Chapter 19 Drifting Toward Disunion, slides

Size: px
Start display at page:

Download "Chapter 19 Drifting Toward Disunion, slides"

Transcription

1 Chapter 19 Drifting Toward Disunion, slides

2 p417

3 CH 19 - DRIFTING TOWARD DISUNION, FOCUS QUESTIONS 1. WHO AUTHORED LITERATURE RELATED TO SLAVERY THAT AROUSED SYMPATHY IN THE NORTH AND IRE IN THE SOUTH? 2. HOW DID EVENTS UNFOLD IN KANSAS AFTER THE PASSAGE OF THE KANSAS-NEBRASKA ACT? 3. WHAT WAS THE DECISION OF THE SUPREME COURT IN THE DRED SCOTT CASE? 4. HOW DID JOHN BROWN S ACTIONS FURTHER ENTRENCH SECTIONAL DIFFERENCES? 5. WHO WERE THE CANDIDATES FOR PRESIDENT IN 1860, WHERE DID EACH GET MOST OF HIS SUPPORT, AND WHAT WERE THE RESULTS OF THE ELECTION? 6. WHAT HAPPENED IN THE TIME BETWEEN THE ELECTION OF 1860 AND THE INAUGURATION OF THE NEW PRESIDENT? CHAPTER THEMES THEME: A SERIES OF MAJOR NORTH-SOUTH CRISES IN THE LATE 1850S CULMINATED IN THE ELECTION OF THE ANTISLAVERY REPUBLICAN LINCOLN TO THE PRESIDENCY IN HIS ELECTION CAUSED SEVEN SOUTHERN STATES TO SECEDE FROM THE UNION AND FORM THE CONFEDERATE STATES OF AMERICA.

4 Ch 19 - Big Take Aways Northern Resistance Uncle Tom s Cabin by Harriet Beecher Stowe (1852) Inspire many northerners to resist the Fugitive Slave Act Brought morality argument to the slavery debate Exposed the horrors of slavery to a Northern & European audiences Lincoln: So you re the little woman who wrote the book that made this great war. Result of the Kansas-Nebraska Act It was assumed that Kansas would become a slave state and Nebraska would be a free state Pro slavery and antislavery flood into Kansas New England Emigrant Aid Company: sent free soil settlers to the area From Missouri pro slavery border ruffians come into Kansas Two rival governments set-up Topeka- free soil Lecompton- slave govt. ***Republican Party*** is formed as a response to the Kansas-Nebraska Act Bleeding Kansas Sack of Lawrence 1856 Free Soil town attacked by pro-slavery forces Pottawatomie Creek John Brown and his followers attack pro slavery forces By 1856 Civil war in Kansas between proslavery and antislavery forces Beat Down Charles Sumner (Senator from Mass.) gives a speech condemning events in Bleeding Kansas Insults Senator from South Carolina Andrew Butler Congressman Preston Brooks of South Carolina enters Congress and beats Sumner with a cane. Violence over slavery in Kansas had spread to Congress Election of st time Republican party runs a candidate for the presidency John C. Fremont Democrats pick James Buchanan Picked because he had nothing to do with Kansas-Nebraska Act Know Nothing Party picked Millard Fillmore Anti-immigrant and Anti Catholic LeCompton COnstitution 1st challenge for President Buchanan Lecompton Constitution Pro-slavery Free Soilers boycott the election Supported by President Buchanan Rejected by Congress #15 VERY SIGN IFICA NT Dred Scott Case Dred Scott was a slave who sued for his freedom Dred Scott case goes to Supreme Court in 1857 Roger Taney was the Chief Justice (a Southern Democrat) African Americans are not citizens of the United States Could not sue Since slaves are property, they could not be taken away (Constitution) Congress could not makes laws regarding slavery in the territories Missouri Compromise unconstitutional cash me outside how bow dah!?

5 Ch 19 - Big Take Aways Lincoln-Douglas Debates Abe Lincoln (Republican) debates Stephen Douglas (Democrat) for the Illinois Senate in debates held Lincoln challenges Douglas on Dred Scott decision: Could slavery be prevented in the territories Dred Scott decision said no Douglas takes the position (Freeport Doctrine) that territories could limit slavery Southerners are pissed Results: Douglas keeps Senate seat Lincoln becomes national figure Southerners are angry Democrats will be split in 1860 John Brown at Harper s Ferry John Brown hopes to spark a slave revolt in 1859 Attempts to seize the federal arsenal at Harper s Ferry It does not go well Charged with treason and hung Impact South is outraged Brown becomes a martyr to abolitionist Immediate cause of secession Election of Democrats Split The issue of slavery had divided the Democrats Northern Democrats favor Stephen Douglas Popular sovereignty & enforce Fugitive Slave Act Southern Democrats favor John C. Breckinridge Allow slavery in the territories Annex Cuba Republicans Lincoln and the Republican party platform For the free-soilers: no extension of slavery in territories For the northern manufacturers: a protective tariff For the Northwest: a Pacific railroad For the farmers: free homesteads (land) Southern secessionist threaten to leave Union if Lincoln wins Election of 1860 Results Republican party wins the Presidency for the 1st time But Lincoln is a minority President Southerners see him as a sectional President Not on ballot in 10 southern states Secession South Carolina votes to secede in December 1860 #16 Eventually 7 southern states leave the union before Lincoln even takes office See him as a sectional President hostile to slavery Confederate States of America is formed Jefferson Davis chosen as President Lame Duck President Buchanan does nothing to stop secession From November 1860 to March 1861 Does not believe secession is legal Crittenden Compromise Last ditch attempt to avoid a major crisis Hope to calm southern fears: The return of the Missouri Compromise idea Slavery prohibited in territories north of Slavery allowed in territories south of Lincoln rejects this Position of Republican party was no extension of slavery in the territories Before Lincoln even takes office 7 southern states have left the union!

6 Ch 19 - Big Take Aways In case you missed it in your readings.... #12 #13 #14

7 I. Stowe and Helper: Literary Incendiaries Uncle Tom s Cabin Harriet Beecher Stowe She was determined to awaken the North to the wickedness of slavery By laying bare its terrible inhumanity, especially the splitting of families Relied on powerful imagery and touching pathos Wrote later about how her deeper sources of her anti-slavery sentiments lay in the evangelical religious crusades of the Second Great Awakening.

8 I. Stowe and Helper: Literary Incendiaries (cont.) The success of the novel at home and abroad was sensational It was also on the stage in Tom shows for lengthy runs No other novel in American history can be compared with it as a political force To many it made slavery appear almost as evil as it really was She was introduced to President in 1862; he remarked, So you re the little woman who wrote the book that made this great war.

9 I. Stowe and Helper: Literary Incendiaries (cont.) Mrs. Stowe never witnessed slavery in the Deep South: She had seen it briefly during a visit to Kentucky And she lived in Ohio, center of Underground Railroad activity Uncle Tom: Left an endearing and enduring impression on the North Many swore they would not have anything to do with the enforcement of the Fugitive Slave Law

10 I. Stowe and Helper: Literary Incendiaries (cont.) It was devoured by millions of impressionable youth It was immensely popular abroad, especially Britain and France. The Impending Crisis of the South (1857) by Hinton R. Helper: Hating slavery, he attempted to prove by an array of statistics that, indirectly, the nonslaveholding whites were the ones who suffered most from the millstone of slavery He finally found a publisher in the North

11 I. Stowe and Helper: Literary Incendiaries (cont.) South s planter elite took note of Helper s audacity, which fueled their fears: That the nonslaveholding majority might abandon them It was banned in the South In the North thousands were distributed as campaign literature by Republicans Southerners were embittered when they learned that their northern brethren were spreading these wicked lies.

