Find the US States - No Outlines Minefield

1864: Senator Charles Sumner, referring to Napoleon III, shortly before Mexican conservatives aided by

Napoleon formally offered the crown of Mexico to

Archduke Maximilliam of Austria.

1864: Andrew Johnson, shortly after

his nomination for the vice-presidency.







1866: Gen Schofield, summarizing Sec of State Seward's instructions to him, upon being sent to France







1866: Editorial in The Chicago Tribune in response to tales of organized lynchings and impossible working conditions resulting from the 'Black Codes' for Southern Negroes





1867: Thaddeus Stevens, a Radical Republican from Pennsylvania who wanted Congress to divide up the 'damned rebel provinces' and fill them with new settlers.





1867: Francis Miles Finch's popular poem, 'The Blue and the Gray,' inspired by Mississippi women who placed flowers over the graves of both the Union and Confederate dead.





1867: From the official charge to new Ku Klux Klan recruits.









1867: William Seward, declaring what he would be able to do over the next several decades, if there was no war.







1868: Elizabeth Cady Stanton in a letter

to Thomas Wentworth Higginson.





