SAT II US History : U.S. Political History from 1790 to 1898

Study concepts, example questions & explanations for SAT II US History

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Example Questions

Example Question #111 : U.S. Political History From 1790 To 1898

The executive under the Articles of Confederation is closest in comparison to which of the following?

Possible Answers:

The Prime Minister of England

King George III

Cardinal Borgia, or Pope Alexander VI

None of these answers are correct.

Correct answer:

None of these answers are correct.

Explanation:

This should have been a fairly cut and dry question. There was no executive under the government of the Articles of Confederation! That was one of the major weaknesses of the Articles of Confederation. Thus all of the other answers are incorrect. 

Example Question #112 : U.S. Political History From 1790 To 1898

The Wilmot Proviso purported to restrict slavery from entering ____________.

Possible Answers:

Any land procured from the Mexican War

Land purchased in the Louisiana Purchase

None of the answers are correct

Land purchased, if any, from Cuba

Correct answer:

Any land procured from the Mexican War

Explanation:

The Wilmot Proviso was a narrowly-failed bill that attempted to keep slavery out from any of the territories gained from the Mexican War. Clearly, this undermined support from the South in respect to the Mexican-American War (Southerners wanted to be able to bring any slaves they had to any newly-acquired territories). Moreover, the issue of slavery and new territories led to the creation and passage of the Compromise of 1850.

Example Question #113 : U.S. Political History From 1790 To 1898

President Lincoln signed the Wade-Davis Bill into law shortly after the radical Republican Congress passed the bill.

Possible Answers:

None of these answers are accurate.

True

False, Lincoln did pass the Wade-Davis Bill, but did so before Congress had approved it

False, Lincoln actually vetoed the bill

Correct answer:

False, Lincoln actually vetoed the bill

Explanation:

President Lincoln actually thought that the Wade-Davis Bill was far too draconian (meaning, went too far in its punishment) and thus pocket-vetoed the bill. Technically speaking, a pocket-veto is less confrontational than an actual veto (the President simply refuses to act—sign or veto—on a bill for ten days after Congress has adjourned), but Lincoln’s pocket veto infuriated the Radical Republicans in Congress, who viewed the bill as just desserts for the rebellious southerners.

Example Question #114 : U.S. Political History From 1790 To 1898

Tecumseh Sherman is best known for which of the following?

Possible Answers:

 The burning of Atlanta in his famous “March to the Sea”

The riots he incited in Jackson, MS, after publishing his book, The Help

The burning of Tara plantation in Gone with the Wind

The assassination of Abraham Lincoln

Correct answer:

 The burning of Atlanta in his famous “March to the Sea”

Explanation:

Sherman is best known for his famous “march to the sea” where he implemented the brutally effective “scorched earth” policy and quite literally burned Atlanta (GA) to the ground while marching to Savannah. This was, of course, depicted in both Margaret Mitchell’s Gone with the Wind (1936), and the movie based off of the novel. This answer (about Gone with the Wind) is not correct, however, because the actual event happened in real life, and it is for that real even that Sherman is known. The Help had nothing to do with Sherman’s march to the sea, and John Wilkes Booth assassinated Lincoln. For these reasons all of the other answers are incorrect.

Example Question #115 : U.S. Political History From 1790 To 1898

Andrew Jackson favored the National Bank so much that he actively campaigned for the renewal of its charter.

Possible Answers:

True

False, the National Bank was abolished prior to Jackson's presidency

False, Jackson neither favored nor disliked the National Bank

 False, Jackson hated the National Bank

Correct answer:

 False, Jackson hated the National Bank

Explanation:

This should have been a relatively easy question. Jackson absolutely hated the National Bank—he was convinced that it was an unconstitutional expenditure of Congress’ power (regardless of what the Supreme Court said). In fact, he hated the bank so much that he actually vetoed the bill that attempted to recharter the bank in 1832. Thus, clearly, he did not favor the bank in any sense. 

Example Question #91 : Facts And Details In U.S. Political History From 1790 To 1898

Which of the following accurately describes the Nullification Crisis?

Possible Answers:

John C. Calhoun, basing much of his reasoning off of the VA and KY resolutions, wrote an “Exposition and Protest” that purported to give state conventions the power to (essentially) veto federal laws.

None of these answers are correct.

Andrew Jackson, basing much of his reasoning off of the Declaration of Independence, agreed with Calhoun—that states have the power to nullify federal law.

Martin Van Buren, basing much of his reasoning off of the Constitution, agreed with Calhoun—that states have the power to nullify federal laws.

Correct answer:

John C. Calhoun, basing much of his reasoning off of the VA and KY resolutions, wrote an “Exposition and Protest” that purported to give state conventions the power to (essentially) veto federal laws.

Explanation:

This was a relatively straightforward question—so long as you remembered the names of the actors involved. The nullification crisis, weirdly enough, set up two states’ rights activists against each other: John C. Calhoun and Andrew Jackson. Andrew Jackson, as president, lined up behind the Tariff of 1828 (the South called this the “Tariff of Abominations” they hated it so much). John C. Calhoun, Jackson’s vice president, was infuriated by this exercise of federal power (which, in his and many southerners’ eyes, hurt the south disproportionately) and eventually resigned from his post as vice president to return to South Carolina and fight the Tariff. For this reason, all of the other answers are correct.

Example Question #453 : Sat Subject Test In United States History

Which of the following, collectively, are called the “Civil War Amendments”?

Possible Answers:

Correct answer:

Explanation:

This should have been an easy question.  collectively are called the Civil War Amendments, as they were all passed directly in the wake of the civil war. If you remember what these amendments do, it actually makes a lot of sense: the  Amendment freed the slaves, the  Amendment granted citizenship to all born on American soil (with some other bells and whistles), and the  Amendment granted the right to vote to all men.

Example Question #116 : U.S. Political History From 1790 To 1898

Which of the following parties ran under the slogan “Free Soil, Free Speech, Free Labor, Free Men”?

Possible Answers:

The Democrats

The Free Soil Party

The Liberty Party

The Whigs

Correct answer:

The Free Soil Party

Explanation:

Sometimes the obvious answer is the correct one—in this question, that is the case. The Free Soil Party ran under this slogan. The Liberty Party may have been a tempting answer—and for good reason—as the Free Soil Party formed out of the former Liberty Party supporters. The same goes for the anti-slavery faction of the Whigs.

Example Question #117 : U.S. Political History From 1790 To 1898

It was possible to buy ones way out of mandatory military service (the draft, essentially) in the Civil War.

Possible Answers:

None of these answers is accurate.

False, the draft was need blind

True, but only in the North

This statement is unambiguously true

Correct answer:

This statement is unambiguously true

Explanation:

This is true, and it led to much grief in between classes. Both the north and the south allowed for a special dispensation for those who could afford it. In other words, so long as you (or your family) could pay X amount (it was set by the Confederacy or the US Government—depending on the side) you could buy your way out of service. This, of course, led to the complaint that the Civil War was a “rich man’s war, but a poor man’s fight.” 

Example Question #118 : U.S. Political History From 1790 To 1898

Which battle of the Civil War was the bloodiest, resulting in more than 23,000 casualties at the end of only one day? 

Possible Answers:

2nd Battle of Bull Run 

Battle of Antietam

1st Battle of Bull Run 

Battle of Vicksburg

Battle of Gettysburg

Correct answer:

Battle of Antietam

Explanation:

The Battle of Antietam, which took place in September 1862, was a one day war during which over 23,000 people died. This battle was fought in Maryland, and was therefore the first battle of the civil was that was fought in Union territory.

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