Deck 20: Girding for War: The North and the South,1861-1865

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Question
Identify and state the historical significance of the following:
Morrill Tariff Act (1861)
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Question
Identify and state the historical significance of the following:
Maximilian
Question
Identify and state the historical significance of the following:
martial law
Question
Identify and state the historical significance of the following:
Edwin M.Stanton
Question
Identify and state the historical significance of the following:
Alabama
Question
Identify and state the historical significance of the following:
U.S.Sanitary Commission
Question
Identify and state the historical significance of the following:
Napoleon III
Question
Identify and state the historical significance of the following:
Jefferson Davis
Question
Identify and state the historical significance of the following:
Fort Sumter
Question
Identify and state the historical significance of the following:
"Billy Yank" and "Johnny Reb"
Question
Identify and state the historical significance of the following:
Sally Tompkins
Question
Identify and state the historical significance of the following:
Border States
Question
Identify and state the historical significance of the following:
Trent affair
Question
Identify and state the historical significance of the following:
National Banking System
Question
Identify and state the historical significance of the following:
Charles Francis Adams
Question
Identify and state the historical significance of the following:
Clara Barton
Question
Identify and state the historical significance of the following:
Laird rams
Question
Identify and state the historical significance of the following:
New York draft riots
Question
Identify and state the historical significance of the following:
Elizabeth Blackwell
Question
Identify and state the historical significance of the following:
writ of habeas corpus
Question
Identify and state the historical significance of the following:
Homestead Act
Question
The importance of the Border States became even greater when ____ was added to their number in 1861.

A) Nevada
B) Kansas
C) Delaware
D) West Virginia
E) Tennessee
Question
The North's greatest strength in the Civil War was its

A) ethnic unity.
B) military leadership.
C) navy.
D) moral commitment to antislavery.
E) economy.
Question
During the Civil War,about _____ of the Union´s soldiers came from the loyal slave states.

A) 10,000
B) 25,000
C) 50,000
D) 100,000
E) 300,000
Question
Identify and state the historical significance of the following:
greenbacks
Question
As the Civil War began,the South had the advantage of

A) more talented political leaders.
B) more talented military leaders.
C) superior industrial capabilities.
D) greater manpower.
E) a stronger navy.
Question
Identify and state the historical significance of the following:
Robert E.Lee
Question
During the Civil War,most of the Five Civilized Tribes in the Indian Territory of present-day Oklahoma

A) supported the Confederacy.
B) supported the Union.
C) tried to remain neutral.
D) took advantage of the opportunity to reassert their independence.
E) sought admission as a Confederate state.
Question
President Lincoln's approach to what to do about the situation at Fort Sumter in the first weeks of his administration can best be characterized as

A) belligerent.
B) ambiguous.
C) manipulative.
D) weak.
E) cautious.
Question
The greatest weakness of the South during the Civil War was its

A) military leadership.
B) navy.
C) system of slavery.
D) economy.
E) inability to conduct offensive warfare.
Question
Identify and state the historical significance of the following:
conscription law
Question
President Lincoln underlined the importance of the Border States when he reportedly said that he hoped to have God on his side,but he had to have

A) Kentucky.
B) Illinois.
C) Kansas.
D) Virginia.
E) Ohio.
Question
Immigrants from northern Europe added to the North´s advantage in manpower,providing about _____ of the Union´s forces.

A) ten percent
B) fifteen percent
C) twenty percent
D) thirty-five percent
E) forty percent
Question
Lincoln's initial declaration that the North fought only to preserve the Union and not to abolish slavery

A) came as a disappointment to most northerners.
B) was designed essentially to keep the Border States in the Union.
C) was understood as politically necessary by most abolitionists.
D) contradicted the campaign promises of the Republican party.
E) cost him support in the "Butternut region" of Ohio, Indiana, and Illinois.
Question
What did President Lincoln mean when he said in his first inaugural address,"Physically speaking,we cannot separate"?