12 p397

13 p397

14 p398

15 II. The North-South Contest for Kansas Popular sovereignty: New England Emigrant Aid Company: Famous antislavery organization Sent 2000 people to the troubled area to forestall the South and to make a profit Many carried their breech-loading Sharps rifles, nicknamed Beecher s Bibles after Rev. Henry Ward Beecher (Harriet Beecher Stowe s brother) who had helped raise money to pay for them Southern spokesmen raised cries of betrayal

16 II. The North-South Contest for Kansas (cont.) The northern Nebrascals, were now out to abolitionize both Kansas and Nebraska Some southern hotheads attempted to assist small groups of well-armed slave-owners to Kansas Planting blacks on Kansas soil was a losing game Slaves were valuable and volatile property Foolish for owners to take them where bullets were flying The soil might be voted free under popular sovereignty Census of 1860 only found 2 slaves among 107,000 souls in Kansas and only 15 in Nebraska.

17 II. The North-South Contest for Kansas (cont.) Crisis conditions in Kansas rapidly worsened (see Map 19.1): In 1855 election day for the first territorial legislature: Saw proslavery border ruffians pour in from Missouri to vote early and often The slavery supporters triumphed and then set up their own puppet government at Shawnee, MO. The free-soilers established an extralegal regime of their own in Topeka

18 II. The North-South Contest for Kansas (cont.) Confused Kansans had their choice of two governments: One based on fraud One based on illegality Tensions mounted as settlers feuded over conflicting land claims Breaking point (1856) when a gang of proslavery raiders, alleging provocation, shot up and burned part of the free-soil town of Lawrence This outrage was but the prelude to bloodier tragedy.

19 III. Kansas in Convulsion John Brown now stalked upon the Kansas battlefield Obsessively dedicated to the abolitionist cause: Brooding over the attack on Lawrence, led a band to Pottawatomie Creek in May 1856 There they literally hacked to pieces 5 surprised men, presumed to be proslaveryites This terrorist butchery besmirched the free-soil cause It also brought vicious retaliation from proslavery forces

20 III. Kansas in Convulsion (cont.) Civil war erupted in Kansas in 1856: Destroyed millions of dollars worth of property Paralyzed agriculture in certain areas Cost scores of lives Continued until it merged with the Civil War of Kansas applied for statehood on a popular sovereignty basis

21 III. Kansas in Convulsion (cont.) Lecompton Constitution: proslavery forces document the people were not allowed to vote for or against the constitution as a whole But for the constitution either with slavery or with no slavery Whatever the outcome there would still be black bondage Free-soilers boycotted the polls The proslaveryites approved the constitution with slavery late in 1857 The scene shifted to Washington: President Pierce had been succeeded by James Buchanan, who was strongly under southern influence

22 III. Kansas Convulsion (cont.) Buchanan supported the Lecompton Constitution Senator Douglas threw his support behind popular sovereignty A compromise was arrived at that submitted the entire Lecompton Constitution to the people The free-soil votes thronged to the polls and snowed it under Kansas remained a territory until 1861, when the southern secessionists left Congress. Buchanan s action divided the Democratic Party.

23 Map 19-1 p399

24 p400

25 IV. Bully Brooks and His Bludgeon Bleeding Kansas: Also spattered blood on the Senate floor 1856: Senator Charles Sumner of Mass. was a leading abolitionist Made himself one of the most disliked men in Senate Delivered the speech The Crime Against Kansas He condemned the proslavery men Referred insultingly to South Carolina and to its white-haired senator Andrew Butler

26 IV. Bully Brooks and His Bludgeon (cont.) Preston S. Brooks: Congressman from South Carolina took vengeance into his own hands He resented the insults to his state and to its senator His code of conduct called for a duel To Brooks, the only alternative was to chastise the senator On May 22, 1856, he approached Sumner and pounded the orator with an 11-ounce cane until it broke

27 IV. Bully Brooks and His Bludgeon (cont.) The House could not muster enough votes to expel Brooks He resigned but was triumphantly reelected Sumner had to leave due to his injuries, go to Europe for treatment Mass. For 3 ½ years keep his seat open until he could return Bleeding Sumner was thus joined with bleeding Kansas as a political issue

28 II. Bully Brooks and His Bludgeon (cont.) The free-soil North was mightily aroused against Brooks: Copies of Sumner s speech were sold by the thousands Every blow to the Senator doubtless made thousands of Republicans The South not unanimous in approving Brooks Were angered by Sumner s speech and because it was so extravagantly applauded in the North The Sumner-Brooks clash and the ensuing reactions revealed how dangerously inflamed passion were The blows rained on Sumner were among the first blows of the Civil War

29 p401

30 V. Old Buck Versus The Pathfinder The Democrats met in Cincinnati to elect their presidential standard-bearer of 1856 The delegates chose James Buchanan: He was serving in London during the Kansas-Nebraska uproar therefore Kansas-less In a crisis that called for giants, he was mediocre, irresolute, and confused Republicans met in Philadelphia: Higher Law Steward was the conspicuous leader

31 V. Old Buck versus The Pathfinder (cont.) However, the final choice was John C. Frémont: The so-called Pathfinder of the West Was virtually without political experience, but was not tarred with the Kansas brush The Republicans came out strongly against the extension of slavery While the Democrats declared no less emphatically for popular sovereignty

32 V. Old Buck versus The Pathfinder (cont.) An ugly dose of antiforeignism was injected into the campaign: Recent influx of immigrants from Ireland and Germany alarmed nativists name of old-stock Protestants They organized the Know-Nothing party because of its secretiveness In 1856 nominated ex-president Millard Fillmore Anti-foreign, anti-catholic Threatened, with some Whig supporter for Fillmore, to cut into the Republican strength Mudslinging bespattered both candidates

33 p402

34 VI. The Electoral Fruits of 1856 The election returns: Buchanan Polled less than a majority of the popular vote Won handily (see Map 19.2) Electoral College count was 174 to 114 for Frémont and 8 for Fillmore The popular vote was 1,832,955 for Buchanan; 1,339,932 for Frémont; 871,731 for Fillmore.

35 VI. The Electoral Fruits of 1856 (cont.) Why the Republican defeat: Frémont s lack of honesty, capacity, and sound judgment Violent threat that the election of a sectional Black Republican would be a declaration of war, forcing the South to secede Many northerners were intimidated to vote for Buchanan Innate conservatism triumphed, assisted by so-called southern bullying

36 VI. The Electoral Fruits of 1856 (cont.) Fortunate for the Union that secession and the Civil War did not come in 1856: Frémont was ill-balanced and second rate figure In 1856 the North was more willing to let the South depart in peace than in 1860 Dramatic events ( ) aroused still-apathetic northerners to a fighting pitch The election of 1856 cast a long shadow forward, and politicians, North and South, peered anxiously toward 1860

37 Map 19-2 p403

38 VII. The Dred Scott Bombshell The Dred Scott v. Stanford decision by the Supreme Court on March 6, 1857: Pronouncement was one of the opening paper-gun blasts of the Civil War Basically the case was simple The Supreme Court turned it in a complex political issue: It ruled that Dred Scott was a black slave and not a citizen, and hence could not sue in federal courts The tribunal could then have thrown out the case on these technical grounds alone

39 VII. The Dred Scott Bombshell (cont.) A majority decided to go further, under the leadership of emaciated Chief Justice Roger B. Taney (from slave state-maryland) A majority decreed that because a slave was private property, he or she could be taken into any territory and legally held there in slavery Reasons the Fifth Amendment forbade Congress to deprive people of their property without due process of law The Court went further:

40 VII. The Dred Scott Bombshell (cont.) They ruled that the Compromise of 1820 had been unconstitutional all along: Congress had no power to ban slavery from the territories, regardless of what the territorial legislatures themselves might want Southerners were delighted with this victory Champions of popular sovereignty were aghast Another lethal wedge was driven between the northern and southern wings of the once united Democratic party.

