Chapter 11 Multiple Choice Questions And

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    Chapter 11QuestionsMultiple Choice

    1. Frederick Douglass argued that:

    a. slaves were truer to the principles of the Declaration of Independence

    than were most white Americans.b. the United States should adopt a gradual emancipation plan that would

    eliminate slavery within forty years.

    c. free blacks would be better off if they moved to Liberia, where a colonyof former American slaves had been founded.

    d. blacks should not serve in the U.S. army during the Civil War because of

    the racial discrimination they faced.e. free African Americans should let down their buckets where they were

    and accept inequality, at least for a period of time.

    ANS: A

    2. The U.S. slave population by 1860 was approximately:

    a. 1 million.

    b. 2 million.

    c. 3 million.d. 4 million.e. 5 million.

    ANS: D

    3. Which of the following was NOT true of the South and slavery in

    nineteenth-century America?a. The Old South had developed into the largest and most powerful slave

    society the modern world has known.

    b. The rate of natural increase in the slave population had more than made

    up for the ban on the international slave trade that was enacted in 1808.c. In the South as a whole, slaves made up only 10 percent of the

    population.

    d. The amount of money invested in or represented by slavery in the United

    States exceeded that of the nations factories, banks, and railroads combined.

    e. The Industrial Revolution promoted slavery because it required intensive

    production of cotton.ANS: C

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    4. In the nineteenth century, what product was the worlds major crop

    produced by slave labor?a. tobacco

    b. indigo

    c. sorghumd. cottone. rice

    ANS: D

    5. Approximately how much of the worlds cotton supply came from the

    southern United States?

    a. 90 percent

    b. 75 percentc. 50 percent

    d. 33 percent

    e. 25 percentANS: B

    6. The internal slave trade in the United States involved the movement of

    hundreds of thousands of enslaved persons from:a. older states like Virginia to the Lower South.

    b. Texas, Louisiana, and Mississippi to Kentucky, Virginia, and Maryland.

    c. the West Indies to the Mississippi River Valley.d. the Lower South to the Upper South.

    e. the lower Mississippi River Valley to the upper Mississippi River Valley.

    ANS: A

    7. What economic effect did southern slavery have on the North?

    a. It was minimal, which explains why northerners opposed slavery.

    b. Many northerners profited from investing in real-estate partnerships thatcontrolled southern plantations.

    c. A few New York shipping companies benefited from slavery, but the

    institution had little effect otherwise.d. Southern slavery helped finance industrialization and internal

    improvements in the North.

    e. Southern slavery drained resources from the North and helped keep the

    whole nation in a depression during the 1850s.ANS: D

    8. The term Lords of the Loom refers to:

    a. early New England factory owners.b. preachers who wove heart-wrenching stories of slave suffering into their

    sermons.

    c. planters who established textile operations on their plantations.d. master artisans who produced cloth in the South.

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    e. an influential 1840s novel about slavery.

    ANS: A

    9. Which of the following is a true statement relative to the Upper South and

    the Deep South?

    a. Committed to slavery, all states in both the Upper South and Deep Southseceded from the Union.b. The Upper South was less economically diversified than the Deep South.

    c. Several Upper South states did not join the Confederacy at the time of

    the Civil War.d. Neither the Upper South nor the Deep South had major industrial

    centers.

    e. Richmond, Virginia, is considered to be the heart of the Deep South.

    ANS: C

    10. Which of the following was NOT true of the South and its economy in the

    period from 1800 to 1860?a. Southern cities, like New Orleans and Baltimore, lay mainly on the

    periphery of the South.

    b. The South produced nearly two-fifths of the nations manufactured

    goods, especially cotton textiles.c. Slavery helped to discourage the immigration of white workers to the

    South, with notable exceptions such as New Orleans.

    d. Slavery proved very profitable for most slave owners.e. Southern banks existed mainly to finance plantations.

    ANS: B

    11. In 1860, what percentage of southern white families were in the slaveowningclass?

    a. 10 percent

    b. 25 percentc. 40 percent

    d. 55 percent

    e. 75 percentANS: B

    12. Southern farmers in the backcountry:

    a. generally worked the land using family labor.b. were all directly involved in the market economy from the start of the

    nineteenth century.

    c. owned a substantial number of slaves.

    d. were highly self-sufficient but still bought most of their supplies fromstores.

    e. were fortunate that their land was far better for farming than that owned

    by planters.ANS: A

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    13. The relationship between rich southern planters and poor southern farmers:

    a. led to numerous violent uprisings in the southern hill country.b. was complicated by the strong antislavery movement among poor

    farmers in the 1850s.

    c. was strained by planters insistence that farmers participate in the slavepatrols.d. showed itself in politics, as most poor farmers became Whigs and most

    wealthy planters became Democrats.

    e. benefited in part from a sense of unity bred by criticism from outsiders.ANS: E

    14. Andrew Johnson of Tennessee and Joseph Brown of Georgia rose to

    political power:a. because of their membership in and identification with the planter class.

    b. in the 1850s, as members of the small but influential southern

    Republican Party.c. as self-proclaimed spokesmen of the common man against the great

    planters.

    d. as proponents of gradual emancipation plans in order to destroy the

    slavocracy.e. after gaining popularity for creating public education systems in their

    states.