A) The costs of creating separate international borders between North and South were too high.
B) The North and South were bound together by geography without an obvious division by a mountain range or river.
C) The North and South were bound tightly together by family ties.
D) The North and South had to remain united because they were sandwiched between the great powers of Canada and Mexico.
E) The railroads connecting North and South had created too many commercial and transport ties for the regions to separate.
Question
Identify and state the historical significance of the following:
West Virginia
Question
Confederate batteries fired on Fort Sumter when they learned that

A) Lincoln had ordered the fort reinforced with federal troops.
B) Lincoln had ordered supplies sent to the fort.
C) the Union commander was planning to evacuate his troops secretly from the fort.
D) Lincoln had called for seventy-five thousand volunteers for the Union army.
E) southern support for secession was weakening.
Question
Compared to Northern recruits,Southern recruits at the outset of the Civil War were generally

A) more malnourished and prone to disease.
B) more educated and better tacticians.
C) more experienced in handling horses and bearing arms.
D) more likely to be foreign-born.
E) more likely to have been industrial workers.
Question
In 1861,many Northerners were willing to let the Southern states leave the Union until

A) the Confederates began burning the American flag.
B) the South attacked Fort Sumter.
C) Robert E. Lee was named to head the potential new nation's army.
D) South Carolina seceded from the United States.
E) Virginia and Tennessee joined the seceding states.
Question
Identify and state the historical significance of the following:
bounty brokers
Question
The Union eventually found talented high-level officers

A) by turning to the top graduates of West Point.
B) drawing on the best products of its reserve officer training program.
C) by bringing in veteran Indian-fighters from the West.
D) by promoting generals with strong political connections.
E) through a costly process of trial and error.
Question
As president of the Confederacy,Jefferson Davis was unable to mobilize the strong power wielded by Abraham Lincoln because

A) of the Confederacy's constitutional emphasis on states' rights.
B) he lacked an effective army and military leadership.
C) he was constantly threatened with impeachment by the Confederate Congress.
D) Davis had a humorous and easy-going personality.
E) of the constant bickering within his cabinet.
Question
For both the North and the South,

A) the goal of stopping raids on their merchant shipping was critical.
B) skilled diplomacy enabled them to achieve their key objectives.
C) Britain or France's diplomatic recognition of the Confederacy would have been a critical factor.
D) the intervention of Mexico or Canada on the side of their enemy would have spelled defeat.
E) it was important to adhere to the letter and spirit of international law.
Question
America's minister to Britain under President Lincoln during the Civil War was

A) Charles Francis Adams.
B) William H. Seward.
C) Jefferson Davis.
D) Edwin M. Stanton.
E) Clara Barton.
Question
Napoleon III's installation of Archduke Maximilian on the Mexican throne was a clear violation of

A) French neutrality.
B) Mexican revolutionary principles.
C) American warnings.
D) the Monroe Doctrine.
E) Pan-American treaties.
Question
Critics dubbed Lincoln a tyrant partly because he

A) raised taxes without Congressional authorization.
B) surrounded himself with "yes men" in his cabinet.
C) tried to bully the British over freedom of the seas.
D) suspended the writ of habeas corpus.
E) implemented a draft long before the Union army exhausted the potential supply of volunteers.
Question
A supposed asset for the South at the beginning of the Civil War that never materialized to its advantage was

A) effective military leadership.
B) intervention by Britain and France.
C) the fighting skill of Southern males.
D) its ability to fight on its own soil.
E) its belief that it was defending its way of life.
Question
During the Civil War,Britain and the United States were nearly provoked into war by

A) Charles Francis Adams's incompetence as United States ambassador to London.
B) British merchant ships' evasion of the Union naval blockade.
C) the Trent affair, involving the removal of Southern diplomats from a British ship.
D) Napoleon III's effort to place Maximilian on the Mexican throne.
E) British working class support for the South.
Question
The South believed that Britain would come to its aid because

A) ordinary British people would sympathize with its fight for independence.
B) British Canada was strongly hostile to the Union.
C) the British recognized the economic need for slavery.
D) the government had refused to allow Uncle Tom's Cabin to be sold within the British Empire.
E) Britain was economically dependent on Southern cotton.
Question
The loyal states,with a total population of around _____,gave the Union a deeper reserve of manpower than the Confederacy,whose total population was around _____.

