What follows are all the multiple choice questions from quizzes through chapter 14. They constitute the majority of the questions that will be on the semester final.
1. Which of the following is a correct statement about the use of slave labor in colonial Virginia?
A. Slave ownership was forced on reluctant White Virginians by profit-minded English merchants and the mercantilist officials of the crown.
B. It was the first case in which Europeans enslaved blacks
C. It fulfilled the original plans of the Virginia Company
D. It first occurred after Eli Whitney’s invention of the cotton gin, which greatly stimulated the demand for low-cost labor
E. It spread rapidly in the late seventeenth century, as blacks displaced white indentured servants in the tobacco fields.
2. In the eighteenth century, colonial Virginia and colonial Massachusetts were most alike in that both
relied on the marketing of a single crop
were heavily dependent on slave labor
had an established Anglican church
were royal colonies
administered local government through justices of the peace
3. Which of the following statements about Africans brought as slaves to the British North American colonies is true?
They were the primary labor force for plantations in the Chesapeake by 1630
They had much lower life expectancy in the Chesapeake than in South Carolina or the West Indies
They greatly outnumbered Europeans in every colony south of the Mason-Dixon line by 1776
They maintained cultural practices brought from Africa
They were the primary labor source in Pennsylvania until 1720
4. Which of the following was true of a married woman in the colonial era?
She would be sent to debtor’s prison for debts incurred by her husband
She could vote as her husband’s proxy in elections
She generally lost control of her property when she married
She had no legal claim to the estate of her deceased husband
Her legal rights over her children were the same as her husband
5. The First Great Awakening was:
a religious revival that occurred throughout the American colonies
a slave rebellion in colonial South Carolina
an eighteenth century religious movement among Native Americans
the flowering of Enlightenment political thought in North America
and early colonial protest against British imperialism
6. The mercantilist system of the eighteenth century led to
the restriction of governmental intervention in the economy
the protection of Native Americans from European economic exploitation
the expansion of colonial manufacturing
the subordination of the colonial economy to that of the mother country
noncompetitive commercial relations among nations
7. The North American colonies took advantage of Great Britain’s policy of salutary neglect to
establish religious freedom as a fundamental right
work out trade arrangements to acquire needed products from other countries
introduce the practice of slavery to the new world
establish a standing army
make favorable territorial settlements with France
8. The Navigation Acts were part of the British policy of
isolationism
capitalism
mercantilism
monopolism
imperialism
9. The mercantilist system of the eighteenth century led to
the restriction of governmental intervention in the economy
the protection of Native Americans from European economic exploitation
the expansion of colonial manufacturing
the subordination of the colonial economy to that of the mother country
noncompetitive commercial relations among nations
10. Colonial cities functioned primarily as
mercantile centers for collecting agricultural goods and distributing imported manufactured goods
places were poor immigrants settled and worked as independent artisans
centers where large-scale financial and banking operations were conducted
places to which wage earners commuted from numerous surrounding communities
centers of light manufacturing
11. The North American colonies took advantage of Great Britain’s policy of salutary neglect to
establish religious freedom as a fundamental right
work out trade arrangements to acquire needed products from other countries
introduce the practice of slavery to the new world
establish a standing army
make favorable territorial settlements with France
12. The Navigation Acts were part of the British policy of
isolationism
capitalism
mercantilism
monopolism
imperialism
13. By the 1750’s, the British colonies on the North American mainland were characterized by all of the following EXCEPT
disdain for British constitutional monarchy
many religious denominations
a society without a hereditary aristocracy
a growing number of non-English settlers
acceptance of slavery as a labor system
14. The First Great Awakening led to all of the following EXCEPT
separatism and secession from established churches
the renewed persecution of witches
the growth of institutions of higher learning
a flourishing of the missionary spirit
a greater appreciation of the emotional experiences of faith
15. The wealthiest people in pre-Revolutionary America were primarily
(A) lawyers, doctors, and other professionals
(B) northern merchants and southern planters
(C) inland farmers
(D) industrialists
(E) local government officials
16. France’s support for the United State’s during the American Revolutionary War was motivated primarily by
(A) enthusiasm for the revolutionary principles espoused by the Americans
(B) a desire to weaken its rival, Great Britain
(C) a desire to regain Canada and the Florida’s
(D) pressures from its ally, Spain
(E) the hope of converting the United States into a French dependency
17. By the time of the revolution, the American colonists had generally come to believe that creation of a republic would solve the problems of monarchical rule because a republic would establish
(A) a highly centralized government led by a social elite
(B) a strong chief executive
(C) a small, limited government responsible to the people
(D) unlimited male suffrage
(E) a society in which there were no differences of rank and status
18. After 1763, changes in the British imperial system threatened the interests of which of the following groups of American colonists?
