Navigation » List of Schools » East Los Angeles College » History » History 11 – A Political and Social History of the United States I » Summer 2021 » Chapter 16 & 17 Quiz
Below are the questions for the exam with the choices of answers:
Question #1
A Carpetbaggers
B Scalawags
C Owners of small businesses
D African Americans
Question #2
A TRUE
B FALSE
Question #3
A vowed to work for the security of all citizens.
B surrounded himself with skilled politicians.
C became known for his anticorruption activities.
D proved a decisive leader.
Question #4
A extend civil rights, although limited, to freedmen.
B extend to blacks the same rights that whites enjoyed.
C provide blacks with economic opportunities.
D subordinate blacks to whites.
Question #5
A Democrats won a majority of seats in the Senate.
B Democrats won a majority in Congress and took most state governorships.
C Democrats gained control of the House of Representatives.
D Republicans maintained slight majorities in both houses of Congress.
Question #6
A allowed former slaves to testify in court against whites.
B pleased northerners because they saw that the rule of law was returning to the South.
C were state laws that controlled the lives of the black population.
D were denounced by President Johnson and declared unconstitutional by the Supreme Court.
Question #7
A He was found guilty of the misuse and abuse of constitutional powers.
B He no longer interfered in Reconstruction.
C A not guilty verdict made him more powerful than ever.
D The Court found him guilty of violating the Tenure of Office Act.
Question #8
A he allegedly violated the Tenure of Office Act.
B he sought to work with Congressional leadership in developing a joint plan for Reconstruction.
C he bribed a Republican senator to support his Reconstruction policies.
D offered amnesty and restoration of property (except slaves) to anyone who took a loyalty oath to the United States.
Question #9
A TRUE
B FALSE
Question #10
A High-ranking Confederate officials had to renounce their allegiance to the government in Richmond.
B Ten percent of the voting population needed to take an oath of allegiance before forming a new government.
C Fifty percent of the voting population needed to pledge allegiance to the United States before forming a new government.
D The state legislature had to guarantee the right to vote to all former slaves.
Question #11
A TRUE
B FALSE
Question #12
A It exempted any man who owned more than twenty slaves from military service.
B It targeted for military service every slaveholder with at least twenty slaves.
C It forced every slaveholder with at least forty slaves to turn over twenty of them for use by the government.
D It paid slaveholders scarce government funds for every twenty slaves they owned or supervised.
Question #13
A continued their staunch support of states’ rights critic Jefferson Davis.
B denied the right of West Virginians to create their own state.
C expanded their power by drafting soldiers into the Confederate army.
D forced every state to issue resolutions in opposition to the Emancipation Proclamation.
Question #14
A They reported a Confederate victory and proclaimed the South had control of the Mississippi River.
B Despite being a Union victory the newspapers ridiculed General Grant and said he was a drunk.
C They reported a Confederate victory and predicted that the Union would not take New Orleans.
D The newspapers praised the Union victory and were convinced that General Grant was going to win the war for the Union.
Question #15
A He planned to have his men confiscate Georgians’ cotton and sell it to England.
B He planned to recruit former plantation slaves for the Union army.
C He orchestrated a scorched-earth military campaign aimed at destroying the will of the southern people.
D He intended to infect Confederate camps with typhoid fever.
Question #16
A FALSE
B TRUE
Question #17
A bear arms.
B be charged with a crime if arrested.
C a speedy trial.
D practice the religion of his or her choice.
Question #18
A declared that he did not have the power to execute the law in states that had seceded.
B threatened to declare war if any more southern states seceded from the Union.
C reassured the South that he had no intention to interfere with slavery where it existed.
D promised he would not allow the South to fire the first shot in a civil war.
Question #19
A A Confederate victory forced Union commanders to question whether they could win the war.
B Weeks of battle and horrendous casualties produced only a stalemate.
C Union victory at Vicksburg gave Grant the advantage he sought in the western theater of war.
D The Confederates forced the Union army out of the deep South.
Question #20
A gave no specifics about postwar plans, but seemed to support black suffrage.
B was confident that he would hold the office of president as long as he wanted it.
C believed Democrats would support Republican peace policies.
D was confident that the transition to a peaceful nation would be relatively simple.