How did events in the middle of the nineteenth century push the South toward secession?

What will be an ideal response?


Answer: The ideal answer should include:
a. The North’s celebration of John Brown as a hero and martyr was incomprehensible to the South.
b. To Southerners, John Brown was a religious zealot with a homicidal streak who attacked an institution that was protected by the law.
c. Southerners felt that the differences over slavery were irreconcilable.
d. The presidential election of 1860 revealed to them that their votes did not matter.
e. The Republican Party had no base of support in the South, and its candidate, Abraham Lincoln, was not on the ballot in the Southern states.
f. Lincoln’s victory made the South feel politically impotent.

History

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In what ways did Africans resist enslavement once in North America?

What will be an ideal response?

History

The growth of the Atlantic slave trade was driven by demand for the products of the Americas in __________

A) Europe B) North Africa C) Asia D) The Middle East

History

Macon's Bill No. 2

a. re-opened trade with all nations except Britain and France. b. required that if either Britain or France lifted its commercial restrictions on American trade, the United States would stop trading with the other. c. forbade American trade with Britain and France but promised to re-open trade with whichever of the two nations first honored neutral rights. d. repealed the Embargo Act of 1807. e. demonstrated American economic strength in dealing with the European powers.

History

Arab states saw the Soviet invasion of Afghanistan as an opportunity to resist Soviet influence and to __________.

A. divert their local religious extremists B. shift their support toward the United States C. attack Israel D. invite China into the region

History