41 VII. The Dred Scott Bombshell (cont.) Foes of slavery extension were infuriated by the Dred Scott setback: They insisted the ruling was an opinion, not a decision Therefore not binding Republicans were defiant of the Court because: Its members were southerners And by their convictions debased themselves Southerners were inflamed by all this defiance; how long could they be joined to a section that refused to honor the Supreme Court?

42 p404

43 VIII. The Financial Crash of 1857 Panic of 1857: why the crash? Inpouring California gold helped to inflate the currency The demands of the Crimean War (Russia, ) overstimulated the growing of grain Frenzied speculation in land and railroads Over 5000 businesses failed North and its grain growers hardest hit South enjoyed favorable cotton prices abroad

44 VIII. The Financial Crash of 1857 (cont.) Panic conditions further proof that cotton was king: This false delusion helped drive the overconfidence of southerners closer to a shooting showdown Financial distress in the North, especially agriculture, gave a new vigor for free farms of 160 acres from the public domain

45 VIII. The Financial Crash of 1857 (cont.) Scheme to make outright gifts of homesteads: Eastern industrialists opposed free land giveaways South opposed because they didn t think gang-labor slavery could flourish on a mere 160 acres Congress (1860) passed a homestead act Public land available for 25 cent an acre It was killed by President Buchanan s veto The panic of 1857 created a clamor for higher tariff rates: There was a large Treasury surplus

46 VIII. The Financial Crash of 1857 (cont.) The Tariff of 1857: Responding to pressure from the South, reduced duties to about 20 percent on dutiable goods the lowest point since 1812 As the surplus melted away in the Treasury,» Industrials in the North pointed to the need for higher duties» They were concerned about the need of increased protection The panic of 1857 gave Republicans two surefire economic issues for the election of 1860:» Protection for the unprotected» Farms for the farmless

47 p405

48 IX. An Illinois Rail-Splitter Emerges The Illinois senatorial election of 1858 claimed the national spotlight: Senator Stephen A. Douglas s term was to expire Republicans ran a Springfield lawyer, Abraham Lincoln:» Not well educated, but an avid reader» He married above himself into the influential Todd family of Kentucky helped to school him in patience and forbearance» Emerged as a trial lawyer in Illinois» Widely referred to as Honest Abe» He served an undistinguished term in Congress,

49 IX. An Illinois Rail-Splitter Emerges (cont.) The Kansas-Nebraska Act lighted within him unexpected fire» He emerged as one of the foremost politicians and orators in the Northwest At the Philadelphia convention 1856:» John C. Frémont was nominated» Lincoln received 100 votes for the vice-presidential nomination

50 p406

51 X. The Great Debate: Lincoln Versus Douglas Lincoln-Douglas debates: Lincoln challenged Douglas to a series of joint debates Douglas accepted; they were arranged from August to October 1858 The most famous debate came at Freeport, Illinois: Lincoln presented a question based on the Supreme Court ruling in the Dred Scott decision Douglas had already publicly answered the Freeport question The Little Giant did not hesitate to meet the issue head-on, honestly and consistently

52 X. The Great Debate: Lincoln Versus Douglas Freeport Doctrine: No matter how the Supreme Court ruled, slavery would stay down if the people voted it down Laws to protect slavery would have to be passed by the territorial legislatures In the absence of popular approval, black bondage would soon disappear Where public opinion does not support the federal government, as in the case of Jefferson s embargo (see pp ), the law is impossible to enforced.

53 X. The Great Debate: Lincoln Versus Douglas (cont.) Douglas defeated Lincoln for the Senate seat The Little Giant s loyalty to popular sovereignty was the decisive point Senators were chosen by the state legislatures Honest Abe won a clear moral victory Lincoln began to emerge as a potential Republican nominee for president Douglas, in winning Illinois, lost his chances of winning the presidency Lincoln-Douglas debate platform proved to be one of the preliminary battlefields of the Civil War

54 p407

55 XI. John Brown: Murderer or Martyr? John Brown studied the tactics of the black rebels Toussaint L Ouverture (see p. 211) and Nat Turner (see p. 348) Hatched a scheme to invade the South secretly Called upon the slaves to rise Furnished them with arms Established a kind of black free state as a sanctuary Harpers Ferry: he seized the federal arsenal in October 1859 Incidentally killing seven innocent people, killing a free black and injuring ten or more Slaves ignored Brown s strike, failed to rise, and wounded Brown

56 XI. John Brown: Murderer or Martyr? (cont.) Brown and his remnants were captured by U.S. Marines under Robert E. Lee Convicted of murder and treason Presumed insanity, supported by 17 friends and relatives He marched up the scaffold steps without flinching His conduct exemplary His devotion to freedom so inflexible that he took on an exalted character The effects of Harper Ferry were inflammatory: To the South, Brown was a wholesale murderer An apostle of treason

57 XI. John Brown: Murderer or Martyr? (cont.) Abolitionists and ardent free-soilers were infuriated by Brown s execution Free-soil centers in the North tolled bells Fired guns, lowered flags, and held rallies The ghost of the martyred Brown would not be laid to rest

58 XII. The Disruption of the Democrats The presidential election of 1860 was the most fateful in American history: Democrats met in Charleston, South Carolina Douglas the leading candidate for the northern wing Southern wing regarded him a traitor» Because of the Lecompton Constitution and the Freeport Doctrine Cotton state delegates walked out Remaining could not scrape enough of the 2/3 necessary; disbanded The first tragic secession was the secession of southerners from the National Convention Departure became habit-forming

59 XII. The Disruption of the Democrats (cont.) The Democrats tried again in Baltimore: Douglas was firmly in the saddle Many cotton-state delegates took a walk The rest of the delegates enthusiastically nominated their hero Platform came out squarely: For popular sovereignty Against obstruction of the Fugitive Slave Law by the states John C. Breckinridge was chosen vice-presidential candidate

60 XII. The Disruption of the Democrats (cont.) The platform favored the extension of slavery into the territories and the annexation of slave-populated Cuba Constitutional Union party: The middle-of-the-road group Sneered as the Do Nothing or Old Gentleman s party Desperately wanted a compromise candidate, met in Baltimore and nominated for the presidency John Bell of Tennessee.

61 p409

62 XIII. A Rail-Splitter Splits the Union Republicans met in Chicago: William H. Seward was the best candidate: Radical utterances, his irrepressible conflict speech at Rochester 1858 had ruined his prospects Enemies slogan, Success Rather Than Steward. Lincoln, the favorite son of Illinois: A Second Best, but a stronger candidate because he made fewer enemies Overtook Seward on the third ballot, was nominated. Republican party had an appeal for everybody: For the free-soilers, nonextension of slavery For the northern manufacturers, a protective tariff For the immigrants, no abridgment of rights

63 XIII. A Rail-Splitter Splits the Union (cont.) For the Northwest, a Pacific railroad For the West, internal improvements at federal expense For the farmers, free homesteads from the public domain Southern secessionists called Lincoln the baboon, the abolitionist rail-splitter who would split the Union Honest Abe, though hating slavery, was no outright abolitionist Lincoln enthusiasts staged roaring rallies and parades Douglas waged a vigorous speaking campaign The returns, breathlessly awaited, proclaimed a sweeping victory for Lincoln (see Table 19.1).

