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Texas History

Spring semester examination review

Chapter 12: The Civil War and Reconstruction 1861-1876

Chapter 12: The Civil War and Reconstruction 1861-1876

• secede • To withdraw from something, such as a nation

Chapter 12: The Civil War and Reconstruction 1861-1876

• Abraham Lincoln • The president of the United States during the Civil War

Chapter 12: The Civil War and Reconstruction 1861-1876

• Eli Whitney • Invented the cotton gin in 1793

Chapter 12: The Civil War and Reconstruction 1861-1876

• abolitionist • A person who wanted to end slavery

Chapter 12: The Civil War and Reconstruction 1861-1876

• slavery • The idea that one person can own another person

Chapter 12: The Civil War and Reconstruction 1861-1876

• States’ rights • The idea that states have the right to limit the power of the federal government

Chapter 12: The Civil War and Reconstruction 1861-1876

• blockade • The closing of a port by positioning ships to keep people or supplies from moving in or out

Chapter 12: The Civil War and Reconstruction 1861-1876

• reconstruction • The federal government’s plan to restore the South to the Union after the Civil War

Chapter 12: The Civil War and Reconstruction 1861-1876

• sharecropper • A farm worker who works someone else’s land and pays for its use by giving the landowner a share of the crops grown

Chapter 12: The Civil War and Reconstruction 1861-1876

• amendment • Formal change to a document

Chapter 12: The Civil War and Reconstruction 1861-1876

• Freedmen’s Bureau • Protected newly freed slaves from violence and black codes

• Provided food, healthcare, jobs, and schools

Chapter 12: The Civil War and Reconstruction 1861-1876

• Black Codes • Severely limited the rights of African Americans

Chapter 12: The Civil War and Reconstruction 1861-1876

• What is significant about the Constitution of 1876?

• It is still the constitution Texas uses today.

• It limited the power of the governor

Chapter 12: The Civil War and Reconstruction 1861-1876

• What did the cotton gin do? How did the cotton gin increase the number of slaves in the south?

• Made it easier to separate the seeds from the bolls

• Made cotton farming more profitable allowing plantation owners to plant more cotton creating a “need” for more slaves

Chapter 12: The Civil War and Reconstruction 1861-1876

• What was the economy of Texas like during Reconstruction?

• It was growing

Chapter 12: The Civil War and Reconstruction 1861-1876

• What was the Kansas Nebraska Act?

• Gave people of Kansas and Nebraska the right to decide if their states would allow slavery (went against the Missouri Compromise of 1820)

Chapter 12: The Civil War and Reconstruction 1861-1876

• What were the 4 causes of the Civil War?

• sectionalism• States’ rights• slavery• Tariffs (taxes)

Chapter 12: The Civil War and Reconstruction 1861-1876

• What were some of the disadvantages the south had during the war and what were some of the advantages of the North during the war?

• South ~ fewer soldiers ~ fewer

weapons ~ b“locked” in

• North ~ more soldiers ~ trained

soldiers ~ more supplies

~ manufacturing

Chapter 12: The Civil War and Reconstruction 1861-1876

• What happened to Abraham Lincoln in 1865?

• John Wilkes Booth assassinated (killed) him.

Chapter 12: The Civil War and Reconstruction 1861-1876

• What did Texas have to do to rejoin the Union after the war?

• Set up temporary governments

• End slavery• Declare secession illegal• Adult white males had

to take an oath of loyalty to the U.S.

Chapter 12: The Civil War and Reconstruction 1861-1876

• How were African Americans’ rights limited and protected during Reconstruction?

• Black Codes limited• Freedmen’s Bureau

helped to protect

Chapter 13: Closing the Frontier 1866-1888

Chapter 13: Closing the Frontier 1866-1888

• treaty • A formal agreement between two nations

Chapter 13: Closing the Frontier 1866-1888

• quarantine • To isolate or separate to prevent the spread of disease

Chapter 13: Closing the Frontier 1866-1888

• vaqueros • Spanish cowboys

Chapter 13: Closing the Frontier 1866-1888

• Joseph Glidden • Invented barbed wire

Chapter 13: Closing the Frontier 1866-1888

• Buffalo Soldiers • African American soldiers who helped fight against the Native Americans

Chapter 13: Closing the Frontier 1866-1888

• Why did ranchers brand cattle?

• To show ownership

Chapter 13: Closing the Frontier 1866-1888

• What ended cattle drives?

• Railroad• Fencing• Goat ranching• Other states refused to

allow Texas cattle in

Chapter 13: Closing the Frontier 1866-1888

• How did the Civil War change the cattle industry in Texas?

• Union soldiers went home asking for beef

Chapter 13: Closing the Frontier 1866-1888

• What were two methods that the U.S. government used to force Native Americans onto the reservations?

• promise to feed and supply the Indians on the reservations

• Killing the buffalo

Chapter 13: Closing the Frontier 1866-1888

• Why did the defense along the frontier weaken during the Civil War?

• Soldiers went to fight during the war

Chapter 14:Farming and Ranching in the late 1800’s

Chapter 14:Farming and Ranching in the late 1800’s

• irrigation • An artificial way to supply water to land

Chapter 14:Farming and Ranching in the late 1800’s

• Commercial agriculture • The growing of crops for sale in order to make a profit

Chapter 14:Farming and Ranching in the late 1800’s

• Cottonseed oil • Oil from cottonseeds

Chapter 14:Farming and Ranching in the late 1800’s

• Tenant farmer • Person who rents a plot of land from its owner and pays for its use with a share of the crop

Chapter 14:Farming and Ranching in the late 1800’s

• Open range • Vast area of undeveloped public land held by the state government for future sale

Chapter 14:Farming and Ranching in the late 1800’s

• Cycle of debt • Overproduction led to low prices

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Chapter 14:Farming and Ranching in the late 1800’s

• What was the Big Die Up? What affect did it have on ranching?

• Thousands of cattle died at the fence line trying to escape harsh weather

• Marked beginning of modern ranching

Chapter 14:Farming and Ranching in the late 1800’s

• How did the railroads affect farming and ranching in Texas?

• Faster to ship out of state

• Easier to reach markets in the east

• Easier to move into west Texas

Chapter 14:Farming and Ranching in the late 1800’s

• What factors made it hard for tenant farmers?

• Overproduction• Low prices• Cycle of debt• Couldn’t pay loans

Chapter 14:Farming and Ranching in the late 1800’s

• What is the main cash crop in Texas?

• What is the 2nd highest cash crop in Texas?

Chapter 14:Farming and Ranching in the late 1800’s

• Explain the fence cutting wars.

• What did the Texas legislation do to end the Fence Cutting Wars?

• Fences cut off public roads and water supplies

• smaller farmers and ranchers became angry and cut through the fences to access these roads and water supplies

• Now a felony to cut a person’s fence