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Saline County, Missouri, and the Civil War
Saline County, Missouri, and the Civil War

... repeated throughout the county during the next four years. Union men were few in the county and most were under threat for their lives. Governor Marmaduke was one of the few who was not molested or had his property damaged. Dr. Glen O. Hardeman lived at “Lo Mismo” farm, just west of Arrow Rock. He h ...
Civil War
Civil War

... • Believed slavery was morally wrong, but promised he would not get rid of it. • The Southern states distrusted Lincoln and began their secession from the US. • They then formed their own country called the Confederacy. ...
Unit 1
Unit 1

... joined the Maine bill with the one for unconditional statehood for Missouri. Senators refused to separate the two, and so they continued to debate about conditions for statehood and slavery. Finally, Senator Jesse Thomas of Illinois offered a compromise. He said Maine could be admitted as a free sta ...
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... breakup of the union  Explain why secession led to outbreak of the Civil war © 2009 abcteach.com ...
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... • Dec. 20: S. Carolina conventions votes – to leave the Union: “sectional party w/ a – a president hostile to slavery” was elected. ...
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Dialectic history discussion

... the country, others, like Thomas Jefferson, saw it as the beginning of a great struggle over the issue.  Daniel Webster, for instance, was alarmed at the way the South had made threats of secession similar to the ones the New Englanders had made during the War of 1812. He and others wondered if the ...
Missouri Compromise, Compromise of 1850, and the Kansas
Missouri Compromise, Compromise of 1850, and the Kansas

... • In May 1855, a proslavery group attacked the town of Lawrence, Kansas • In return, John Brown (an extreme abolitionist) and seven other men murdered five proslavery people in their cabins • Civil war in Kansas broke out and continued for three years ...
14. civil war - Petal School District
14. civil war - Petal School District

... 33. In February of 1861, delegates met in Alabama to form the Confederate States of America. Jefferson Davis was elected as President of the Confederacy. ...
Civil War Website Treasure Hunt (updated 7/2003 by Susan C
Civil War Website Treasure Hunt (updated 7/2003 by Susan C

... Ways of life were different for both sides: plantations versus factories. On state's rights the North argued no state had a right to secede from the Union, the South argued a state could ...
Unit 5: The Civil War Name: Period________ Date: 1. The purpose of
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Chapter 15 Secession and the Civil War 1861-1865
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... • April 4, 1861 – Lincoln ordered an expedition be prepared to bring food and other provisions to the troops in Charleston Harbor – his orders to reinforce Fort Pickens in Florida had not been carried out ...
The Election of 1860
The Election of 1860

... Georgians were, for the most part, for the Union; however, they were strongly for states’ rights Despite lawmakers’ strong debates for and against secession, a Secession convention began in January 1861 in Milledgeville, the capital A secession ordinance (bill) passed 208-89 The Southern states who ...
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Terms Review 5

... What is the principal called that allowed the people in each territory vote on whether to permit slavery? Popular Sovereignty ...
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Issues Leading to the Civil War

... • Dred Scott was a slave – His owner took him from Missouri (s) to Illinois (f) then to Wisconsin (f) • Scott claimed he should be free ...
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The Civil War and Reconstruction

... Secession Texas Secession Convention met in Austin in January 1861 and adopted decree called the Ordinance of Secession. Ordinance means local law. ...
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PPT

...  The South considered Lincoln’s election along ...
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... • Bill passed creating a split in the Democratic party- Know Nothings and Republicans emerge. ...
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RUMBLINGS OF CIVIL WAR 1845

... 1854- two new territories, Kansas & Nebraska became open to settlement. Both were north of the line established by the ...
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... through the United States. Industrialization started in the northeast where many flowing rivers provided waterpower to help run factories. Samuel Morse also invented the telegraph and created Morse code, which revolutionized the speed at which news and information could travel. Industrialization cau ...
Ch.12, Sec.1- The Rise of Nationalism
Ch.12, Sec.1- The Rise of Nationalism

... • The Seminole decided they weren’t leaving without a fight. In 1832, some Seminole leaders were forced to sign a treaty promising to leave Florida within 3 years. They also agreed that any Seminole of African ancestry would be considered a runaway slave. The Seminole had taken most of these runaway ...
Power Point JEOPARDY CIVIL WAR
Power Point JEOPARDY CIVIL WAR

... new birth of freedom- and that the government of the people, by the people, for the people, shall not perish from this earth” What was it? ...
File
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... new birth of freedom- and that the government of the people, by the people, for the people, shall not perish from this earth” What was it? ...
File
File

... the union was fighting. He outlined a “rebirth of this nation” and insisted Americans to revert back to the ideals of our ...
The Election of 1860
The Election of 1860

... Georgians were, for the most part, for the Union; however, they were strongly for states’ rights Despite lawmakers’ strong debates for and against secession, a Secession convention began in January 1861 in Milledgeville, the capital A secession ordinance (bill) passed 208-89 The Southern states who ...
Civil War SS8H6a_REVISED
Civil War SS8H6a_REVISED

... • Dred Scott was a slave – His owner took him from Missouri (s) to Illinois (f) then to Wisconsin (f) • Scott claimed he should be free ...
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Missouri secession

During the American Civil War, the secession of Missouri was controversial because of the disputed status of the state of Missouri. During the war, Missouri was claimed by both the Union and the Confederacy, had two competing state governments, and sent representatives to both the United States Congress and the Confederate Congress. This unusual situation, which also existed to some degree in the states of Kentucky and Virginia (with West Virginia), was the result of events in early 1861.
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