1 / 25

United States History I

United States History I. Chapter 10-4: “Causes of the American Civil War” Standards 1.2-1.8. Sectionalism and the Roots of Conflict. During the 1800’s, the northern and southern “sections” of the United States began to grow apart socially and economically North: Industry

alden
Download Presentation

United States History I

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. United States History I Chapter 10-4: “Causes of the American Civil War” Standards 1.2-1.8

  2. Sectionalism and the Roots of Conflict • During the 1800’s, the northern and southern “sections” of the United States began to grow apart socially and economically • North: Industry • South: Cash Crops: Cotton/Tobacco

  3. The Missouri Compromise: 1820 • 60,000 People needed in area/territory before it can apply for statehood • 1820: 11 Slave and 11 Free States • Missouri applied for statehood • Balance of power would be offset one way or the other. Will Missouri be slave or free? • Who cares? Why would this be important for political power? Discussion

  4. Missouri Compromise: 1820 • *Maine also applied for statehood at the same time: PROBLEM SOLVED… for now • See map of U.S. Maine vs. Missouri • Compromise: Giving a little of something in order to get a little bit of something you want • Missouri Compromise: Maine is admitted as a free state while Missouri enters the UNION as a slave state: State Count = 12-12 • Future? 36-30 Line Established: Anything North would be Free and Everything South would be slave

  5. Missouri Compromise Map: 1820

  6. California Gold Rush: 1849 • 1848: Gold is found in the mountains of California • 1849: People RUSH out to California in order to find gold (49ers’) Sound Familiar? • California all of sudden had enough people to become a state. Most people wanted California to become a free state! • Slave states become angry and threaten to leave the Union!!

  7. Compromise of 1850 • After nine months of heated debate… • Henry Clay: “The Great Compromiser” suggests… • 1. California be allowed to enter Union as a free state: South angry… • 2. Territories of Utah and New Mexico established w/o restrictions on slavery: North angry • 3. Slave trade was abolished in Washington D.C. • 4. Strict Fugitive Slave Law was passed: Said that fugitive slaves HAD to be reported to the authorities. So…If you lived in Indiana and knew that a fugitive slave was around and did not report it, you were breaking the law! Northerners very angry at this law!! • 13 Free to 12 Slave States

  8. Uncle Tom’s Cabin: 1852 • Harriet Beecher Stowe: Abolitionist who lived in Cincinnati, Ohio. Was a contemporary of Frederick Douglas. • Uncle Tom’s Cabin: Book that exposed slavery for what it really was and infuriated slave owners in the south. • Eliza and the Horrors of Slavery • *What does it mean when someone is referred to as an Uncle Tom?

  9. The Mighty Ohio River

  10. Kansas-Nebraska Act: 1854 • Stephen Douglas: Senator IL • Wanted to build a transcontinental RR through Chicago (Economics) • Two new territories created: Kansas and Nebraska: Both ABOVE the 36-30 Line! • Kansas-Nebraska Act: Douglas wanted to scrap the 36-30 line and leave the fate of all future states up to POPULAR SOVEREIGNTY: Let the people choose • 1854: A group of northern politicians become so angry that they form a new political party called the Republican Party

  11. Kansas Nebraska Act: 1854

  12. Bleeding Kansas: 1854-1857 • Two groups “moved” into Kansas in an attempt to sway the vote for a constitution that met their needs • Anti-Slavery: Lawrence • Pro-Slavery: Lecompton • *After some Pro-Slavery supporters attacked and killed some abolitionists. John Brown and his sons killed at least five Pro-Slavery people. • *Open fighting broke out and lasted a few years.

  13. Dred Scott Case: 1857 • Background: Dred Scott was a slave who was owned by a slave owner in Missouri. His owner was in the army and spent time in Wisconsin and Illinois. When his owner died, the state of Missouri tried to sell Dred Scott as property • Case: Dred Scott sued for his freedom and lost because he was “property” • -Roger Taney: -Could not sue because he was not a citizen • -Congress could NOT ban slavery in new territories

  14. Illinois Senate Race of 1858 • Illinois Senate seat was up for election • Stephen Douglas was incumbent: already held seat • Abraham Lincoln: Republican: Challenged Douglas to a series of debates all over the state of Illinois • Douglas: Believed in Popular Sovereignty • Lincoln: Wanted to stop the SPREAD of slavery to new territories: “Contain it” • *LINCOLN LOST THE ELECTION BUT GAINED POPULARITY WITH MANY NORTHERNERS • *THIS SET THE STAGE FOR HIM TO RUN FOR PRESIDENT IN 1860!