I. Land speculators with interests west of the Appalachians
II. Newspaper editors and lawyers
III. Farmers wishing to settle in the Ohio River valley
IV. Boston smugglers
III only
IV only
I and III only
I, II, and IV only
I, II, III, and IV
19. During the War for Independence, the principal reason the American government sought diplomatic recognition from foreign powers was to
A. rally all the states behind a common cause
B. convince the British of the justice of the American cause
C. make it easier to levy taxes on the citizens of the several states
D. facilitate the purchase of arms and borrowing money from other nations
E. allow Von Steuben, Lafayette, and other Europeans to join the American army
20. Which of the following contributed most to the American victory in the Revolution?
A. French military and financial assistance
B. The failure of Loyalists to participate in military action
C. A major American military victory at Valley Forge
D. Support from the French Canadians
E. The British failure to capture Philadelphia
21. The Declaration of Independence did all of the following EXCEPT
A. appeal to the philosophy of natural rights
B. call for the abolition of the slave trade
C. appeal to the sympathies of the English people
D. Criticize the provisions of the Quebec Act of 1774
E. accuse George III of tyranny
22. All of the following contributed to the discontent among soldiers in the Continental Army EXCEPT:
A. Most soldiers were draftees
B. The soldiers feared for the welfare of their families back home
C. The army had inadequate arms and ammunition
D. The army paid soldiers in depreciated paper money
E. The army was inadequately fed and clothed
23. A major defect in the national government established by the Articles of Confederation was that it lacked
A. a means of amending the Articles
B. the authority to tax
C. the power to declare war
D. the authority to make treaties
E. a legislative branch
24. In 1787-1789 which of the following groups was most likely to oppose the ratification of the Constitution?
A. Farmers in isolated areas
B. Export Merchants
C. Former officers in the Continental Army
D. Southern planters
E. Urban artisans
25. The principal motivation for drafting the Bill of Rights was the desire to
A. test the new process of amendment described in the Constitution
B. protect rights not specified in the Constitution
C. strengthen the powers of the federal government
D. restore to the states the powers they had enjoyed under the Articles of Confederation
E. clarify the federal relationship among the states
26. As originally ratified, the U.S. Constitution provided for
A. political parties
B. a presidential cabinet
C. the direct election of senators
D. an electoral college
E. a two-term presidential limit
27. The greatest achievement of the government under the Articles of Confederation was its establishment of
A. a bicameral legislature
B. a system for orderly settlement of the West
C. general postwar prosperity
D. a standardized length for the school year
E. federal financing of secondary education
28. After the Revolution, the concept of the "republican mother" suggested that
A. women would be responsible for raising their children, especially their sons, to be virtuous citizens of the young republic