64 p410

65 XIV. The Electoral Upheaval of 1860 Lincoln was a minority president: 60% of the voters would have preferred someone else A sectional president in ten southern states, not being on the ballot The election of 1860 was virtually two elections: one for the North and one for the South (see Map 19.3) South Carolina rejoiced over Lincoln s victory; they now had their excuse to secede. Douglas scraped only 12 electoral votes: He campaigned energetically for himself Douglas and Breckinridge together amassed 365,476 more votes than did Lincoln

66 XIV. The Electoral Upheaval of 1860 (cont.) The ballot box did not indicate a strong sentiment for secession (see Map 19.4) Breckinridge polled fewer votes in the slave states than the combined strength of his opponents Douglas and Bell He failed to carry his own state of Kentucky. Even though the Republicans had elected Lincoln: They controlled neither the Senate nor the House. The federal government could not touch slavery, except by a constitutional amendment.

67 XIV. The Electoral Upheaval of 1860 (cont.) Confederate States of America: Formed by seven seceding states in Montgomery, Alabama in February 1861: They chose as their president Jefferson Davis Crisis was deepened by the lame duck interlude: Lincoln, elected in November 1860, could not take office until March 4, 1861 During this time seven of the eleven deserting states left President Buchanan was blamed for not holding the nation together; he did not believe that the southern states could secede Yet he could find no authority in the Constitution for stopping them with guns

68 XV. The Secessionist Exodus (cont.) One reason he did not resort to force:» The tiny standing army of 15,000 troops was urgently needed to control the Indians in the West North not interested in fight at this time The weakness not such much in Buchanan, but in the constitution and in the Union itself Ironically, when Lincoln became president in March, he essentially continued Buchanan s wait-and-see policy

69 Table 19-1 p410

70 Map 19-3 p411

71 XV. The Secessionist Exodus A tragic chain reaction of secession now began to erupt: South Carolina had threatened to go out if the sectional Lincoln won: 4 days later they voted to call a special convention Meeting in Charleston, December 1860, the convention voted unanimously to secede During the next six weeks other southern states voted to secede Alabama, Mississippi, Florida, Georgia, Louisiana, Texas Four more would join late, bringing the total to eleven

72 Map 19-4 p412

73 p413

74 XVI. The Collapse of Compromise Crittenden amendments: Sponsored by Senator John Jordan Crittenden, Kentucky Designed to appease the South Slavery in the territories was to be prohibited north of the latitude, but south of that line it was to be given federal protection in all territories existing or hereafter to be acquired Future states north of this line could come into the Union with or without slavery, as they should choose Slavery supporters were to be guaranteed full rights in the southern territories regardless of popular sovereignty

75 XVI. The Collapse of Compromise (cont.) Lincoln flatly rejected the Crittenden scheme He was elected on a platform that opposed the extension and felt he must support this, even if slavery was only to be temporary Buchanan: how could he have prevented the Civil War by starting a civil war? No one has yet come up with a satisfactory answer

76 XVII. Farewell to Union Secessionists left for a number of reasons: Most related to the issue of slavery Southerners were dismayed by the triumph of the new Republican party They were weary of free-soil criticism: Abolitionist nagging Northern interference ranging from the Underground Railroad to John Brown s raid Supported secession because they felt sure that their departure would be unopposed Southerners saw it as a golden opportunity to cast aside their generations of vassalage to the North

77 XVII. Farewell to Union (cont.) An independent Dixieland could develop its own banking and shipping and trade directly with Europe Who could tell when the greedy Republicans would drive through their own oppressive protective tariff? Pitted between the North and South:» The North with its manufacturing plants» The South with its agricultural exports Worldwide impulses of nationalism were fermenting in the South The principles of self-determination of the Declaration of Independence seemed to many southerners to apply perfectly to them

78 XVIII. Farewell to Union (cont.) Few southern states felt that they were doing anything wrong or immoral Historical parallel ran even deeper: 1776 thirteen American colonies, led by the rebel George Washington, seceded from the British empire by throwing off the yoke of King George III eleven American states, led by the rebel Jefferson Davis, were seceding from the Union by throwing off the yoke of King Abraham Lincoln With that burden gone, the South was confident that it could work its own peculiar destiny more quietly, happily, and prosperously

79 p414

80 p417

Chapter 19 Drifting Toward Disunion The Kansas Territory erupted in violence in 1855 between proslavery and antislavery arguments.

Chapter 19 Drifting Toward Disunion The Kansas Territory erupted in violence in 1855 between proslavery and antislavery arguments. The Kansas Territory erupted in violence in 1855 between proslavery and antislavery arguments. In 1857, the Supreme Court's Dred Scott decision invalidated the Missouri Compromise of 1820. 1. Stowe and

More information

Drifting Toward Disunion

Drifting Toward Disunion Drifting Toward Disunion 1854-1861 Stowe 1852 Harriet Beecher Stowe s Uncle Tom s Cabin which showed the cruelty of slavery Helped start the war So you re the little woman who wrote the book that made

More information

APUSH REVIEWED! DRIFTING TOWARD DISUNION NORTHERN RESISTANCE 11/9/15. Result of the Kansas-Nebraska Act

APUSH REVIEWED! DRIFTING TOWARD DISUNION NORTHERN RESISTANCE 11/9/15. Result of the Kansas-Nebraska Act 11/9/15 APUSH 1854-1861 DRIFTING TOWARD DISUNION REVIEWED! American Pageant (Kennedy)Chapter 19 American History (Brinkley) Chapter 13 America s History (Henretta) Chapter 13 NORTHERN RESISTANCE Uncle

More information

Drifting Toward Disunion, Chapter 19

Drifting Toward Disunion, Chapter 19 Drifting Toward Disunion, 1854-1861 Chapter 19 Stowe & Helper: Literary Incendiaries Harriet Beecher Stowe Uncle Tom s Cabin Revealed evil in slavery Rallied North around abolitionism Hinton R. Helper

More information

I. Stowe and Helper: Literary Incendiaries I. Stowe and Helper: Literary Incendiaries (cont.) I. Stowe and Helper: Literary Incendiaries (cont.

I. Stowe and Helper: Literary Incendiaries I. Stowe and Helper: Literary Incendiaries (cont.) I. Stowe and Helper: Literary Incendiaries (cont. 1 2 3 I. Stowe and Helper: Literary Incendiaries Uncle Tom's Cabin Harriet Beecher Stowe She was determined to awaken North to wickedness of slavery By laying bare its terrible inhumanity, especially splitting

More information

CHAPTER 15. A Divided Nation

CHAPTER 15. A Divided Nation CHAPTER 15 A Divided Nation Trouble in Kansas SECTION 15.2 ELECTION OF 1852 1852 - four candidates for the Democratic presidential nomination. Many turned to Franklin Pierce, a little-known politician

More information

Drifting Toward Disunion

Drifting Toward Disunion Drifting Toward Disunion 1854 1861 Drift to Civil War Series of events through 1850s lead to Civil War Violence in Kansas over slavery Dred Scott decision Lincoln s nomination for Republican president

More information

1. In 1852, Harriet Beecher Stowe published Uncle Tom s Cabin, a popular book that awakened the passions of the North toward the evils of slavery.

