Cause and Effect in U.S. Political History from 1790 to 1898

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AP U.S. History › Cause and Effect in U.S. Political History from 1790 to 1898

Questions 1 - 10
1

Although the Treaty of Ghent was signed on December 24th, 1814, to end this war, the slowness of trans-Atlantic communication meant that the two hostile sides would still meet in battle at New Orleans on January 8th, 1815.

The War of 1812

The Mexican-American War

The American Revolutionary War

The Spanish-American War

The French and Indian War

Explanation

Although the Treaty at Ghent was signed in 1814, it still needed to be ratified by Congress; this was done in February of 1815. Still, the Battle of New Orleans, which resulted in an American victory might have been avoided were communications of the era quicker.

2

Abraham Lincoln's Emancipation Proclamation .

freed all slaves in the United States

freed slaves in the rebelling states but not in the bordering Union states

made slavery illegal

caused soldiers to leave the army

freed slaves in all US territories

Explanation

The Emancipation Proclamation freed slaves in the Confederate held states that were rebelling. The border states of Missouri, Kentucky, Delaware, and Maryland were not affected. All Union states had either already freed their slaves, or would do so in separate state and federal actions. Slavery was not actually illegal until the Thirteenth Amendment in 1865, however.

3

The involvement of the United States in the Spanish-American War is significant because __________.

it represented the US becoming an Imperialist country and becoming more of a global power

it was the first time the United States had fought a European nation since the American Revolution

it set Spain up to have an antagonistic relationship with the United Stated throughout the twentieth century

it showed the United States how weak its Navy was in comparison with European militaries

it was the first time people in the United States protested a war effort

Explanation

At the end of the Spanish-American War, the United States gained territory in the Caribbean and the Philippines. Though the United States refused to name these territories as colonies, they essentially treated them as such. Thus joining the Imperialist nations.

4

The Bleeding Kansas conflict was precipitated by which Congressional act?

The Kansas-Nebraska Act, which allowed the new states to be admitted into the Union to decide by popular sovereignty whether or not they would permit slavery.

The Compromise of 1850, which settled which parts of the territory acquired in the Mexican-American War could enter as Free or Slave States.

The Treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo, which ended the Mexican-American War and brought large amounts of land into the possession of the United States of America.

The Fugitive Slave Act, which required all runaway slaves be returned to their masters, even if they were found in a Free State.

The Annexation of Texas, which brought a new Slave state into the Union, unbalancing the representation in Congress of Slave and Free States.

Explanation

“Bleeding Kansas” is a term that refers to the armed conflict between Free Soil settlers and Pro-Slavery settlers to determine the composition of the state’s populace between 1854 and 1858. The makeup of the population became important because the Congress had allowed new states to decide whether to be Free or Slave states with the Kansas-Nebraska Act.

5

John Brown's raid on Harper's Ferry resulted in all of the following EXCEPT __________.

the immediate start of the American Civil War

Brown's capture and execution

a fear of slave revolts throughout the South

an increase in militias throughout the south

celebration of Brown's cause by abolitionists in the North

Explanation

The ardent abolitionist John Brown led an attack on the Federal arsenal at Harpers Ferry, Virginia (now West Virginia) on October 16, 1859, with the hopes of gaining weapons and support for a widespread slave uprising. In actual fact, Brown's 20 men were quickly counterattacked by local militia, and U.S. troops under Colonel Robert E. Lee managed to kill 10 of Brown's men (including two sons) and capture Brown. Brown was hanged on December 2, 1859, but the event stirred passions North and South regarding issues of slavery. In late December, South Carolina became the first state to secede from the Union, which helped the country on the road to Civil War.

6

The event that directly prompted the Pendleton Civil Service Reform Act of 1883 was the ___________________.

assassination of President James Garfield

assassination of President William McKinley

impeachment of President Andrew Johnson

assassination of President Abraham Lincoln

non-consecutive election of Grover Cleveland

Explanation

Charles Guiteau shot President James A. Garfield on July 2, 1881, at the Sixth Street Station as Garfield was boarding a train, because Guiteau was dissatisfied that he did not receive a job in the Garfield Administration. Garfield would survive for two more months, but in an incapacitated state, and was replace by his Vice President Chester A. Arthur. Although Arthur benefited and promoted the "spoils system," giving influential positions to political supporters, he encouraged the Congress to pass the Pendleton Civil Service Reform Acts in response to Guiteau's motivations. The Act required open applications and civil service exams for government positions.

7

Nathaniel "Nat" Turner's ultimately unsuccessful slave rebellion, on August 21st, 1831, in the state of Virginia, resulted in all of the following EXCEPT:

Newspaper coverage throughout the South largely sympathetic to the slave rebels.

New legislation throughout the South prohibiting the education of slaves and free blacks.

Restrictions on the rights of assembly for free blacks.

Restrictions on various civil rights for free blacks.

The requirement that white ministers attend black church services.

Explanation

Following Nat Turner's slave rebellion, which resulted in the deaths of 55 whites, and no fewer than 100 blacks, there was no largely sympathetic newspaper coverage in the South.

8

The most significant outcome of the presidential election of 1876 was __________.

the end of Reconstruction

the codification of Jim Crow Laws

the inclusion of African-Americans into national politics

the outbreak of vigilante violence throughout the South

the realignment of the two political parties

Explanation

The 1876 was conducted in the shadow of Republican Ulysses S. Grant's disastrous second term and the serious economic troubles that accompanied it. The election pitted Republican Governor Rutherford B. Hayes of Ohio against Democratic Governor Samuel J. Tilden of New York. Tilden won the popular vote, but the Electoral College vote was contested. A deal was put in place to elect Hayes, but on the condition that Reconstruction end. This pulled troops out of the former Confederate states, rolling back African-American rights, enforcing a white supremacist order, and enacting Jim Crow Laws.

9

Why was the Whiskey Rebellion important in altering and/or forming political party allegiance?

It turned frontiersman away from the Federalist Party and towards the Democratic-Republicans .

It solidified the support of the Democratic-Republican Party amongst merchants and bankers.

It turned frontiersman away from the Democratic-Republican Party and towards the centrally strong Federalist Party.

It caused support of the Federalists to decline throughout New England.

The political situation remained roughly the same before and after the Whiskey Rebellion.

Explanation

In 1791 Congress passed an excise tax on whiskey at the encouragement of Alexander Hamilton. Many of the frontiersmen, who relied on the sale of whiskey, refused to pay the tax. Hamilton mobilized the militia, and the Whiskey Rebellion died a very quick death. One very important consequence of the Whiskey Rebellion, however, was the complete reversal of popular support in the Western States for the Federalist Party. Instead, they flocked to the Democratic-Republicans and remained largely loyal supporters for several electoral campaigns.

10

Why was an electoral commission established in 1876?

The votes of states, worth votes in the electoral college, had disputed election results

Samuel Tilden rigged the election so that Rutherford B. Hayes would lose

Rutherford B. Hayes rigged the election so that Samuel Tilden would lose

Northern carpet baggers tried to elect Samuel Tilden

Explanation

This question is fairly difficult in the abstract, but given the answer choices, it is less difficult here. The election of 1876 involved the disputed votes of 3 states, which in total were worth 20 Electoral College votes. They were disputed because both the Democrats and Republicans claimed them—in other words, the Electoral College was confronted with 20 votes, all of which were claimed by BOTH parties. In order to resolve the discrepancy, the government decided to create an “electoral commission” in order to determine which candidate, Tilden or Hayes, actually won the 20 votes.

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