The Rise of Jacksonian Democracy
... – 13 ever-shifting members – Informal meetings with advisors • Group did not gather in the kitchen • Influence was exaggerated • Not unconstitutional ...
... – 13 ever-shifting members – Informal meetings with advisors • Group did not gather in the kitchen • Influence was exaggerated • Not unconstitutional ...
File - APUSH
... would not be any trouble unless initiated by the South • He did say the nation could not be split either politically, economically, or geographically • Lincoln told the Confederate states he would re-supply Fort Sumter in South Carolina • The Confederate states saw this as reinforcing the fort and o ...
... would not be any trouble unless initiated by the South • He did say the nation could not be split either politically, economically, or geographically • Lincoln told the Confederate states he would re-supply Fort Sumter in South Carolina • The Confederate states saw this as reinforcing the fort and o ...
The Civil War 1860-1861: The Cause
... He would leave the army and marry Taylor’s daughter Sarah, but she would die in of malaria after three months. Davis would recover and move to Mississippi and meet and fall in love with Varina Howell. They would marry in 1845 He would serve as a Colonel under Taylor in the Mexican war. He wo ...
... He would leave the army and marry Taylor’s daughter Sarah, but she would die in of malaria after three months. Davis would recover and move to Mississippi and meet and fall in love with Varina Howell. They would marry in 1845 He would serve as a Colonel under Taylor in the Mexican war. He wo ...
A - Humble ISD
... 1. Both men were great for their sections, and both were correct on things as they were at the time, though not necessarily on how they were in the past. 2. Webster’s speech was reprinted and its ideas seared into countless northerners like 21 year-old Abraham Lincoln, and helped win the Civil War y ...
... 1. Both men were great for their sections, and both were correct on things as they were at the time, though not necessarily on how they were in the past. 2. Webster’s speech was reprinted and its ideas seared into countless northerners like 21 year-old Abraham Lincoln, and helped win the Civil War y ...
The Great Impact of Stonewall Jackson
... in his life; which he needed because he held a high ranking position that was accountable for the lives of thousands of men. ...
... in his life; which he needed because he held a high ranking position that was accountable for the lives of thousands of men. ...
U.S. History Overview
... – Compromise eventually reached (tariff is lowered and S.C. repeals its nullification of the tariff) ...
... – Compromise eventually reached (tariff is lowered and S.C. repeals its nullification of the tariff) ...
States` Rights_Nullification
... • The Confederate States of America: South Carolina led the way out of the Union on December 20, 1860, and by March 1861, six more states, outraged over Lincoln's election to the presidency and emboldened by South Carolina's example, also seceded: Mississippi, Florida, Alabama, Georgia, Louisiana, a ...
... • The Confederate States of America: South Carolina led the way out of the Union on December 20, 1860, and by March 1861, six more states, outraged over Lincoln's election to the presidency and emboldened by South Carolina's example, also seceded: Mississippi, Florida, Alabama, Georgia, Louisiana, a ...
Rob The Banks! The Missouri Guerrilla War 1860
... Militia were all pro-secessionist. They demanded the turn-over of the Federal arsenal in St. Louis, which was refused. Street fighting broke out in St. Louis between radical Republican "Wide Awakes" (mostly German immigrants) and the Douglas-Democrat "Minutemen." In April, the state legislature vote ...
... Militia were all pro-secessionist. They demanded the turn-over of the Federal arsenal in St. Louis, which was refused. Street fighting broke out in St. Louis between radical Republican "Wide Awakes" (mostly German immigrants) and the Douglas-Democrat "Minutemen." In April, the state legislature vote ...
Objective: Students will learn about how the debate over slavery
... - Negroes were not citizens of the United States and had no right to bring suit in a federal court. - Dred Scott had not become a free man as a result of his residence at Fort Snelling because the Missouri Compromise was unconstitutional; Congress had no authority to prohibit slavery in the federal ...
... - Negroes were not citizens of the United States and had no right to bring suit in a federal court. - Dred Scott had not become a free man as a result of his residence at Fort Snelling because the Missouri Compromise was unconstitutional; Congress had no authority to prohibit slavery in the federal ...
The Bushwhacker - Civil War St Louis, The Civil War Round Table of
... harassing US troops all over the area. He informed General Grant that the Jewish merchants were the root of his problems. On December 11, 1862, Grant ordered the expulsion of all Jews “as a class” within 24 hours, causing thirty of Paducah’s most respectable families to be routed from their homes an ...
... harassing US troops all over the area. He informed General Grant that the Jewish merchants were the root of his problems. On December 11, 1862, Grant ordered the expulsion of all Jews “as a class” within 24 hours, causing thirty of Paducah’s most respectable families to be routed from their homes an ...
Chapter 16: Slavery Divides the Nation*
... – (Moderate --still looking for compromise between the North and South) ...
... – (Moderate --still looking for compromise between the North and South) ...
Document
... c. Two incidents almost brought Britain, which needed cotton imports from the South, into the war. One was the ______________ Affair in which the U.S. took two Confederate diplomats off an English ship. The other involved the willingness of the British to build ships for the South, which could be us ...
... c. Two incidents almost brought Britain, which needed cotton imports from the South, into the war. One was the ______________ Affair in which the U.S. took two Confederate diplomats off an English ship. The other involved the willingness of the British to build ships for the South, which could be us ...
32. The Collapse of Compromise
... popular sovereignty. He lost and died within the year. The Southern Democrats ran John C. Breckinridge of Kentucky, a pro-slavery candidate who also lost and went on to be a General for the Confederate Army. John Bell of Tennessee pronounced all the other candidates crazy and founded the Constitutio ...
