American History Midterm
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- Successes of Reconstruction
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New schools for freed slaves
13-15 Amendments
Tipped scales for blacks--gave them the chance to work for wages - Failures of Reconstruction
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No industry in the south
Jim Crow laws
they became too lenient on enforcing laws - Hayes vs. Tilden
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20 votes in question,
commitee of 15 men: 7 democrats, 7 republicans, 1 independent,
the independent resigned (as as not to be the deciding vote) and they replaced him with another republican,
they voted along the line and Hayes obviously won,
the south was outraged, so in the first policy of Hayes' presidency, he agreed to remove troops from the south,
thus ending reconstruction - conquered provinces theory for reconstruction
- what congress originally wanted: since the south split itself illegally, they should not be a part of the union anymore
- lincoln's 10% plan
- for any state, 1/10 of the qualified voters must take a loyalty vote to become a state again
- wade-davis bill
- congress' second attempt at a reconstruction plan: former confederate officials return to power in their states if they take a loyalty oath
- ***the johnson plan
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lincoln's plan died along with him so johnson came up with a new one:
1) repeal ordinances of succession
2) merge their debt with the union's war debts
3) ratify 13th amendment - ***13th amendment
- prohibits slavery
- radical republicans on reconstruction
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opposed johnson's plan,
resented speedy recovery of the southern states to power,
determined to establish their own party in the south,
hoped that industry would stay in the north - black codes
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controlled the new freedmen--
could not hold public office, serve on jurys, bear arms, etc - freedmen's bureau
- protected civil rights of the freedmen and cared for abandoned lands
- joint committee on reconstruction
- studied reconstruction (15 radical republicans)
- ***civil rights act of 1866
- gives citizenship to blacks--overran johnson's veto of this bill (he feared rebellion)
- ***14th amendment
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still has not been ratified in all states to this day--
citizenship given to everyone born in the US, cannot deprive any male of the right to vote, former confederates barred from holding pre-war offices once more, confederate debt consolidated with the north's debt
--many states thought this amendment was unconstitutional-- - 1866 congressional elections
- radical republicans won almost every available seat
- reconstruction acts
- divided up the south into 5 military districts headed by a general who controlled reconstruction
- impeachment of johnson
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radical republicans came up with the "tenure of office act"-- a president cannot remove office holders without senate's consent
--the sec of war refuses johnson's command and johnson fires him
--the house impeached the president with 11 charges
--senate missed 2/3 vote by 1 vote so he wasn't impeached - carpetbag governments
- people from the north who moved to the south to make a difference or gain an upperhand economically
- reformers
- blacks and whites who wanted to reform the south--very committed to their cause
- scaliwags
- white men of the south who tried to change how things were
- ***15th amendment
- you cannot deny someone the right to vote based on race, color, or previous condition of servitude
- KKK
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founded in 1866, became instrumental in terrorizing the countryside (esp blacks),
wanted to tip the scale by scaring the blacks into not voting - enforcement acts
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1870, 1871:
tried to put a damper on the KKK - general amnesty act of 1872
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disliked the construction:
allowed former confederates to hold office once again - supreme court decisions after reconstruction
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1) 1875--discrimination is public places is okay as long as froce isn't used
2) if you own your own business, you could do what you want/serve who you want - the solid south
- b/t 1876 and 1920, there was never a republican that carried a single state in any election
- the bourbons
- white southern men becamse part of the "european royal family": vote the way their dad/grandad votes, teach their sons to vote democratic
- ***disfranchisement of blacks
- literacy test, poll tax, property requirements, grandfather clause
- prob with literary test
- some blacks now literate and some whites still not
- prob with the poll tax
- many whites were poor and couldn't afford it
- prob with property requirement
- not all whites owned property after the war
- success of grandfather clause
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if your grandfather votes in 1860, then you are allowed to--
no registered southern black in 1860 - "the new south"
- henry grady
- problems remaining after reconstruction
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1) southern economy had not escaped the control of northern financiers
2) southern political leaders remained far more interested in sectional than national problems
3) many farmers, both black and white, still lived in poverty
4) minful of heavy personal losses during the war and reconstruction, most southern voters refused to accept tax programs that would have provided much needed funds - election of 1868-- grant vs. seymore
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democrats-- horatio seymore, repubs--grant
campaign-- seymore against reconstruction, grant for it
elect grant because he and the repub party saved the union
grant won - black friday
