Official June SAT II US History Thread

<p>Oooh. On that TR one, I didn't know if it was Panama or Open Door. I said Panama Canal....</p>

<p>I put citizenship for the second picture of the african american.</p>

<p>i put radical republicans and for the 2nd one, "black veterans deserved citizenship" or something.</p>

<p>no it definitely was not the war veterans one.....</p>

<p>it was A i'm almost positive.</p>

<p>it said which one didnt theo roosevelt do and i said pass the 15th amendment. Also one question was about the Dred Scott cause how blacks didnt have the right to sue in court and then it asked which one invalidated that statement. Was it the 14th or 15th, i forgot which made blacks citizens</p>

<p>Which one he DIDN'T do? ...Really? Ergh.</p>

<p>Black citizenship was 15th, wasn't it?</p>

<p>i was going to put the panama canal
but didn't TR have to sign a treaty with Britain saying that it wasn't going to be for ONLY the US...and that he would share the canal with britain or something like that</p>

<p>i put the open door</p>

<p>14th, I'm pretty sure.
darn about that thomas nast one...cartoons always get me.</p>

<p>isn't it
13th free
14th right to vote
15 free rights</p>

<p>i coudlnt' remember either</p>

<p>And shoot i got that TR one wrong if its what he didn't do</p>

<p>2100 or bust - I guess northern democrat does make a bit of sense... but I'm pretty sure the fact that the soldier was black makes it a different message than just all veterans in general.</p>

<p>dan112931 - I believe the answer the answer was 14th amendment. 13 = abolish slavery, 14 = citizenship, and 15 = voting rights (From the top of my head)</p>

<p>yeawh i forgot the order of the amendments completly</p>

<p>it was radical republican
theo roosevelt...panama canal?...open door policy woudl have been linked to john hay, wouldnt it?</p>

<p>i just looked it up and the answer is 14th. The fifteenth was right to vote, while the fourteenth gave people citizenship.</p>

<p>what was the answer for that question with the building</p>

<p>It was something about wealth and European ideas.</p>

<p>it was 14, not 15, 15 gave right to vote, 14 made them citizens which reversed the dred scott case</p>

<p>I'm pretty sure the Teddy question asked which he DID do, not which he DIDN'T.</p>

<p>It was either Panama or Open Door. I know he did both of them, but wasn't sure on the "exclusive" part of Panama... crap... I really should have put down Open Door because it was a shorter answer and thus less parts could be wrong with it (because I know Open Door took place with him in office). But I put Panama... and now I'm regretting it somewhat unless one of you guys can say otherwise :D</p>

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<p>yeah i was deciding between that one and land ownership, but doesn't the grandfather clause and literary tests count as selective disenfrachisement? and didn't most former slaves become tenant farmers?</p>

<p>deus.ex.machina, which question are you talking about?</p>

<p>EDIT: nevermind, I know which one. I put they didn't get significant land gains because it asked for the time period 1875-1900, which is after reconstruction was over.
EDIT2: or maybe I'm talking about something else heh</p>

<p>And has the demographics quesiton already been answered? because if it has, I missed it :O</p>

<p>I'm pretty sure Panama is right. Open Door is most linked to sec of state John Hay who served first under McKinley. Open door is McKinley, just checked it. Not theo</p>