A) 22 million; 9 million
B) 15 million; 10 million
C) 35 million; 15 million
D) 8 million; 7 million
E) 100 million; 30 million
Question
The Confederate navy's commerce-raiders such as the Alabama

A) were largely a nuisance to northern merchant shipping.
B) proved devastatingly effective against Union shipping.
C) depended on their ability to use French and British ports.
D) had little effect on American naval strategy.
E) operated mostly off the Atlantic coast.
Question
France abandoned its attempt to control Mexico

A) because the French working class opposed the effort.
B) when the British pressured them to leave.
C) when it decided not to recognize the Confederacy.
D) because the Mexicans declared independence.
E) because the United States threatened to send the victorious Union army against the French in Mexico.
Question
To fill the army's demand for troops,prior to 1863,the North relied mainly on

A) the draft.
B) bounty brokers.
C) foreign mercenaries.
D) volunteers.
E) the militia (National Guard).
Question
Lincoln's attempts to preserve the Union led him to take questionable actions as president,such as

A) promoting and demoting military commanders without Congressional approval.
B) calling for a blockade and increasing the size of the army after the attack on Fort Sumter.
C) suspending the right to trial by jury.
D) risking the loyalty of the Border States by making the abolition of slavery the Union´s aim at the outset.
E) refusing to implement a draft, or conscription law, during the war.
Question
In 1863,the United States passed a conscription law that

A) enabled the wealthy to buy an exemption for $300 or pay a substitute to fight for them.
B) exempted all agricultural producers.
C) required women to serve in the nursing corps or other non-combat support roles.
D) forbade free blacks from serving.
E) drew draftees equally from all classes and groups in Northern society.
Question
As leader of the Confederacy,Jefferson Davis

A) enjoyed widespread popularity despite the South's military struggles.
B) displayed good administrative skill and judgment.
C) was able to shape the Confederate Congress and public opinion.
D) eloquently articulated southern ideals.
E) defied public opinion, rather than allowing himself to be led by it.
Question
In the last major crisis between the United States and Britain during the Civil War,war was prevented when the British agreed

A) not to trade with the Confederacy.
B) to remove their warships from the St Lawrence River.
C) to end their intrigues in Mexico.
D) to cede territory in lower Canada.
E) not to sell the Laird rams to the Confederacy.
Question
The Union's establishment of the National Banking System

A) allowed the United States to officially abandon the gold standard for its money.
B) guaranteed that all U.S. money would be in gold or silver.
C) evolved into the third Bank of the United States.
D) served only as an emergency measure during the Civil War.
E) led to creating a standard bank-note currency.
Question
What was one of the factors that ultimately kept Britain from committing to the Confederate cause?

A) The anti-slavery sentiment of the working people of Britain
B) The declining fortunes of the British textile industry
C) The British focus on its important colonial ventures in Africa and Asia
D) The threat of civil war within Britain
E) The British concern that aid to the Confederacy would provoke slave revolts in the Caribbean
Question
Abraham Lincoln was able to overcome his political problems more readily than Jefferson Davis because he

A) headed a long-established and fully recognized government.
B) had strong political support from Britain and France.
C) enjoyed unified political support in the North.
D) whipped his Cabinet into line behind his policies.
E) had more extensive administrative experience.
Question
To help pay for the Civil War,both the Union and the Confederacy

A) sold public lands and other assets to European investors.
B) printed large amounts of paper currency.
C) suspended all debt payments.
D) imposed high protective tariffs.
E) imposed a national income tax.
Question
President Lincoln proved a more effective wartime leader than Jefferson Davis partly because

A) he was more experienced.
B) he was able to rely on a stronger pool of military leaders.
C) he was a skilled interpreter and shaper of public opinion.
D) he led an army whose recruits were more prepared at the outset.
E) he got along better with British officials.
Question
Compare and contrast the characteristics that "Billy Yank" and "Johnny Reb" brought to the battlefield and their wartime experiences.
Question
During the Civil War,women in the North

