---
title: "APUSH Unit 5 Review: Civil War and Reconstruction, 1848-1877"
description: "AP US History Unit 5 covers Contextualizing Period 5, Manifest Destiny, and The Mexican-American War. Study guides, practice questions, and key terms."
canonical: "https://fiveable.me/apush/unit-5"
type: "unit"
subject: "AP US History"
unit: "Unit 5 – Civil War and Reconstruction, 1848–1877"
---

# APUSH Unit 5 Review: Civil War and Reconstruction, 1848-1877

## Overview

Unit 5 covers the collapse of compromise over slavery, the causes and conduct of the Civil War, and the successes and failures of Reconstruction from 1848 to 1877. Key themes include Manifest Destiny and territorial expansion, the breakdown of the Second Party System, Lincoln's wartime leadership, the Reconstruction Amendments, and the rise of sharecropping and Jim Crow.

## AP CED Alignment

This unit hub is organized around AP Course and Exam Description topics, skills, and exam task types when they are available in the source data.
- 5.1: Contextualizing Period 5
- 5.2: Manifest Destiny
- 5.3: The Mexican-American War
- 5.4: The Compromise of 1850
- 5.5: Sectional Conflict: Regional Differences
- 5.6: Failure of Compromise
- 5.7: Election of 1860 and Secession
- 5.8: Military Conflict in the Civil War
- 5.9: Government Policies During the Civil War
- 5.10: Reconstruction
- 5.11: Failures of Reconstruction
- 5.12: Comparison in Period 5
- 5.2-5.3: Manifest Destiny and the Mexican-American War
- 5.4-5.5: Compromise of 1850 and Sectional Tensions
- 5.6-5.7: Failure of Compromise and the Road to Secession
- 5.8-5.9: Civil War: Military Conflict and Government Policies
- 5.10: Reconstruction: Amendments, Policies, and Black Political Power
- 5.11-5.12: Failure of Reconstruction and Comparing Period 5
- Skill 2 - Sourcing and Situation
- Skill 4 - Contextualization
- Document-Based Question (DBQ)
- Short Answer Question 3 - Primary or Secondary Non-Text Source
- 5.11
- apush-3.A
- SAQ

## Topics

- [5.1: Contextualizing Period 5](/apush/unit-5/contextualizing-period-5/study-guide/4IjDIqCCZ4MNbXQ9gqev): Explains the economic, social, and political context of sectional conflict from 1844 to 1877, including the diverging Northern and Southern economies and the legacy of earlier territorial expansion.
- [5.2: Manifest Destiny](/apush/unit-5/manifest-destiny/study-guide/QCAKf0AWBCPTgZHZtUPD): Covers the ideology of Manifest Destiny, its role in driving westward migration, the Homestead Act, and U.S. diplomatic and economic outreach toward Asia.
- [5.3: The Mexican-American War](/apush/unit-5/mexican-american-war/study-guide/NMqiBxahosm76SKTghut): Examines the causes and effects of the war with Mexico, the Treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo, the Mexican Cession, and the Wilmot Proviso debate over slavery in new territories.
- [5.4: The Compromise of 1850](/apush/unit-5/compromise-1850/study-guide/SD3f1WJu48SnOd8v1RAm): Analyzes the five-part compromise including California statehood, popular sovereignty, and the strengthened Fugitive Slave Act, and explains why it failed to permanently resolve sectional tensions.
- [5.5: Sectional Conflict: Regional Differences](/apush/unit-5/sectional-conflict-before-civil-war/study-guide/Klx3eOhZBS11qtWKIvH2): Explores how Irish and German immigration reshaped the North, how nativism produced the Know-Nothing Party, and how free-labor ideology, abolitionism, and pro-slavery arguments deepened the sectional divide.
- [5.6: Failure of Compromise](/apush/unit-5/failure-compromise/study-guide/Pc8cAsWACsNLhZIwOHf3): Traces how the Kansas-Nebraska Act, Bleeding Kansas, and the Dred Scott decision each destroyed a potential compromise and accelerated the collapse of the Second Party System.
- [5.7: Election of 1860 and Secession](/apush/unit-5/election-1860-secession/study-guide/6wnMakCgnFOoTG2IEnSa): Covers Lincoln's victory on a free-soil platform without Southern electoral votes, the Lincoln-Douglas Debates, Southern secession, and the firing on Fort Sumter.
- [5.8: Military Conflict in the Civil War](/apush/unit-5/military-conflict-civil-war/study-guide/d9NgoNY74uuvfh4RmD6l): Examines Union and Confederate military strategies, the Anaconda Plan, key battles including Antietam and Gettysburg, Sherman's March to the Sea, and the Union's material advantages.
- [5.9: Government Policies During the Civil War](/apush/unit-5/government-policies-during-civil-war/study-guide/rI7StngOCC4D0qsmkDvV): Analyzes Lincoln's Emancipation Proclamation, the Gettysburg Address, conscription and home front opposition, and how wartime policy expanded the war's purpose beyond preserving the Union.
- [5.10: Reconstruction](/apush/unit-5/reconstruction/study-guide/DiWHCM2v4Drc73iIcfDS): Covers the 13th, 14th, and 15th Amendments, Congressional Reconstruction, the Freedman's Bureau, Black political participation, and the debate over women's rights during Reconstruction.
- [5.11: Failures of Reconstruction](/apush/unit-5/reconstruction/study-guide/DiWHCM2v4Drc73iIcfDS): Explains how sharecropping, Black Codes, KKK violence, Supreme Court decisions, and the Compromise of 1877 dismantled Reconstruction gains and established Jim Crow segregation.
- [5.12: Comparison in Period 5](/apush/unit-5/comparison-period-5/study-guide/F4PJCNduTfAlJJKn5VEj): Asks students to compare the relative significance of the Civil War's effects on American values, national identity, citizenship, and equality across the full 1844-1877 period.

