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Chapter 19 p. 425-431

Chapter 19 p. 425-431. The Disruption of the Democrats. Breckinridge. Douglas.

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Chapter 19 p. 425-431

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  1. Chapter 19p. 425-431

  2. The Disruption of the Democrats Breckinridge Douglas • After failing to nominate a candidate in Charleston, South Carolina, the Democrats split into Northern and Southern factions, and at Baltimore, popular sovereignty Northern Democrats nominated Stephen Douglas for president while the Southern Democrats, on a proslavery platform, chose Kentuckian John C. Breckinridge.

  3. Meanwhile, the “Know-Nothings” chose John Bellof Tennessee and called themselves the Constitutional Union party. They tried to mend fences, promoting preserving the Union by compromise and offered as their platform, simply, the Constitution.

  4. A Rail-Splitter Splits The Union • The Republicans, sensing victory against their split opponents, nominated Abraham Lincoln, not William “Higher Law” Seward. • Their platform had an appeal to every important non-southern group: for free-soilers it proposed the non-expansion of slavery; for northern manufacturers, a protective tariff; for the immigrants, no abridgement of rights; for the West, internal improvements at federal expense; and for the farmers, free homesteads. • Southerners threatened that Lincoln’s election would result in Southern secession. • Lincoln wasn’t an outright abolitionist, since as late as February 1865, he had still favored cash compensation for freed slaves. • Abe Lincoln won the election despite not even being on the ballot in the South.

  5. The Electoral Upheaval of 1860 • It was a very sectional race: the North went to Lincoln, the South to Breckinridge, the “middle-ground” to the middle-of-the-road candidate in Bell, and popular-sovereignty-land went to Douglas.

  6. The Electoral Upheaval of 1860 • Lincoln won with only 40% of the popular vote, and had the Democratic Party been more organized and energetic, they might have won. • The Republicans did not control the House or the Senate, and the South still had a five-to-four majority in the Supreme Court, but the South still decided to secede.

  7. The Secessionist Exodus • When Lincoln won the 1860 presidential election, people in South Carolina rejoiced because it gave them an excuse to secede – which they did effectively in December. • Alabama, Mississippi, Florida, Georgia, Louisiana, and Texas (the Deep South) followed in the next six weeks, before Abe was inaugurated. • The seven secession states first met in Montgomery, Alabama in February of 1861 and created the Confederate States of America, and they chose Jefferson Davis as president.

  8. The Secessionist Exodus • President Buchanan did nothing to force the confederacy back into the Union, partly because: - northern public opinion would still not support war. - Union troops were needed to control the Indians in the West. - he was surrounded by pro-southern advisers. - a slim chance of reconciliation still remained. • Instead, he simply left the issue for Lincoln to handle when he got sworn in. Lincoln’s 1865 inauguration

  9. The Collapse of Compromise • In a last-minute attempt at compromise (again), James Henry Crittenden of Kentucky proposed the Crittenden Compromise, which would ban slavery north of the 36°30’ line extended to the Pacific and would leave the issue in territories south of the line up to the people; also, existing slavery south of the line would be protected. Crittenden

  10. The Collapse Of Compromise • Lincoln opposed the compromise, which might have worked, because his party had preached against the extension of slavery, and he had to stick to principle. • It also seems that Buchanan couldn’t have saved the Union no matter what he would have done. Buchanan

  11. Farewell To Union The seceding states ultimately left the Union because: • They feared that their rights as a slaveholding minority were being threatened and the political balance seemed to be tipping against them. • They were alarmed at the growing power of the Republican Party. • They believed that their departure would be unopposed, despite what the Northerners claimed. • They were tired of abolitionist attacks. Jefferson Davis

  12. Farewell to Union • The South also hoped to develop its own banking and shipping, and to prosper. In fact, the South simply repudiated their immense debt owed to northern creditors! • Besides, in 1776, the 13 colonies had seceded from Britain and had won; now the South theorized they could do the same thing.

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