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By the mid-1800s, what group had been added to the voting rolls?

O A. white adult males who did not own property
B. white adult women
C. black adult males
D. white males between 18 and 21 years old

User Yunjin
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1 Answer

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Final answer:

A) White adult males who did not own property were added to the voting rolls by the mid-1800s, marking a shift towards universal white manhood suffrage, although other groups remained disenfranchised.

Step-by-step explanation:

By the mid-1800s, the group that had been added to the voting rolls was white adult males who did not own property (Option A). This expansion of voting rights was part of a broader movement towards universal white manhood suffrage, which was the most significant political innovation of the early nineteenth century.

Starting from a period where property qualifications for voting were common, there was a shift that culminated in states like Ohio and Alabama removing property qualifications and expanding the right to vote to all white men. However, this extension of suffrage did not apply to women, Native Americans, or free African Americans at that time.

User Ajadex
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