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under grant
stock market died, price of gold plumetted - credit mobilizer
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under grant
railroad system, stock issues - tweed ring
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under grant
william tweed, millions of dollars - election of 1872--grant cs greely
- grant
- salary grab
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under grant,
congress coted themselves a 50% pay increase and payback - sanborn contracts
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under grant
department of treasury and revenue taxes - whiskey ring
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under grant,
tax revenues on sale of whiskey - belknap scandal
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under grant
supplies supposed to go to indian tribes went elsewhere - hayes
- hardowrking and honest, represented the views of businessmen
- stalwarts
- radical republicans
- half-breeds
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liberal republicans,
headed by james blaine and james garfield - election of 1880--hancock vs garfield
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garfield (garfield= pres, half breed; chester = vp, stalwart)
garfield assassinated by a stalwart who wanted chester (arthur) as pres - pork-barrel appropriations
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add-on to a bill--
you vote for one, you vote for another hidden bill which is usually unrelated to the first - pendleton act
- under chesterstopped giving positions as political rewards
- tariff of 1883
- 15 person committee reduced the average teriff by 2%
- election of 1884-- cleveland vs blaine
- blaine didn't campaign, cleveland won, "best pres since lincoln", qualified cabinet
- extending the civil service list
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under cleveland
used to be 100,000 jobs being given out as political favors-- cleveland constructed a list of 20,000 - repeal of the tenure of office act
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under cleveland,
was the act used to impeach johnson,
gave presidency more power-- can dismiss people for lack of action - pension controversy
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under cleveland
congress granting pensions to veterans of the civil war (350,000 names--collected by men who worked on commission)--
cleveland personally reduced the list to 200 names - presidential succession act
- cleveland's vp died-- this act provided what happens if the pres or vp dies
- electoral count act
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under cleveland
says the house and senate vote seperately in case of voting controvery - department of agriculture
- became a cabinet position under cleveland
- election of 1888-- cleveland vs harrison
- republican revival, harrison won
- mckinley tariff
- average tariff increases 50% on everything
- reed rules
- reed= speaker of the house, changes how congress is run with voting
- billion dollar congress
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under harrison
congress spends too much money - election of 1892--cleveland vs blaine
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second time this pair runs against eachother,
cleveland= only pres to win twice unconsecutively - panic of 1893
- business failure-- causes: deficit, european investors withdrawal, currency without backing, people panicked
- coxey's army
- jacob coxey took 100's of men to DC and petitioned for congress to fix the economy
- wilson-gorman tariff
- inclusion of raw materials on the free list, reduction of rates on finished good, repeal of bounty to the domestic producers of unprocessed sugar, imposition of a tax of 2% on income of $4K+
- income tax
- determined unconstitutional under cleveland
- election of 1896--brian vs mckinley
- mckinley (who campaigned from his front porch) won
- election of 1900--brian vs mckinley
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second time they ran vs eachother,
mckinley's new vp is roosevelt, mckinley wins,
he is later assassinated and roosevelt becomes pres is 1901 - new RR lines and inventions: 1873-1880
- tripled amount of track being build-- steel, track guage changes, air brake, meant you could stop the train when you wanted, RR pullman cars (sleeping, dining, parlor, etc)
- invented air brake
- george westinghouse
- govn't aid for the RR
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congress granted a charter to the union pacific to run rail to the west coast-- joined with the already present central pacific
granted free use of land, timber, minerals, and a 10 square mile plot of land for the track (later doubled to 20): congress gave them $16,000 for every mile across the plains , $32,000 for plateaus, and $48,000 for mountains - rr construction methods
- union takes irish and central takes asian immigrants to build track-- nonstop work, harsh conditions, families often followed their worker hudbands/fathers-- when they got to the end (utah, where it merged) they were stuck there
- govn't stimulus to build rr
- private investors, borrowed money from state govnts, small towns often paid to have tracks laid in hopes of becoming a a boom town (often didn't get what they paid for)
- ***effects of transcontinental rr system
- influence on manufacturing and trade-- finished goods, imports, exports cross country; population-- people moved west; politics-- politicians had to pay attention to the west now
- laissez faire
- to let people do as they choose
- oil leaders
- rockefeller and harkness
- steel leaders
- carnegie and gary
- rr leaders
- vanderbilt and hill
- banking leaders
- morgan and cooke
- social darwinism
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only the sure/fittest/smartest will survive-- it is natural for some to fail
theory by sumner - the pool
- used by railroads-- agreed to est price, regulate output, and markets for all
- the trust
