For part 2 of the Unit 1 Exam, choose
ONLY 1 essay question
from the list below, which covers chapter 15 and part of chapter 16 in the textbook. Grades will be based on the content of the answer and must be
more than 300 words
in length. Direct quotes do not count toward the required word count.
Part 2 Essay Questions:
1 - What did freedom mean for the ex-slaves? Be sure to address economic opportunities, gender roles, religious independence, and family security.
2 - Reconstruction witnessed profound changes in the lives of southerners, black and white, rich and poor. Explain the various ways that the lives of these groups changed. Were the changes for the better or worse?
3 - Stating that he “lived among men, not among angels,” Thaddeus Stevens recognized that the Fourteenth Amendment was not perfect. Explain the strengths and weaknesses of the Fourteenth Amendment. What liberties and freedoms did it extend in the nineteenth century—and to whom? How did it alter the relationship between the federal government and the states?
4 - Who were the Redeemers, what did they want, and what were their methods? How did the Redeemers feel that their freedom was being threatened by Radical Reconstruction? Conclude your essay with a comment on how you think the federal government should have responded to the Redeemers.
5 - Was Reconstruction a success or a failure? Or was it something in between? In your response, consider land policy, key legislation during Presidential and Radical Reconstruction, southern politics, racial and political violence, and northern “fatigue” with Reconstruction. Be sure to make clear what you mean by success and failure.
6 - The debate surrounding the creation and ratification of the Fifteenth Amendment divided one-time political allies over the matter of women’s suffrage. What were the arguments for and against including a woman’s right to vote in the Fifteenth Amendment? What did this debate say about the boundaries of freedom defined by Reconstruction?
7 - What role did the government play in defining, protecting, and/or limiting the liberty of American workers during the Gilded Age?
8 - Henry Demarest Lloyd wrote in Wealth against Commonwealth (1864), “Liberty and monopoly cannot live together.” Based on your knowledge of the Gilded Age and the industrial revolution, assess the validity of this statement.
9 - How did the labor movement launch a sustained assault on the understanding of freedom grounded in Social Darwinism and in the liberty of contract?
10 - Compare the motives and methods of the various social reformers active in the Gilded Age. How did the efforts of thinkers such as Henry George, Laurence Gronlund, and Edward Bellamy differ from those of the Protestant and Social Gospel reformers of the period? Were any of these approaches more successful than others? Why, or why not?
PART3:
For part 3 of the Unit 1 Exam,
choose ONLY 1 essay question
from the list below, which covers part of ch.
For part 2 of the Unit 1 Exam, choose ONLY 1 essay question .docx
1. For part 2 of the Unit 1 Exam, choose
ONLY 1 essay question
from the list below, which covers chapter 15 and part of chapter
16 in the textbook. Grades will be based on the content of the
answer and must be
more than 300 words
in length. Direct quotes do not count toward the required word
count.
Part 2 Essay Questions:
1 - What did freedom mean for the ex-slaves? Be sure to address
economic opportunities, gender roles, religious independence,
and family security.
2 - Reconstruction witnessed profound changes in the lives of
southerners, black and white, rich and poor. Explain the various
ways that the lives of these groups changed. Were the changes
for the better or worse?
3 - Stating that he “lived among men, not among angels,”
Thaddeus Stevens recognized that the Fourteenth Amendment
was not perfect. Explain the strengths and weaknesses of the
Fourteenth Amendment. What liberties and freedoms did it
extend in the nineteenth century—and to whom? How did it
alter the relationship between the federal government and the
states?
4 - Who were the Redeemers, what did they want, and what
were their methods? How did the Redeemers feel that their
freedom was being threatened by Radical Reconstruction?
Conclude your essay with a comment on how you think the
federal government should have responded to the Redeemers.
2. 5 - Was Reconstruction a success or a failure? Or was it
something in between? In your response, consider land policy,
key legislation during Presidential and Radical Reconstruction,
southern politics, racial and political violence, and northern
“fatigue” with Reconstruction. Be sure to make clear what you
mean by success and failure.