## Hardest Topics And Analytics

Snapshot: practice snapshot
This snapshot uses Fiveable practice activity to show where students tend to miss questions and which review moves are worth prioritizing first.
- **72% average MCQ accuracy** (Across 45k multiple-choice practice attempts for this unit.)
- **45k MCQ attempts** (Practice activity included in this snapshot.)
- **68% average FRQ score** (Across 197 scored free-response attempts for this unit.)
- **40% average SAQ score** (Across 121 scored short-answer attempts for this unit.)
- **5.6: Failure of Compromise**: 37% MCQ miss rate across 3390 attempts. Review Failure of Compromise with attention to how the concept appears in AP-style source and evidence questions.
- **5.11: Failures of Reconstruction**: 30% MCQ miss rate across 2528 attempts. Review Failures of Reconstruction with attention to how the concept appears in AP-style source and evidence questions.
- **5.5: Sectional Conflict: Regional Differences**: 28% MCQ miss rate across 5001 attempts. Review Sectional Conflict: Regional Differences with attention to how the concept appears in AP-style source and evidence questions.
- **5.3: The Mexican-American War**: 28% MCQ miss rate across 4347 attempts. Review The Mexican-American War with attention to how the concept appears in AP-style source and evidence questions.

## Review Notes

### 5.1: Contextualizing Period 5

Period 5 builds directly on the Market Revolution and territorial growth of Period 4. By the 1840s, the North's industrial free-labor economy and the South's enslaved-labor plantation economy had diverged sharply, making every new territory a flashpoint. Westward expansion, immigration, and debates over citizenship all intensified between 1844 and 1877.

- **Sectional conflict**: The deepening political and economic divide between the free-labor North and the slave-labor South, rooted in contrasting economic systems and moral arguments about slavery.
- **Free-labor ideology**: The Northern belief that wage labor and economic mobility were morally superior to enslaved labor, and that slavery's expansion threatened white workers' opportunities.
- **States' rights**: The Southern argument that individual states retained the constitutional authority to protect slavery against federal interference.

**Checkpoint:** What economic and ideological differences between North and South made compromise over new territories so difficult by the 1840s?

Region | Economic base | Labor system | View on expansion of slavery
--- | --- | --- | ---
North | Manufacturing and commerce | Free wage labor | Opposed expansion; free-soil movement
South | Cotton and plantation agriculture | Enslaved labor | Demanded equal access to new territories

### 5.2-5.3: Manifest Destiny and the Mexican-American War

Manifest Destiny was the belief that the United States was destined to expand across the continent. President James K. Polk used it to justify annexing Texas and provoking war with Mexico. The Treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo (1848) transferred the Mexican Cession to the United States, immediately raising the question of whether slavery would be permitted in the new lands. The Wilmot Proviso, which would have banned slavery in all territory gained from Mexico, passed the House but failed in the Senate, previewing the sectional deadlock ahead.

- **Manifest Destiny**: The ideological belief that U.S. expansion across North America to the Pacific was both inevitable and divinely sanctioned, used to justify territorial acquisition and displacement of Native peoples and Mexicans.
- **Mexican Cession**: The vast territory including present-day California, Nevada, Utah, and parts of Arizona and New Mexico that Mexico ceded to the United States after the Mexican-American War under the Treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo.
- **Wilmot Proviso**: An 1846 proposal to ban slavery from any territory acquired from Mexico; it passed the House but failed in the Senate, exposing the sectional divide over slavery's expansion.
- **Homestead Act**: An 1862 law granting 160 acres of public land to settlers who improved it, accelerating westward migration during and after the Civil War.

