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All of the following were requirements for voting prior to 1828, EXCEPT Being Male. Serving in the Military. Owning Land. Being White.

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Final answer:

Serving in the military was not a requirement for voting prior to 1828. Voting rights were mainly limited to white males who owned property; however, this requirement was being removed in various states, leading to broader white manhood suffrage. Military service was never a consistent voting requirement across the states.

Step-by-step explanation:

The requirement that was NOT a criteria for voting prior to 1828 is Serving in the Military. Before this time, many state constitutions required property qualifications for voting, and it was generally accepted that only White males who owned land had the right to vote. However, various states also imposed taxpaying and militia service requirements. The era of universal white manhood suffrage saw the removal of property qualifications for voting, vastly increasing the number of white men eligible to vote. New York amended its constitution to remove property qualifications in the early 1820s, and several new states also provided the right to vote without property requirements. Despite broader suffrage for white men, race and gender restrictions maintained limited voting populations, particularly excluding women, Native Americans, and free Black men from voting.

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