This chapter summarizes the key events from 1848 to 1860 that exacerbated tensions around the issue of slavery and moved the United States closer to civil war. It discusses the Wilmot Proviso, popular sovereignty, the Compromise of 1850 including the Fugitive Slave Act, the Kansas-Nebraska Act and violence in "Bleeding Kansas", the Dred Scott decision, and the election of Abraham Lincoln which convinced many southerners that secession was their only choice. By 1860, the nation was divided along sectional lines with the Republican party gaining support in the north against the expansion of slavery.
This chapter summarizes the key events from 1848 to 1860 that exacerbated tensions around the issue of slavery and moved the United States closer to civil war. It discusses the Wilmot Proviso, popular sovereignty, the Compromise of 1850 including the Fugitive Slave Act, the Kansas-Nebraska Act and violence in "Bleeding Kansas", the Dred Scott decision, and the election of Abraham Lincoln which convinced many southerners that secession was their only choice. By 1860, the nation was divided along sectional lines with the Republican party gaining support in the north against the expansion of slavery.
This chapter summarizes the key events from 1848 to 1860 that exacerbated tensions around the issue of slavery and moved the United States closer to civil war. It discusses the Wilmot Proviso, popular sovereignty, the Compromise of 1850 including the Fugitive Slave Act, the Kansas-Nebraska Act and violence in "Bleeding Kansas", the Dred Scott decision, and the election of Abraham Lincoln which convinced many southerners that secession was their only choice. By 1860, the nation was divided along sectional lines with the Republican party gaining support in the north against the expansion of slavery.
This chapter summarizes the key events from 1848 to 1860 that exacerbated tensions around the issue of slavery and moved the United States closer to civil war. It discusses the Wilmot Proviso, popular sovereignty, the Compromise of 1850 including the Fugitive Slave Act, the Kansas-Nebraska Act and violence in "Bleeding Kansas", the Dred Scott decision, and the election of Abraham Lincoln which convinced many southerners that secession was their only choice. By 1860, the nation was divided along sectional lines with the Republican party gaining support in the north against the expansion of slavery.
1848-1860 I– Slavery in Territories I-1 The Wilmot Proviso The Mexican War was less than three months old when the seeds of new conflict began to spread. David Wilmot, a Democrat congressman from Pennsylvania, discussed President James K. Polk’s (US 11th president (1845-1849)) request to support the war against Mexico. On August 8, 1846 he endorsed the annexation of Texas as a slave State whereas he was against slavery. He declared: “God forbid that we should be the means of planting this institution [slavery] upon it.” • Senator John C. Calhoun of South Carolina defended slavery He asserted his pride in being a slaveholding cotton planter. Congress had no right to prevent any citizen from taking slaves. → Senator John C. Calhoun took the Bill of Rights as a guarantee of slavery. Slavery thus played the crucial role in the series of events dividing the nation and prompting secession and civil war. I-2 popular sovereignty Popular sovereignty or “squatter sovereignty” was Lewis Cass (senator) of Michigan's idea. It promised to open the territories to no slaveholding farmers Senator Stephen A. Douglass of Illinois and other prominent democrats endorsed it. I- 3 The Free-soil Coalition Its slogan or motto was : free soil, free speech free labor, and free men”. Free soil in the new territories rather than abolition in the South. David Wilmot had raised a standard to which a broad coalition could rally. Ex. William Lloyd Garrison and his abolitionist movement. In 1848 hey created the Free-Soil Party at a convention at Buffalo, New York. II- The Compromise of 1850 Divisions over slavery in territories
II-1 The Great Debate
In January 1850 Henry Clay (Secretary of State) presented a package of eight resolutions designed to solve all the disputed issues. Congress debated the contentious issues. Clay's Compromise was set forth for a vote, it did not receive a majority. II-2 Toward A Compromise Henry Clay himself had to leave in sickness. His successor, Millard Fillmore, was much more interested in compromise. By September, Clay's Compromise became law. It consisted of laws. (1) admitting California as a free state. (2) creating Utah and new Mexico territories with the question of slavery in each to be determined by popular sovereignty. (3) settling a Texas-New Mexico boundary dispute in the former’s favor…… (4) ending the slave trade in Washington, D.C., (5) making it easier for southerners to recover fugitive slaves. • II-3 The Fugitive Slave Act The Fugitive Slave Act was the most controversial of the compromise of 1850. It required northerners to return runaway slaves to their owners under penalty of law.
• II-4 Uncle Tom’s Cabin
Uncle Tom’s Cabin (1852) by Harriet Beecher Stow depicts slavery. III-The Kansas-Nebraska Crisis In January 1854, Stephen Douglas introduced a bill to set up a government in the Nebraska Territory. Douglas knew southern whites did not wish to add another free state to the Union. He proposed that the Nebraska Territory be divided into two territories; Kansas & Nebraska. The settlers living in each territory would be able to decide the issue of slavery by popular sovereignty. Douglas's bill was known as the Kansas-Nebraska Act. Southern leaders supported the Kansas-Nebraska Act. Kansas-Nebraska Act would set off a series of events that many argued led to the Civil War. III-1 "Bleeding Kansas" In 1856, proslavery men raided the town of Lawrence, Kansas which was an antislavery stronghold. Attackers smashed the press of a Free-Soil newspaper and destroyed homes. Abolitionist John Brown, son of fervent Ohio Calvinists who believed that life was a crusade against sin. He believed that slavery was the most wicked of sins. He moved to Kansas to make it a free state and he rode with his sons to the town of Pottawatomie Creek. Brown and his four sons dragged five proslavery settlers from their beds and murdered them. • The killings at Pottawatomie Creek led to more violence, marked by guerrilla warfare. By 1856, over 200 people had been killed in Kansas. Newspapers began to call the area “Bleeding Kansas.” III-2 Violence in the Senate The violence in Kansas over slavery spilled over into Congress. On May 22, 1856 a sudden flash of violence on the Senate floor electrified the whole country. Senator Charles Summer of Massachusetts delivered an inflammatory speech on “The Crime against Kansas.” His brutal beating drove more northerners into the Republican party. IV-Deepening Sectional Crisis The Dred Scott Case The Supreme Court ruled against Dred Scott. First, the Court ruled that an enslaved person could not file a lawsuit because he was not a citizen. Court's written decision clearly stated that slaves were considered property. According to the Court, Congress did not have the power to outlaw slavery in any territory. V- The Center Comes Part V-1 The Democrats Divided The union’s crisis intensified as the democratic party fragmented along sectional lines and the republicans gained support in the north and the Midwest. V-2 Lincoln Election Abraham Lincoln was the only Republican leader to emerge whose policies and temper may have saved the union. V-3 Response in the South Lincoln election convinced many white southerners that their only choice was secession, which would likely lead to war. THANK YOU