... popular sovereignty. He lost and died within the year. The Southern Democrats ran John C. Breckinridge of Kentucky, a pro-slavery candidate who also lost and went on to be a General for the Confederate Army. John Bell of Tennessee pronounced all the other candidates crazy and founded the Constitutio ...
Sectionalism and Secession Sectionalism and Secession
... Citizens who thought otherwise did so at their peril. Soon after missionaries of an abolitionist-friendly church, the Wesleyans, came into Randolph County to set up congregations, they were run out of the state. One Uwharrie native, Benjamin Hedrick, lost his job as a professor at the University whe ...
... Citizens who thought otherwise did so at their peril. Soon after missionaries of an abolitionist-friendly church, the Wesleyans, came into Randolph County to set up congregations, they were run out of the state. One Uwharrie native, Benjamin Hedrick, lost his job as a professor at the University whe ...
Cause #1 - Humble ISD
... election of 1860, Southerners believed that their rights would no longer be respected. Southern leaders believed it was time to secede, or withdraw, from the Union. As a result, 6 states immediately voted to withdraw from the Union. Many Texans urged Governor Sam Houston to issue a call for a conven ...
... election of 1860, Southerners believed that their rights would no longer be respected. Southern leaders believed it was time to secede, or withdraw, from the Union. As a result, 6 states immediately voted to withdraw from the Union. Many Texans urged Governor Sam Houston to issue a call for a conven ...
Chapter Seven, Section Four
... But, Calhoun’s home state was hurting financially, and planters and their slaves were moving to more fertile lands in other states. Calhoun proved how much he cared about his state with the nullification theory – questioned the legality of applying federal laws to independent states Each state ...
... But, Calhoun’s home state was hurting financially, and planters and their slaves were moving to more fertile lands in other states. Calhoun proved how much he cared about his state with the nullification theory – questioned the legality of applying federal laws to independent states Each state ...
Chapter Seven, Section Four
... But, Calhoun’s home state was hurting financially, and planters and their slaves were moving to more fertile lands in other states. Calhoun proved how much he cared about his state with the nullification theory – questioned the legality of applying federal laws to independent states Each state ...
... But, Calhoun’s home state was hurting financially, and planters and their slaves were moving to more fertile lands in other states. Calhoun proved how much he cared about his state with the nullification theory – questioned the legality of applying federal laws to independent states Each state ...
Slide 1
... After South Carolina seceded, troops were stationed around Charleston harbor. They prevented the United States Army commander of Fort Sumter from resupplying the fort from shore. On April 12, 1861, before the Virginia convention's delegation could confer with Lincoln about his policies toward the se ...
... After South Carolina seceded, troops were stationed around Charleston harbor. They prevented the United States Army commander of Fort Sumter from resupplying the fort from shore. On April 12, 1861, before the Virginia convention's delegation could confer with Lincoln about his policies toward the se ...
Unit 6: Civil War Times
... and Sojourner Truth. Write a paragraph about each person describing the role he/she played in helping free the slaves. J – Juneteenth – Explain what this holiday is and why it is celebrated. K – Kansas/Nebraska Act – What was this act? How did this act change the rules of the Missouri Compromise? L ...
... and Sojourner Truth. Write a paragraph about each person describing the role he/she played in helping free the slaves. J – Juneteenth – Explain what this holiday is and why it is celebrated. K – Kansas/Nebraska Act – What was this act? How did this act change the rules of the Missouri Compromise? L ...
States Rights
... election of 1860, Southerners believed that their rights would no longer be respected. Southern leaders believed it was time to secede, or withdraw, from the Union. As a result, 6 states immediately voted to withdraw from the Union. Many Texans urged Governor Sam Houston to issue a call for a conven ...
... election of 1860, Southerners believed that their rights would no longer be respected. Southern leaders believed it was time to secede, or withdraw, from the Union. As a result, 6 states immediately voted to withdraw from the Union. Many Texans urged Governor Sam Houston to issue a call for a conven ...
History of the Homestead Cabin
... The McHaffie family was Scots-Irish who immigrated around 1700. The family patriarch was a rebel who was arrested and executed by the government in Scotland. After this event his remaining family moved to Ireland and then on to America. The McHaffie family settled in Virginia and moved west to Tenne ...
... The McHaffie family was Scots-Irish who immigrated around 1700. The family patriarch was a rebel who was arrested and executed by the government in Scotland. After this event his remaining family moved to Ireland and then on to America. The McHaffie family settled in Virginia and moved west to Tenne ...
Lecture S15 -- The Confederacy and the United States
... mute in the 1850s, except among a group of radicals known as the Fire Eaters, who continued to push for secession at every opportunity. Secessionism had proved to be hampered, however, by the split between the most radical, willing to secede with even a single state, and the cooperationists who favo ...
... mute in the 1850s, except among a group of radicals known as the Fire Eaters, who continued to push for secession at every opportunity. Secessionism had proved to be hampered, however, by the split between the most radical, willing to secede with even a single state, and the cooperationists who favo ...
Chapter 21: A Dividing Nation Section 1
... Confronting the Issue of Slavery The issue of granting Missouri statehood threatened to upset the balance of free and slave states. Northerners were concerned that if Missouri entered the Union as a slave state, other territories would also be admitted as slave states. Southerners worried that if Co ...
... Confronting the Issue of Slavery The issue of granting Missouri statehood threatened to upset the balance of free and slave states. Northerners were concerned that if Missouri entered the Union as a slave state, other territories would also be admitted as slave states. Southerners worried that if Co ...