Chapter 11 Review
1. What caused the American fur trade to move westward in the early
1800s? a. Fur companies wiped out the beaver population in the
East in their effort to meet European demand for the popular “high hat.”
b. Fur trappers called “mountain men” wanted to be the first to map western territory and asked the American Fur Company to sponsor their journey.
c. The American Fur Company sent mountain men to the West in its effort to beat its competitors from Europe and the East.
d. American Indian trappers from the Pacific Northwest were acclaimed for their skill and eastern companies wanted to know their secrets.
a. Fur companies wiped out the beaver population in the East in their effort to meet European demand for the popular “high hat.”
2. All of these were challenges that pioneers faced on the Oregon Trail
EXCEPT?
a. shortages of food, supplies, and waterb. mistreatment by American Indiansc. barriers such as mountainsd. the high cost of moving a family
b. mistreatment by American Indians
3. Which was true about the Oregon Trail?
a. It ran through the Appalachian Mountains.b. It was a gravel paved road that made
travel much easier than normal trailsc. It required protection by U.S. government
troops.d. It took six months to travel.
d. It took six months to travel.
4. When they first moved from New York in the early 1830s, what did
Mormons hope to find in the West?
a. gold and other natural resourcesb. a sense of religious freedomc. a site for their Great Templed. a set of silver tablets with religious
teachings
b. a sense of religious freedom
5. Which practice caused Mormons to be persecuted in the
1850s? a. the ritual slaughter of animalsb. the circumcision of newborn malesc. marriage to more than one wifed. sacrificing humans to the sun god
c. marriage to more than one wife
6. By December 1860, the Mormon population of Utah had reached about
40,000 people because of the efforts of which church leader?
a. Brigham Youngb. Joseph Ratzingerc. Joseph Smithd. L. Ron Hubbard
a. Brigham Young
7. Why did Mexican priest Father Miguel Hidalgo y Costilla lead about 80,000 American Indians and
mestizos in a rebellion in 1810?
a. The people were uprooted and thought an attack would push American settlers back over Mexico’s northern border.
b. The priest believed that the “meek will inherit the earth” and wanted to make the Christian dream a reality.
c. The people were poor and thought independence from the Spanish monarchy would improve their lives.
d. The priest believed that Mexico should have a Christian king and wanted to take the place of the secular monarch.
c. The people were poor and thought independence from
the Spanish
#8 Who was Stephen F. Austin?
a. an empresario who started a colony on the lower Colorado River in 1822
b. an American agent who enforced Mexico’s laws on new settlers until 1830
c. the only American to witness the signing of the Mexican constitution in 1824
d. a southern settler who spurred Texans to defy the ban on slavery in 1831
a. an empresario who started a colony on the lower Colorado
River in 1822
#9 After 1824, all of the following created conflicts between the Mexican government and American
settlers in Texas EXCEPT Mexico’s
a. requirement of citizenship.b. prohibition on importing slaves.c. strict enforcement of its laws.d. heavy taxation of settled lands.
d. heavy taxation of settled lands.
#10. “…I call on you in the name of Liberty, of patriotism, and everything dear to the American character, to come to our aid with all dispatch [speed]…
VICTORY OR DEATH.”--from a letter written by William Travis
Travis wrote those words during the build-up to which important battle of the Texas War for
Independence?
a. the Battle of Goliadb. the Battle of the Alamoc. the Battle of Gonzalesd. the Battle of San Jacinto
b. the Battle of the Alamo
11. Why was the Battle of the Alamo significant to the outcome of the Texas
Revolution? a. Frontiersman Davy Crockett and Colonel Jim
Bowie joined the Texan defenses.b. The Texans were beaten, but Sam Houston’s
forces were inspired to win the Battle of San Jacinto.
c. Prisoners who had surrendered at Goliad were released, adding to the Texan defenses.
d. The Texans suffered heavy losses, but the survivors overcame Antonio López de Santa Anna’s army.
b. The Texans were beaten, but Sam Houston’s forces were inspired to win the Battle of San Jacinto.
12. President Jackson refused to annex Texas because doing so would have
a. upset the balance between free and slave states.
b. gone against the wishes of Congress.c. encouraged wars of independence in
other border areas.d. admitted to the British that western
expansion had ended.
a. upset the balance between free and slave states.
