b. He vetoed a bill to extend the life of the Freedmen’s Bureau.
c. He bribed a Republican senator to support his Reconstruction policies.
d. He defiantly released a letter showing he had given support to the Confederacy in 1863.
e. He allegedly violated the Tenure of Office Act.
60. When assessing the impeachment of Andrew Johnson, what can be determined about this issue?
a. Both Congress and the president accused the other of unconstitutional acts.
b. Johnson was willing to compromise, but Congress was unwilling to listen.
c. The moderate Republicans hoped in general terms to weaken the office of president.
d. Johnson had little support from white southerners.
e. Johnson survived being removed from office due to overwhelming support from his cabinet.
61. Which of the following statements is true of the Reconstruction Act?
a. It ended the sharecropping system.
b. It established black men’s legal right to vote in the former Confederacy.
c. It banned the use of federal troops for enforcing civil rights laws in the southern states.
d. It ended the period known as “Radical Reconstruction.”
e. It was supported by President Johnson.
62. Why was Andrew Johnson acquitted on charges of impeachment?
a. Johnson’s lawyers assured moderate Republicans that he would behave for the rest of his term, so several voted to acquit him.
b. No one would testify against him.
c. Leading Radical Republican Benjamin Wade brilliantly managed the president’s defense.
d. Ulysses Grant urged Republicans to acquit Johnson because convicting him might hurt Grant’s chances in the presidential
election.
e. Many feared a constitutional crisis because, without a vice president in office, no one knew who would succeed Johnson as
president.
63. “Waving the bloody shirt” referred to
a. a powerful symbol of Ku Klux Klan violence against African-Americans.
b. a Democratic campaign prop that reminded voters that Republicans had been responsible for the Civil War.