1. In 1852, Harriet Beecher Stowe published Uncle Tom s Cabin, a popular book that awakened the passions of the North toward the evils of slavery. Chapter 19 - Drifting Toward Disunion I. Stowe and Helper: Literary Incendiaries 1. In 1852, Harriet Beecher Stowe published Uncle Tom s Cabin, a popular book that awakened the passions of the North toward

More information

CHAPTER 10: THE NATION SPLITS APART The Big Picture: After the war with Mexico, one questions stirred national politics: Would these new territories

CHAPTER 10: THE NATION SPLITS APART The Big Picture: After the war with Mexico, one questions stirred national politics: Would these new territories CHAPTER 10: THE NATION SPLITS APART The Big Picture: After the war with Mexico, one questions stirred national politics: Would these new territories be slave or free? By 1860 the nation had split along

More information

North/South Split Made Complete

North/South Split Made Complete North/South Split Made Complete In 1855, the American Party split into northern (antislavery) and southern (proslavery) wings Many people who had voted for the Know-Nothings shifted their support to the

More information

Chapter 13 The Union In Peril,

Chapter 13 The Union In Peril, Chapter 13 The Union In Peril, 1848-1861 Zachary Taylor s presidency Almost immediately he had to deal with the admission of California into the union as a free state. California s population expanded

More information

Uncle Tom s Cabin Harriett Beecher Stowe Connecticut teacher

Uncle Tom s Cabin Harriett Beecher Stowe Connecticut teacher Uncle Tom s Cabin 1852 Harriett Beecher Stowe Connecticut teacher Goal was to expose the reality of slavery Humanity can be saved through Christianity No. 1 Novel for Century. Sectionalism North Horrified

More information

A Divided Nation. Chapter 15 Page 472

A Divided Nation. Chapter 15 Page 472 A Divided Nation Chapter 15 Page 472 The Debate Over Slavery Chapter 15 Section 1 Page 476 New Land Renews Slavery Disputes The Missouri Compromise of 1820 had divided the Louisiana Purchase into either

More information

Road to Civil War ( ) North - South Debates HW

Road to Civil War ( ) North - South Debates HW Road to Civil War (1850 1861) North - South Debates HW Crash Course US History Episode #18 http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ronmeoojcdy&list=pl8dpuualjxtmwmepbjtsg593eg7obzo7s&index=18 Review of some examples

More information

Slavery and Sectionalism. The Political Crisis of

Slavery and Sectionalism. The Political Crisis of Slavery and Sectionalism The Political Crisis of 1848-1861 Slavery? In the Territories Gold Rush Slavery? In the Territories Compromise of 1850 Dead on arrival/president Taylor dies/douglas Separate Legislation

More information

Unit 6: A Divided Union

Unit 6: A Divided Union Unit 6: A Divided Union Lecture 6.1 The Abolition Movement The idea that slavery was morally wrong grew out of two different sets of beliefs or principles: political - The Constitution says that, All men

More information

Can the Civil War be prevented?

Can the Civil War be prevented? Can the Civil War be prevented? Abraham Lincoln Abraham Lincoln Background Born in Kentucky; moved to Indiana then Illinois as a boy Didn t want to farm; went into business Elected to state legislature

More information

Chapter Introduction Section 1: Slavery and the West Section 2: A Nation Dividing Section 3: Challenges to Slavery Section 4: Secession and War

Chapter Introduction Section 1: Slavery and the West Section 2: A Nation Dividing Section 3: Challenges to Slavery Section 4: Secession and War Chapter Introduction Section 1: Slavery and the West Section 2: A Nation Dividing Section 3: Challenges to Slavery Section 4: Secession and War Visual Summary Slavery and the West Essential Question Did

More information

Unit 6: A Divided Union

Unit 6: A Divided Union Unit 6: A Divided Union Name: Lecture 6.1 The Abolition Movement The idea that slavery was morally wrong grew out of two different sets of beliefs or principles: political - The Constitution says that,

More information

Why the Civil War Happened

Why the Civil War Happened Why the Civil War Happened And What We Can Learn From It Day 2 WHAT WE LL COVER IN THIS COURSE Day One: Setting the stage: - the late 1790s through the 1830s or so Day Two: 1840 through mid-1850s Day Three:

More information

Slavery and Secession. Chapter 10.4

Slavery and Secession. Chapter 10.4 Slavery and Secession Chapter 10.4 1856: Democrat James Buchanan elected president 1857: Dred Scott v. Sandford Missouri Compromise = unconstitutional 1857: Voters in Kansas reject proslavery state constitution

More information

Slavery and Secession. The Americans, Chapter 10.4, Pages

Slavery and Secession. The Americans, Chapter 10.4, Pages Slavery and Secession The Americans, Chapter 10.4, Pages 324-331. Slavery Dominates Politics For strong leaders, slavery was a difficult issue. But it presented even more of a challenge for the indecisive

More information

Chapter 15: The Nation Breaking Apart

Chapter 15: The Nation Breaking Apart Chapter 15: The Nation Breaking Apart Teacher 1 SQ3R Chapter 15 The Nation Breaking Apart, Section 1 Tensions Rise Between North and South p.480-487 SURVEY Headings and Subheadings: SURVEY continued 1)

More information

Civil War - Points of Conflict

Civil War - Points of Conflict Civil War - Points of Conflict Missouri (Maine) Compromise (1820) proslavery in the early 1800s, tensions began to rise between and anti-slavery groups across the country by 1819 there were 11 free states

More information

Chapter 15 Worksheet: The Nation Breaking Apart Growing Tensions Between North and South Read pages Name 8

Chapter 15 Worksheet: The Nation Breaking Apart Growing Tensions Between North and South Read pages Name 8 Chapter 15 Worksheet: The Nation Breaking Apart 1846-1861 15.1 Growing Tensions Between North and South Read pages 441-445 Name 8 1. Wilmot Proviso- 2. Free-Soil Party- 3. Henry Clay- 4. Daniel Webster-

More information

1856 Presidential Election. James Buchanan John C. Frémont Millard Fillmore Democrat Republican Whig

1856 Presidential Election. James Buchanan John C. Frémont Millard Fillmore Democrat Republican Whig CHAPTER 19 Election of 1856 Old Buck v. The Pathfinder Democrats - James Buchanan someone untainted by the Kansas-Nebraska Act and a person with lots of political experience Popular sovereignty No Pierce

More information

Chapter Fifteen. The Coming Crisis, the 1850s

Chapter Fifteen. The Coming Crisis, the 1850s Chapter Fifteen The Coming Crisis, the 1850s Part One: Introduction Chapter Focus Questions Why did the Whigs and Democrats fail to find a lasting political compromise on the issue of slavery? What caused

More information

Chapter 15 Toward Civil War ( ) Section 3 Challenges to Slavery

Chapter 15 Toward Civil War ( ) Section 3 Challenges to Slavery Chapter 15 Toward Civil War (1840-1861) Section 3 Challenges to Slavery Which political issue is most important to you? A. Foreign policy B. Domestic policy C. The economy D. Government reform A. A B.

More information

Caning of Senator Sumner Election of 1856 Dred Scott Lincoln Douglas debate John Brown s raid

Caning of Senator Sumner Election of 1856 Dred Scott Lincoln Douglas debate John Brown s raid Caning of Senator Sumner Election of 1856 Dred Scott Lincoln Douglas debate John Brown s raid In reaction to the violence in Kansas, Senator Charles Sumner of Massachusetts delivered a speech denouncing

More information

Chapter 14: The Sectional Crisis

Chapter 14: The Sectional Crisis Chapter 14: The Sectional Crisis AP United States History Week of January 25, 2016 The Buildup to a Tumultuous Decade Both the Democrats and Whigs wanted to resolve the crisis Emotion and ideology became

More information

1/22/18 Monday Organize Your Notebook for Unit 6

1/22/18 Monday Organize Your Notebook for Unit 6 1/22/18 Monday Organize Your Notebook for Unit 6 #65 African-American Response to Slavery #66 Typical Day for the Enslaved #67 The Civil War Video Notes #68 Sectionalism New #69 1+2 Causes of the Civil

More information

Slavery was the topic

Slavery was the topic Slavery was the topic » if slavery is legal or not?» where slavery is allowed (or not allowed)? » The United States had been experiencing rapid growth (in terms of population and in land acquisition)

More information

SWBAT. Explain the role of compromise in the preservation of the Union

SWBAT. Explain the role of compromise in the preservation of the Union Union in Crisis SWBAT Explain the role of compromise in the preservation of the Union Do Now I hold it to be a good and it will continue to prove so if not disturbed by the spirit of abolition John C.