    ANS: C

    15. In 1850, a majority of southern slaveholders owned how many slaves?

    a. 1 to 5

    b. 6 to 10c. 15 to 20

    d. 25 to 30

    e. at least 35ANS: A

    16. To qualify as a member of the planter class, a person had to be engaged insouthern agriculture and:

    a. own at least ten slaves.

    b. grow specifically cotton or sugar cane.

    c. own at least twenty slaves.d. live in a large mansion.

    e. own at least fifty slaves.

    ANS: C

    17. From 1840 to 1860, the price of a prime field hand:

    a. rose about 80 percent, which made it harder for southern whites to enter

    the slaveholding class.b. rose less than 10 percent, which kept the size of the planter class about

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    the same.

    c. declined about 15 percent as the supply of slaves in the internal slave

    trade increased.d. became so inexpensive that the slaveholding class grew to include nearly

    two-thirds of southern whites.

    e. declined because labor-intensive agricultural work became less popularin the South.ANS: A

    18. What event is credited with helping to ingrain the paternalist ethos moredeeply into the lives of southern slaveholders?

    a. Nat Turners Rebellion

    b. the nullification crisis

    c. the development of domestic ideologyd. the closing of the African slave trade

    e. the secession crisis

    ANS: D

    19. In the South, the paternalist ethos:

    a. reflected the hierarchical society in which the planter took responsibility

    for the lives of those around him.b. declined after the War of 1812, as southern society became more

    centered on market relations rather than on personal relations.

    c. suffered because southern slaveholders lived among their slaves, so thatthe groups constant exposure to each other made southern slavery more

    openly violent than elsewhere.

    d. brought southern society closer to northern ideals.

    e. encouraged southern women to become more active and better educatedso that they could help their husbands in their paternal roles.

    ANS: A

    20. What did the Reverend Charles C. Jones of Georgia NOT do?

    a. help improve slave housing

    b. help discourage severe punishments for slavesc. urge an end to slavery

    d. organize religious instruction of slaves

    e. help improve slave medical care

    ANS: C

    21. By the late 1830s, the Souths proslavery argument:

    a. rested on the premise that slavery was a necessary evil.

    b. was based entirely on secular evidence.c. had not yet been accepted by major southern political figures.

    d. claimed that slavery was essential to human economic and cultural

    progress.e. was roundly criticized by southern newspaper editors, ministers, and

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    academics.

    ANS: D

    22. Who said that the language in the Declaration of Independencethat all

    men were created equal and entitled to libertywas the most false and

    dangerous of all political errors?a. James Madisonb. James G. Birney

    c. John C. Calhoun

    d. Denmark Veseye. Solomon Northup

    ANS: C

    23. The end of slavery in most Latin American nations:a. resulted from violent slave revolts that rocked Latin America from 1822

    to 1855.

    b. involved gradual emancipation accompanied by recognition of ownerslegal rights to slave property.

    c. was inspired by the emancipation of slaves that occurred as a result of

    the American Civil War.

    d. followed a pattern very different from that established in the northernUnited States.

    e. did not happen until the United States made emancipation an aim of the

    Spanish-American War.ANS: B

    24. Defenders of American slavery claimed that British emancipation in the

    1830s had been a failure because:a. many newly freed slaves moved to West Africa where they became reenslaved

    later.

    b. of the violence it spawned in the West Indies during the 1840s.c. many of those freed had moved to the United States where they could

    obtain only menial jobs.

    d. the freed slaves grew less sugar cane, which hurt the economy of theCaribbean.

    e. the freed slaves could not take care of themselves and many begged their

    ex-masters to support them.

    ANS: D

    25. John C. Calhoun and George Fitzhugh:

    a. agreed that slavery was not a necessary evil but something actually

    positive and good.b. fought a famous duel that demonstrated the southern commitment to the

    idea of defending ones honor.

    c. competed for power in Andrew Jacksons administration.d. were known as two of the most vicious slaveholders, who regularly

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    whipped their slaves.

    e. agreed on the need for slavery but disagreed as to whether it actually was

    beneficial to society.ANS: A

    26. Which of the following statements about slavery and the law is true?a. Because slaves were property, a master could kill any of his slaves forany reason.

    b. Slaves were legally permitted to possess guns if guns were necessary for

    their work (tasks such as scaring birds away from rice fields, for example).c. Laws specifically provided for a slave to be taught to read and write if

    the master so chose.

    d. A slave could, with permission from his or her master, testify against a

    white person in court.e. Slaves accused of serious crimes were entitled to their day in court,

    although they faced all-white judges and juries.