A) demanded to serve in the Union army.
B) worked on farms but not in factories.
C) were largely restricted to the clothing industry.
D) found new opportunities in industry and nursing.
E) agitated for the vote.
Question
At the outset of the Civil War,the South confidently anticipated that King Cotton would guarantee European intervention on behalf of the Confederacy.Why didn't this intervention materialize? How did European powers aid the South in more limited ways?
Question
As a result of the Civil War,the Northern economy

A) became more dependent on international trade.
B) saw industrial profits improve but agricultural profits fall.
C) was notable for its honest and fair business practices.
D) experienced considerable unemployment despite military manpower demands.
E) greatly expanded its industrial and technological productivity.
Question
At the outset of the Civil War,which side seemed more likely to win? Is it more accurate to say that Union's strengths won the war,or that Confederate weaknesses caused it to lose? Give evidence of each side's strengths and weaknesses to back up your answer.
Question
In what ways did President Lincoln exceed his constitutional authority during the Civil War? Were his actions justified?
Question
Along with providing nursing and medical support services during the war,the U.S.Sanitary Commission

A) helped many women acquire organizational skills and self-confidence that they would use in the postwar women´s rights movement.
B) helped garner public respect for the medical profession.
C) provided medical training to a large number of African Americans.
D) enabled many women to serve as spies while nursing.
E) made major breakthroughs in germ theory and the prevention of deaths due to infection.
Question
The Border slave states that remained loyal to the Union included

A) Kentucky, Missouri, and Tennessee.
B) Missouri, Maryland, and Indiana.
C) Maryland, Illinois, and Kentucky.
D) Kentucky, Missouri, and Maryland.
E) Delaware, Maryland, and Arkansas.
Question
In what ways was the economic and social impact of the war similar in both North and South,and it what ways was it different?
Question
Like the North during the Civil War,the South

A) exempted the wealthy from military service.
B) experienced draft riots.
C) found volunteer enlistments woefully inadequate to meet manpower needs.
D) drafted women into non-combat military service.
E) used black soldiers.
Question
It has been said that the South's devotion to states' rights was a major reason for its failure to win the Civil War.Do you agree? Why or why not?
Question
In the deadly ____ of 1863,working-class,antiblack protesters rampaged against conscription,especially the exemptions afforded to the wealthy.

A) Philadelphia draft march
B) New York draft riots
C) Richmond bread riot
D) Rising of the Irish
E) mock Lincoln impeachment trial
Question
Northern advantages at the outset of the Civil War included

A) strong morale based on the aims of self-determination and self-preservation.
B) more banks, factories, railroads, and people.
C) an experienced president.
D) a young male population prepared for military service.
E) better military leadership.
Question
Explain the significance of the Border States to both the North and the South.How did they influence the shaping of Union strategy?
Question
The authors argue that diplomacy "has seldom been so critical as during the Civil War." What role did diplomacy play in the Civil War and why was it so important?
Question
When confronted with Southern secession in 1861,why didn't Lincoln simply allow the South to separate in peace? If he had,might those states have later returned peacefully? Did Lincoln's actions prompt greater unity among southern states and,in turn,more secessions?
Question
Wartime inflation hit the _____ much harder,rising to as much as _____.

A) Confederacy; 150 percent
B) Union; 700 percent
C) Confederacy; 1,000 percent
D) Union; 5,000 percent
E) Confederacy; 9,000 percent
Question
"King Cotton" failed the South as a tool of wartime diplomacy partly because