More information

Chapter 10 Section 4. Violence Erupts

Chapter 10 Section 4. Violence Erupts Chapter 10 Section 4 Violence Erupts Antislavery groups in the Northeast set up so-called Emigrant Aid societies in 1854 1855 to send some 1,200 New Englanders to Kansas to fight against slavery. The new

More information

The Path to Civil War

The Path to Civil War The Path to Civil War It all started at the Constitutional Convention The Three-Fifths Compromise Allowed southern states to count 3/5 of their slave populations for purposes of determining how many representatives

More information

Popular Sovereignty. Provisions. Settlers would determine status of slavery

Popular Sovereignty. Provisions. Settlers would determine status of slavery Popular Sovereignty Settlers would determine status of slavery Provisions Organization of Nebraska and Kansas territories Popular sovereignty Repealed Missouri Compromise Expanded slavery beyond Southern

More information

Events Leading to the Civil War

Events Leading to the Civil War Events Leading to the Civil War (1820-1861) Chapter 16 This is how it all began... Missouri Compromise (1820) Missouri Compromise (1820) devised by Henry Clay, kept the balance of free states (12) and

More information

Chapter 16 : Slavery Divides a Nation

Chapter 16 : Slavery Divides a Nation Chapter 16 : Slavery Divides a Nation 1 Part 1: Slavery in the Territories Hooray for the free Soil Party! In 1848 the Free Soil Party formed. The free soil party was a group of antislavery supporters

More information

Road to Civil War Challenges to Slavery: Chapter 12, Section 4 Conflict often brings about great change. A new antislavery party and a Supreme Court

Road to Civil War Challenges to Slavery: Chapter 12, Section 4 Conflict often brings about great change. A new antislavery party and a Supreme Court Road to Civil War Challenges to Slavery: Chapter 12, Section 4 Conflict often brings about great change. A new antislavery party and a Supreme Court decision divided the nation further on slavery. The

More information

THE ROAD TO CIVIL WAR

THE ROAD TO CIVIL WAR THE ROAD TO CIVIL WAR DIFFERENCES BETWEEN NORTH & SOUTH: SECTIONALISM NORTH: Favored a stronger central government (remember Federalist) More dependency on government Growing industrial economy Larger

More information

601. Stephen A. Douglas A moderate, who introduced the Kansas-Nebraska Act in 1854 and popularized the idea of popular sovereignty.

601. Stephen A. Douglas A moderate, who introduced the Kansas-Nebraska Act in 1854 and popularized the idea of popular sovereignty. Note Cards 601. Stephen A. Douglas A moderate, who introduced the Kansas-Nebraska Act in 1854 and popularized the idea of popular sovereignty. 602. Popular Sovereignty The doctrine that stated that the

More information

Civil War 10/25/2018. The Union in Crisis! Gold found in CA- increase population CA wants to be a state Free or slave state?

Civil War 10/25/2018. The Union in Crisis! Gold found in CA- increase population CA wants to be a state Free or slave state? The Union in Crisis! Dred Scott Kansas-Nebraska Act Lincoln-Douglas Debates Compromise of 1850 Civil War Lincoln s Election Compromise of 1850 Gold found in CA- increase population CA wants to be a state

More information

Years Before Secession. Buchanan s Presidency. ISSUE 1: Dred Scott Case 1/16/2013

Years Before Secession. Buchanan s Presidency. ISSUE 1: Dred Scott Case 1/16/2013 Years Before Secession Buchanan s Issues, Lincoln-Douglas Debates, Democratic Party Split, Election of Lincoln Buchanan s Presidency Three major events 1. Dred Scott Decision 2. Troubles in Kansas Lecompton

More information

Document 1: Railroads and Slave Density I Cotton (Maps)

Document 1: Railroads and Slave Density I Cotton (Maps) Document 1: Railroads and Slave Density I Cotton (Maps) These maps are meant to give students a visual sense that the Northern and Southern economies were very different, the North more industrial symbolized

More information

Thursday, May 28, Quick Recap s Right Now --> What are THREE events that show the growing divide in the USA since the 1850s?

Thursday, May 28, Quick Recap s Right Now --> What are THREE events that show the growing divide in the USA since the 1850s? Thursday, May 28, 2015 Take Out: - notes - writing utensil Today: Union in Peril - How did the divide over slavery widen in the 1850s? Homework: Permission Slips + $5!! Quick Recap - 1850s Right Now -->

More information

CHAPTER FIFTEEN: THE COMING CRISIS, THE 1850s

CHAPTER FIFTEEN: THE COMING CRISIS, THE 1850s CHAPTER FIFTEEN: THE COMING CRISIS, THE 1850s AMERICA IN 1850 Expansion and Growth Political Parties and Slavery States' Rights and Slavery Northern Fears of "The Slave Power Two Communities, Two Perspectives

More information

The Americans (Reconstruction to the 21st Century)

The Americans (Reconstruction to the 21st Century) The Americans (Reconstruction to the 21st Century) Chapter 4: TELESCOPING THE TIMES The Union in Peril CHAPTER OVERVIEW Slavery becomes an issue that divides the nation. North and South enter a long and

More information

netw rks Where in the world? When did it happen? Toward Civil War Lesson 1 The Search for Compromise ESSENTIAL QUESTION Terms to Know

netw rks Where in the world? When did it happen? Toward Civil War Lesson 1 The Search for Compromise ESSENTIAL QUESTION Terms to Know Lesson 1 The Search for Compromise ESSENTIAL QUESTION Why does conflict develop? GUIDING QUESTIONS 1. What political compromises were made because of slavery? 2. What is the Kansas-Nebraska Act? Terms

More information

Sectional disagreements moved settlers into the new territories. Settlers remained Northerners or Southerners.

Sectional disagreements moved settlers into the new territories. Settlers remained Northerners or Southerners. Unit 6 Notes Sectional disagreements moved settlers into the new territories. Settlers remained Northerners or Southerners. The opening of Oregon and the admission of California to the Union convinced

More information

THE DEBATE OVER SLAVERY

THE DEBATE OVER SLAVERY THE DEBATE OVER SLAVERY THE MORALITY & LEGITIMACY OF SLAVERY Read either the William Lloyd Garrison or John C Calhoun Article. Complete the questions associated with your article in Complete Sentences

More information

Lincoln s Election and Southern Secession

Lincoln s Election and Southern Secession Lincoln s Election and Southern Secession MAIN IDEA The election of Lincoln led the Southern states to secede from the Union. WHY IT MATTERS NOW This was the only time in U.S. history that states seceded

More information

Reading Guide Chapter 17: Manifest Destiny and Its Legacy ( )

Reading Guide Chapter 17: Manifest Destiny and Its Legacy ( ) Name Period Reading Guide Chapter 17: Manifest Destiny and Its Legacy (1841-1848) The Accession of Tyler Too 1. How were Clay and Webster foiled in their attempt to run Harrison s presidency? 2. Tyler

More information

#13: Sectionalism & Secession

#13: Sectionalism & Secession #13: Sectionalism & Secession 1. As a result of the modified Fugitive Slave Law from the Compromise of 1850, A) many Northerners who were not abolitionists were outraged at the sight of people being forced

More information

SSUSH 9 The student will identify key events, issues, and individuals relating to the causes, course, and consequences of the Civil War.