13. What is another way of saying “manifest destiny”?
a. “clear choice”b. “people’s future”c. “obvious fate”d. “humanity’s end”
c. “obvious fate”
14. How did the slavery issue get tied up with “manifest destiny” in the 1840s and
’50s? a. Slaveholders did not know if ownership claims
would be honored in the new territories.b. Americans did not know if the institution of
slavery would be allowed in the new territories.c. Slavery went against the democratic values
implied by the philosophy of “manifest destiny.”d. Southern slaveholders thought expansion in the
spirit of “manifest destiny” would cause their region to lose power.
b. Americans did not know if the institution of slavery would be allowed in the new territories.
15. Why did President John Tyler, a Whig from Virginia, favor the annexation of Texas
during the Election of 1844? a. He was pressured by southerners who
threatened to give their votes to Senator Henry Clay.
b. He wanted Texas to be a free state that could not compete with the South’s plantations.
c. He thought the annexation of Texas would increase the power of southern slave states.
d. He stood in opposition to James K. Polk, who ran on a platform against annexation.
c. He thought the annexation of Texas would increase the power of southern slave
states.
16. Americans cried “Fifty-four forty or fight!” in reference to
a. the line to which they wanted their northern territory to extend.
b. the number of prisoners they wanted Santa Anna to release.
c. the line that marked the northern border of what is now California.
d. the number of American fighters whose deaths they wanted to avenge.
a. the line to which they wanted their northern
territory to extend.
17. Who referred to a piece of land as a “stolen province,” and what were they talking
about? a. The British, about Oregon Countryb. The American Indians, about Utahc. The Mexicans, about Texasd. The Spanish, about California
c. The Mexicans, about Texas
18. In 1821, Mexico won its independence from Spain. What
happened in California as a result? a. Californios fought for independence from
Mexico.b. American Indians were given parcels of
land called ranchos.c. Mexican businessmen planned a rail route
to Canada.d. Mexican officials terminated the mission
system.
d. Mexican officials terminated the mission system.
19. What happened during the Bear Flag Revolt?
a. A union of Spanish settlers rose up against the Californios in the Mission district of San Francisco.
b. John C. Frémont’s mapping expedition fought off a black bear while crossing the Sierra Nevadas.
c. General Taylor led his troops across the Rio Grande to protect Texas against a Mexican uprising.
d. A small group of Americans seized the town of Sonoma and declared California’s independence.
d. A small group of Americans seized the town of Sonoma and declared California’s
independence.
20. How did the Treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo, signed in 1848, affect the United
States? a. It drew the border line that divides the
U.S. from Mexico to this day.b. It enabled the U.S. to collect $18 million in
property taxes from Mexico.c. It increased the size of the U.S. by almost
25 percent.d. It gave the U.S. the southern parts of
present-day Arizona and New Mexico.
c. It increased the size of the U.S. by almost 25 percent.
21. How did the Gadsden Purchase benefit the United States?
a. It promised to safeguard the property rights of longtime U.S. residents.
b. It allowed the U.S. to purchase the northern part of present day Arizona.
c. It gave the U.S. hunting rights in the area of Texas north of the Rio Grande.
d. It secured a southern route for a transcontinental railroad on American soil.
d. It secured a southern route for a transcontinental railroad on
American soil.
22. How did Brigham Young’s influence resolve the western dispute over water rights?
a. Young supported the eastern U.S. tradition regarding equal access to water.
b. Young felt that irrigation was less effective than dams or canals for large-scale agriculture.
c. Young promoted the idea that the good of the community should outweigh the interests of individuals.
d. Young felt that addressing individual water use was the key to resolving the problem for the entire community.
c. Young promoted the idea that the good of the community should
outweigh the interests of individuals.
23. In the 1830s to 1840s, why did a growing number of Americans travel the
California Trail? a. Recently published Anglo-Californian
guidebooks persuaded settlers to move to the region.
b. American and Mexican merchants would meet in California to trade factory-made goods for precious coins, hides, and tallow.
c. Taken by the spirit of “manifest destiny,” many Americans decided to settle permanently at the continent’s western edge.
d. American cattle ranchers were attracted by the Spanish government’s promise of Mexican land.
b. American and Mexican merchants would meet in California to trade factory-made goods for precious coins, hides, and tallow.
24. What lesson might a western traveler have learned from the story of the Donner party?
a. “There are no good shortcuts.”b. “Don’t always trust what you read in the
papers.”c. “Always travel with a friend.”d. “Help is on the way.”
a. “There are no good shortcuts.”