6 - The debate surrounding the creation and ratification of the
Fifteenth Amendment divided one-time political allies over the
matter of women’s suffrage. What were the arguments for and
against including a woman’s right to vote in the Fifteenth
Amendment? What did this debate say about the boundaries of
freedom defined by Reconstruction?
7 - What role did the government play in defining, protecting,
and/or limiting the liberty of American workers during the
Gilded Age?
8 - Henry Demarest Lloyd wrote in Wealth against
Commonwealth (1864), “Liberty and monopoly cannot live
together.” Based on your knowledge of the Gilded Age and the
industrial revolution, assess the validity of this statement.
9 - How did the labor movement launch a sustained assault on
the understanding of freedom grounded in Social Darwinism and
in the liberty of contract?
10 - Compare the motives and methods of the various social
reformers active in the Gilded Age. How did the efforts of
thinkers such as Henry George, Laurence Gronlund, and Edward
Bellamy differ from those of the Protestant and Social Gospel
reformers of the period? Were any of these approaches more
successful than others? Why, or why not?
3. PART3:
For part 3 of the Unit 1 Exam,
choose ONLY 1 essay question
from the list below, which covers part of chapter 16 and all of
chapter 17 in the textbook. Grades will be based on the content
of the answer and must be
more than 300 words
in length. Direct quotes do not count toward the required word
count.
Part 3 Essay Questions:
1 - Sitting Bull stated, “The life my people want is a life of
freedom.” Likewise, Chief Joseph simply asked the government
for equal rights enshrined by the laws. Describe what freedom
meant to the Indians and how that conflicted with the interests
and values of most white Americans. Also, explain why white
Americans did not allow Indians the opportunity to have
American citizenship.
2 - The West experienced tremendous growth after the Civil
War; nowhere was this more apparent than in California. Write
an essay on the consequences of population growth on the
western landscape, looking at farming, livelihoods, the impact
of the railroad, the growth of Indian reservations, and the
subjugation of Indian peoples.
3 - What might account for the emergence of a mythic “Wild”
West during the Gilded Age? Given the rapid post–Civil War
expansion of industry beyond the Mississippi River, why would
4. perceptions of a West, at once a lawless but timeless romantic
frontier dominated by cowboys and Indians, permeate American
popular culture in the late nineteenth century? (In composing
your answer, consider the impact of the second industrial
revolution.)
4 - Explain why Americans increasingly came to feel that they
were being denied economic independence and democratic self-
government during the late nineteenth century.
5 - How did the Populists seek to rethink the relationship
between freedom and government to address the crisis of the
1890s? Why was their platform considered radical? How did
their platform seek to guarantee freedom?
6 - Chronicle the process that developed in the South of
chipping away the freedoms granted to blacks during
Reconstruction. Give careful consideration to how the Civil War
was remembered by white America. By 1900, what conditions
did African-Americans in the South face? How did they respond
to these conditions?
7 - Analyze the consequences of American rule in Puerto Rico,
Cuba, and the Philippines. Did the citizens prosper? Enjoy
freedom? Accept American rule? Comment on the consequences
for the United States with regard to the statement made by Eric
Foner in the text: “Thus, two principles central to American
freedom since the War of Independence—no taxation without
representation and government based on the consent of the
governed—were abandoned when it came to the nation’s new
possessions.”
8 - Explain the controversy that the war in the Philippines and
the annexation of the Philippines triggered over the relationship
between political democracy, race, and American citizenship.
5. 9 - Discuss some of the freedoms and restrictions experienced
by American women after 1880. How did some women’s lives
seem to change for the better, while others’ did not? How would
you explain the disparity in their situations? Support your
answer with specific examples from the text.
10 - Discuss the many obstacles faced by Chinese immigrants to
the United States in the late nineteenth century. Among the
immigrant groups arriving in the United States in the late
nineteenth century, how were arrivals from China singled out
for particular discrimination by Americans? Why do you think
the Chinese received such unique treatment?