1 / 15

Impending Crisis & Civil War

Crises Fight Scott Harpers Ferry Election Candidates Results War (1861-65) Fort Sumter After…. Key Terms Brooks vs. Sumner Dred Scott Decision John Brown’s Raid 1860 Election Border States Emancipation Proclamation. Impending Crisis & Civil War.

larya
Download Presentation

Impending Crisis & Civil War

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. Crises Fight Scott Harpers Ferry Election Candidates Results War (1861-65) Fort Sumter After… Key Terms Brooks vs. Sumner Dred Scott Decision John Brown’s Raid 1860 Election Border States Emancipation Proclamation Impending Crisis & Civil War

  2. Brooks vs. Sumner-1856(Tensions Continued To Rise) • Senator Charles Sumner & Representative Preston Brooks fought on the floor of the US Senate.

  3. Dred Scott Case (1857) Dred Scott (A Slave) Resided in Illinois (free state) & Wisconsin (a territory made free by Congress) for many years. He sued to obtain his freedom.

  4. Scott was not freed Slaves (& all blacks) were denied citizenship rights; slaves = property Congress cannot prohibit slavery anywhere (only states have this power) Dred Scott Decision (1857) Chief Justice Roger Taney (1777-1864)

  5. Impact Of Dred Scott • Infuriated Northerners as they feared slavery could expand to new areas. • Demonstrated slavery was a NATIONAL problem; not just Southern.

  6. John Brown’s Raid(1859) • Brown was an abolitionist • Raided the federal arsenal in Harper’s Ferry, VA. • Goal: Take munitions & lead a slave rebellion • He was captured & executed 1800-1859

  7. John Brown’s Raid(1859) Officer who led capture of Brown Brown on trial Robert E. Lee

  8. Impact Of John Brown’s Raid • It made Southerners fearful that maybe ALL in the North were abolitionists. • A final straw…?

  9. 1860 Election Stephen Douglas (Northern Democrat) • Supported Popular Sovereignty John Breckinridge (Southern Democrat) • Supported expansion of slavery into territories Abraham Lincoln (Republican) • Allow slavery to remain where it already exists; but no new expansion John Bell (Constitutional Union) • Stood for Constitution, Union, & enforcement of laws

  10. Following Lincoln’s Victory • Seven states seceded (even before his inauguration) • Texas, Louisiana, Mississippi, Alabama, Georgia, South Carolina & Florida

  11. Fighting Begins • Lincoln called for 75,000 volunteers to fight for Union following attack on Fort Sumter (April, 1861). • Four more Southern states seceded. • Virginia, North Carolina, Arkansas, Tennessee

  12. Border States • Slave states which remained loyal to the Union. • Missouri, Kentucky, West Virginia, Maryland, Delaware

  13. Emancipation Proclamation(Effective 1/1/1863) • Declared that slaves residing in states in rebellion against the Union were freed. • It did not free any slaves in the states that remained loyal to the Union. 1862

  14. Results of the Civil War(1861-1865) • Slavery ended—but what about the newly freed slaves? • More than 600,000 Americans died • WWII: 209 deaths per 100,000 (total pop) • Civil War: 2,000 deaths per 100,000 (total pop) • Much of the South was destroyed—how would it be rebuilt?

  15. Crises Fight Scott Harpers Ferry Election Candidates Results War (1861-65) Fort Sumter After… Key Terms Brooks vs. Sumner Dred Scott Decision John Brown’s Raid 1860 Election Border States Emancipation Proclamation Impending Crisis & Civil War

More Related