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AP US HISTORY CHAPTER 18 Flashcards

Chapter 18

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82069754541. In order to maintain the two great political parties as vital bonds of national unity, early 19th century politicians avoided public discussion of slaveryavoided public discussion of slavery0
82069754552. The U.S.' victory in the Mexican American War resulted in a) renewed controversy over the issue of extending slavery into the territories b) a possible split in the Whig and Democrat parties over slavery c) the cession by Mexico of an enormous amount of land to the U.S. d) a rush of settlers to new American territory in California e) all of the abovea) renewed controversy over the issue of extending slavery into the territories b) a possible split in the Whig and Democrat parties over slavery c) the cession by Mexico of an enormous amount of land to the U.S. d) a rush of settlers to new American territory in California e) all of the above1
82069754563.The Wilmot Proviso, if adopted, would haveprohibited slavery in any territory acquired in the Mexican War2
82069754574. The debate over slavery in the Mexican Cession a) threatened to split national politics along North-South linesthreatened to split national politics along North-South lines3
82069754585. In 1848, the Free Soil party platform advocated all of the following exceptinternal improvements4
82069754596. According to the principle of 'popular sovereignty.' The question of slavery in the territories would be determined bythe vote of the people in any given territory5
82069754607. The public liked popular sovereignty because itfit in with the democratic tradition of self-determination6
82069754618. In the 1848 presidential election, the Democratic and Whig partiesremained silent on the issue of slavery7
82069754629. The key issue for the major parties in the 1848 presidential election waspersonalities8
820697546310. The event that brought turmoil to the administration of Zachary Taylor was thediscovery of gold in California9
820697546411. The Free Soilers argued that slaverywould cause more costly wage labor to wither away10
820697546512. Of those people going to California during the gold rush,a distressingly high proportion were lawless men11
820697546613. The Free Soliers condemned slavery becauseit destroyed the chances of free white workers to rise to self-employment12
820697546815. Harriet Tubman gained fame a) by helping slaves escape to Canada b) in the gold fields of California c) as an African-American antislavery novelist d) as an advocate of the Fugitive Slave Law e) by urging white women to oppose slaveryA13
820697546714. By 1850, the South a) was experiencing economic difficulties b) feared that slavery might be abolished in states where it already existed c) rem ained concerned about its weak voice in national government d) was relatively well off, p[politically and economicallywas relatively well off, p[politically and economically14
820697546916. During the 1850s, slaves gained their freedom most frequently by a) running away b) persuading masters to free them c) rebellion d) use of federal laws e) self-purchaseE15
820697547017. John C. Calhoun's plan to protect the South and slavery involved a) a constitutional amendment permanently guaranteeing equal numbers of slave and free states b) southern secession from the Union c) support of Henry Clay's proposed concessions by both the North and the South d) repealing the president's veto power e) the election of two presidents, one from the North and one from the SouthE16
820697547118. Daniel Webster's famed Seventh of March speech in 1850 resulted in a) Senate rejection of a fugitive-slave law b) A shift toward compromise in the North c) Condemnation by northern commercial interests d) Charges of accepting bribes e) A movement to draft him for the presidencyB17
820697547219. In his Seventh of March speech, Daniel Webster a) attacked Henry Clay's compromise proposals b) called for a new, more stringent fugitive-slave law c) advocated a congressional ban on slavery in the territories d) proposed a scheme for electing two presidents, one from the North and one from the South, each having veto power e) became a hated figure in the SouthB18
820697547320. For his position in his Seventh of March speech, Daniel Webster was viciously condemned by a) northern Unionists b) northern banking and commercial interests c) abolitionists d) Henry Clay e) John C. CalhounC19
820697547421. The Young Guard from the North a) regarded preserving the Union as their top priority b) agreed fully with the Old Guard on the issue of slavery c) saw expansionism as a solution to the slavery question d) gave support to John C. Calhoun's plan for rescuing the Union e) were most interested in purging and purifying the UnionE20
820697547522. In the debates of 1850, Senator William H. Seward, as a representative of the northern Young Guard, argued that a) the Constitution must be obeyed b) John C. Calhoun's compromise plan must be adopted to preserve the Union c) Christian legislators must obey God's moral law d) Compromise must be achieved to preserve the Union e) African Americans should be granted their own territoryC21