B. voting would soon become a privilege granted to educated and/or married women
C. the first duty of mothers was to serve the needs of the government
D. wives and mothers would be welcome in the emerging political parties
E. women's virtues had been the inspiration for the ideals of the Revolution
29. Which of the following was true of the U.S. Constitution as adopted at the Constitutional Convention?
A. It was built on a series of compromises
B. It provided exact specifications covering all aspects of government
C. It was a revised version of the English Constitution
D. It included a Bill of Rights
E. It allowed all male citizens over the age of twenty-one to vote
30. Under the Articles of Confederation the U.S. central government had no power to
A. levy taxes
B. make treaties
C. declare war
D. request troops from the states
E. amend the articles
31. Thomas Jefferson opposed some of Alexander Hamilton’s programs because Jefferson believed that
(A) the common bond of a substantial national debt would serve to unify the different states
(B) the French alliance threatened to spread the violence of the French Revolution to America
(C) the federal government should encourage manufacturing and industry
(D) Hamilton’s programs were weakening the military strength of the nation
(E) Hamilton’s programs favored wealthy financial interests
32. Early American diplomats to European nations often gained advantages for the United States by
A. sending America’s strong military and naval forces against those of European powers
B. convincing the people of European nations to exert pressure on their governments
C. using confidential information effectively
D. exploiting European rivalries
E. using America’s vast wealth in order to obtain favorable diplomatic settlements.
33. Which of the following most accurately describes the attitude of the Founding Fathers toward political parties?
A. Parties are vehicles of ambition and selfish interest that threaten the existence of republican government
B. Parties are engines of democracy that provide citizens with a voice in government
C. Parties are necessary evils in any republic.
D. In a large republic, parties are the best means of creating effective coalitions of interest groups.
E. A two-party system is essential to a stable republic.
34. The Kentucky and Virginia Resolutions took the position that
A. only the U.S. Supreme Court had the power to restrict freedom of speech and the press
B. the authority of state governments included the power to decide whether or not an act of Congress was constitutional
C. only fiscal measures initiated by state legislatures could be acted on by Congress
D. Congress was responsible for maintaining the vitality of a "loyal opposition" political party
E. the "supremacy clause" of the constitution applied only to foreign affairs
35. President Washington's Neutrality Proclamation of 1793 was issued in response to
A. Spanish expansion in the Southeast
B. Dutch economic activity in the Mid-Atlantic states
C. Canadian alliances with northern American Indians
D. French diplomatic overtures to invoke the Franco-American Alliance
E. English boycotts of selected American manufacturers
36. The financial programs of Alexander Hamilton included all of the following EXCEPT
A. funding of a national debt
B. nullification of all private debts to the states
C. imposing of a tax on liquor
D. establishment of the Bank
E. assumption of all state debts
37. In the United States, the Haitian rebellion of the 1790s prompted
A. the acquisition of Puerto Rico for colonization by emancipated slaves
B. a movement of free African Americans to Haiti
C. the passage of a federal law increasing the severity of punishments for slave rebellion
D. an increased fear of slave revolts in the South
E. a military expedition of southern slaveholders to restore French rule in Haiti
Which of the following did NOT contribute to the United States’ decision to declare war against Britain in 1812?
American military and economic preparedness for war
American concern for national honor
The impressment of American seamen
British interference with United States commerce
American fears of British aid to Native Americans on the frontier
39. Marbury v. Madison (1803) is famous for establishing the principle of
A. the sancity of contracts
B. the supremacy of the executive over the legislative branch
C. judicial review
D. due process of law
E. equal access by any citizen to federal courts
40. An important reason for the proclamation of the Monroe Doctrine was to
end the United States alliance with France
displace England as the chief creditor of the Latin American countries
counter British objections that would arise in any future United States effort to annex Canada or the West Indies
protect republican institutions of government in the Western Hemisphere
prevent French interference in the internal affairs of Mexico
Which of the following is correct about tariffs passed between the period 1816-1828?
They reduced barriers to free trade
They were supported by all sections of the nation.
Their constitutionality was tested in the courts
They were primarily intended as revenue-raising measures
They were the first tariffs whose major purpose was protection
Which of the following had the greatest effect on the institution of slavery in the United States in the first quarter of the nineteenth century?
Demands of Southern textile manufacturers for cotton
Introduction of crop rotation and fertilizers
Use of more stringent techniques of slave control
Invention of the cotton gin
The “three-fifths” compromise
The opening of the Erie Canal in 1825 was important because it
established the role of the federal government in internal improvements
strengthened the ties between the eastern manufacturing and western agricultural regions
made the invention of the steamboat economically viable
spurred innovation in the railroad industry
was the last major canal project before the Civil War
Which of the following moved in the greatest numbers into Appalachia as the Native Americans of the region were defeated?
immigrants from Sweden
Slaveholders, indentured servants, and slaves from coastal plantations
Puritans from New England
Scotch-Irish, German, and English immigrants
White immigrants from the West Indies
Which of the following describes the “Lowell System” in early nineteenth century New England?
