850 to northerners was the decision concerning

the new Fugitive Slave Law

According to the principle of popular sovereignty, the question of slavery in the territories would be determined by

the people in any given territory

A southern route for the transcontinental railroad seemed the best because

the railroad would be easier to build in this area

The Pierce administration's secret scheme to gain control of Cuba was stopped when

the secret Ostend Manifesto was leaked to the public

The debate over slavery in the Mexican Cession

threatened to split national politics along North-South lines

In the Compromise of 1850, Congress determined that slavery in the New Mexico and Utah territories was

to be decided by popular sovereignty

One of Stephen Douglas' mistakes in proposing the Kansas-Nebraska Act was

underestimating the depth of northern opposition to the spread of slavery

The Young Guard from the North

were most interested in purging and purifying the Union


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