**Checkpoint:** How did the Mexican-American War directly intensify the debate over slavery's expansion?

Event | Territory gained | Slavery question raised
--- | --- | ---
Treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo (1848) | Mexican Cession: CA, NV, UT, AZ, NM | Wilmot Proviso debate in Congress
Gadsden Purchase (1854) | Southern AZ and NM strip | Southern railroad route and slavery access

### 5.4-5.5: Compromise of 1850 and Sectional Tensions

The Compromise of 1850 attempted to resolve the crisis over the Mexican Cession through a package deal: California entered as a free state, the remaining territories would use popular sovereignty to decide on slavery, the slave trade was abolished in Washington D.C., and the Fugitive Slave Act was strengthened. The Fugitive Slave Act outraged many Northerners by requiring them to assist in capturing escaped enslaved people, fueling abolitionist sentiment. Meanwhile, large-scale immigration from Ireland and Germany reshaped Northern cities and sparked a nativist backlash through the Know-Nothing Party.

- **Compromise of 1850**: A package of five laws brokered by Henry Clay and Stephen Douglas that admitted California as a free state, applied popular sovereignty to new territories, and strengthened the Fugitive Slave Act.
- **Fugitive Slave Act**: Part of the Compromise of 1850 requiring Northern citizens and officials to assist in returning escaped enslaved people to their enslavers, intensifying Northern opposition to slavery.
- **Popular sovereignty**: The principle that settlers of a territory, rather than Congress, should decide whether to allow slavery, used in the Compromise of 1850 and the Kansas-Nebraska Act.
- **Know-Nothing Party**: A nativist political movement of the 1850s that opposed Irish and German Catholic immigration and sought to limit immigrants' political influence.

**Checkpoint:** Why did the Fugitive Slave Act make the Compromise of 1850 more divisive in the North rather than settling the slavery debate?

Group | Response to Compromise of 1850
--- | ---
Southern slaveholders | Satisfied by stronger Fugitive Slave Act but suspicious of California's free-state status
Northern moderates | Accepted compromise as necessary to preserve the Union
Northern abolitionists | Outraged by Fugitive Slave Act; aided escaped enslaved people more openly
Free-Soilers | Opposed popular sovereignty as a threat to free labor in new territories

### 5.6-5.7: Failure of Compromise and the Road to Secession

The Kansas-Nebraska Act of 1854 repealed the Missouri Compromise line and applied popular sovereignty to Kansas and Nebraska, triggering violent conflict in Kansas known as Bleeding Kansas. The Dred Scott decision (1857) ruled that Congress had no authority to ban slavery in any territory and that Black Americans were not citizens, effectively invalidating the free-soil position. These events destroyed the Whig Party and gave rise to the Republican Party on a free-soil platform. Lincoln's victory in the 1860 election without a single Southern electoral vote convinced most slave states to secede, and Confederate forces fired on Fort Sumter in April 1861.

- **Kansas-Nebraska Act**: An 1854 law that created the territories of Kansas and Nebraska and applied popular sovereignty to both, effectively repealing the Missouri Compromise and reigniting the slavery debate.
- **Dred Scott decision**: The 1857 Supreme Court ruling that enslaved people were property, not citizens, that Congress could not ban slavery in territories, and that the Missouri Compromise had been unconstitutional.
- **Bleeding Kansas**: The violent guerrilla conflict in Kansas Territory between pro-slavery and anti-slavery settlers following the Kansas-Nebraska Act, symbolizing the failure of popular sovereignty.
- **1860 election**: The presidential election in which Abraham Lincoln won on a free-soil Republican platform without carrying any Southern state, triggering the secession of most slave states.

**Checkpoint:** How did the Kansas-Nebraska Act and the Dred Scott decision each undermine the possibility of a legislative compromise over slavery?

Event | Year | Effect on sectional conflict
--- | --- | ---
Compromise of 1850 | 1850 | Temporarily reduced tension but angered abolitionists
Kansas-Nebraska Act | 1854 | Repealed Missouri Compromise; sparked Bleeding Kansas
Dred Scott decision | 1857 | Declared congressional bans on slavery unconstitutional; radicalized both sides
Election of 1860 | 1860 | Lincoln's victory without Southern votes triggered secession

### 5.8-5.9: Civil War: Military Conflict and Government Policies

The Civil War became a total war requiring full mobilization of both societies. The Union held key advantages: a larger population, an industrial economy, an extensive railroad network, and naval power used in the Anaconda Plan to blockade Southern ports and control the Mississippi River. The Confederacy relied on defensive strategy and hoped European powers would intervene. Lincoln's issuance of the Emancipation Proclamation on January 1, 1863, reframed the war as a fight against slavery, discouraged British and French recognition of the Confederacy, and encouraged tens of thousands of Black men to enlist in the Union Army. The Gettysburg Address articulated the war's purpose as fulfilling the founding promise of equality. Union victories at Antietam, Gettysburg, and Sherman's March to the Sea destroyed Confederate infrastructure and morale.