820697547623. During the debate of 1850, ___________________ argued that there was a "higher law" than the Constitution that compelled him to demand the exclusion of slavery form the territories. a) William H. Seward b) Henry Clay c) Daniel Webster d) Stephen A. Douglas e) Zachary TaylorA22
820697547724.President Zachary Taylor unknowingly helped the cause of compromise in 1850 when he a) lead an invasion of Texas to halt its attempts to take part of New Mexico b) supported fellow southerner John C. Calhoun's plan for union c) died suddenly and Millard Fillmore became president d) ushered in a second Era of Good Feelings e) decided not to run for re-electionE23
820697547825. Southern delegates met at a convention in Nashville in the summer of 1850 to a) plan southern secession b) plan ways to acquire more slave territory c) propose a series of constitutional amendments d) denounce Daniel Webster as a traitor to the South e) condemn the compromises being worked out in CongressC24
820697547926. In the Compromise of 1850, Congress determined that slavery in the New Mexico and Utah territories was a) to be banned b) protected by federal law c) to be decided by popular sovereignty d) to be ignored until either territory applied for admission to statehood e) to be decided by the Mormon ChurchC25
820697548027. The most alarming aspect of the Compromise of 1850 to northerners was the decision concerning a) slavery in the District of Columbia b) slavery in the New Mexico and Utah territories c) the new Fugitive Slave Law d) settlement of the Texas-New Mexico boundary dispute e) continuation of the interstate slave tradeA26
820697548128. The Fugitive Slave Law included all of the flowing provisions except a) the requirement that fugitive slaves be returned from Canada b) denial of a jury trial to runaway slaves c) denial of fleeing slaves' right to testify on their own behalf d) the penalty of imprisonment for northerners who helped slaves to escape e) a higher payment if officials determined blacks to be runawaysE27
820697548229. Many northern states passed 'personal liberty' laws in response to the Compromise of 1850's provision regarding a) slavery in the District of Columbia b) slavery in the territories c) restriction son free blacks d) the interstate slave trade e) runaway slavesB28
820697548330. In light of future evidence, it seems apparent that in the Compromise of 1850 the South made a tactical blunder by a) allowing a ban on the slave trade in Washington, D.C. b) demanding a strong fugitive-slave law c) not insisting on federal protection of slavery in the territories d) allowing the admission of California as a free state e) allowing popular sovereignty in Nebraska territoryB29
820697548431. The fatal split in the Whig party in 1852 occurred over a) the nomination of General Winfield Scott or Daniel Webster b) slavery c) the Gadsden Purchase d) homestead laws e) the transcontinental railroad routeB30
820697548532. The election of 1852 was significant because it a) saw the victory of a pro-South northerner b) marked the return of issues-oriented campaigning c) saw the rise of purely national parties d) marked the end of the Whig party e) saw the emergence of an antislavery third partyA31
820697548633. For a short time in the 1850s, an American seized control of a) Nicaragua b) Cuba c) Japan d) El Salvador e) Puerto RicoA32
820697548734. The man who opened Japan to the U.S. was a) William Walker b) Franklin Pierce c) Lafcadio Hearn d) Clayton Bulwer e) Matthew ParryE33
820697548835. The prime objective of Manifest Destiny in the 1850s was a) Panama b) Nicaragua c) Cuba d) Hawaii e) The Dominican RepublicB34
820697548936. The U.S.' scheme to gain control of Cuba was stopped when a) Spain thereatened war b) northern free-soilers fiercely protested the effort c) U.S. leaders signed the Clayton-Bulwer Treaty d) Cuba refused to go along with the plan e) U.S. adventurers bungled their invasionE35
820697549037. The most brazen scheme for territorial expansion in the 1850s was expressed in the a) Clayton-Bulwer Treaty b) Wilmot Proviso c) Kansas-Nebraska Act d) Gadsden Purchase e) Ostend ManifestoD36
820697549138. Most American leaders believed that the only way to keep the new Pacific Coast territories from breaking away form U.S. control was a) to allow slavery in these areas b) to build a canal across Central America c) to grant the territories quick statehood d) to construct a transcontinental railroad e) to establish large naval bases in San DiegoC37
820697549239. A southern route for the transcontinental railroad seemed the best because a) northern areas were organized territories b) slave labor could be used to construct it c) the railroad would be easier to build in this area d) Mexican leader Santa Anna agreed to contribute money for the project e) It would firmly tie southern California to the UnionA38
820697549340. Stephen A. Douglas proposed that the question of slavery in the Kansas-Nebraska Territory be decided by a) popular sovereignty b) making Kansas a free territory and Nebraska a slave territory c) the Supreme Court d) admitting California, Kansas, and Nebraska to the Union as free states e) the winner of the next presidential electionE39
820697549441. Stephen A. Douglas's plans for deciding the slaveyr question in the Kansas-Nebraska scheme required repeal of the a) Compromise of 1850 b) Fugitive Slave Act c) Wilmot Proviso d) Northwest Ordinance e) Missouri CompromiseD40

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