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Chapter 18.1

Chapter 18.1. The Debate over Slavery Unit 10. The Debate over Slavery. Wilmot Proviso vs. Popular Sovereignty W. Proviso: would have banned slavery completely in new territories. P. Sovereignty: allows each territory to decide the issue.

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Chapter 18.1

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  1. Chapter 18.1 The Debate over Slavery Unit 10

  2. The Debate over Slavery • Wilmot Proviso vs. Popular Sovereignty • W. Proviso: would have banned slavery completely in new territories. • P. Sovereignty: allows each territory to decide the issue. • Debate shows growing sectionalism of the country. • Favor of region over interest of the country as whole. WASHINGTON WARNED US!!!! Danger of political parties, founded on geographical discriminations.

  3. DO YOU REMEMBER??? What territories have we recently talked about, that have entered the Union? • Missouri • Texas • Mexican Cession • California • Louisiana Territory SLAVE STATE VS. FREE STATE

  4. The Compromise of 1850 • CA entered the Union as a free state. • The rest of the Mexican Cession divided into 2 territories: Utah & New Mexico. • Issue of slavery decided by pop. sovereignty. • TX gave up land claims in New Mexico in return for financial help. • Outlawed slavery in Wash. DC • Created Fugitive Slave Act. HAVE NO FEAR….. HENRY CLAY IS HERE!!!! Henry Clay helps create a compromise!

  5. Fugitive Slave Act Made it a federal crime to help runaway slaves. Let officials arrest runaways in areas where slavery was illegal.

  6. Fugitive Slave Act • Agents could arrest suspected runaways before U.S. commissioners. • Commissioners pay: • $5 to reject an agent’s claim, • $10 to return the suspected slave to the South. What effect will this act have on slavery???

  7. Antislavery Literature • Abolitionists used stories, like slave narratives, to gain support. • Uncle Tom’s Cabin, by Harriet Beecher Stowe (1852) • Stowe wanted to write a book to show what slavery was really like. • Book sold 2 million copies w/in 10 years. • Stowe had created “two millions of abolitionists”

  8. 18.2 Trouble in Kansas

  9. The Election of 1852 Hypothesize WHO DO YOU THINK WINS? Franklin Pierce

  10. The Kansas-Nebraska Act • Stephen Douglas wanted a railroad from Chicago to the Pacific.

  11. The Kansas-Nebraska Act • HOWEVER, the Louisiana Purchase had to become federal territory without slavery. (Missouri Compromise) The South was not happy with this idea.

  12. The Kansas-Nebraska Act • Compromise • The Kansas-Nebraska Act: • Divide the rest of the Louisiana Purchase into two territories. • Kansas and Nebraska. • Popular Sovereignty decided the question of slavery.

  13. The Kansas-Nebraska Act • Antislavery Northerners were outraged. • Lost in the controversy, Douglas’s railroad never happened. FAIL!

  14. REVIEW What is Popular Sovereignty? • A contest for Kansas has Began!

  15. “Bleeding Kansas” Antislavery Northerners VS. Proslavery Southerners 1856- Kansas had two governments and an angry population divided into two armed camps.

  16. “Bleeding Kansas” May 1856 – Pro-Slavery posse of more than 700 men rode to Lawrence, where they destroyed buildings and printing presses.

  17. “Bleeding Kansas” • Pottawatomie Massacre • John Brown and seven men killed 5 pro-slavery men in response to the Sack of Lawerence. Kansas goes into a civil war.200 people killed“Bleeding Kansas”

  18. Conflict in Congress • Charles Sumner’s anti-slavery speech, “The Crime Against Kansas” was given in congress and upset Preston Brooks. • Brooks will beat Sumner unconsciously with a walking stick.

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