A) Britain held large surpluses of cotton when the war began.
B) the British elite had long resented the aristocratic pretensions of southern planters.
C) poor harvests over the late 1850s and early 1860s drastically reduced the South´s cotton production.
D) Britain developed alternative supplies of cotton in South Africa and Australia.
E) the cotton crop was devastated by the boll weevil.
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Deck 20: Girding for War: The North and the South,1861-1865
1
Identify and state the historical significance of the following:
Morrill Tariff Act (1861)
Answers will vary.
2
Identify and state the historical significance of the following:
Maximilian
Answers will vary.
3
Identify and state the historical significance of the following:
martial law
Answers will vary.
4
Identify and state the historical significance of the following:
Edwin M.Stanton
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5
Identify and state the historical significance of the following:
Alabama
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6
Identify and state the historical significance of the following:
U.S.Sanitary Commission
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7
Identify and state the historical significance of the following:
Napoleon III
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8
Identify and state the historical significance of the following:
Jefferson Davis
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9
Identify and state the historical significance of the following:
Fort Sumter
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10
Identify and state the historical significance of the following:
"Billy Yank" and "Johnny Reb"
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11
Identify and state the historical significance of the following:
Sally Tompkins
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12
Identify and state the historical significance of the following:
Border States
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13
Identify and state the historical significance of the following:
Trent affair
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14
Identify and state the historical significance of the following:
National Banking System
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15
Identify and state the historical significance of the following:
Charles Francis Adams
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16
Identify and state the historical significance of the following:
Clara Barton
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17
Identify and state the historical significance of the following:
Laird rams
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18
Identify and state the historical significance of the following:
New York draft riots
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19
Identify and state the historical significance of the following:
Elizabeth Blackwell
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20
Identify and state the historical significance of the following:
writ of habeas corpus
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21
Identify and state the historical significance of the following:
Homestead Act
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22
The importance of the Border States became even greater when ____ was added to their number in 1861.

A) Nevada
B) Kansas
C) Delaware
D) West Virginia
E) Tennessee
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23
The North's greatest strength in the Civil War was its

A) ethnic unity.
B) military leadership.
C) navy.
D) moral commitment to antislavery.
E) economy.
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24
During the Civil War,about _____ of the Union´s soldiers came from the loyal slave states.

A) 10,000
B) 25,000
C) 50,000
D) 100,000
E) 300,000
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25
Identify and state the historical significance of the following:
greenbacks
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26
As the Civil War began,the South had the advantage of

A) more talented political leaders.
B) more talented military leaders.
C) superior industrial capabilities.
D) greater manpower.
E) a stronger navy.
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27
Identify and state the historical significance of the following:
Robert E.Lee
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28
During the Civil War,most of the Five Civilized Tribes in the Indian Territory of present-day Oklahoma

A) supported the Confederacy.
B) supported the Union.
C) tried to remain neutral.
D) took advantage of the opportunity to reassert their independence.
E) sought admission as a Confederate state.
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29
President Lincoln's approach to what to do about the situation at Fort Sumter in the first weeks of his administration can best be characterized as

A) belligerent.
B) ambiguous.
C) manipulative.
D) weak.
E) cautious.
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30
The greatest weakness of the South during the Civil War was its

A) military leadership.
B) navy.
C) system of slavery.
D) economy.
E) inability to conduct offensive warfare.
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31
Identify and state the historical significance of the following:
conscription law
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32
President Lincoln underlined the importance of the Border States when he reportedly said that he hoped to have God on his side,but he had to have

A) Kentucky.
B) Illinois.
C) Kansas.
D) Virginia.
E) Ohio.
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33
Immigrants from northern Europe added to the North´s advantage in manpower,providing about _____ of the Union´s forces.

A) ten percent
B) fifteen percent
C) twenty percent
D) thirty-five percent
E) forty percent
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34
Lincoln's initial declaration that the North fought only to preserve the Union and not to abolish slavery

A) came as a disappointment to most northerners.
B) was designed essentially to keep the Border States in the Union.
C) was understood as politically necessary by most abolitionists.
D) contradicted the campaign promises of the Republican party.
E) cost him support in the "Butternut region" of Ohio, Indiana, and Illinois.
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35
What did President Lincoln mean when he said in his first inaugural address,"Physically speaking,we cannot separate"?

