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The Union in Peril

12. The Union in Peril. The Union in Peril. Slavery in the Territories Political Disintegration Kansas and the Two Cultures Polarization and the Road to War The Divided House Falls Conclusion: The “Irrepressible Conflict”. Slavery in the Territories. Deferring Conflict.

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The Union in Peril

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  1. 12 The Union in Peril

  2. The Union in Peril • Slavery in the Territories • Political Disintegration • Kansas and the Two Cultures • Polarization and the Road to War • The Divided House Falls • Conclusion: The “Irrepressible Conflict”

  3. Slavery in the Territories

  4. Deferring Conflict • Compromise even in 1787 • Missouri Compromise • South Carolina had tried to nullify, 1833 • Gag rule, 1836 • 1840’s the conflict breaks out again • Debate increasingly North v. South

  5. Free Soil or Protection • War with Mexico, 1846 • Wilmot Proviso • Free Soilers • Some oppose slavery for ideological reasons • Some don’t want blacks in the West • John C. Calhoun • Says Congress has no right to limit slavery

  6. War News

  7. The Compromise of 1850 • Popular sovereignty: leave decision to states • Election of 1848 • Whigs choose Zachary Taylor – slaveholder • Democrats nominate Cass – no stand • Free-Soilers select Van Buren • Taylor elected

  8. The Compromise of 1850 (cont’d) • Henry Clay proposes compromise • Put forward by Stephen Douglas, Illinois • The Compromise • California free • New Mexico and Utah to decide themselves • Slave trade abolished in District of Columbia • Fugitive Slave Act

  9. Consequences of the Compromise • Two new political issues • Greater sectional alignment • Constitution questioned as supreme law • Fugitive slave law unpopular • Many vowed not to comply • States pass “personal liberty laws”

  10. Consequences of the Compromise (cont'd) • Rhetoric angrier • Frederick Douglass • Sojourner Truth • Harriet Beecher Stowe, Uncle Tom’s Cabin

  11. The Compromise of 1850

  12. Political Disintegration

  13. Party Politics • Party lines blurred • Voter apathy

  14. Celebrating a Political Victory

  15. The Kansas-Nebraska Act • Nebraska Bill – Stephen Douglas • To push development • Violated Missouri Compromise • Bill passes • Whig party disappears • Know Nothings and Republicans emerge • Slavery issue enflamed

  16. Expansionist “Young America” • Franklin Pierce, elected 1852 • Expansionist • Search for more cottonlands • Gadsden Purchase, 1853 • Filibusters into Mexico • Attempts to acquire Cuba • Ostend Manifesto • Supported by Democrats

  17. Expansionist “Young America” in the 1850s: Attempted Raids into Latin America

  18. New Political Directions • Nativism, Know-Nothings • Angered by immigrants, especially Catholics

  19. Immigration and Politics

  20. Immigration and Politics, cont

  21. New Political Directions (cont’d) • Republicans • Moralists, against slavery • Anti-Catholic • Reformers • Supporters of Clay’s American System

  22. New Political Directions (cont'd) • Election of 1856 • Republicans: John C. Frémont • Democrats: James Buchanan • Know-Nothings: Millard Fillmore • Buchanan wins with only 45% of popular vote

  23. Kansas and the Two Cultures

  24. Competing For Kansas • Passage of Kansas-Nebraska Act • Kansas to vote on the slavery issue • Free-Soilers mobilize • So does opposition • Elections disputed • Kansas becomes a microcosm of national issues

  25. “Bleeding Kansas” • Free-Soilers v. pro-southern forces • Lawrence, Kansas sacked • Pottowatomie Creek Massacre – John Brown • Minor civil war

  26. Scenes from North and South

  27. Scenes from North and South, cont

  28. Kansas and the Two Cultures • The North • Cities, many small towns • Moral legislation favored • Slavery seen as an evils • A mobile society: socially and geographically • The South • Social order important • For states’ rights

  29. Polarization and the Road to War

  30. The Dred Scott Case • Dred and Harriet Scott claim they are free • Court rules they are not free • Of an inferior order without rights • Missouri Compromise unconstitutional • Fact that Scott’s stay in free states irrelevant • Decision endorsed by President Buchanan • The decision further exacerbates sectionalism

  31. Constitutional Crisis in Kansas • Lecompton Constitution, 1857 • Pro-slavery, barring free blacks from state • Did not reflect popular opinion in Kansas • Congress rejects Lecompton Constitution • Stephen Douglas opposes it • Buchanan supports it

  32. Lincoln and the Illinois Debates • Illinois senatorial race, 1858 • Lincoln speaks against sectionalism, slavery • Douglas takes no moral stand • Douglas elected • Republicans do well elsewhere

  33. John Brown’s Raid • John Brown, 1859, tries to begin slave uprising • Attacks federal arsenal at Harper’ Ferry • His attack and death seen as heroic by many • Provoked fear of revolt in the South

  34. John Brown as anAvenging Hero

  35. The Election of 1860 • Democrats have two conventions, two candidates • Republicans choose Lincoln • Lincoln elected • Secession follows before inauguration

  36. The Presidential Election of 1860

  37. The Divided House Falls

  38. Secession and Uncertainty • December, 1860, South Carolina secedes • Six more states follow • Confederate States created, February, 1861 • Jefferson Davis elected president • Lincoln waits, considers • Dedicated to preserving Union

  39. Secession and Uncertainty (cont'd) • Provisioning of Fort Sumter prevented • Jefferson Davis orders the fort surrender • As relief expedition nears, Confederacy fires

  40. Conclusion:The “Irrepressible Conflict”

  41. Conclusion:The “Irrepressible Conflict” • After 1848, conflict intensifies • Many divisions: economic, cultural, political • But slavery is decisive

  42. Timeline

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