- rockefeller-- standard oil trust: board owned companies and all stock
- holding company
- owns other companies but doesn't actually produce anything
- sherman antitrust act
- tried to control big business and offset supreme court rulings
- RR strike of 1877
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began when eastern rrs announced a 10% wage cut,
state militias called out,
100 ppl died,
america's first major national labor conflict - enforcing the monroe doctrine in mexico
- disallowing european countries from setting up more colonies
- william seward's defining moment in 1867
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1) purchase of alaska-- thought of as a bad move at the time
2) formal occupying of the midway islands--naval post
3) eventual acquisition of the hawaiian islands-- strategically setting up the US in the pacific ocean - alabama claims
- a ship built by the british and given to the south during the civil war
- treaty of washinton
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ratified in senate in 1871,
1) the submission of the alabama claims to an international tribunal
2) making of a new arrangement to protest the rights of American fishermen operating off the shore of canada
3) settlement by arbitration of the disputed water boundary between british columbia and the state of washington - venezualian boundary adjustment
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gold discovered--
created a dispute over who owned the land-- US or UK? - attitude of latin american nations
- resentful toward our interference and how we thought we were superiour (we started filtrating their country with missionaries, for example, to teach them religion)
- blaine's pan-american policy
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no sec of state since henry clay had worked harder than james blaine to promote the interests of the US in latin america--
blaine wanted to dictate what would take place: every aspect of your lives should look like ours
we thought we had the perfect country/perfect solution - missionaries and mariners
- trying to christianize the heathens (missionaries) and finding/using goods (mariners)
- emergence of the new imperialism
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1) mariners and missionaries
2) settlement of the west--explorers wanted new lands to discover
3) search for new markets for faster trade routes, sea routes, selling markets, etc
4) importance of sea ports-- more business savy and safer - hawaiian imperialism
- took over sugar plantations, overthrew queen and started a revolution and set up a revolutionary govnt, expansionists wanted to annex hawaii under mckinley
- ***open-door policy
- est trade with china-- how would this effect us economically? all these countries would work together to keep the trade routes to china open no matter what
- ***boxer rebellion
- group of chinese (ultra-patriotic) wanted to drive us out at any cost-- they attacked the capital so we call up our military to "save" china
- the situation in cuba
- american policy, cuban insurrection, cuban war of independence-- cuban rebels vs. spaniards
- cleveland's attitude toward military intervention in the war with spain (cuba)
- wanted to stay neutral
- de lome letter
- 1898, letter appeared in the NY journal: spanish minister writes a friend in cuba about mckinley's anger and bitterness
- ***sinking of the maine and 4 views on it
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in cuba, 6 days after the de lome letter, 260 ppl died
4 views:
1) spanish loyalists sunk it
2) cuban revolutionists (wanting us to engage on their side)
3) accident
4) american imperialistic move (make us engage in war) - mckinley's war message
- peace at any price
- war on two fronts
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1) philippine campaign (war)-- if we were to grant independence for one, then we'd grant independence for all
2) caribbean campaign-- teddy roosevelt became war hero (bc of sensational propoganda) - treaty of paris
- confirmed the terms of the armistice concerning cuba, puerto rico, and guam. demanded that spain also cede the philippines to the US
- umpton sinclair
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"The jungle"-- about the chicago meat packing plants,
because of this book, ppl thought we would become a meatless society
muckrakers on a mission to fix society-- helped teddy pass legislation - ***initiative
- permits about 10% of the voters to initiate a petition/law and submit it to the politicians (easier at city level than district or state)
- ***referendum
- 10% of voters can put a change of a law on a ballot to be voted on during an election
- ***recallq
- 25% of voters to remove someone from office
- ***direct primary
- primary before an election (before this, it was all party-driven political bosses)
- ***17th amendment
- senators will be directly elected by the people (before, they were hand selected out of the most popular)
- sommission plan
- segregating the functions of the city into 5 groups, all headed by a commissioner who directed their peice of the city and then came back and discussed it with the others
- city-manager plan
- has commissioners, but also has a city manager who everyone works under-- he calls all the shots (city manager vs major and commissioners who don't do as much as they used to/want to)
- ***19th amendment
- women's suffrage (took 50 yrs to get it off the congressional floor-- ratified in 1920)
- proposed idea of 19th amendment
- susan b anthony
- socialist challenge
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1) enactment of unemployment insurance
2) reduction of workday hours
3) govnt ownership of RR lines, telegraph co.s, telephone firms, and other public utilites
4) nationwide adoption of the initiative, referendum, and recall
5) implentation of proportional representation - socialist party of america
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socialist labor and socialist democratic joined to creat the socialist party of america