A) The costs of creating separate international borders between North and South were too high.
B) The North and South were bound together by geography without an obvious division by a mountain range or river.
C) The North and South were bound tightly together by family ties.
D) The North and South had to remain united because they were sandwiched between the great powers of Canada and Mexico.
E) The railroads connecting North and South had created too many commercial and transport ties for the regions to separate.
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36
Identify and state the historical significance of the following:
West Virginia
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37
Confederate batteries fired on Fort Sumter when they learned that

A) Lincoln had ordered the fort reinforced with federal troops.
B) Lincoln had ordered supplies sent to the fort.
C) the Union commander was planning to evacuate his troops secretly from the fort.
D) Lincoln had called for seventy-five thousand volunteers for the Union army.
E) southern support for secession was weakening.
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38
Compared to Northern recruits,Southern recruits at the outset of the Civil War were generally

A) more malnourished and prone to disease.
B) more educated and better tacticians.
C) more experienced in handling horses and bearing arms.
D) more likely to be foreign-born.
E) more likely to have been industrial workers.
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39
In 1861,many Northerners were willing to let the Southern states leave the Union until

A) the Confederates began burning the American flag.
B) the South attacked Fort Sumter.
C) Robert E. Lee was named to head the potential new nation's army.
D) South Carolina seceded from the United States.
E) Virginia and Tennessee joined the seceding states.
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40
Identify and state the historical significance of the following:
bounty brokers
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41
The Union eventually found talented high-level officers

A) by turning to the top graduates of West Point.
B) drawing on the best products of its reserve officer training program.
C) by bringing in veteran Indian-fighters from the West.
D) by promoting generals with strong political connections.
E) through a costly process of trial and error.
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42
As president of the Confederacy,Jefferson Davis was unable to mobilize the strong power wielded by Abraham Lincoln because

A) of the Confederacy's constitutional emphasis on states' rights.
B) he lacked an effective army and military leadership.
C) he was constantly threatened with impeachment by the Confederate Congress.
D) Davis had a humorous and easy-going personality.
E) of the constant bickering within his cabinet.
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43
For both the North and the South,

A) the goal of stopping raids on their merchant shipping was critical.
B) skilled diplomacy enabled them to achieve their key objectives.
C) Britain or France's diplomatic recognition of the Confederacy would have been a critical factor.
D) the intervention of Mexico or Canada on the side of their enemy would have spelled defeat.
E) it was important to adhere to the letter and spirit of international law.
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k this deck
44
America's minister to Britain under President Lincoln during the Civil War was

A) Charles Francis Adams.
B) William H. Seward.
C) Jefferson Davis.
D) Edwin M. Stanton.
E) Clara Barton.
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Unlock Deck
k this deck
45
Napoleon III's installation of Archduke Maximilian on the Mexican throne was a clear violation of

A) French neutrality.
B) Mexican revolutionary principles.
C) American warnings.
D) the Monroe Doctrine.
E) Pan-American treaties.
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Unlock for access to all 81 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
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46
Critics dubbed Lincoln a tyrant partly because he

A) raised taxes without Congressional authorization.
B) surrounded himself with "yes men" in his cabinet.
C) tried to bully the British over freedom of the seas.
D) suspended the writ of habeas corpus.
E) implemented a draft long before the Union army exhausted the potential supply of volunteers.
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47
A supposed asset for the South at the beginning of the Civil War that never materialized to its advantage was

A) effective military leadership.
B) intervention by Britain and France.
C) the fighting skill of Southern males.
D) its ability to fight on its own soil.
E) its belief that it was defending its way of life.
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48
During the Civil War,Britain and the United States were nearly provoked into war by

A) Charles Francis Adams's incompetence as United States ambassador to London.
B) British merchant ships' evasion of the Union naval blockade.
C) the Trent affair, involving the removal of Southern diplomats from a British ship.
D) Napoleon III's effort to place Maximilian on the Mexican throne.
E) British working class support for the South.
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49
The South believed that Britain would come to its aid because

A) ordinary British people would sympathize with its fight for independence.
B) British Canada was strongly hostile to the Union.
C) the British recognized the economic need for slavery.
D) the government had refused to allow Uncle Tom's Cabin to be sold within the British Empire.
E) Britain was economically dependent on Southern cotton.
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50
The loyal states,with a total population of around _____,gave the Union a deeper reserve of manpower than the Confederacy,whose total population was around _____.

