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Growth and Conflict

Growth and Conflict. Conflicts over Texas, Maine, and Oregon. Texas Revolt and independence Annexation denied Boundary dispute in Maine Boundary dispute in Oregon. Conflicts over Texas, Maine, and Oregon. Election of 1844 James K. Polk Annexing Texas and dividing Oregon. War with Mexico.

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Growth and Conflict

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  1. Growth and Conflict

  2. Conflicts over Texas, Maine, and Oregon • Texas • Revolt and independence • Annexation denied • Boundary dispute in Maine • Boundary dispute in Oregon

  3. Conflicts over Texas, Maine, and Oregon • Election of 1844 • James K. Polk • Annexing Texas and dividing Oregon

  4. War with Mexico • Immediate causes of the war • Military campaigns • Consequences of the war • Treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo • Wilmot Proviso • Prelude to civil war?

  5. Manifest Destiny to the South • Ostend Manifesto • Walker Expedition • Clayton-Bulwer Treaty, 1850 • Gadsden Purchase

  6. Slavery and the Mexican Cession • Background • Missouri Compromise, 1820 • Compromise of 1850 • Issue • Provisions

  7. Further Growth of Antislavery Feeling in the North • Fugitive Slave Law, 1850 • Harriet Beecher Stowe • Horace Greeley

  8. Further Growth of Antislavery Feeling in the North • Kansas-Nebraska Act, 1854 • Provisions • Douglas’ motives • “Bleeding Kansas”

  9. Further Growth of Antislavery Feeling in the North • Formation of the Republican Party, 1854 • Presidential election of 1856 President James Buchanan

  10. Further Growth of Antislavery Feeling in the North • Dred Scott case • Issue • Supreme Court decision, 1857

  11. Further Growth of Antislavery Feeling in the North • Lincoln-Douglas debates, 1858 • John Brown’s raid, 1859

  12. The Union Dissolves • Presidential Election of 1860 • Issues and candidates • Results • The South secedes • Southern reaction to the election • Confederate States of America

  13. The Union Dissolves • The Federal Government and the Challenge of Secession • Buchanan’s inaction • Lincoln takes office • Other Causes of the Civil War • Economic differences • Nature of the federal union • Control of the central government • Differences in civilization • Fanaticism

  14. The Civil War: The Home Front • Recruiting for military service • In the South • In the North • Financing the War • In the South • In the North

  15. The Civil War: The Home Front • Politics in the South • Politics in the North • Expansion of presidential powers • Peace Democrats (Copperheads) • Emancipation Proclamation, 1863 • Election of 1864 • Lincoln’s Second Inaugural Address • Lincoln’s assassination

  16. Congressional Reconstruction • Civil Rights Act of 1866 • Freedmen’s Bureau Act of 1866 • 14th Amendment • First Reconstruction Act, 1867

  17. Impeachment of President Andrew Johnson • Tenure of Office Act, 1867 • Failure of the Impeachment • Significance

  18. Lasting Results of the Civil War and Reconstruction • Abolition of slavery and constitutional guarantee of African-Americans’ rights • Discrimination against African-Americans in the South • Beginnings of education for African-Americans in the South "This Is A White Man's Government,"Harper's Weekly, September 5, 1868

  19. Lasting Results of the Civil War and Reconstruction • Supremacy of the federal government • Expansion of presidential powers in wartime • Changes in the South’s economy

  20. Republicans Dominate the Post-Civil War Period, 1869-1889 • Economic developments • Social developments • Political developments • Major parties and their supporters • Issues

  21. Grant Administration, 1869-1877 (Republican) • Election of 1868 • Grant and the presidency • Election of 1872 • Corruption: A period of national disgrace • Important domestic legislation • Significant foreign affairs: The Alabama claims

  22. Hayes Administration, 1877-1881 (Republican) • Election of 1876 • Candidates and issues • Disputed electoral vote • End of Reconstruction • Beginnings of civil service reform • Hayes’ anti-labor acts • Silver coinage

  23. Garfield-Arthur Administration, 1881-1885 (Republican) • Election of 1880 • Assassination of Garfield, 1881 • Arthur as President, 1881-1885 • The office makes the person • Important domestic legislation

  24. First Cleveland Administration, 1885-1889 (Democrat) • Election of 1884 • Cleveland and civil service reform • Restored prestige of the presidential office • Important domestic legislation

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