    ANS: E

    27. Celia was:

    a. the pen name of Floride Calhoun, who secretly criticized her husband

    Johns views on slavery.b. a slave tried for killing her master while resisting a sexual assault.

    c. the name used to signify a southern plantation mistress in writings about

    the institution.d. a slave who became famous for helping other slaves escape via the

    Underground Railroad.

    e. a character in Uncle Toms Cabin.

    ANS: B

    28. Why did southern slaves live in better conditions by the mid-nineteenth

    century than those in the Caribbean and South America?a. They did not; slaves led vastly healthier lives in regions other than the

    American South.

    b. Southern Protestant churches encouraged better treatment of southernslaves than the Roman Catholic Church did with slaves in the Caribbean

    and South America.

    c. The rising value of slaves made it profitable for slaveowners to take

    better care of them.d. Laws in the South were far more protective of slaves than were laws

    concerning slaves elsewhere.

    e. Southern slaves had a greater likelihood of becoming free than did other

    New World slaves.ANS: C

    29. In an 1840 letter written from Canada, fugitive slave Joseph Taper asked fordivine blessings upon:

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    a. the writer Harriet Beecher Stowe.

    b. his former master.

    c. President Martin Van Buren.d. abolitionist William Lloyd Garrison.

    e. Queen Victoria.

    ANS: E

    30. Bennet Barrows advice to slaveowners on slave discipline (based on rules

    for slaves at his Highland Plantation in Louisiana) included all of the

    following EXCEPT:a. Allow slaves to grow some of their own food to cut down on costs.

    b. Prohibit any slave to marry someone from another plantation.

    c. Make a slave as comfortable as possible at home.

    d. Consider all of a slaves time to belong to the master.e. Never allow a man, meaning a white man, to talk to one of your slaves.

    ANS: A

    31. Free blacks in the South were allowed to:

    a. own property.

    b. be bought and sold.

    c. carry a firearm.d. testify in court.

    e. vote.

    ANS: A

    32. What was the name of the vibrant community of former slaves freed by

    Virginian Richard Randolph?

    a. Sea Islandb. Mount Vernon

    c. Israel Hill

    d. Shermans Lande. Promised Land

    ANS: C

    33. Free blacks in the United States:

    a. had the same rights as whites in the North but faced far more restrictions

    on their freedom in the South.

    b. tended to live in rural areas if they lived in the Lower South.c. sometimes became wealthy enough to own slaves.

    d. made up nearly one-third of the African-American population in the

    South.

    e. could testify in court and vote in most states, but could carry firearmsonly with the approval of the local sheriff.

    ANS: C

    34. All of the following statements are true of the work done by southern slaves

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    EXCEPT:

    a. by 1860, some 200,000 worked in factories.

    b. slaves sometimes were allowed to supervise other laborers, includingwhite workers.

    c. masters rented out slaves to do a variety of jobs.

    d. the federal government used slaves to build forts and other publicbuildings in the South.e. slaves worked exclusively as agricultural field hands and house servants.

    ANS: E

    35. On the plantation, the white employee in charge of ensuring a profitable

    crop for the plantation master was called the:

    a. journeyman.

    b. slave driver.c. chain gang.

    d. overseer.

    e. deputy master.ANS: D

    36. Task labor:

    a. got its name for tasking the abilities of slaves; it was very difficult,complicated work.

    b. was an acronym for Take All Southerners Knives, a secret organization

    of slaves planning an insurrection.c. always was controlled by an overseer.

    d. allowed slaves to take on daily jobs, set their own pace, and work on

    their own when they were done.

    e. was the most common form of slave labor organization in the South.ANS: D

    37. Urban slaves:a. most often were domestic servants.

    b. was a term coined by southerners to describe northern factory workers.

    c. had less autonomy than plantation slaves because there were moreauthorities to watch them.

    d. could work on their own and always kept the majority of their earnings.

    e. increasingly replaced skilled white laborers as the Civil War approached.

    ANS: A

    38. The plantation masters had many means to maintain order among their

    slaves. According to the text, what was the most powerful weapon the

    plantation masters had?a. requiring slaves to attend church

    b. the threat of sale

    c. exploiting the divisions among slavesd. withholding food

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    e. denying a marriage between two slaves

    ANS: B

    39. Slave families:

    a. were rare because there were too few female slaves.

    b. were more common in the West Indies, where living conditions favoredtheir formation and survival.c. were headed by women more frequently than were white families.

    d. usually were able to stay together because most slaveowners were

    paternalistic.e. avoided naming children for family members because children so often

    were sold, and it was better not to build strong kinship ties.