A plan to promote and expand textile manufacturing activities
An agreement among the New England states to secede and form a New England confederacy
A reform eliminating property-holding as a qualification for voting
A strategy to defend New England during the War of 1812
A congressional reapportionment plan during the 1820s.
In the first half of the 19th century, Cherokee efforts to retain their tribal lands in Georgia received direct support from
the white residents of Oklahoma
President Andrew Jackson
The United States Supreme Court
The Democratic press
The United States Congress
Of the following, which was the principal issue on which the U.S, sought settlement with Great Britain at the outset of the War of 1812?
A guarantee of New England fishing rights off Newfoundland
Free navigation of the Mississippi River
Cancellation of pre-Revolutionary War debts
Access to trade with the British West Indies
An end to impressment
According to Alexis de Toqueville in Democracy in America, American individualism arose as a result of
the absence of an aristocracy
limited geographic mobility
the uneven distribution of wealth
urbanization
the Enlightenment
When Thomas Jefferson said in 1801, “We are all republicans—we are all federalists,” he meant that
Americans would never ally themselves with monarchical governments
Federalists would be appointed to his cabinet
The two parties’ platforms were identical
The principles of American government were above party politics
He admired Hamilton’s policies
The Hartford Convention was a manifestation of
New England Federalist opposition to the War of 1812
New England’s desire to end United States trade with Great Britain
Northern gratitude to General Jackson for his victory at New Orleans
The War Hawks’ impatience with President Madison’s conduct of foreign policy
Western resentment against British-backed American Indian attacks
Jefferson’s purchase of Louisiana had its origins in his desire to
remove the French from forts along the Mississippi valley
acquire a port to provide an outlet for western crops
acquire territory for the expansion of slavery
oppose New England Federalism
demonstrate friendship for the French in the Napoleonic Wars
In Marbury vs. Madison, the U.S. Supreme Court affirmed
its right to determine the constitutionality of state court decisions
its right to determine the constitutionality of state laws
its right to determine the constitutionality of congressional enactments
the sanctity of property rights against harassment by unfriendly state legislatures
the broad scope of the federal government’s commerce power
The issuance of the Monroe Doctrine did which of the following?
Reaffirmed George Washington’s goal of American neutrality in the Americas
Helped Secretary of State John Quincy Adams secure the presidency in 1824
Established the U.S. as the dominant economic power in Latin America
Provided the basis for resolving Anglo-American border disputes
Asserted American independence in the area of foreign policy
The Jefferson administration advocated which of the following changes as a means of restoring republican ideals?
Abolishing the Bank of the United States
Reducing the scope of activities of the federal government
Discontinuing the funding of state debts
Increasing the size of the U.S. military
Adopting the Kentucky and Virginia Resolutions on the national level
The Missouri Compromise did which of the following?
Prohibited slavery in all of the Louisiana Purchase
Provided for admission to the Union of all future states in pairs of one free, one slave
Allowed Maine to enter as a free state
Provided for the annexation of Texas
Finally settled the question of congressional power over slavery in the territories
The Embargo Act of 1807 had which of the following effects on the U.S.?
It severely damaged American manufacturing
It enriched many cotton plantation owners
It disrupted American shipping
It was ruinous to subsistence farmers
It had little economic impact
The development of the early nineteenth century concept of “separate spheres” for the sexes encouraged all of the following EXCEPT
accepting women as intellectual equals of men
idealizing the home as a haven in a competitive world
designating the home as the appropriate place for a woman
emphasizing childrearing as a prime duty of a woman
establishing a moral climate in the home
President Jackson’s Native American policy resulted in which of the following?
