true or false
Abraham Lincoln's Ten Percent Plan meant that ten percent of African Americans were allowed to become full citizens.
False
In northern states, dissenters called abolitionists spoke out against the war.
False
In the South, strong beliefs in military service caused some governors to object to their troops' being commanded by officers from other states.
False
Northern reaction to John Brown's raid shocked and angered southern African Americans.
False
Republicans were hurt by widespread corruption in the administration of President Rutherford B. Hayes.
False
Stephen Douglas took a strong stand against slavery's expansion in the Lincoln-Douglas debtes.
False
The Democratic candidate during the election of 1876 was Rutherford Hayes.
False
The Fourteenth Amendment banned slavery in the United States.
False
The Radical Republicans used violence to keep African Americans out of political office.
False
The assassination of Abraham Lincoln dashed hopes for a harsh plan for a Reconstruction.
False
The election of 1879 led to the end of Reconstruction.
False
The goal of the new Federalist Party was to stop the spread of slavery into the western territories.
False
The union blockade prevented the South from gaining money by selling rice overseas.
False
Both the North and the South had draft laws.
True
During the Civil War, some women worked in factories making ammunition.
True
Most freedmen were uneducated and poor.
True
Northerners supported John Brown.
True
Roger B. Taney was the Chief Justice of the Supreme Court who wrote that Dred Scott was not a free man.
True
The Wade-Davis Bill required 50 percent of voters sign a loyalty oath before a state could return to the union.
True
To outlaw the black codes, Congress passed the Civil Rights Act in 1866.
True