25. Which description fits the group of people known as “forty-niners”?
a. gold-seekers from America and abroad who migrated to California
b. individualistic prospectors of California gold-mining sites
c. middle-aged married men with previous gold-mining experience
d. Mexicans and South Americans who immigrated to find gold
a. gold-seekers from America and abroad who migrated to California
26. Which of these statements about the consequences of the Gold Rush years is true?
a. The population of San Francisco grew, by over twenty-five times, to more than 25,000.
b. The vast majority of gold-rush miners left California and took their earnings to their families back east.
c. Mexicans and South Americans came to make up the largest foreign group in the mining region.
d. The large amount of gold in circulation in California caused severe deflation, meaning prices dropped.
a. The population of San Francisco grew, by over
twenty-five times, to more than 25,000
27. What happened to California’s population as a result of the Gold Rush?
a. The population grew, but not as much as it had during the Spanish and Mexican periods of settlement.
b. Immigrants and Americans flocked to California to “get rich quick” and stayed to build a stable frontier society.
c. The population boomed during “gold fever,” but declined just as quickly because of inflation.
d. Californios and American Indians still outnumbered immigrants and Americans after the Gold Rush.
b. Immigrants and Americans flocked to California to “get
rich quick” and stayed to build a stable frontier society.
28. As a result of the population explosion of the “gold fever” years,
California became a. eligible for statehood.b. more populous than any other region in
the country.c. richer than any other region in the country.d. off limits to new immigrants.
a. eligible for statehood.
29. What role did the Transcontinental Railroad play in California’s development?
a. It contributed to California’s population explosion by bringing settlers to the West in the mid-1850s.
b. It gave California’s economy the means to grow by connecting the state to the rest of the country.
c. It slowed down California’s economy because it took two decades and many thousands of dollars to complete.
d. It damaged California’s environment by requiring the development of coal mining and timber industries.
b. It gave California’s economy the means to grow by connecting the state to the rest of the country.
30. Which of the following was least important to the South’s economy in the 1830s?
a. small farmingb. plantation agriculturec. manufacturingd. trade
c. manufacturing
31. Which of the following was not a difference between the North and the South ?
a. conflicting views on the issue of slaveryb. different economic interestsc. disagreement over the Indian removal
policyd. disagreement over protective tariffs
c. disagreement over the Indian removal policy
32. What was the main job of the early mountain men of the West?
a. to make mapsb. to trap furs to trade with merchantsc. to establish friends with Native Americansd. to cut roads through the mountains
b. to trap furs to trade with merchants
33. Which of the following foreign nations did not have claims to the Oregon
Territory in the 1800s? a. Spainb. Francec. Englandd. Russia
b. France
34. Which of the following trails led settlers west from either Independence, Missouri or Council Bluffs, Iowa to the Willamette Valley
a. California Trailb. Mormon Trailc. Oregon Traild. Santa Fe Trail
c. Oregon Trail
35. What trail led merchants and settlers west from Independence, Missouri to New
Mexico? a. California Trailb. Mormon Trailc. Oregon Traild. Santa Fe Trail
d. Santa Fe Trail
36. Who founded the Church of Jesus Christ of Later-Day Saints?
a. Brigham Youngb. Jim Bridgerc. Jedediah Smithd. Joseph Smith
d. Joseph Smith
37. Who was the leader of Mexico after they won their independence from Spain?
a. Miguel Hidalgo y Costillab. Antonio Lopez de Santa Annac. Comte de Rochambeaud. Bartolome de Las Casas
b. Antonio Lopez de Santa Anna
38. What battle of the Texas Revolution has stood for years as a lasting image
of Texas independence?
a. San Jacintob. Mexico Cityc. Alamod. Veracruz
c. Alamo
39. What was the fight for California’s independence from Mexico called?
a. The Battle of San Franciscob. The Bear Flag Revoltc. The San Diego Revoltd. The San Jacinto Slaughter
b. The Bear Flag Revolt
40. After Texas won its independence from Mexico who was elected as the President of
Texas? a. Stephen F. Austinb. Jim Bowiec. Davy Crockettd. Sam Houston
d. Sam Houston
41. What was the main reason that James K. Polk won the presidency against Henry
Clay in the election of 1844?
a. the economyb. the Spanish-American Warc. the expansion issued. the fight over slavery
c. the expansion issue
42. Britain and the United States decided on the northern border of Oregon at what point?
a. the 49th Parallelb. the 60th Parallelc. the 54th Paralleld. the 63rd Parallel
a. the 49th Parallel
43. What were the early Mexican residents of California who lived so far away from their
government called? a. Mestizosb. Mexicanosc. Creolesd. Californios
d. Californios
44. What was the name of the treaty that ended the Mexican and American War?
a. Treaty of San Jacintob. Treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgoc. Treaty of San Marcosd. Treaty of Sierra Madre
b. Treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo
45. Who was the German immigrant that designed heavy denim pants for miners?
a. James Wranglerb. Guido Sarducic. Robert E. Leed. Levi Strauss
d. Levi Strauss
46. At what battle were approximately 200 rebel volunteers able to hold off Mexican
General Antonio Lopez de Santa Anna with about 1800 troops for 12 days at an old
mission outside of San Antonio??