Jackson’s loss of popularity in the country
The first efforts to grant citizenship to Native Americans
The division of tribal lands into small units and their allotment to heads of families in each tribe
Widespread uprisings among the Sioux in Dakota territory
The removal of the Cherokee from the Southeast to settlements across the Mississippi
In the first half of the 19th century, Cherokee efforts to retain their tribal lands in Georgia received direct support from
the white residents of Oklahoma
President Andrew Jackson
The United States Supreme Court
The Democratic press
The United States Congress
Henry Clay’s “American System” called for all of the following EXCEPT
A tariff for the protection of industry
Internal improvements at national government expense
Sale of federal lands to finance higher education
Greater reliance on domestic financial resources
Increased trade among the sections of the nation
Which of the following resulted from the policies of the Jackson Administration?
A central bank was established.
The value of paper currency issued by individual banks became uniform.
The number of banks, each issuing its own paper currency, increased
A nationwide banking system was begun
Federal fiscal activities became linked to a system of federal banks.
Andrew Jackson supported all of the following EXCEPT
Indian removal
The right of nullification
The removal of federal deposits from the Bank of the United States
Annexation of new territory
Use of the presidential veto power
Jacksonian Democracy was distinguished by the belief that
an aristocracy posed no danger to the Republic
the National Republicans alone new what was right for the people
political participation by the common man should be increased
political rights should be granted to women
franchise restrictions should be racially neutral
65. The nullification crisis of 1832-1833 was significant, in part, because it
Signaled the triumph of pro-tariff forces
Strengthened support for the Missouri Compromise
Weakened the Whig party throughout the South
Enhanced Andrew Jackson’s reputation as a strong president
Cemented the alliance between Andrew Jackson and John C. Calhoun
67. The Whigs of the 1830s and 1840s differed from the Jacksonian Democrats in that the Whigs
won the support of Irish immigrants
secured the removal of Native Americans to lands west of the Mississippi
Supported the American System of Henry Clay
Favored a laissez-faire economy
Urged the annexation of Texas
Which of the following describes the “Lowell System” in early nineteenth century New England?
A plan to promote and expand textile manufacturing activities
An agreement among the New England states to secede and form a New England confederacy
A reform eliminating property-holding as a qualification for voting
A strategy to defend New England during the War of 1812
A congressional reapportionment plan during the 1820s.
The majority of white families in the antebellum South owned
more than 100 slaves
50 to 100 slaves
10 to 50 slaves
5 to 10 slaves
No slaves
The development of the early nineteenth century concept of “separate spheres” for the sexes encouraged all of the following EXCEPT
accepting women as intellectual equals of men
idealizing the home as a haven in a competitive world
designating the home as the appropriate place for a woman
emphasizing childrearing as a prime duty of a woman
establishing a moral climate in the home
The idea of Manifest Destiny included all of the following beliefs EXCEPT:
Commerce and industry would decline as the nation expanded its agricultural base
The use of land for settled agriculture was preferable to its use for nomadic hunting
Westward expansion was both inevitable and beneficial
God had selected America as a chosen land and people
The ultimate extent of the American domain was to be from the tropics to the Arctic
Which of the following most likely increased Mexican suspicion of American territorial objectives of the 1830s and 1840s?
Abolitionist agitation in the North
Jackson’s policy toward the annexation of Texas (1836-1837)
The Webster –Ashburton Treaty
Clay’s speeches in the campaign of 1844
Rhetoric on “manifest destiny” in the American press
A proposal for the uncompensated emancipation of American slaves was advanced by
A. Thomas Jefferson in the Northwest Ordinance of 1787
B. James Madison in The Federalist in 1788
C. The American Colonization Society in 1817
D. William Lloyd Garrison in The Liberator in 1831
E. The Republican party platform of 1860
Which of the following had the greatest effect on the institution of slavery in the United States in the first quarter of the nineteenth century?
Demands of Southern textile manufacturers for cotton
Introduction of crop rotation and fertilizers
Use of more stringent techniques of slave control
Invention of the cotton gin
The “three-fifths” compromise
The dramatic increase in The South’s slave labor force between 1810 and 1860 was due to
an increase in the African slave trade
the importation of slaves from the West Indies
an increase in the severity of fugitive slave laws
the acquisition of Louisiana
the natural population increase of American-born slaves
In the antebellum period, free African Americans were
given the right to suffrage in most states
protected from kidnapping under stringent provisions of the Fugitive Slave Act
educated in integrated schools in most northern states
able to settle in states in the Middle West without legal restriction
able to accumulate some property in spite of discrimination
The Missouri Compromise did which of the following?