- **Anaconda Plan**: Union General Winfield Scott's strategy to blockade Southern ports and control the Mississippi River, economically strangling the Confederacy.
- **Emancipation Proclamation**: Lincoln's executive order of January 1, 1863, declaring enslaved people in Confederate-held territory free, transforming the war's purpose and discouraging European support for the Confederacy.
- **Gettysburg Address**: Lincoln's 1863 speech dedicating the Gettysburg cemetery, which reframed the war as a struggle to fulfill the Declaration of Independence's promise of equality.
- **March to the Sea**: General Sherman's 1864 campaign from Atlanta to Savannah that deliberately destroyed Confederate infrastructure and civilian resources, exemplifying total war strategy.
- **Conscription**: The military draft implemented by both the Union and Confederacy to meet troop needs, which sparked opposition including the New York Draft Riots of 1863.

**Checkpoint:** How did the Emancipation Proclamation change both the military and diplomatic dimensions of the Civil War?

Factor | Union | Confederacy
--- | --- | ---
Population | 22 million | 9 million (including 3.5 million enslaved)
Industrial capacity | Extensive manufacturing and railroads | Limited industry; relied on agriculture
Military strategy | Anaconda Plan; total war; Grant's attrition | Defensive strategy; hoped for European recognition
Diplomatic outcome | Emancipation Proclamation blocked European support | Failed to gain British or French recognition

### 5.10: Reconstruction: Amendments, Policies, and Black Political Power

Reconstruction posed three central questions: what to do with former Confederate states, what rights to grant formerly enslaved people, and whether Congress or the president would control the process. Lincoln's lenient 10% Plan was replaced after his assassination by Congressional Reconstruction, which divided the South into military districts and required states to ratify the Reconstruction Amendments before rejoining the Union. The 13th Amendment abolished slavery, the 14th granted citizenship and equal protection, and the 15th prohibited denying the vote based on race. Black communities built schools, churches, and political organizations; Black men served in state legislatures and Congress. The women's rights movement was divided over the 14th and 15th Amendments because neither granted women the vote.

- **13th Amendment**: Ratified in 1865, it abolished slavery and involuntary servitude throughout the United States except as criminal punishment.
- **14th Amendment**: Ratified in 1868, it granted citizenship to all persons born or naturalized in the United States and guaranteed equal protection under the law, directly overturning the Dred Scott decision.
- **15th Amendment**: Ratified in 1870, it prohibited denying the right to vote based on race, color, or previous condition of servitude.
- **Freedman's Bureau**: A federal agency established in 1865 to assist formerly enslaved people and poor whites in the South through education, employment assistance, and legal protection.
- **Congressional Reconstruction plan**: The Radical Republican program that divided the South into military districts, required ratification of the 14th Amendment, and mandated new state constitutions before readmission to the Union.

**Checkpoint:** What were the major differences between Lincoln's 10% Plan and Congressional Reconstruction, and why did Radical Republicans reject Lincoln's approach?

Plan | Who controlled it | Requirements for readmission | Stance on Black rights
--- | --- | --- | ---
Lincoln's 10% Plan | President | 10% of voters swear loyalty oath; accept end of slavery | Minimal explicit protections
Congressional Reconstruction | Congress (Radical Republicans) | Military districts; ratify 14th Amendment; new state constitutions | Black male suffrage required; civil rights enforced by troops

### 5.11-5.12: Failure of Reconstruction and Comparing Period 5

Reconstruction's gains were systematically dismantled through violence, legal manipulation, and federal retreat. The Ku Klux Klan and similar groups used terror to suppress Black voting. Black Codes and later Jim Crow laws restricted Black economic and political life. Sharecropping trapped formerly enslaved people and poor whites in cycles of debt, since plantation owners retained land ownership. The Compromise of 1877 ended federal military presence in the South in exchange for Hayes's presidency, effectively ending Reconstruction. The 14th and 15th Amendments survived but went largely unenforced until the 20th century civil rights movement. Topic 5.12 asks students to compare the relative significance of the Civil War's effects on American values, including national identity, definitions of citizenship, and the meaning of equality.

