Jul 07, 2016 · Save Question 2 (2 points) Which of the following was the last expansion of the right to vote? Question 2 options: 1) The lowering of the voting age to 18 2) The 14th amendment defining citizenship as all males 3) Constitutional amendment that gave women the right to vote 4) The elimination of long state residency requirements
Jul 07, 2016 · Questi on 2 0 / 2 points Which of the following was the last expansion of the right to vote? 1) The lowering of the voting age to 18 2) The 14th amendment defining citizenship as all males 3) Constitutional amendment that gave women the right to vote 4) The elimination of long state residency requirements
Oct 21, 2018 · Question 59 1 / 1 point Which of the following was the last expansion of the right to vote? 1) Constitutional amendment that gave women the right to vote 2) The elimination of long state residency requirements 3) The 14th amendment defining citizenship as all males 4) The lowering of the voting age to 18
expansion era 3. the 19th amendment ratified in 1920, gave women the right to vote in every state. expansion era 4. courts decision and federal legislation especially the voting rights act of 1965 and its later extensions, finally made the 15th amendment truly effective. expansion era 5.
The Civil Rights Cases of 1883 greatly limited the rights of blacks and strengthened Jim Crow laws in the South. I n Plessy v.Ferguson,the U.S. Supreme Court affirmed the concept of separate but equal public facilities, thus ensuring racial segregation and discrimination, especially in education.
In 1865, following the Civil War, southern state legislatures began enacting Black Codes to restrict freedmen's rights and maintain the plantation system . The Republican-controlled Congress responded to these measures by passing the three great postwar constitutional amendments (Thirteenth, Fourteenth, and Fifteenth) that abolished slavery, guaranteed the newly freed blacks equal protection of the laws, and gave all male American citizens the right to vote regardless of their "race, color, or previous condition of servitude."