    ANS: C

    40. Jumping over a broomstick was a ceremony celebrating:

    a. a fugitive slave arriving in a free state.

    b. a slave marriage.c. the birth of a slave baby.

    d. surviving the Middle Passage.

    e. a slaves promotion from field hand to domestic servant.

    ANS: B

    41. Gender roles under slavery:

    a. were the same as those that existed in white society.b. differed from those of white society because men and women alike

    suffered a sense of powerlessness.

    c. greatly differed from those of whites when slaves were able to work on

    theirown; the men took on more womens work and vice versa.d. meant that slave husbands refused to let their wives work in the fields.

    e. were unaffected by the ability of masters to take advantage of female

    slaves sexually.ANS: B

    42. Slave religion:a. was based entirely on what slaves learned and heard from white

    ministers.

    b. existed without approval from masters, who thought that letting slaves

    learn about religion might weaken their control.c. benefited from masters assigning a member of each slave quarters to

    serve as a slave chaplain.

    d. combined African traditions and Christian beliefs.

    e. died out by the early 1820s because of strong opposition from whites.ANS: D

    43. Which of the following statements about religious life among African-Americans in southern cities is true?

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    a. Blacks usually worshipped in churches where they sat side-by-side with

    whites.

    b. Urban free blacks sometimes formed their own churches.c. African-Americans, free and slave, were banned from religious services.

    d. Free blacks could worship publicly, but slaves were not permitted to

    do so.e. The formation of the Afro-Catholic Church in 1844 was a majordevelopment in black Christianity.

    ANS: B

    44. Which of the following stories did NOT play a central role in black

    Christianity?

    a. Moses and the exodus from Egypt

    b. Noah and the arkc. David and Goliath

    d. Jonah and the whale

    e. Daniel and the lions denANS: B

    45. The Brer Rabbit stories of slave folklore:

    a. celebrated how the weak could outsmart the more powerful.b. borrowed heavily from English folktales but did add some African

    elements.

    c. formed the basis ofUncle Toms Cabin.d. introduced the character Paul Bunyan to American culture.

    e. were largely unknown until the making of a series of animated films in

    the twentieth century.

    ANS: A

    46. Compared to slave revolts in Brazil and in the West Indies, slave revolts in

    the United States were:a. larger in scale but less frequent.

    b. smaller in scale but more frequent.

    c. larger in scale and more frequent.d. smaller in scale and less frequent.

    e. bloodier and more successful.

    ANS: D

    47. Silent sabotage can be defined as when slaves:

    a. ran away.

    b. did poor work and broke tools.

    c. learned how to read and write.d. secretly met to worship.

    e. named their children after kin.

    ANS: B

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    48. Fugitive slaves:

    a. generally understood that the North Star led to freedom.

    b. were more likely to be women than men, because they were trying toescape sexual assault.

    c. succeeded in escaping more frequently from the Deep South because

    they had access to ships leaving ports like New Orleans and Charleston.d. benefited from the refusal of non-slaveowners to participate in patrolsthat looked for fugitives.

    e. who escaped to Canada were routinely returned to slavery by the British

    authorities.ANS: A

    49. Historians estimate that approximately ____________ slaves per year

    escaped to the North or Canada.a. 500

    b. 1,000

    c. 2,000d. 5,000

    e. 10,000

    ANS: B

    50. Harriet Tubman:

    a. was a mythical character about whom runaway slaves told many stories.

    b. led a slave rebellion in Maryland in 1849 that resulted in two dozendeaths.

    c. although born free in New York, was kidnapped and made a slave in

    Louisiana.

    d. cleverly escaped from slavery by pretending to be a sickly maleslaveowner.

    e. was a fugitive slave who risked her life many times to bring others out of

    slavery.ANS: E

    51. Denmark Veseys conspiracy:a. reflected a combination of American and African influences.

    b. took place in 1831 and was a success.

    c. reflected the belief of the conspirators that the Bible endorsed slavery.

    d. was discovered, but Vesey escaped North to freedom.e. resulted in over twenty deaths of white men, women, and children.

    ANS: A

    52. Joseph Cinqu led a slave rebellion:a. that nearly captured a fort in Charleston, South Carolina.

    b. aboard theAmistad.

    c. that inspired the gag rule.d. in southern Virginia.

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    e. that established the Republic of Haiti.

    ANS: B

    53. Which statement about Nat Turners Rebellion is true?

    a. Turner and his followers assaulted mostly men.

    b. Fewer than twenty whites were killed during the rebellion.c. Turner escaped capture.d. Many southern whites were in a panic after the rebellion.

    e. It occurred in Georgia.

    ANS: D