A) 22 million; 9 million
B) 15 million; 10 million
C) 35 million; 15 million
D) 8 million; 7 million
E) 100 million; 30 million
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51
The Confederate navy's commerce-raiders such as the Alabama

A) were largely a nuisance to northern merchant shipping.
B) proved devastatingly effective against Union shipping.
C) depended on their ability to use French and British ports.
D) had little effect on American naval strategy.
E) operated mostly off the Atlantic coast.
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52
France abandoned its attempt to control Mexico

A) because the French working class opposed the effort.
B) when the British pressured them to leave.
C) when it decided not to recognize the Confederacy.
D) because the Mexicans declared independence.
E) because the United States threatened to send the victorious Union army against the French in Mexico.
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53
To fill the army's demand for troops,prior to 1863,the North relied mainly on

A) the draft.
B) bounty brokers.
C) foreign mercenaries.
D) volunteers.
E) the militia (National Guard).
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54
Lincoln's attempts to preserve the Union led him to take questionable actions as president,such as

A) promoting and demoting military commanders without Congressional approval.
B) calling for a blockade and increasing the size of the army after the attack on Fort Sumter.
C) suspending the right to trial by jury.
D) risking the loyalty of the Border States by making the abolition of slavery the Union´s aim at the outset.
E) refusing to implement a draft, or conscription law, during the war.
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55
In 1863,the United States passed a conscription law that

A) enabled the wealthy to buy an exemption for $300 or pay a substitute to fight for them.
B) exempted all agricultural producers.
C) required women to serve in the nursing corps or other non-combat support roles.
D) forbade free blacks from serving.
E) drew draftees equally from all classes and groups in Northern society.
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56
As leader of the Confederacy,Jefferson Davis

A) enjoyed widespread popularity despite the South's military struggles.
B) displayed good administrative skill and judgment.
C) was able to shape the Confederate Congress and public opinion.
D) eloquently articulated southern ideals.
E) defied public opinion, rather than allowing himself to be led by it.
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57
In the last major crisis between the United States and Britain during the Civil War,war was prevented when the British agreed

A) not to trade with the Confederacy.
B) to remove their warships from the St Lawrence River.
C) to end their intrigues in Mexico.
D) to cede territory in lower Canada.
E) not to sell the Laird rams to the Confederacy.
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58
The Union's establishment of the National Banking System

A) allowed the United States to officially abandon the gold standard for its money.
B) guaranteed that all U.S. money would be in gold or silver.
C) evolved into the third Bank of the United States.
D) served only as an emergency measure during the Civil War.
E) led to creating a standard bank-note currency.
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59
What was one of the factors that ultimately kept Britain from committing to the Confederate cause?

A) The anti-slavery sentiment of the working people of Britain
B) The declining fortunes of the British textile industry
C) The British focus on its important colonial ventures in Africa and Asia
D) The threat of civil war within Britain
E) The British concern that aid to the Confederacy would provoke slave revolts in the Caribbean
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60
Abraham Lincoln was able to overcome his political problems more readily than Jefferson Davis because he

A) headed a long-established and fully recognized government.
B) had strong political support from Britain and France.
C) enjoyed unified political support in the North.
D) whipped his Cabinet into line behind his policies.
E) had more extensive administrative experience.
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61
To help pay for the Civil War,both the Union and the Confederacy

A) sold public lands and other assets to European investors.
B) printed large amounts of paper currency.
C) suspended all debt payments.
D) imposed high protective tariffs.
E) imposed a national income tax.
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62
President Lincoln proved a more effective wartime leader than Jefferson Davis partly because

