Congressional Reconstruction might have been more effective if
A. the federal government had not involved itself with redistributing income.
B. the federal government had not passed the Enforcement Acts.
C. Radical Republicans had not put Jefferson Davis on trial for treason.
D. the Freedmen's Bureau had been ended sooner.
E. the federal government had better enforced the laws designed to assist blacks.
Answer: E
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WHS AP US History Chapter 15
- In the 1890s, voting percentages in the South
- In the 1890s, pressure in the South to restrict black voting rights came from
- In his 1895 "Atlanta Compromise" speech, Booker T. Washington
- During the last quarter of the nineteenth century, Southern agriculture
- Advocates of the "New South"
- The elections of 1876 saw
- Congressional passage of the Enforcement Acts in 1870-1871
- The Alabama claims
- The Panic of 1873
- In 1868, Ulysses S. Grant
- In the South, the crop-lien system
- During Reconstruction, the black labor force worked
- Black sharecropping
- During Reconstruction, the Southern school system
- During Reconstruction, Southern African-American officeholders
- During Reconstruction, the term "Scalawags" referred to
- In 1868, President Andrew Johnson was impeached because he
- The Tenure of Office Act
- In 1867, Congressional plans for Reconstruction
- In the 1860s, Black Codes were
- The story of the assassination of President Abraham Lincoln
- President Abraham Lincoln's "ten percent" plan for the South referred to
- The Freedmen's Bureau
- In 1865, Southern blacks defined "freedom" as