Final answer:
The First Reconstruction Act of 1867 indeed divided the South into military districts, marking it as true. The trustee system did not involve a royal governor in Savannah, and Dillon's Rule limits local government's powers, not enhances them.
Step-by-step explanation:
The statement regarding the Division of Service Operations is unrelated to the historical context provided by the question about the First Reconstruction Act. However, answering the question provided:
According to the First Reconstruction Act passed in 1867, was the South divided into military districts?
True. The First Reconstruction Act of 1867 did indeed divide the Southern states into military districts. This was part of the Reconstruction Era efforts to rebuild and reorganize the Southern states following the Civil War. The Act reduced the secessionist states to little more than conquered territory and placed them under the control of the military. Commanding officers were tasked with maintaining order and ensuring the civil rights of freed slaves were being respected.
Answering the additional statements from the exercise:
- The Trustee system being advised by a royal governor in Savannah is false. The Trustee system in the colony of Georgia was established to be managed by trustees, without a royal governor.
- Dillon's Rule giving local governments the freedom and flexibility to make decisions for themselves is false. Dillon's Rule is a legal principle that local governments have limited authority, and can only exercise powers expressly granted to them by the state government.