- **Sharecropping**: A labor system in which formerly enslaved people and poor whites farmed land owned by planters in exchange for a share of the crop, keeping workers in perpetual debt and economic dependence.
- **Black Codes**: Laws passed by Southern states after the Civil War to restrict the labor, movement, and civil rights of formerly enslaved people, effectively recreating conditions of servitude.
- **Compromise of 1877**: The informal agreement that resolved the disputed 1876 election by giving the presidency to Rutherford B. Hayes in exchange for withdrawing federal troops from the South, ending Reconstruction.
- **Jim Crow Laws**: State and local laws enacted after Reconstruction that enforced racial segregation and disenfranchised Black Americans in the South through poll taxes, literacy tests, and grandfather clauses.
- **Ku Klux Klan**: A white supremacist organization founded after the Civil War that used violence and terror to suppress Black political participation and undermine Reconstruction governments in the South.

**Checkpoint:** What combination of economic, political, and violent factors caused Reconstruction to fail, and what long-term constitutional legacy did it leave?

Factor undermining Reconstruction | Mechanism | Long-term effect
--- | --- | ---
Sharecropping | Kept freedpeople economically dependent on former planters | Perpetuated poverty and limited Black land ownership
KKK and white supremacist violence | Terrorized Black voters and Republican officeholders | Suppressed Black political participation
Black Codes and Jim Crow laws | Restricted movement, labor, and civil rights legally | Established legal segregation lasting into the 20th century
Compromise of 1877 | Withdrew federal troops from the South | Ended federal enforcement of Reconstruction Amendments
Supreme Court decisions | Narrowed 14th Amendment protections | Left 14th and 15th Amendments dormant until civil rights era

## Study Guides

- [5.10 Reconstruction](/apush/unit-5/reconstruction/study-guide/DiWHCM2v4Drc73iIcfDS)
- [5.3 The Mexican–American War](/apush/unit-5/mexican-american-war/study-guide/NMqiBxahosm76SKTghut)
- [5.6 Failure of Compromise](/apush/unit-5/failure-compromise/study-guide/Pc8cAsWACsNLhZIwOHf3)
- [5.2 Manifest Destiny](/apush/unit-5/manifest-destiny/study-guide/QCAKf0AWBCPTgZHZtUPD)
- [5.4 The Compromise of 1850](/apush/unit-5/compromise-1850/study-guide/SD3f1WJu48SnOd8v1RAm)
- [5.9 Government Policies during the Civil War](/apush/unit-5/government-policies-during-civil-war/study-guide/rI7StngOCC4D0qsmkDvV)
- [5.11 Failure of Reconstruction](/apush/unit-5/failures-reconstruction/study-guide/v760MdiOJXB3TCLYZBZ5)
- [5.1 Contextualizing Period 5](/apush/unit-5/contextualizing-period-5/study-guide/4IjDIqCCZ4MNbXQ9gqev)
- [5.7 Election of 1860 and Secession](/apush/unit-5/election-1860-secession/study-guide/6wnMakCgnFOoTG2IEnSa)
- [5.5 Sectional Conflict: Regional Differences](/apush/unit-5/sectional-conflict-before-civil-war/study-guide/Klx3eOhZBS11qtWKIvH2)
- [5.8 Military Conflict in the Civil War](/apush/unit-5/military-conflict-civil-war/study-guide/d9NgoNY74uuvfh4RmD6l)
- [5.12 Comparison in Period 5, 1844-1877](/apush/unit-5/comparison-period-5/study-guide/F4PJCNduTfAlJJKn5VEj)

## Practice Preview

### Multiple-choice practice

- **AP-style practice question**: Skill 2 - Sourcing and Situation | Why do a planter's 1878 letter and a freedman's 1878 account describe sharecropping so differently?
- **AP-style practice question**: Skill 2 - Sourcing and Situation | In 1870, African American petitioners asked the federal government to keep troops and enforce voting rights. Why did they appeal to federal rather than state authorities?
- **AP-style practice question**: Skill 2 - Sourcing and Situation | An 1872 African American newspaper editorial states: "The war has given us freedom and the ballot, yet we remain economically enslaved by sharecropping and denied true citizenship by violence and intimidation. The war's promise of equality remains unfulfilled." This editorial's emphasis on the gap between the war's stated effects and its actual outcomes reflects which aspect of African American perspectives on Civil War values?
- **AP-style practice question**: Skill 2 - Sourcing and Situation | An 1865 Northern editorial argues the Union's preservation requires legal protections for all men regardless of color. Which historical factor best explains this emphasis on legal equality?
- **AP-style practice question**: Skill 4 - Contextualization | Why did acquiring western territories after the Mexican–American War intensify rather than resolve sectional conflict over slavery?
- **AP-style practice question**: Skill 4 - Contextualization | The Free-Soil Party's 1848 platform opposed slavery's expansion to reserve western lands for free white farmers and smallholders. This position best reflects which broader economic and social development?

