which was among the rights that free african americans lost in the north and west during the 1820s and 1830s
Charles Finney
The best symbol Democracy in the 1820s was Andrew Jackson. That's if you think forcing Native Americans on death marches is more noble than emancipating slaves.
Greece
Most were abolished in the 1820s, during the process of Catholic Emancipation. A few remained in place until the last were abolished in the 1920s, when Ireland became independent.
Stephen Austin
Liberia
Increased to the highest point ever in American Experience
Drew
In the 1820s, most residents of Texas were Mexican nationals. I presume they supported the government of Mexico (although there were Mexicans who fought with the Americans at Alamo). I suspect that most of the Americans living in Texas in the 1820s supported slavery and independence (slavery was illegal in Mexico).
Despite the nation's growing democratic spirit, a great many Americans did not have the right to vote. They included women, Native Americans, and the vast majority of African Americans. Slaves had no political rights at all. Most northern states had allowed free African American men to vote. In the 1820s, many of these states took away that right. By 1830, only a few New England states permitted African American men to vote on equal terms with white men. In New York, African American men had to own property in order to vote, but white men didn't.
Americans were attracted to Texas in the 1820s because Spain offered land at about 4 cents an acre, while land in the United States cost about $1.25 an acre at that time.
100,000
During the 1820s.
This multiple-choice question requires students to show the relationship between civic participation and civic goals by selecting a change that allowed more Americans to participate in civic life and influence public policy. Option A is correct because states began giving white males citizens who did not own property the right to vote beginning in the 1820s. This change allowed more citizens to participate in the civic process and influence public policy. It would be many years before both women and African Americans were also able to exercise this right. Options B, C and D are inaccurate because they are all rights previously guaranteed by the Bill of Rights.
Stephan Austin
At the end of the 1820s, the right to vote in the United States was primarily restricted to white males, and many states imposed property requirements that effectively limited suffrage to wealthier individuals. However, during this time, several states began to relax these restrictions, leading to broader voting rights for white males without property qualifications. Despite these changes, women, African Americans, and other marginalized groups were largely excluded from the electoral process. Thus, while the voting landscape was evolving, it remained predominantly accessible to wealthy white males.
mass participation through wider voting rights for white males.