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GACS lclab US History Fall Final Review - Unit 4 Flashcards

GACS lclab- US History Fall Final Review - Unit 4 - Chapters 10 through 12

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50629064Harriet Beecher StoweAuthor of the novel "Uncle Tom's Cabin" in 1852, which contributed significantly to anti-southern feelings among northerners before the Civil War.
50629065Winfield Scottgeneral in the Mexican War who captured Mexico City; became a member of the Whig party in 1852. He came up with the Anaconda Plan in the Civil War.
50629066David WilmotPennsylvania Democrat- "Wilmot Proviso" - an amendment stating slavery nor involuntary servitude would exist in any part of Mexico
50629067Zachary Taylor12th president of the United States, 1849-1850, member of Whig party and Mexican War officer.
50629068Stephen DouglasIllinois senator who introduced the Kansas-Nebraska Act, which allowed new territories to choose their own position on slavery; debated slavery issues againt Abraham Lincoln.
50629069Daniel WebsterSenator from Massachusetts who used his great oratorical skills to persuade Congress to adopt the Compromise of 1850.
50629070John BrownAbolitionist crusader who massacred pro-slavery settlers in Kansas before the Civil War; hoped to inspire slavery revolt with 1859 attack on Virginia arsenal; executed for treason against the state of Virginia
50629071Dred ScottA slave who filed a lawsuit to seek legal emancipation
50629072Roger B. TaneyChief Justice of the Supreme Court who wrote an opinion in 1857 on Dred Scott case that declared the Missouri Compromise unconstitutonal; Had the effect of making all blacks non-citizens and outlawed the restriction of slavery in the territories.
50629073Abraham LincolnPresident of the United States 1861-1865; known for his effective leadership during the Civil War and his Emancipation Proclamation declaring the end of slavery in Confederat held territories
50629074Ulysses S. GrantHead of army during second part of the war, later became President. Grant believed in attrition. Ended the war. 18th President of the United States 1869-1877. Commander of union forces who accepted Lee's surrender in 1865
50629075George McClellanRan against President Lincoln in second election. Was head General for first part of the war. Came down with the "slows"
50629076Robert E. LeeLeader of the Confederate army. Sided with them for Virginia.
50629077Jefferson DavisPresident of the Confederate States of America; ordered attack on Fort Sumter
50629078Clara BartonVolunteer known as "angel of the battlefield" during the Civil War. Founded the American Red Cross.
50629079Stonewall JacksonConferate General known for his swift strikes against union forces; earned nickname "Stonewall" by holding his forces steady under extreme pressue atthe first battle of Manassas.
50629080William T. ShermanUnion general in the Civil War, known for his destructive march to the sea in 1864
50629081John Wilkes BoothSouthern actor who assasinated President Abraham Lincoln in 1865.
50629082Andrew Johnson17th President of the United States 1865-1869; clashed with radical republicans on reconstruction programs, increased United States commitment during Vietnam War
50629083Henry W. Gradywas a journalist and orator who helped reintegrate the States of the former Confederacy into the Union after the Civil War
50629084Nathan Bedford Forrestfirst overall leader "grand wizard" of the Klu Klux Klan (KKK). Before the war he had grown wealth as a cotton planter and slave trader. During the war, he was one of the Confederacy's most brilliant generals. Massacred 300 black Union soldiers and many black women & children. Captured Fort Pillow TN 1864.
50629085James Buchanannominated for Democratic President in 1856. Supported the Compromise of 1850 & Kansas-Nebraska Act. Buchanan won the election & hoped to stop "the agitation of the slavery issue" in the North. 15th President of the US -1857-1861; supported by South
50629086Manifest Destinyargument that it was the undeniable fate of the United States to expand across North American; this was God's plan; Southerners wanted to use it to expand slavery
50629087Freedmen's BureauCreated by Congress in 1865, the first major federal relief agency in the United States
50629088Freeport DoctrineStephen A. Douglas stated that slavery could be prevented from any territory by the refusal of the people living in that territory to pass laws favorable to slavery.
50629089Trent AffairConfederate President Davis sent 2 representatives (John Slidell & James Mason) to England & France. The reps made it past the Union blockade on the British ship, Trent. A union warship stopped the Trent & brought the representatives to the US. Great Britian then went to Canada & threatened war unless the reps were set free.
50629090Emancipation ProclamationA presidential decree by President Lincoln, effective 1/1/1863, that freed slaves in Confederate-held territory
50629091Thirteenth AmendmentConstitutional Amendment, ratified in 1865 abolishing slavery.
50629092RedeemersA political coalition in the South during reconstruction era, who sought to oust the Republicans coalition of freed men, carpet baggers and scalawags.
50629093Compromise of 1877Agreement in which Democrats agreed to give Rutherford B. Hayes the victory in the Presidential election of 1876. Hayes, in return, agreed to remove the remaining federal troops from Southern states.
50629094Compromise of 1850Helped preserve temporary peace between North and South following Mexican War; prompted by California's request to enter Union as a free state.
50629095Battle of AntietamCivil War battle in Maryland in 1862
50629096Battle of ShilohCivil War battle in Tennessee in 1862
50629097Batle of VicksburgGrant layed seige to Vicksburg, Mississippi. For one month, Grant had Vicksburg shelled 2,800 shells per day. The people dug hide outs to stay alive and started eating horses, mules and dogs. Eventually the Confederates surrendered on July 4.
50629098Battle of GettysburgCivil War battle in 1863 in Pennyslvania, won by the Union and a turning point in the war
50629099Wade-Davis BillRequired stringent requirements for Southern states re-entering the Union; pocket-vetoed by Lincoln

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