Prohibited slavery in all of the Louisiana Purchase
Provided for admission to the Union of all future states in pairs of one free, one slave
Allowed Maine to enter as a free state
Provided for the annexation of Texas
Finally settled the question of congressional power over slavery in the territories
The Kansas-Nebraska Act (1854) heightened the sectional crisis because it
Repealed the Missouri Compromise
Repealed the Fugitive Slave Act
Made Kansas and Nebraska free states
Stimulated Southern emigration to the territories taken from Mexico
Signaled acceptance of the principle of the Wilmot Proviso
79. In the pre-Civil War era, the railroad’s most important impact on the economy was the
Creation of a huge new market for railway equipment
Creation of the basis for greater cooperation between Southern planters and Northern textile manufacturers
Generation of new employment opportunities for unskilled workers
Participation of the federal government in the financing of a nationwide transportation network
Accessibility to Eastern urban markets provided to Midwestern farmers
In the presidential campaign of 1860, which of the following positions was asserted by the Republican Party platform with respect to slavery?
Slavery should be abolished immediately by the federal government
The extension of slavery to other countries should be prohibited
The Missouri Compromise line (36◦ 30◦) should be extended to the Pacific Ocean, and slavery should be prohibited in territories above that line
The gradual emancipation of the slaves should begin, and the federal government should compensate slave owners for the loss of slave property
The extension of slavery to United States territories should be prohibited by the federal government, but slavery should be protected in the states where it already existed
The hostility of the Know-Nothing Party was primarily directed against
the growth of cities and industrial manufacturing
Irish and German Catholic immigrants
Free Masons and members of other fraternal orders
Abolitionists
Slaveholders
Which of the following states the principle of Popular Sovereignty?
Congress has the right to decide where slavery shall and shall not exist
The settlers in a given territory have the sole right to decide whether or not slavery will be permitted there
Individual citizens can decide for themselves whether or not to hold slaves
The American people shall decide where slavery will exist through a national plebiscite
Individual states have the right to reject congressional decisions on slavery
In the 1850’s, the South differed from the North in that the South had
A better developed transportation system
A better educated white population
Less interest in evangelical religion
Fewer European immigrants
More cities
Which of the following statements about the Dred Scott decision is correct?
It recognized the power of Congress to prohibit slavery in the territories, but refused on technical grounds to free Scott
It stated that black people were not citizens of the United States
It upheld the constitutionality of the Missouri Compromise
It upheld the principle of Popular Sovereignty
It freed Scott, but not other slaves in circumstances similar to Scott’s
Which of the following provisions of the Compromise of 1850 provoked the most controversy in the 1850’s?
the admission of California as a free state
The establishment of the principle of popular sovereignty in the Mexican Secession
The ban on the slave trade in the District of Columbia
The continued protection of slavery in the District of Columbia
The strengthened Fugitive Slave Law
The Republican Party originated in the mid 1850’s as a sectional party committed to which of the following?
Opposition to further extension of slavery into the territories
Immediate emancipation of all slaves
Repeal of Whig economic policies
Restriction of immigration
Acknowledgment of popular sovereignty as the basis for organizing the federal territories
The Wilmot Proviso specifically provided for
the prohibition of slavery in the Louisiana Territory
the primacy of federal law over state legislated Black Codes
the abolition of the internal slave trade
the prohibition of slavery in lands acquired from Mexico in the Mexican War
federal return of fugitive slaves
The goal of the American Colonization Society was to
return freed slaves to Africa
recruit immigrant labor for American factories
assimilate recent immigrants into American society
extend U.S. influence to overseas colonies
promote western expansion by funding internal improvements
“Let Southern oppressors tremble. . . . I shall strenuously contend for immediate enfranchisement. . . . I will be as harsh as truth and as uncompromising as justice.”
The Author of the statement above was
John C. Calhoun
Stephen A. Douglas
Henry Clay
Abraham Lincoln
William L. Garrison
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