SSUSH 9 The student will identify key events, issues, and individuals relating to the causes, course, and consequences of the Civil War. SSUSH 9 The student will identify key events, issues, and individuals relating to the causes, course, and consequences of the Civil War. Stephen Douglas of Illinois proposes Repeals Missouri Compromise

More information

Lincoln, Secession, and War

Lincoln, Secession, and War Lincoln, Secession, and War Dred Scott Aftermath John C. Breckinridge James Buchanan Abraham Lincoln Dred Scott Stephen Douglas John Bell Republicans in Chicago The Wigwam Chicago convention hall at it

More information

Nuts and Bolts of Civil War/Reconstruction Unit

Nuts and Bolts of Civil War/Reconstruction Unit Sectionalism Nuts and Bolts of Civil War/Reconstruction Unit Differences between the various regions of the United States had a great impact on the events leading up to the Civil War. The North Industrialized

More information

Chapter 18 A Divided Nation

Chapter 18 A Divided Nation Chapter 18 A Divided Nation David Wilmot Election of 1848 & Free Soil Compromise of 1850 The Strange Death Zachary Taylor The Fugitive Slave Act Kansas-Nebraska Act Dred Scott John Brown And much more!

More information

DRED-SCOTT DECISION. Attempt by the Supreme Court to end the controversy over slave or free states

DRED-SCOTT DECISION. Attempt by the Supreme Court to end the controversy over slave or free states POLITICAL ALIGNMENT DEEPENS THE CRISIS DRED-SCOTT DECISION Attempt by the Supreme Court to end the controversy over slave or free states From Library of Congress Prints and Photographs Dred Scott and his

More information

The Great Debate- The Compromise of 1850

The Great Debate- The Compromise of 1850 Chapter 18 The Great Debate- The Compromise of 1850 The 1850 Crisis & Compromise 1. Nov. 1849- CA ratified a constitution that banned slavery. 2. The admission of California as a state threatened the balance

More information

SSUSH8 Explore the relationship

SSUSH8 Explore the relationship SSUSH8 Explore the relationship between slavery, growing northsouth divisions, and westward expansion that led to the outbreak of the Civil War. a. Explain the impact of the Missour i Compromise on the

More information

REVIEW FOR CHAPTERS 15, 16, AND 17 TEST

REVIEW FOR CHAPTERS 15, 16, AND 17 TEST Define the following with detail: REVIEW FOR CHAPTERS 15, 16, AND 17 TEST 1. Wilmot Proviso A bill passed by the House of Representatives but not by the Senate that would have outlawed slavery in the Mexican

More information

Chapter 15 Toward Civil War ( ) Section 4 Secession and War

Chapter 15 Toward Civil War ( ) Section 4 Secession and War Chapter 15 Toward Civil War (1840-1861) Section 4 Secession and War Rate your agreement with the following statement: States should be allowed to leave the Union if they disagree with the policies of the

More information

the election of abraham lincoln

the election of abraham lincoln Scott pursed his freedom, with the case eventually reaching the United States Supreme Court. It became a political question on whether or not slavery should be legal. Abolitionists and those who supported

More information

Chapter 10. The Union Peril

Chapter 10. The Union Peril Chapter 10 The Union Peril Section 1: The Divisive Politics of Slavery The North Economic & Social Diversity Cities, factories, immigrants Prejudice against: Slavery Between 1800 and 1860: Mill owners,

More information

AP U.S. History Unit 5 Exam. Name: Date: Choose the best of the answers given

AP U.S. History Unit 5 Exam. Name: Date: Choose the best of the answers given AP U.S. History Unit 5 Exam Name: Date: Choose the best of the answers given 1. President Polk's claim that American blood [had been shed] on the American soil referred to news of an armed clash between

More information

Civil War Open- Note Test. Directions: Using your notes from this unit answer the following questions.

Civil War Open- Note Test. Directions: Using your notes from this unit answer the following questions. Civil War Open- Note Test Directions: Using your notes from this unit answer the following questions. 1. Which of the following was a cause of the Civil War? a. Northerners did not believe the South had

More information

CHAPTER 13 THE COMING OF THE CIVIL WAR

CHAPTER 13 THE COMING OF THE CIVIL WAR CHAPTER 13 THE COMING OF THE CIVIL WAR The American Nation: A History of the United States, 13th edition Carnes/Garraty THE SLAVE POWER COMES NORTH New fugitive slave law encouraged more white Southerners

More information

Notes on the Pendulum Swing in American Presidential Elections,

Notes on the Pendulum Swing in American Presidential Elections, Notes on the Pendulum Swing in American Presidential Elections, 1789-1865 I Trends and Fluctuations Political Competition and Franchise Extension Parties compete against one another: Franchise extended

More information

AN OUTLINE OF THE 1850S, THE BREAKDOWN OF COMPROMISE, AND THE COMING OF THE WAR

AN OUTLINE OF THE 1850S, THE BREAKDOWN OF COMPROMISE, AND THE COMING OF THE WAR AN OUTLINE OF THE 1850S, THE BREAKDOWN OF COMPROMISE, AND THE COMING OF THE WAR The Fugitive Slave Act The Fugitive Slave Clause Found in Article IV, Section 2 of the Constitution Stated that No person

More information

A Dividing Nations 4. Which events of the mid-1800s kept the nation together and which events pulled it apart?

A Dividing Nations 4. Which events of the mid-1800s kept the nation together and which events pulled it apart? A Dividing Nation Which events of the mid-1800s kept the nation together and which events pulled it apart? P R E V I E W In 1858, Abraham Lincoln warned, A house divided against itself cannot stand. Answer

More information

The Civil War,

The Civil War, I. An Overview 1. The Civil War (1861-65) was a social and military conflict between the United States of America inthe North and the Confederate States of American in the South. 2. Two immediate triggers:

More information

Steps to the Civil War

Steps to the Civil War Steps to the Civil War 1820 1860 WORKSHOP FOR QUESTIONS SAMPLES How did Rosa Parks assist in the start of the Civil Rights Act? Was the Battle of Alamo the leading cause of the Mexican War? Nov 20 11:14

More information

Kentucky Senator HENRY CLAY earned his reputation as the Great Compromiser for his tireless efforts to find common ground between North and South.

Kentucky Senator HENRY CLAY earned his reputation as the Great Compromiser for his tireless efforts to find common ground between North and South. Kentucky Senator HENRY CLAY earned his reputation as the Great Compromiser for his tireless efforts to find common ground between North and South. One of 16 siblings, Clay grew up on a farm in Virginia.

More information

PPT Accompaniment for To Secede or Not to Secede: Events Leading to Civil War

PPT Accompaniment for To Secede or Not to Secede: Events Leading to Civil War PPT Accompaniment for To Secede or Not to Secede: Events Leading to Civil War To view this PDF as a projectable presentation, save the file, click View in the top menu bar of the file, and select Full

More information

Which events of the mid-1800s kept the nation together and which events pulled it apart?

Which events of the mid-1800s kept the nation together and which events pulled it apart? A Dividing Nation Which events of the mid-1800s kept the nation together and which events pulled it apart? R E A D I N G N O T E S Key Content Terms As you complete the Reading Notes, use these terms in

More information

The South Secedes By USHistory.org 2016

The South Secedes By USHistory.org 2016 Name: Class: The South Secedes By USHistory.org 2016 This text details the official start of the American Civil War, fought between the northern and southern states of the United States from 1861 to 1865.

