Sectional Crisis
Civil War
Westward Expansion
Reconstruction 1860s
Reconstruction
1870s
100

Senator who was nearly caned to death

Charles Sumner

100

The war officially began at this fort in the Charleston Harbor in April 1861

Fort Sumter

100

The Wilmot Proviso proposed that this not be allowed in new territory purchased from Mexico

Slavery

100

Document that declared that people enslaved by rebels were now free

Emancipation Proclamation

100

White supremacist terrorist organization of Confederate veterans that attacked Black voters and politicians

Ku Klux Klan

200

This Supreme Court case declared that the Missouri Compromise was unconstitutional.

Dred Scott v. Sanford

200

This Westpoint graduate led Confederate troops along the Potomac destroying miles of railways and telegraph wires.

Stonewall Jackson

200

Missouri Compromise forbade slavery north of this latitude line.

36 30 parallel

200

Constitutional Amendment that said all born in the US were citizens with equal rights under the law

14th Amendment

200

Constitutional Amendment that banned voter restrictions based on “race, color, or prior servitude”

15th Amendment

300

Stephen Douglas’ Kansas-Nebraska Act allowed settlers to vote if they wanted slavery, a policy known by this two word name

Popular Sovereignty

300

New York City exploded in violence after the Union instituted this

The draft

300

Named for a wealthy Massachusetts man, this town was the home of two anti-slavery newspapers and the site of “Bleeding Kansas.”

Lawrence, KS

300

Name for laws passed in Southern states right after the Civil War, during Presidential Reconstruction, that heavily restricted the rights of freedpeople

Black Codes

300

President distracted from Reconstruction by scandal and the Panic of 1873

Ulysses S Grant

400

DAILY DOUBLE: This politician who successfully negotiated a compromise between Jackson and South Carolina during the nullification crisis was known as “the great pacificator.”

Henry Clay

400

Three of the four “border states” that stayed in the Union despite having slavery

Missouri, Kentucky, Maryland, and Delaware

400

The native nation in Minnesota that used the Civil War as an opportunity to rebel

Dakota

400

Agricultural practice that left many freedpeople trapped in debt

Sharecropping

400

Town in Louisiana where an infamous massacre took place in 1873

Colfax

500

In response to the Kansas-Nebraska Act this organization provided assistance to any family that would move to the territories and vote against slavery.

Emigrant Aid Society

500

Historian who argued that enslaved people were the primary agents of their emancipation

Ira Berlin

500

Name four of the current states the US purchased from Mexico after the Mexican War

California, Nevada, Arizona, New Mexico, Utah (Texas already independent)

500

Plan that created Military Districts(5), required states to hold state conventions to create constitutions that Ratify 14th amendment, included the 13th amendment included, guarenteed Suffrage for black men and limited of voting rights for some former confederate officials

The Reconstruction Act 1867

500

Name 2 of the five tenets of the Lost Cause Myth

  1. Nobility of Confederate leaders like Robert E. Lee and Stonewall Jackson.

  2. Defense of states' rights, rather than preservation of chattel slavery, was the primary cause that led eleven Southern states to secede from the Union, thus precipitating the war.

  3. Secession was a justifiable constitutional response to Northern cultural and economic aggressions against the Southern way of life.

  4. Slavery was a benign institution, and the slaves were loyal and faithful to their benevolent masters.

  5. Lose was inevitable because the North had more money and resources.