### FRQ practice

- **Individualism versus community building and social reform**: Document-Based Question (DBQ) | Individualism versus community building and social reform
- **Abolitionism, Reconstruction, and post-Reconstruction Southern resistance**: Short Answer Question 3 - Primary or Secondary Non-Text Source | Abolitionism, Reconstruction, and post-Reconstruction Southern resistance

### SAQ practice

- ***Plessy v. Ferguson*, Dissent SAQ**: 5.11 | apush-3.A

## Key Terms

- **Mexican Cession**: The territory including present-day California, Nevada, Utah, and parts of Arizona and New Mexico that Mexico ceded to the United States in the Treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo (1848), immediately reigniting the debate over slavery's expansion.
- **Kansas-Nebraska Act**: An 1854 law that created Kansas and Nebraska territories under popular sovereignty, effectively repealing the Missouri Compromise line and triggering Bleeding Kansas and the collapse of the Whig Party.
- **Dred Scott decision**: The 1857 Supreme Court ruling that enslaved people were property rather than citizens, that Congress had no authority to ban slavery in any territory, and that the Missouri Compromise had been unconstitutional.
- **Emancipation Proclamation**: Lincoln's executive order of January 1, 1863, freeing enslaved people in Confederate-held territory, transforming the Civil War into a fight against slavery and discouraging British and French recognition of the Confederacy.
- **Anaconda Plan**: The Union strategy to blockade Southern ports and control the Mississippi River, economically strangling the Confederacy by cutting off supplies and splitting Confederate territory.
- **13th Amendment**: Ratified in 1865, it abolished slavery and involuntary servitude throughout the United States, completing what the Emancipation Proclamation had begun.
- **14th Amendment**: Ratified in 1868, it granted citizenship and equal protection under the law to all persons born or naturalized in the United States, directly overturning the Dred Scott decision and later becoming the basis for 20th-century civil rights rulings.
- **15th Amendment**: Ratified in 1870, it prohibited denying the right to vote based on race, color, or previous condition of servitude, extending suffrage to Black men during Reconstruction.
- **Sharecropping**: A post-Civil War labor system in which freedpeople and poor whites farmed land owned by planters in exchange for a share of the crop, keeping workers in perpetual debt and limiting economic independence.
- **Black Codes**: Laws passed by Southern states after the Civil War to restrict the labor, movement, and civil rights of formerly enslaved people, effectively recreating conditions of servitude and provoking Congressional Reconstruction.
- **Compromise of 1877**: The informal agreement resolving the disputed 1876 presidential election by awarding the presidency to Rutherford B. Hayes in exchange for withdrawing federal troops from the South, effectively ending Reconstruction.
- **Freedman's Bureau**: A federal agency established in 1865 to assist formerly enslaved people and poor whites in the South through education, employment, and legal services, representing the federal government's most direct intervention in Southern society during Reconstruction.

## Common Mistakes

- **Treating the Emancipation Proclamation as abolishing slavery**: The Emancipation Proclamation (1863) freed enslaved people only in Confederate-held territory and had no legal force there. It did not apply to border states or Union-controlled areas. Slavery was not legally abolished nationwide until the 13th Amendment was ratified in December 1865.
- **Conflating the causes of the Civil War with slavery alone**: While slavery was the central cause, the AP exam expects you to explain the specific mechanisms: the failure of legislative compromises, the Dred Scott decision closing off congressional solutions, the collapse of the Second Party System, and Lincoln's election triggering secession. Saying simply 'the South wanted slavery' misses the political and constitutional dimensions.
- **Assuming Reconstruction was a complete failure**: Reconstruction produced real, lasting constitutional change through the 13th, 14th, and 15th Amendments. Black men held political office and communities built schools and churches. The failure was in enforcement and economic transformation, not in the legal framework itself. The 14th Amendment later became the basis for 20th-century civil rights rulings.
- **Mixing up the Compromise of 1850 and the Kansas-Nebraska Act**: The Compromise of 1850 applied popular sovereignty to the territories from the Mexican Cession. The Kansas-Nebraska Act (1854) applied popular sovereignty to Kansas and Nebraska, which were north of the Missouri Compromise line, effectively repealing that earlier compromise. These are distinct events with different consequences.
- **Overlooking the role of immigration in sectional conflict**: Topic 5.5 specifically asks about immigration's effects. Large-scale Irish and German immigration to the North in the 1840s-1850s fueled the nativist Know-Nothing Party and shaped Northern urban culture. This is a distinct thread from the slavery debate and appears in its own learning objective.