a. Battle of San Jacintob. Battle of the Alamoc. Battle of Buena Vistad. Battle of Goliad
b. Battle of the Alamo
47. At what battle was Colonel James Fannin and 350 Texans taken prisoner and
executed under the orders of General Antonio Lopez de Santa Anna?
d. The Battle of Goliad
48. Why did President Polk send diplomat John Slidell to Mexico City?
a. To explain that we had decided to declare war on them and wanted to give them advanced notice before we attacked
c. To discuss where Texas should put their capital following it gaining its independence from Spain and Mexico
b. To try and settle the border dispute by purchasing New Mexico and California
d. To get Mexico to pay the United States not to attack them to pay off our war debts from the Mexican-American War.
•B. To try and settle the border dispute by purchasing New Mexico and California
49. Where was the disputed territory between the United States and Mexico?
a. The far Northwestern part of the Mexican Territory in California between San Francisco and Los Angeles.
c. The area between Mexico City and the ancient city Tenochtitlan.
b. The Southwestern part of Texas between the Nueces River and the Rio Grande River.
d. The Southern parts of Arizona and New Mexico.
b. The Southwestern part of Texas between the Nueces River and the Rio Grande River.
50. What location did President Polk send Zachary Taylor to take up camp in March of 1846, knowing it would irritate the Mexican
Army and most likely provoke a fight?a.
to the northern border of the Rio Grande River
c.
to the far western part of Mexico near Tijuana.
b.
to San Diego which was southeast of San Franciso.
d.
to Buena Vista which was North of Mexico City.
a. to the northern border of the Rio
Grande River
51. What American general defeated the Mexican general, Antonio Lopez de Santa Anna in bitter fighting with many casualties at the Battle of Buena Vista in February of
1847?? a.
Andrew Jackson c.
Zachary Taylor
b.
Stephen F. Austin d.
Winfield Scott
a. Andrew Jackson
52. Who was the American general that defeated General Antonio Lopez de Santa Anna and took Mexico City on September
14, 1847??
a.
Andrew Jackson c.
Zachary Taylor
b.
Stephen F. Austin
d.
Winfield Scott
d. Winfield Scott
53. What was the name given to the acquisition of the entire states of Nevada, California, and Utah and parts of Arizona,
New Mexico, Colorado and Wyoming called?
a. Gadsden Purchaseb. The Louisiana Purchasec. Mexican Cessiond. Spanish Cession
c. Mexican Cession
54. How much did we agree to pay Mexico for the acquisition of the entire states of Nevada,
California, and Utah and parts of Arizona, New Mexico, Colorado, and Wyoming??
a. 5 million dollars c. 30 million dollars
b.
15 million dollars d.
100 million dollars
b. 15 million dollars
55. Which of the following were types of discrimination that Native Americans and Mexican Americans faced in the areas the United States acquired in the treaty that
ended the Mexican-American War?a. Legalb. Economicc. Sociald. All of the above
d. All of the above
56. Which of the following describe the type of searching for gold called “placer mining”?
a. digging shallow into the earth and breaking rocks using a hammer and pick
c. taking a large hammer or sledgehammer to break boulders into smaller rocks hoping to find gold
b. using a pan or other device to wash gold nuggets out of loose rock or gravel
d. using dynamite or nitro glycerin to blow up small areas and look for shiny rocks.
b. using a pan or other device to wash gold nuggets out of loose
rock or gravel
57. Which of the following best describes the average forty-niner?
a. young unmarried men in search of adventure
c. hard working men with families that had debts that finding gold would fix
b. middle aged men whose wife had left them and they had nothing to lose
d. foreigners from India, Russia, and the Middle East
a. young unmarried men in search of
adventure
58. What foreign country that suffered famine and economic hardships had men come to California looking for great wealth
and then planned to return home??
a.
India c.
China
b.
Russia d.
Germany
C. China
59. What was the name given to forty-niners that were looking and trying to find gold in
California?
a.
Searchers c.
Prospectors
b.
Panners d.
Entrepreneurs
c. Prospectors
60. Which of the following were agents that the Mexican government hired to bring
settlers into the area of Texas?a. Empresariosb. Californiosc. Vaquerosd. Gambusino
a. Empresarios
• All Done!