A) he was more experienced.
B) he was able to rely on a stronger pool of military leaders.
C) he was a skilled interpreter and shaper of public opinion.
D) he led an army whose recruits were more prepared at the outset.
E) he got along better with British officials.
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63
Compare and contrast the characteristics that "Billy Yank" and "Johnny Reb" brought to the battlefield and their wartime experiences.
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64
During the Civil War,women in the North

A) demanded to serve in the Union army.
B) worked on farms but not in factories.
C) were largely restricted to the clothing industry.
D) found new opportunities in industry and nursing.
E) agitated for the vote.
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65
At the outset of the Civil War,the South confidently anticipated that King Cotton would guarantee European intervention on behalf of the Confederacy.Why didn't this intervention materialize? How did European powers aid the South in more limited ways?
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66
As a result of the Civil War,the Northern economy

A) became more dependent on international trade.
B) saw industrial profits improve but agricultural profits fall.
C) was notable for its honest and fair business practices.
D) experienced considerable unemployment despite military manpower demands.
E) greatly expanded its industrial and technological productivity.
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67
At the outset of the Civil War,which side seemed more likely to win? Is it more accurate to say that Union's strengths won the war,or that Confederate weaknesses caused it to lose? Give evidence of each side's strengths and weaknesses to back up your answer.
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68
In what ways did President Lincoln exceed his constitutional authority during the Civil War? Were his actions justified?
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69
Along with providing nursing and medical support services during the war,the U.S.Sanitary Commission

A) helped many women acquire organizational skills and self-confidence that they would use in the postwar women´s rights movement.
B) helped garner public respect for the medical profession.
C) provided medical training to a large number of African Americans.
D) enabled many women to serve as spies while nursing.
E) made major breakthroughs in germ theory and the prevention of deaths due to infection.
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70
The Border slave states that remained loyal to the Union included

A) Kentucky, Missouri, and Tennessee.
B) Missouri, Maryland, and Indiana.
C) Maryland, Illinois, and Kentucky.
D) Kentucky, Missouri, and Maryland.
E) Delaware, Maryland, and Arkansas.
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71
In what ways was the economic and social impact of the war similar in both North and South,and it what ways was it different?
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72
Like the North during the Civil War,the South

A) exempted the wealthy from military service.
B) experienced draft riots.
C) found volunteer enlistments woefully inadequate to meet manpower needs.
D) drafted women into non-combat military service.
E) used black soldiers.
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73
It has been said that the South's devotion to states' rights was a major reason for its failure to win the Civil War.Do you agree? Why or why not?
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74
In the deadly ____ of 1863,working-class,antiblack protesters rampaged against conscription,especially the exemptions afforded to the wealthy.

A) Philadelphia draft march
B) New York draft riots
C) Richmond bread riot
D) Rising of the Irish
E) mock Lincoln impeachment trial
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75
Northern advantages at the outset of the Civil War included

A) strong morale based on the aims of self-determination and self-preservation.
B) more banks, factories, railroads, and people.
C) an experienced president.
D) a young male population prepared for military service.
E) better military leadership.
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76
Explain the significance of the Border States to both the North and the South.How did they influence the shaping of Union strategy?
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77
The authors argue that diplomacy "has seldom been so critical as during the Civil War." What role did diplomacy play in the Civil War and why was it so important?
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78
When confronted with Southern secession in 1861,why didn't Lincoln simply allow the South to separate in peace? If he had,might those states have later returned peacefully? Did Lincoln's actions prompt greater unity among southern states and,in turn,more secessions?
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79
Wartime inflation hit the _____ much harder,rising to as much as _____.

A) Confederacy; 150 percent
B) Union; 700 percent
C) Confederacy; 1,000 percent
D) Union; 5,000 percent
E) Confederacy; 9,000 percent
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80
"King Cotton" failed the South as a tool of wartime diplomacy partly because

A) Britain held large surpluses of cotton when the war began.
B) the British elite had long resented the aristocratic pretensions of southern planters.
C) poor harvests over the late 1850s and early 1860s drastically reduced the South´s cotton production.
D) Britain developed alternative supplies of cotton in South Africa and Australia.
E) the cotton crop was devastated by the boll weevil.
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Unlock Deck
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