More information

Manifest Destiny. Eve of Civil War 3 rd Period

Manifest Destiny. Eve of Civil War 3 rd Period Manifest Destiny Eve of Civil War 3 rd Period Texas Annexation-Wilmot Proviso Not Appealing to the North Southerners approved due to agriculture Texas submits treaty of annexation in 1844 President John

More information

The United States Expands West. 1820s 1860s

The United States Expands West. 1820s 1860s The United States Expands West 1820s 1860s Georgia Standards SSUSH8 The student will explain the relationship between growing northsouth divisions and westward expansion. a. Explain how slavery became

More information

A Dividing Nation. Which events of the mid-1800s kept the nation together and which events pulled it apart?

A Dividing Nation. Which events of the mid-1800s kept the nation together and which events pulled it apart? Unit 7 A Dividing Nation C H A P T E R 21 Which events of the mid-1800s kept the nation together and which events pulled it apart? P R E V I E W In 1858, Abraham Lincoln warned, A house divided against

More information

SOWING THE SEEDS OF CONFLICT IN A HOUSE DIVIDED. By: Angelica Narvaez

SOWING THE SEEDS OF CONFLICT IN A HOUSE DIVIDED. By: Angelica Narvaez SOWING THE SEEDS OF CONFLICT IN A HOUSE DIVIDED By: Angelica Narvaez Timeline Cotton Gin (1784) Compromise of 1820 Nullification Crisis (1832) Mexican- American War (1846-1848) Compromise of 1850 Harriet

More information

8-4.3 Notes - Causes of Secession: Why South Carolina Left the Union

8-4.3 Notes - Causes of Secession: Why South Carolina Left the Union 8-4.3 Notes - Causes of Secession: Why South Carolina Left the Union Objectives - Analyze key issues that led to South Carolina s secession from the Union, including the nullification controversy and John

More information

The Crisis Deepens. Birth of the Republican Party

The Crisis Deepens. Birth of the Republican Party The Crisis Deepens Main Idea The slavery controversy accelerated both the breakdown of the major political parties and the growth of hostility between North and South. Key Terms and Names Republican Party,

More information

The United States, Mid-1850

The United States, Mid-1850 G E O G R A P H Y C H A L L E N G E The United States, Mid-1850 130 W 50 N 70 W 30 N ATLANTIC OCEAN 120 W Gulf of Mexico PACIFIC OCEAN 20 N N W E S 0 110 W 400 800 miles 80 W 0 400 800 kilometers Lambert

More information

Bleeding Kansas

Bleeding Kansas Bleeding Kansas 1853 1861 Guided Reading: Secondary The term Bleeding Kansas is used to describe the violent events that took place in the Kansas Territory regarding arguments about whether slavery should

More information

Part 5 The South Breaks Away

Part 5 The South Breaks Away Part 5 The South Breaks Away More bloodshed helped push the North and South further apart. In 1859, John Brown and some of his followers raided a federal arsenal (gun warehouse). They were hoping to start

More information

Popular Sovereignty Should Settle the Slavery Question (1858) Stephen A. Douglas ( )

Popular Sovereignty Should Settle the Slavery Question (1858) Stephen A. Douglas ( ) Popular Sovereignty Should Settle the Slavery Question (1858) Stephen A. Douglas (1813-1861) Stephen A. Douglas, U.S. senator from Illinois, was one of America's leading political figures of the 1850s.

More information

Sectionalism and Compromise

Sectionalism and Compromise Sectionalism and Compromise Steps to Civil War CA 8 th Grade US History Standard 8.9.5 In 1818, Missouri asked to Join the Union as a slave state. At that time the number of slave and free states were

More information

COMPREHENSION AND CRITICAL THINKING

COMPREHENSION AND CRITICAL THINKING Name Class Date Chapter Summary COMPREHENSION AND CRITICAL THINKING Use information from the graphic organizer to answer the following questions. 1. Recall What caused the sectional controversy that led

More information

American History Unit 1 American Unification (Part I) The Big Picture:

American History Unit 1 American Unification (Part I) The Big Picture: American History Unit 1 American Unification (Part I) The Big Picture: Compromises in 1820, 1833, and 1850 worked temporarily, but the emergence of sectional parties (Republicans and Democrats) as a result

More information

Civil War Catalysts: The Demise of the Second Party System and the Rise of the Republican Party. By Olivia Nail-Beatty

Civil War Catalysts: The Demise of the Second Party System and the Rise of the Republican Party. By Olivia Nail-Beatty Civil War Catalysts: The Demise of the Second Party System and the Rise of the Republican Party. By Olivia Nail-Beatty The Whig Party Major party opposing the Democratic party from 1834-1854. Developed

More information

A Divided Nation

A Divided Nation Chapter 15 A Divided Nation 1848 1860 What you will learn Two women look at a display called Survival of Spirit at the Museum of African American History in Detroit, Michigan.The display shows a history

More information

Sectionalism The Mexican American War and the Kansas Nebraska Act. APUSH Period 5 Notes

Sectionalism The Mexican American War and the Kansas Nebraska Act. APUSH Period 5 Notes Sectionalism The Mexican American War and the Kansas Nebraska Act APUSH Period 5 Notes Key Concept 5.2.II A&B Intensified by expansion and depending regional divisions, debates over slavery and other economic,

More information

Emancipation Proclamation

Emancipation Proclamation Emancipation Proclamation and the 13 th, 14 th & 15 th Amendments Written by Douglas M. Rife Illustrated by Bron Smith Teaching & Learning Company 1204 Buchanan St., P.O. Box 10 Carthage, IL 62321-0010

More information

America s History, Chapter 13, Expansion, War, and Sectional Crisis

America s History, Chapter 13, Expansion, War, and Sectional Crisis America s History, Chapter 13, Expansion, War, and Sectional Crisis Key Concept: The United States's acquisition of lands in the West gave rise to contests over the extension of slavery into new territories.

More information

Election of May the Candidates Please Rise

Election of May the Candidates Please Rise Election of 1860 May the Candidates Please Rise The Election of 1860 During the election of 1860 four candies ran for office. Each candidate had different views. Slavery of course will be a major issue

More information

WS/FCS Unit Planning Organizer

WS/FCS Unit Planning Organizer WS/FCS Unit Planning Organizer Subject(s) Social Studies Conceptual Lenses Grade/Course American History 1 Compromise Unit of Study Unit 6: The Civil War and (4.1, 4.2, 4.4, 5.2, 7.1, 7.2, 7.3) War Power

More information

Units 6 and 7: Civil War and Reconstruction

Units 6 and 7: Civil War and Reconstruction Units 6 and 7: Civil War and Reconstruction Heading towards War Territorial Expansion and Sectional A. Manifest Destiny and mission extend power and civilization across North America 1840s - Driven by

More information

James Buchanan ( )

James Buchanan ( ) James Buchanan (1791 1868) James Buchanan, a Democrat, was America s 15 th President. He held office from 1857 1861. He was born on April 23, 1791, in Cove Gap, Pennsylvania. He was the second of eleven

More information

Expansion, Nationalism,& Sectionalism ( )

Expansion, Nationalism,& Sectionalism ( ) Expansion, Nationalism,& Sectionalism (1800-1865) President Adams John Adams was Washington s VP Adams ran for election in 1796 and won He faced 2 difficult tasks: war from abroad & growing political party

More information

AP United States Unit Four Study Guide Mr. Hansen Sectionalism and the Roads to Disunion and Reconstruction

AP United States Unit Four Study Guide Mr. Hansen Sectionalism and the Roads to Disunion and Reconstruction AP United States Unit Four Study Guide Mr. Hansen Sectionalism and the Roads to Disunion and Reconstruction Text chapters: Chapter 13: The Impending Crisis Chapter 14: The Civil War Chapter 15: Reconstruction

More information