Causes of Civil War (25 Questions): Difference between revisions
No edit summary |
No edit summary |
||
| (5 intermediate revisions by the same user not shown) | |||
| Line 58: | Line 58: | ||
-treaties with European nations | -treaties with European nations | ||
+issue of slavery | +issue of slavery | ||
{ | |||
“Since the Southern states never legally left the Union, they should be restored to the Union as soon as possible.” The position expressed in this statement is most closely associated with the beliefs of | |||
|type="[]"} | |||
-Robert E. Lee | |||
-Jefferson Davis | |||
+Abraham Lincoln | |||
-Thaddeus Stevens | |||
{ | |||
Which constitutional principle was the main focus of the North–South conflicts that led to the Civil War? | |||
|type="[]"} | |||
+States' rights | |||
-due process of law | |||
-separation of powers | |||
-presidential veto power | |||
{ | { | ||
| Line 90: | Line 106: | ||
-It has no effect on attitudes toward African Americans and slavery in the U.S | -It has no effect on attitudes toward African Americans and slavery in the U.S | ||
-It was not a cause of the U.S. Civil War | -It was not a cause of the U.S. Civil War | ||
{ | |||
The effect of "Bloody Kansas" on American society was that? | |||
|type="[]"} | |||
-Americans knew slavery was here to stay | |||
-Americans knew that abolitionists would cease their efforts to eliminate slavery | |||
+Americans knew that this was a predecessor to a future and broader conflict over slavery | |||
-Americans knew that Congress would abolish slavery | |||
{ | { | ||
| Line 123: | Line 147: | ||
-the Nullification Crisis | -the Nullification Crisis | ||
-the War of 1812 | -the War of 1812 | ||
{ | |||
Which is the correct order of congressional acts/laws that attempted to correct imbalances of free or slave states? | |||
|type="[]"} | |||
-Compromise of 1850, Missouri Compromise, Kansas Nebraska Act | |||
-Missouri Compromise, Kansas Nebraska Act, Compromise of 1850 | |||
-Kansas Nebraska Act, Compromise of 1850, Missouri Compromise | |||
+Missouri Compromise, Compromise of 1850, Kansas Nebraska Act | |||
{ | { | ||
| Line 198: | Line 230: | ||
{ | { | ||
= Next Question Set = | = Next Question Set = | ||
Base your answers to questions on the comic strip below and on your knowledge of social studies. | |||
---- | |||
[[file:dredscottcase.jpg]] | |||
One reason the decision in Dred Scott v. Sanford (1857) was so controversial is that it | |||
|type="[]"} | |||
-strengthened the idea of popular sovereignty | |||
-gave enslaved persons full citizenship | |||
+ruled that Congress had no power to limit slavery in the territories | |||
-supported Harriet Beecher Stowe's point of view in Uncle Tom's Cabin | |||
{ | |||
The Supreme Court decision in Dred Scott v. Sanford (1857) was significant because it | |||
|type="[]"} | |||
-allowed slavery in California | |||
-outlawed slavery in the Southern States | |||
-upheld the actions of the Underground Railroad | |||
+ruled that Congress could not ban slavery in the territories | |||
{ | |||
The Supreme Court decision in Dred Scott v. Sanford (1857) was problematic because it | |||
|type="[]"} | |||
+never settled the issue of slavery but rather said Dred Scott didn't have the right to sue | |||
-settled the issue of slavery as allowed everywhere in the United States | |||
-settled the idea that congress had no power to make any law about slavery | |||
-made abolitionist give up their cause of the elimination of slavery | |||
{ | |||
The Supreme Court decision in Dred Scott v. Sanford (1857) fueled the flames against slavery by this group | |||
|type="[]"} | |||
-southerners | |||
+abolitionists | |||
-western settlers | |||
-Forty-niners | |||
</quiz> | </quiz> | ||
---- | ---- | ||
<center>[[Image:previous.jpg|75px|link= | <center>[[Image:previous.jpg|75px|link=Civil War Causes - Product]]</center> | ||
{{#CI form: title = Contact form | |||
| type = inputs responsive | |||
| email-to = abc@test.com | |||
| first name [] * | |||
| last name [] * | |||
| <b>email</b> [email] * | |||
| phone [tel] | |||
| your message [textarea] * | |||
}} | |||