  15. HARPER’S FERRY: 1859 • JOHN BROWN: Wanted to start a slave revolt in the state of Virginia • -Attacked a U.S. Army Arsenal at Harper’s Ferry, Virginia • -No slaves joined the revolt • -Brown was captured by Robert E. Lee • -Brown was hanged for “treason” • *Many in North saw Brown as a Martyr: Hero • *Many in the South saw Brown as an extremist

  16. Election of 1860 • By 1860, the United States was very separated by Regional, Political, and Economic differences. • Election: Abraham Lincoln (IL): Republican • -Stephen Douglas (IL): Northern Democrat • -John C. Breckinridge (KY): Southern Democrat • -John Bell (TN): Constitutional Union Party

  17. Election of 1860 • Lincoln gained most of his support in the North while Breckinridge got his from the South • *Many in the southern states hated Lincoln and vowed to leave the Union if he was elected: They thought that he would end slavery for good (THAT WAS THEIR DECISION TO MAKE, NOT HIS!) • -Abraham Lincoln won the election by a count of 180 Electoral Votes to 72 (Breckinridge)

  18. Secession!!! • South Carolina left the Union on December 20th, 1860: Claimed they did it for “State’s Rights” • February 1st, 1861: Mississippi, Florida, Alabama, Georgia, Louisiana, and Texas joined South Carolina: *Did it to defend “American Rights” like the colonist during the revolution of 1776 • *John J. Crittenden (KY): wanted to reach a last minute “Compromise” Reestablish 36 30 • Crittenden’s Compromise did not work

  19. Confederate States of America are Born! (CSA) • February 8th, 1861: Montgomery, Alabama • -REBEL states get together and form the Confederate States of America • -Declared each state independent • -*Jefferson Davis: Became the first President of the CSA

  20. Ft. Sumter, S.C. • Ft. Sumter: a Union fort in “Confederate” territory (South Carolina) • -Major Robert Anderson: Commander: Asked Lincoln for supplies • *If Lincoln refuses to send supplies and abandons the fort, then he acknowledges the CSA’s right to exist. If he sends supplies, then he risks war! Lincoln sends supplies • April 12th, 1861: Confederate forces attack Ft. Sumter • *The American Civil War had begun!

  21. “Upper South” Secedes • After Ft. Sumter, Virginia, Arkansas, North Carolina, and Tennessee left the Union • *CSA Capital moved to Richmond, Virginia (100 Miles Away from Washington D.C.)

  22. Habeas Corpus and the Border States • Lincoln was worried the rest of the slave states would also leave the Union • He suspended writs of Habeas Corpus: right to be charged with a crime within 24 hours of being arrested: and declared Marshall Law (Curfew) in order to prevent this • Kentucky, Missouri, Delaware, West Virginia (Broke Away from Virginia), and Maryland (If Maryland left, then D.C. was already surrounded by the enemy) were the five slave states that DID NOT leave the Union: AKA Border States

  23. Which States Left the Union? 11 • CSA: • 1. S.C. • 2. N.C. • 3. Virginia • 4. Tennessee • 5. Mississippi • 6. Georgia • 7. Florida • 8. Louisiana • 9. Texas • 10. Alabama • 11. Arkansas

  24. Border States: 1. Kentucky 2. Delaware 3. Missouri 4. W. Virginia 5. Maryland Non-Slave Union 1. Indiana 2. Illinois 3. Iowa 4. Wisconsin 5. Minnesota 6. Kansas 7. Oregon 8. California 9. Michigan 10. Pennsylvania 11. New York 12. New Jersey 13. Connecticut 14. Rhode Island 15. Massachusetts 16. Ohio 17. Vermont 18. New Hampshire 19. Maine Who stayed loyal? 24 Total

  25. Map of U.S. During Civil War

More Related