## Exam Connections

- **Causation and continuity across the unit**: APUSH frequently asks students to explain the causes of major events or to trace continuity and change over time. In Unit 5, strong responses connect the failure of successive compromises (Missouri Compromise, Compromise of 1850, Kansas-Nebraska Act) as a causal chain leading to secession, and trace how the 14th and 15th Amendments represented change that was then undermined by continuity in Southern racial hierarchy through sharecropping and Jim Crow.
- **Comparison tasks within and across periods**: Topic 5.12 explicitly requires comparison of the Civil War's effects on American values. Exam tasks may ask you to compare Lincoln's Reconstruction plan with Congressional Reconstruction, compare Northern and Southern economic systems, or compare the experiences of different groups (Black Americans, women, immigrants) during Reconstruction. Practice identifying specific similarities and differences with supporting evidence rather than general claims.
- **Argumentation using primary sources and context**: SAQs and DBQs in APUSH Period 5 often use documents such as the Emancipation Proclamation, the Gettysburg Address, Reconstruction-era political cartoons, or testimony from formerly enslaved people. Strong responses situate documents in their historical context, identify the author's purpose or audience, and use the document as evidence for a broader argument about causation, change, or significance rather than simply summarizing its content.

## Final Review Checklist

- **Final Unit 5 review checklist: Manifest Destiny and expansion**: Explain how Manifest Destiny justified westward expansion, identify the territories gained through the Mexican-American War, and connect the Wilmot Proviso to the slavery debate.
- **Final Unit 5 review checklist: Compromises and their failures**: Compare the Missouri Compromise, Compromise of 1850, and Kansas-Nebraska Act. Explain why each failed to permanently resolve the slavery question and how the Dred Scott decision closed off legislative solutions.
- **Final Unit 5 review checklist: Party realignment and secession**: Trace the collapse of the Whig Party, the rise of the Republican Party on a free-soil platform, and how Lincoln's 1860 victory without Southern electoral votes triggered secession and the Civil War.
- **Final Unit 5 review checklist: Civil War causes and Union victory**: Identify the Union's material and strategic advantages, explain how the Emancipation Proclamation changed the war's purpose and diplomacy, and describe how total war tactics contributed to Confederate defeat.
- **Final Unit 5 review checklist: Reconstruction Amendments**: State what each of the 13th, 14th, and 15th Amendments did, explain the difference between Lincoln's 10% Plan and Congressional Reconstruction, and describe Black political gains during Reconstruction.
- **Final Unit 5 review checklist: Failure of Reconstruction**: Explain how sharecropping, Black Codes, KKK violence, and the Compromise of 1877 each contributed to the end of Reconstruction, and describe the long-term constitutional legacy of the 14th and 15th Amendments.
- **Final Unit 5 review checklist: Period 5 comparison**: Practice comparing the relative significance of the Civil War's effects on American values, including national identity, definitions of citizenship, and the meaning of equality for different groups.

## Study Plan

- **Step 1: Build the context and expansion foundation (5.1-5.3)**: Read the topic guides for 5.1, 5.2, and 5.3. Map the territories gained through the Mexican-American War and identify how each acquisition reopened the slavery debate. Practice explaining Manifest Destiny's ideological components and the significance of the Wilmot Proviso.
- **Step 2: Understand the compromise sequence and its collapse (5.4-5.6)**: Use the topic guides for 5.4, 5.5, and 5.6 to build a timeline from the Compromise of 1850 through the Kansas-Nebraska Act to the Dred Scott decision. Use the comparison table in this review to distinguish each compromise's terms and why each failed. Review the rise of the Republican Party and the Know-Nothing Party as products of this breakdown.
- **Step 3: Analyze secession and Civil War causation (5.7-5.8)**: Work through the topic guides for 5.7 and 5.8. Practice explaining Lincoln's 1860 victory in terms of the four-way party split and the free-soil platform. Then identify the Union's specific military and material advantages and connect the Anaconda Plan, Emancipation Proclamation, and Sherman's March to the Sea to Union victory.
- **Step 4: Examine Lincoln's wartime policies and their effects (5.9)**: Focus on the Emancipation Proclamation's dual purpose: reframing the war's goals and blocking European recognition of the Confederacy. Review the Gettysburg Address as a primary source connecting the war to the Declaration of Independence. Note home front opposition through conscription and the Copperhead movement.
- **Step 5: Evaluate Reconstruction's gains and losses (5.10-5.12)**: Use the topic guides for 5.10 and 5.11 to compare Lincoln's 10% Plan with Congressional Reconstruction, then trace how each Reconstruction Amendment was undermined. Practice the Period 5 comparison skill from 5.12 by writing a short argument about which effect of the Civil War was most significant for American values. Use available FRQ and SAQ practice to test your argument structure.

