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The Civil War’s Approach

The Civil War’s Approach. 1848-1861. Philosophies Regarding Slavery. Constitutional Protectionism Slavery protected by the Constitution and, therefore, must be allowed everywhere in US John C. Calhoun and other staunch supporters of slavery. Philosophies Regarding Slavery. Free Soil

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The Civil War’s Approach

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  1. The Civil War’s Approach 1848-1861

  2. Philosophies Regarding Slavery • Constitutional Protectionism • Slavery protected by the Constitution and, therefore, must be allowed everywhere in US • John C. Calhoun and other staunch supporters of slavery

  3. Philosophies Regarding Slavery • Free Soil • No expansion of slavery into new territories • Slavery should continue to be allowed where it already exists • GOAL: slow decline of slavery over time • Lincoln, Wilmot, Seward, etc.

  4. Philosophies Regarding Slavery • Abolition • Either gradual or immediate • This position was taken by a minority (albeit a vocal one) of those who opposed slavery

  5. Philosophies Regarding Slavery • Popular Sovereignty -- residents of state/territory vote to decide whether or not to allow slavery -- Lewis Cass, Stephen A. Douglas -- thought, by its proponents, to be the perfect compromise

  6. Wilmot Proviso (1846) • Added by Congressman David Wilmot to a Mexican War appropriations bill • Declared “neither slavery nor involuntary servitude shall ever exist” in territories acquired from Mexico • Free Soil!

  7. California (1850) • With its population growing rapidly due to the Gold Rush, California applied for statehood in 1850. • What was the problem? . . . Admission of California as a free state would give free states a 16-15 advantage.

  8. Compromise of 1850 • CA a Free State • Popular Sovereignty to decide slave status of New Mexico and Utah Territories • Slave Trade outlawed in DC • Fugitive Slave Act of 1850 • New, stronger fugitive slave law • Required Northerners to hunt down and return runaway slaves • Denied suspected runaways a jury trial

  9. Architects of the Compromise of 1850 • Henry Clay, not surprisingly, put together the elaborate compromise, but . . . . . . he then died. Illinois Senator Stephen A. Douglas skillfully ushered it through the Congress.

  10. Reaction to the Fugitive Slave Act • Anti-slavery Northerners were outraged! • They believed the act was a deliberate effort to implicate them in the evilof slavery. It brought the crisis to their own, free states. • Southerners were equally appalled by the Northern reaction since they believed arrogant, self-righteous Northerners were trying to imposetheir values on them. • A compromise that was supposed to solve the problem of slavery only intensified differences and the slavery debate!

  11. Reaction to the Fugitive Slave Act

  12. Subverting the System • Some anti-slavery Northerners put themselves at risk by sheltering runaway slaves and helping them escape to Canada on the “underground railroad.”

  13. Uncle Tom’s Cabin (1852) • anti-slavery novel by . . . • extremely popular and influential (even in Europe) • Lincoln to Stowe in 1863: “So you’re the little woman that wrote the book that made this great war!” What made it so influential?

  14. Kansas-Nebraska Act (1854) • Sponsored by Sen. Stephen A. Douglas • Called for popular sovereignty to determine the slave status of the Kansas and Nebraska Territories • Douglas believed it would not be controversial since KS and NE weren’t suitable for slavery.

  15. Kansas-Nebraska Act (1854) • Though Douglas managed to get it passed, the Act was met with furious opposition. • Violated Missouri Compromise • It split the Whig party along sectionallines. The party never recovered.

  16. Republican Party (1856) • Former “Conscience Whigs” • Former “American System Whigs” • Former “Know-Nothings” • Free Soilers • Almost entirely Northerners – sectionalism!

  17. Kansas Controversy • After passage of the KS-NE Act, anti-slavery forces mobilized to ensure that Kansas would be a free territory. • Frederick Douglass, among others, called for “companies of emigrants from the free states . . . to possess the goodly land.” • By mid-1855 about 1200 anti-slavery New Englanders had emigrated to Kansas.

  18. Kansas Controversy: David Atchison’s Pro-slavery Legions • Democratic Missouri Senator David Atchison proudly vowed to defend the “property” of KS slaveowners “with the bayonet and with blood” and, if necessary, “kill every God-damned abolitionist in the district.” • The situation in Kansas deteriorated.

  19. “Bleeding Kansas” (1856):Pottawatomie Massacre • In May, a mob ransacked the anti-slavery town of Lawrence. • Abolitionist John Brown responded by leading a band of New Englanders that murdered five men in the night at a pro-slavery settlement near Pottawatomie Creek.

  20. John Brown:Abolitionist Cult Hero

  21. “Civil War” in Kansas • With the territory hopelessly divided, pro and anti-slavery forces each set up their own governments. • Pro-slavery capital = Lecompton • Anti-slavery capital = Lawrence/Topeka

  22. May 1856

  23. Caning of Sumner • Tensions spilled over onto the usually-polite floor of the US Senate. • After an anti-slavery speech in which MA Sen. Charles Sumner “insulted” his uncle (Sen. Andrew Butler), SC Congressman Preston Brooks savagely beat Sumner with a cane as he sat at his Senate desk.

  24. Lecompton Constitution (1857) • KS held an election for delegates to a state constitutional convention in 1857. • Widespread intimidation kept the anti-slavery vote to a minimum. • A pro-slavery constitution was written. • After much heated debate, Congress rejected the almost certainly illegitimate KS constiution

  25. Democrats Divided • The battle over the Lecompton Constitution split the Democratic Party. • Northern Democrats, led by Stephen A. Douglas, opposed it. • Southern Democrats and Pres. James Buchanan supported it. • The Democrats too were now divided along sectional lines

  26. Dred Scott Case (1857) • Dred Scott was a Missouri slave. • He traveled with his owner to the free territories of Wisconsin and Illinois, then sued for his freedom. • The case ultimately went to the US Supreme Court.

