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Explore the escalating tensions between North and South over slavery from 1845 to 1861, featuring key events, political figures, and legislative compromises that shaped the nation's destiny. Witness the impact of controversial acts like the Fugitive Slave Act and the explosive Dred Scott Case, all leading to the brink of the Civil War.
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Chapter 11Sectional Conflict Increases 1845-1861 NORTH SOUTH
Slavery Divides the Nation • By 1800, there were 50,000 enslaved people in the North, compared to 1 million in the South
Missouri Compromise of 1820 • Every time there was going to be a new state, there was much debate whether it would be a slave OR free state. • Missouri became a slave state but slavery would not be allowed anywhere else north of Missouri’s southern border.
Discussion “All society is formed upon the principle of mutual concession” – Henry Clay Agree or Disagree?
Fire-Eaters • Southerners who were very pro-slavery and wanted the South to secede • Threatened the Congress to choose between abolition and secession
Compromise of 1850 Congress passed Clay’s measures: 1. California was admitted as a free state 2. New Mexico and Utah territories would decide by popular sovereignty 3. Texas was unrestricted to slavery 4. Slave trade was abolished in the District of Columbia
President of U.S • President Zachary Taylor • Died- he had opposed Clay’s compromise • Vice President Millard Fillmore replaced Taylor • favored Clay’s compromise • Congress passed Clay’s measures and it was known as the Compromise of 1850
Popular Sovereignty and the Wilmot Proviso • Popular Sovereignty: • leaving the issue up to territorial governments • Wilmot Proviso: • banned slavery in all lands that would be acquired from Mexico • (failed)
Debate Question Federal vs. State Right’s
Election of 1852 • Democrat candidate, Franklin Pierce won the election • Persuaded both north and south on the issue of slavery • Called, “a northern man with southern principles” • He proved to be a weak leader
List of Presidents • George Washington • John Adams • Thomas Jefferson • James Madison • James Monroe • John Quincy Adams • Andrew Jackson • Martin Van Buren (1829-1837) • William Henry Harrison (1841-1841) (first person to die in office – 32 days in office) • John Tyler (1841-1845) • James Polk (1845-1849) • Zachary Taylor (1849-1850) (died after 16 months in office) • Millard Fillmore (1850-1853) • Franklin Pierce • James Buchanan • Abraham Lincoln
Fugitive Slave Act • Under the law, no black person was safe • Many blacks in the north, were now transported back to the south • The Compromise of 1850 started to fall apart mainly due to this act • Authorized the arrest of escaped slaves even in states where slavery was illegal
Anti-Slavery Issue • Abolitionists from the North and Midwest used their pens to win people to their cause • Goal was to change public opinion
Uncle Tom’s Cabin • Harriet Beecher Stowe was the author • Helped convince many Americans of the moral wrongs of slavery • African Americans depicted as husbands and wives, parents and children • For the first time, readers began to think of slaves as people, rather than as possessions. • In 1862, Lincoln met with Harriet Beecher Stowe and reportedly said, “So you’re the little woman that wrote the book that made this great war” • Compared to Common Sense
Frederick Douglass • Taught to read and write • A life devoted to the cause of freedom, for women as well as blacks
Discussion Compare Compromise of 1850 to Kansas-Nebraska Act of 1854
Kansas Nebraska Act of 1854 • Congress divided the Nebraska territory into Kansas and Nebraska • Residents of each territory would vote to allow or outlaw slavery • Congress assumed Kansas would be slave and Nebraska free • Northerners and Southerners tried to influence the vote
Things Turn Violent • Pro slavery residents from Missouri attacked the antislavery town of Lawrence, Kansas. • Northern abolitionist John Brown responded by killing five proslavery settlers.
Violence in the Senate • Violence over the slavery issue broke out on the floor of the U.S. Senate. • Southern Representative Preston Brooks badly beat Northern Senator Charles Sumner with a cane.
Republican Party • Party based on anti-slavery • Ended up losing to Democrat candidate • James Buchanan (1856 President) • With the Whig and American Party (Know-Nothings) finished, a lot of people joined the Republican ticket
Individual Reading Activity Read Page 358: Dred Scott and the Supreme Court • What do you find disturbing after reading this? 2. What did the Supreme Court rule?
Dred Scott Case • Case was heard by the US Supreme Court • Roger B. Taney (TAW-nee) was one of five southerners on the Court • Wrote the majority opinion • Declared Scott was not a citizen and therefore could not bring suit in the U.S • Slaves were considered property • Rejected the Missouri Compromise based on the Fifth Amendment
Effects of Dred Scott Case • After Kansas-Nebraska Act, and now the Dred Scott Decision, there was no way to keep slavery from spreading into the territories.
Lincoln and Douglas • Republican Abraham Lincoln ran for Senator of Illinois- spoke out against the expansion of slavery. • Faced off against Stephen Douglas (Democrat) • known as the Little Giant • Douglas narrowly defeated Lincoln
Abraham Lincoln • “A house divided against itself cannot stand” • What does this mean? • What is Abraham Lincoln talking about? • The nation, he argued, could not remain forever divided into slave and free states
Discussion • What issues divide the U.S today? • Environment • Immigration • War • Abortion • Stem Cell Research
John Brown’s Raid • Brown, armed with a band of some 20 men, including five African Americans were back on the attack • Harper’s Ferry • 1859- seized the federal arsenal in Virginia • (now in WV)
Harper’s Ferry • Planned to give the arsenal’s guns to slaves living nearby • However, no slaves came to aid the group • Federal troops under the command of Colonel Robert E. Lee assaulted Brown’s positions • Brown and his men were killed • (Think of Boondock Saints or Dexter)
Discussion • What do you think about John Brown’s actions? • If you were a southerner, how do you feel about what Brown did? • If you were a northerner, how do you feel about what Brown did?
Group Activity Page 362 Look at the Map of the Election of 1860 Based on what you see on the map, how is it that Lincoln won the presidency?
Questions • Read Pages 362-363 • What event caused secession? • What state was the first to secede? • What did the seceding states call themselves? • How was their Constitution different than the U.S Constitution?
Secession! • Lincoln had a moderate stance on slavery • Once elected, South Carolina unanimously voted to leave the Union • Confederate States of America was created. • Jefferson Davis was the president of the Confederacy