President Lincoln’s decision on what to do about the situation at Fort Sumter in the first weeks of his administration can best be characterized as: |
a middle of the road solution. |
Confederate batteries fired on Fort Sumter when it was learned that: |
Lincoln had ordered supplies sent to the fort. |
In 1861, many Northerners were willing to allow Southern states to leave the Union until: |
the South attacked Fort Sumter. |
In order to persuade the Border States to remain in the Union, President Lincoln: |
used legally dubious methods. |
The Border States offered all the following advantages except: |
shipbuilding facilities. |
Lincoln’s declaration that the North sought to preserve the Union with or without slavery: |
revealed the influence of the Border States on his policies. |
Lincoln declared from the outset of the Civil War that: |
he was not fighting to free the blacks. |
During the Civil War, most of the Five Civilized Tribes in the Indian Territory of present-day Oklahoma: |
supported the confederacy. |
The Cherokees decision on whether to side with the North or the South during the war was based on: |
the fact that the tribe also owned slaves. |
In return for support from the Plains Indians during the Civil War, the Union: |
waged war on them and herded them onto reservations. |
The achieve its independence, the Confederacy had to: |
fight the invading Union army to a draw. |
As the Civil War began, the South seemed to have the advantage of: |
more talented military leaders. |
All of the following are similar characteristics that both Union and Confederate soldiers shared except: |
poor unskilled workers were well represented among both armies. |
Johnny Reb tended to be all of the following except: |
detached personally from the war. |
Billy Yank tended to be all of the following except: |
religious. |
Of all the hardships faced by soldiers during the Civil War, the greatest was: |
disease. |
The North’s greatest strength in the Civil War was its: |
economy. |
The greatest weakness of the South during the civil war was its: |
economy. |
Much of the hunger experienced by Confederate soldiers in the Civil War was due to: |
the South’s rickety transportation system. |
Northern soldiers eventually became known for their: |
discipline and determination. |
The find effective high-level commanders, the Union: |
used trial and error. |
A supposed asset for the South at the beginning of the Civil War that never materialized to its real advantage was: |
intervention from Britain and France. |
Most working people in Britain sided with the North because: |
they had been moved by Uncle Tom’s Cabin to want the end of slavery. |
One reason that the British did not try to break the Union blockade of the South during the Civil War was that: |
they feared losing Northern grain shipments. |
The South believed that the British would come to its aid because: |
Britain was dependent on Southern cotton |
During the Civil War, Britain and the United States were nearly provoked into war by: |
the Trent affair, involving the removal of Southern diplomats from British ships. |
During the Civil War, diplomacy for the Union and the Confederacy: |
was critical for both. |
Confederate commerce-raiders such as the Alabama: |
proved effective against Union shipping. |
The Confederacy’s most effective commerce-raider was the: |
Alabama. |
Napoleon III’s attempt to install Maximilian on the Mexican throne was a clear violation of: |
the Monroe Doctrine. |
America’s minister to Britain, during the Civil War, under President Lincoln was: |
Charles Francis Adams. |
France abandoned its attempt to control Mexico: |
when the United States threatened to force France to leave. |
During the Civil War: |
relations between the Union and Canada were at times very poor. |
The Southern cause was weakened by: |
the concept of states’ rights that the Confederacy professed. |
The leader of the Confederacy, Jefferson Davis: |
defied rather than was led by public opinion. |
The problems that Abraham Lincoln experienced as president were less prostrating than those experienced by Jefferson Davis partly because the North: |
had a long-established and fully recognized government. |
As president of the Confederacy, Jefferson Davis did not exercise the arbitrary power wielded by Abraham Lincoln because: |
of the South’s emphasis on states’ rights. |
To fill the army’s demand for troops, prior to 1863, the North relied mainly on: |
volunteers. |
In Lincoln’s attempt to preserve the Union, he did all of the following questionable actions as president except: |
refused to implement a draft, or conscription law, during the war. |
The Union’s establishment of the National Banking System: |
was the first significant step forward a unified banking network since 1836. |
All of the following are true statements about the federal conscription (draft) law except: |
it was passed despite a healthy rate of volunteers. |
As a result of the Civil War, the Northern economy: |
greatly expanded its industrial and technological and technological productivity. |
Possessing ___% of the national wealth in 1860, the South claimed only ___% in 1870. |
30, 12 |
The Civil War was a women’s war in all the following way’s except: |
women were encouraged to run for office to fill political posts abandoned by men. |
Despite the war, 300,000 people migrated to the West, lured mainly by: |
the prospect of free land under the Homestead Act. |
Chapter 20 APUSH
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