  27. Dred Scott Decision (1857) • Chief JusticeRoger Taney wrote the Court’s decision. • It declared that blacks were not people and, therefore, not protected by the Constitution. • Property rights of slaveowners, however, were. • Therefore, the limitation of slavery by Congress was unconstitutional.

  28. Lincoln-Douglas Debates (1858) • The politically-inexperienced but articulate and determined Abraham Lincoln (R) challenged Stephen A. Douglas (D) in the 1858 Illinois US Senate race. • A highly-publicized series of debates brought national attention to the race.

  29. Lincoln-Douglas Debates • Lincoln, during a debate at Freeport, asked Douglas how he could support both popular sovereignty and the Dred Scott decision • Douglas’ answer, known as the Freeport doctrine, was that local governments could simply not enforce slavery laws. (Freeport Doctrine) • The Senate election was won by. . . . . . Douglas.

  30. John Brown’s Raid on Harpers Ferry • On Oct. 16, 1859, John Brown and 22 other men attacked the federal arsenal at Harpers Ferry, VA • Their intent was to arm slaves for a massive slave revolt.

  31. John Brown’s Raid (1859) • After more than a day’s fighting, Brown was captured. • He was later tried and hanged for treason.

  32. John Brown • Brown’s status as an abolitionist hero was greatly enhance, and he was portrayed in the North as a saintly figure. • Southerners responded to this portrayal with shock and horror.

  33. Election of 1860 • Abraham Lincoln (Republican) • Stephen A. Douglas (Northern Democrat) • John C. Breckinridge (Southern Democrat) • John Bell (Constitutional Union Party)

  34. Election of 1860

  35. Secession • Lincoln’s election was the last straw for increasingly anxious Southerners. • On December 20, 1860, SC seceded. • By February 1861, the rest of the Deep South had followed. • A total of 13 states ultimately left the Union.

  36. Border States • Attention then turned to a group of states situated between North and South that could go either way. • Virginia split. • After much maneuvering (and an extraordinary display of presidential power by Lincoln, Kentucky, Missouri, and Maryland stayed in the Union.

  37. The Struggle for the Border States: Maryland • Southern sympathy ran deep in the slave state of Maryland. • On his way to his inauguration, Lincoln had to be ushered through Baltimore in the night disguised by a shawl. • On April 19, 1861, the 6th MA Regiment was attacked by a mob in Baltimore. • Lincoln suspended habeas corpus and jailed 19 state legislators and Baltimore’s mayor in order to secure the state.

  38. The Civil War 1861-1865

  39. Abraham Lincoln • Born on KY frontier, grew up on small farm in Indiana • Difficult childhood: deaths of mother and sister, not close to father • maybe one year of formal schooling • self-taught lawyer • suffered bouts of depression • served one term in US House

  40. A. Lincoln: Frederick Douglass’ Take “I was never more quickly or more completely put at ease in the presence of a great man than in that of Abraham Lincoln.” “Perhaps many of you know how the President of the United States received a black man at the White House. I will tell you how he received me – just as one gentleman received another. I tell you I felt big there!”

  41. Jefferson Davis • Raised in wealthy Southern family (born in Kentucky) • Graduated from West Point • known as a “good” slaveowner in Mississippi • battled various illnesses • had reputation for being personally disagreeable • never well-liked • blamed (somewhat unjustly) for Confederacy’s failures

  42. Fort Sumter • After SC’s secession, the Union continued to maintain Ft. Sumter in Charleston harbor. • Refusing to recognize secession, Lincoln continued to supply the garrison at Ft. Sumter under Major Robert Anderson. • On April 12, 1861, Confederate artillery opened fire and forced Ft. Sumter’s surrender. • With war apparently having broken out, Lincoln called up state militiamen for 90 days.

  43. Relative Strengths and Weaknesses of North and South

  44. (First) Battle of Bull Run • At Manassas, VA, just outside DC • Union forces under Irwin McDowell were routed by Confederate troops. • Onlookers were sent fleeing back to Washington in horror. • Confederates failed to press their advantage.

  45. Union Command • Lincoln had difficulty settling on a commander for Union forces. In the summer of 1861, he turned to 34-yr-old Gen. George McClellan. • McClellan skillfully put together and trained the Union Army, but proved hesitant to use it. He and Lincoln developed an adversarial relationship.

  46. McClellan’s Peninsula Campaign (March 1862) • Prodded by Lincoln, McClellan moved his army toward Richmond. • Despite significant advantages, McClellan stopped short of the Confederate capital. • Lincoln was furious.

  47. Robert E. Lee • Unbelievably popular, the quietly dignified Lee was the moral leader of the Confederacy. • Personally opposed to slavery • A skillful military commander • Believed that the South needed to force a quick end to the war • To that end, he invaded the North in Sept. 1862.

  48. Dissension in the North • During 1862, many Northerners began to question the war’s necessity and the competence of their president. • “Copperheads” (Peace Democrats) openly opposed the continuation of the war. • Lincoln also came under fire from fellow Republicans who doubted his competence and dedication to abolition. • Draft riots broke out in NYC among angry Irish immigrants.

  49. Battle of Antietam • Over 5000 dead, nearly 20,000 wounded in a matter of hours in Maryland countryside • Lee forced to retreat

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