headed by debbs
denounced progressives as ppl who tinkered but didn't fix - teddy roosevelt's first state of the union message
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1) greater control of coporations by the fed govnt
2) more authority for the interstate commerce commission
3) conservation of natural resources
4) extension of the merit system in the civil services
5) construction of an isthmian canal
6) vigorous foreign policy: "big stick" - coal strike of 1902
- long hours, low wages, being forced to live in company houses and trade at company stores, refusal to recognize unions
- white house conference of 1902
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between mine owners and john mitchell (pres of united mine workers)--
came to terms: 10% wage increase, 9 hour work day, no union recognition still - election of 1904-- jennings brian vs teddy
- roosevelt wins-- he could do no wrong
- election of 1908-- taft vs jennings brian
- taft wins-- wants to mesh progressives and conservatices in repub party back together
- payne-aldrich tariff
- lower tariffs, lower rates by 40% caused angst from repub party and congress
- ballinger-pinchot controversy
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ballinger's actions-- debate over selling reserved land
pinchot's dismissal - cannonism
- joe cannon, speaker of the house
- revolt of 1910
- repubs and democrats sided to change the speaker's power in appointing committee members
- mann-elkins act
- commerce court to deal with rate cases was formed
- physical caluation act
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robert lafayette
validated the value of land owned by the RRs-- wanted to cerify how much the RRs were charging - postal savings bank act
- post offices became baks
- ***16th amendment
- gradual increase of income tax
- departments of commerce and labor
- split and each became a cabinet position
- election of 1912-- wilson vs taft bs teddy (progressive party)
- wilson won b/c repubs were split b/t taft and teddy
- edward house (col. house)
- became wilson's trusted advisor (no offical position)
- WWI allies
- GB, france, Russia, US
- WWI central pwrs
- germany, austria-hungary
- british maritime policy
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wanted to prevent us from trading with the enemy (or neutral countries),
they thought they had the right to seize neutral ships in time of war-- they said they would compensate for the inconvenience of those on board - geerman maritime policy
- declared the water around GB as a war zone-- fair game to seize any ships in there
- sinking of the lusitania
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british liner, 128 american died, silson tried to issue a note to the germans to tell them to play fair-- jennings brian resigns as sec of state protesting they're a seconf away from getting involved in the war,
german ambassador responded: passenger liners no longer attacked unless they believe they have contraband on board - sussex affair
- french liner in the english chanel attacked, 2 american injured, wilson sent an ultimatum-- we would sever diplomatic relations if any ships other than warships were attacked-- sussex pledge: germans would not sink liners w/o warning and saving lives
- ntnl defense act
- provided for military expansion-- double its size
- army appropriation act
- est council for ntnl defense-- planned for nation's resources in event of war
- shipping act
- built warships in case of war
- election of 1916-- hughes vs wilson
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wilson: "he will keep us out of war"
wilson won - the House mission
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col. House
created this to bring the birtish, french, and german leaders together to talk about peace - peace without victory
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wilson
wanted the groups to state their purpose/war aims-- they said no peace w/o victory - germany's resumption of submarine activity
- disregard for the sussex pledge, we sever diplomatic relations with the germans-- killed the crews of 5 american ships
- zimmerman note
- confiscated by british intelligence-- Arthur zimmerman (german prime minister to mexico) was busy trying to get mexico to joing the war against us in exchange for all their lost land-- wilson released the note and the US was outraged
- wilson's war message after zimmerman note
- the german submarine campagin was a war against mankind-- we must go to war to make the world safe for democracy
- selective servie act of 1917
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all men 21-31 must register
later changed to 18-45 - war industries board
- took over industry-- right equip, right materials to produce right amount of goods
- war labor board
- no work stoppages, no disagreements/strikes
- food administration
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headed by herbert hoover
reduced waste, fixed price on food, meatless and wheatless days - emergency fleet corp
- we built 2 ships for every ally vessel sunk by a german sub
- commitee on public info
- released news presses, films, etc-- never spoke negatively
- espionage act, sedation act
- required you to be pro-american
- Wilson's 14 pt plan
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8 recommendations for adjusting postwar boundaries and est. new nations to replace austria-hungary and ottoman;
five principles to govern international conduct in the future-- freedom of seas, open treaties, reductions in arms, free trade, impartial mediation;
league of nations - league of nations
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would help implement wilson's 14 pts and resolve future controversies,
US refused to join - treaty of versailles
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surrender areas to france, transfer german colonies to diff ally pwrs, reduce army, relenquish subs, ships, planes, guns, pay $56 1/2 bill. for damanges,
germans signed under protest