## More Ways To Review

- [Topic study guides](/apush/unit-5#topics)
- [FRQ practice](/apush/frq-practice)
- [Cram archive videos](/cram-archives?subject=ap-us-history&unit=unit-5)
- [Cheatsheets](/apush/cheatsheets/unit-5)
- [Key terms](/apush/key-terms)

## FAQs

### What topics are covered in APUSH Unit 5?

APUSH Unit 5 covers the Civil War era and Reconstruction across 12 topics: Contextualizing Period 5 (1844-1877), Manifest Destiny, the Mexican-American War, the Compromise of 1850, Sectional Conflict and Regional Differences, Failure of Compromise, the Election of 1860 and Secession, Military Conflict in the Civil War, Government Policies During the Civil War, Reconstruction, Failures of Reconstruction, and Comparison in Period 5. The unit spans 1848-1877 and traces how disputes over slavery escalated from political compromise to open war, then examines how Reconstruction reshaped citizenship and voting rights before collapsing under resistance and the Compromise of 1877. See [APUSH Unit 5](/apush/unit-5) for topic-by-topic breakdowns.

### How much of the APUSH exam is Unit 5?

APUSH Unit 5 makes up 10-17% of the AP exam, making it one of the more heavily tested periods. The unit covers the Civil War and Reconstruction from 1848 to 1877, including topics like Manifest Destiny, the Compromise of 1850, military conflict, and the successes and failures of Reconstruction. Because the exam weight range is wide, expect questions on both the causes of the Civil War and its aftermath. Reconstruction policy and its collapse are especially common targets for both multiple-choice and free-response questions.

### What's on the APUSH Unit 5 progress check (MCQ and FRQ)?

The APUSH Unit 5 progress check includes both MCQ and FRQ parts drawn from the unit's 12 topics on the Civil War and Reconstruction. MCQ questions test your understanding of events like the Compromise of 1850, the Election of 1860, sectional conflict, and Reconstruction amendments. The FRQ portion typically asks you to analyze causation, continuity and change over time, or comparison across these topics. Common progress check targets include the causes of secession (Topics 5.5-5.7), government policies during the Civil War (5.9), and why Reconstruction ultimately failed (5.11). Practicing with stimulus-based questions on primary sources from this era is the best prep. Head to [APUSH Unit 5](/apush/unit-5) for practice questions matched to each progress check topic.

### How do I practice APUSH Unit 5 FRQs?

To practice APUSH Unit 5 FRQs, focus on the topics that generate the most free-response prompts: the causes of the Civil War, the impact of Reconstruction amendments, and why Reconstruction failed. The three FRQ types you'll see are the Document-Based Question (DBQ), Long Essay Question (LEQ), and Short Answer Question (SAQ). For this unit, strong LEQ and SAQ targets include comparing sectional tensions before 1861, analyzing continuity and change during Reconstruction, and evaluating the Compromise of 1877's consequences. Practice by writing full outlines or timed responses using primary sources from the 1848-1877 period. Check [APUSH Unit 5](/apush/unit-5) for FRQ prompts tied to specific topics like Manifest Destiny, the Mexican-American War, and Reconstruction policy.

### Where can I find APUSH Unit 5 practice questions?

You can find APUSH Unit 5 practice questions, including multiple-choice and practice test sets, at [APUSH Unit 5](/apush/unit-5). The page organizes MCQ and FRQ practice by topic, so you can target specific areas like the Compromise of 1850, the Election of 1860, or Reconstruction. For the best MCQ prep, look for stimulus-based questions that pair a primary source with questions about causation or historical context, since that's the format the AP exam uses. Mixing topic-specific practice with full unit practice tests helps you spot patterns across the Civil War and Reconstruction content.

### How should I study APUSH Unit 5?

Start APUSH Unit 5 by building a clear timeline from 1848 to 1877, anchoring key events like the Compromise of 1850, the Mexican-American War, the Election of 1860, and the major Reconstruction amendments. Understanding causation is critical here because the Civil War and Reconstruction are deeply connected. Here's a practical study plan: 1. **Learn the causes first.** Topics 5.2-5.7 cover Manifest Destiny through secession. Know how each event escalated sectional conflict.
2. **Understand the war's turning points.** Topic 5.8 (Military Conflict) and 5.9 (Government Policies) include the Emancipation Proclamation and its political significance.
3. **Focus on Reconstruction's arc.** Topics 5.10 and 5.11 are high-yield. Know what the 13th, 14th, and 15th Amendments did, what Black political participation looked like, and why Reconstruction collapsed.
4. **Practice comparison.** Topic 5.12 asks you to compare this period to others, which shows up on LEQs.
5. **Do timed FRQ outlines.** Reconstruction and Civil War causation are frequent essay topics. Visit [APUSH Unit 5](/apush/unit-5) for guides and practice sets organized by topic.

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