Much of the hunger experienced by Confederate soldiers in the Civil War was due to:
  • they feared losing Northern grain shipments.
  • Britain was dependent on Southern cotton
  • the South's rickety transportation system.
  • the fact that the tribe also owned slaves.
The problems that Abraham Lincoln experienced as president were less prostrating than those experienced by Jefferson Davis partly because the North:
  • they feared losing Northern grain shipments.
  • it was passed despite a healthy rate of volunteers.
  • had a long-established and fully recognized government.
  • the concept of states' rights that the Confederacy professed.
As the Civil War began, the South seemed to have the advantage of:
  • the prospect of free land under the Homestead Act.
  • the South attacked Fort Sumter.
  • more talented military leaders.
  • was critical for both.
As a result of the Civil War, the Northern economy:
  • proved effective against Union shipping.
  • detached personally from the war.
  • they had been moved by Uncle Tom's Cabin to want the end of slavery.
  • greatly expanded its industrial and technological and technological productivity.
Most working people in Britain sided with the North because:
  • the concept of states' rights that the Confederacy professed.
  • they had been moved by Uncle Tom's Cabin to want the end of slavery.
  • was the first significant step forward a unified banking network since 1836.
  • greatly expanded its industrial and technological and technological productivity.
To fill the army's demand for troops, prior to 1863, the North relied mainly on:
  • religious.
  • disease.
  • economy.
  • volunteers.
The Union's establishment of the National Banking System:
  • refused to implement a draft, or conscription law, during the war.
  • when the United States threatened to force France to leave.
  • greatly expanded its industrial and technological and technological productivity.
  • was the first significant step forward a unified banking network since 1836.
Johnny Reb tended to be all of the following except:
  • Britain was dependent on Southern cotton
  • detached personally from the war.
  • Lincoln had ordered supplies sent to the fort.
  • proved effective against Union shipping.
The leader of the Confederacy, Jefferson Davis:
  • discipline and determination.
  • of the South's emphasis on states' rights.
  • a middle of the road solution.
  • defied rather than was led by public opinion.
The Cherokees decision on whether to side with the North or the South during the war was based on:
  • had a long-established and fully recognized government.
  • Lincoln had ordered supplies sent to the fort.
  • the fact that the tribe also owned slaves.
  • it was passed despite a healthy rate of volunteers.
During the Civil War, most of the Five Civilized Tribes in the Indian Territory of present-day Oklahoma:
  • more talented military leaders.
  • supported the confederacy.
  • the Trent affair, involving the removal of Southern diplomats from British ships.
  • was critical for both.
Confederate batteries fired on Fort Sumter when it was learned that:
  • proved effective against Union shipping.
  • Britain was dependent on Southern cotton
  • they feared losing Northern grain shipments.
  • Lincoln had ordered supplies sent to the fort.
America's minister to Britain, during the Civil War, under President Lincoln was:
  • the Monroe Doctrine.
  • supported the confederacy.
  • was critical for both.
  • Charles Francis Adams.
The Border States offered all the following advantages except:
  • used trial and error.
  • Alabama.
  • detached personally from the war.
  • shipbuilding facilities.
In return for support from the Plains Indians during the Civil War, the Union:
  • the prospect of free land under the Homestead Act.
  • women were encouraged to run for office to fill political posts abandoned by men.
  • waged war on them and herded them onto reservations.
  • fight the invading Union army to a draw.
Napoleon III's attempt to install Maximilian on the Mexican throne was a clear violation of:
  • the South's rickety transportation system.
  • used trial and error.
  • the Monroe Doctrine.
  • the fact that the tribe also owned slaves.
During the Civil War, diplomacy for the Union and the Confederacy:
  • supported the confederacy.
  • more talented military leaders.
  • the Trent affair, involving the removal of Southern diplomats from British ships.
  • was critical for both.
The greatest weakness of the South during the civil war was its:
  • volunteers.
  • economy.
  • Alabama.
  • disease.
Despite the war, 300,000 people migrated to the West, lured mainly by:
  • more talented military leaders.
  • the prospect of free land under the Homestead Act.
  • the Trent affair, involving the removal of Southern diplomats from British ships.
  • waged war on them and herded them onto reservations.
Of all the hardships faced by soldiers during the Civil War, the greatest was:
  • volunteers.
  • Alabama.
  • economy.
  • disease.
In Lincoln's attempt to preserve the Union, he did all of the following questionable actions as president except:
  • the fact that the tribe also owned slaves.
  • poor unskilled workers were well represented among both armies.
  • refused to implement a draft, or conscription law, during the war.
  • they feared losing Northern grain shipments.
The North's greatest strength in the Civil War was its:
  • religious.
  • disease.
  • economy.
  • Alabama.
Billy Yank tended to be all of the following except:
  • Alabama.
  • economy.
  • disease.
  • religious.
The achieve its independence, the Confederacy had to:
  • more talented military leaders.
  • women were encouraged to run for office to fill political posts abandoned by men.
  • fight the invading Union army to a draw.
  • the prospect of free land under the Homestead Act.
In 1861, many Northerners were willing to allow Southern states to leave the Union until:
  • the Trent affair, involving the removal of Southern diplomats from British ships.
  • the South attacked Fort Sumter.
  • the prospect of free land under the Homestead Act.
  • more talented military leaders.
During the Civil War, Britain and the United States were nearly provoked into war by:
  • the prospect of free land under the Homestead Act.
  • supported the confederacy.
  • the Trent affair, involving the removal of Southern diplomats from British ships.
  • women were encouraged to run for office to fill political posts abandoned by men.
During the Civil War:
  • relations between the Union and Canada were at times very poor.
  • poor unskilled workers were well represented among both armies.
  • it was passed despite a healthy rate of volunteers.
  • when the United States threatened to force France to leave.
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.
  • discipline and determination.
  • of the South's emphasis on states' rights.
  • defied rather than was led by public opinion.
All of the following are similar characteristics that both Union and Confederate soldiers shared except:
  • the South's rickety transportation system.
  • poor unskilled workers were well represented among both armies.
  • refused to implement a draft, or conscription law, during the war.
  • the concept of states' rights that the Confederacy professed.
The Civil War was a women's war in all the following way's except:
  • the Trent affair, involving the removal of Southern diplomats from British ships.
  • women were encouraged to run for office to fill political posts abandoned by men.
  • more talented military leaders.
  • waged war on them and herded them onto reservations.
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.
  • a middle of the road solution.
  • he was not fighting to free the blacks.
  • revealed the influence of the Border States on his policies.
Possessing ___% of the national wealth in 1860, the South claimed only ___% in 1870.
  • disease.
  • economy.
  • volunteers.
  • 30, 12
Lincoln's declaration that the North sought to preserve the Union with or without slavery:
  • a middle of the road solution.
  • revealed the influence of the Border States on his policies.
  • used legally dubious methods.
  • defied rather than was led by public opinion.
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