Download File

Survey
yes no Was this document useful for you?
   Thank you for your participation!

* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project

Document related concepts
no text concepts found
Transcript
The Civil War
THE UNION IN PERIL
1848-1861
• Facts, sequence of events
• 4 main causes for why war erupted when it did:
• Slavery as a moral issues in North vs. defense, expansion in
South
• Constitutional disputes over nature of federal union vs.
states’ rights
• Economic differences b/t N and S
• Tariffs, nat’l bank, internal improvements
• Political mistakes, extremism
Why would war erupt?
• Issues of slavery in territories after Mexican War
• 1840s
• Wilmot Proviso vs. Compromise of 1820
• Balance of 15/15 states
• Proviso failed  increase in sectional feelings
• 3 competing views
• Free Soil
• Pro-slavery
• Popular Sovereignty
Territories
• N. Dems + Whigs that supported Wilmot Proviso
• Believed ALL African Americans should be excluded
from Mexican Cession (1848)
• Little opposition to slavery in S
• West should be kept land of opportunity for whites only
• No competition w/ slave labor, free blacks
• “Free soil, free labor, and free men” = Free-Soil Party
• Also advocate free homesteads, internal improvements
Free-Soil Movement
• Any restriction of expansion of slavery = violation of
constitutional right to take, use property as see fit
• Free-Soilers, abolitionists attempting to destroy slavery
• Moderates want to see 36/30 extend to Pacific
The Southern Position
• Promoted by Lewis Cass (Dem. Senator, MI) as
compromise
• Supported by moderates from N and S
• Extension of slavery into territories decided by vote of
people who settle there, NOT by Congress
• = squatter (popular) soverignty
Popular Sovereignty
THE ELECTION OF 1848
• 1848- Cass nominated by Dems
• Focus solely on popular sovereignty
• Whigs nominated Gen. Zachary Taylor
• War hero, not political, no position taken on extension of
slavery- was a Southerner, slaveholder
• Vs. 3rd party Free-Soiler MVB
• “conscience” Whigs (opposed slavery), antislavery Dems
• Antislavery Dems called “barnburners”- defect threated to
destroy Dem. party
• Taylor win b/c split vote
• Free-Soilers take votes from NY, PA
Enter Taylor
AGITATION OVER SLAVERY
• Gold rush of ‘49 + 100k settlers  need for law, order
• Draft of state constitution, application for statehood
• Banned slavery
• Taylor support admission of CA, NM as free
•  secession talk by “fire-eaters” (S. radicals)
• Met in Nashville to discuss secession
Compromise of 1850
• Henry Clay step in & organize compromise
• CA in as free
• Mexican cession divided into Utah, New Mexico & allow
slavery determined by pop. sovereignty
• Disputed land b/t TX, NM settled- land to new territories in
exchange for US assuming $10 mil. Of TX public debt
• Slave trade banned in DC
• Whites still able to hold slaves as before
• New Fugitive Slave Law that will be enforced
Enter Clay
• Senate debates led by
• Henry Clay, Daniel Webster, John C. Calhoun
• Webster- for compromise to save Union  end of support from
abolitionists in MA
• Calhoun- vs. compromise, want South to have = rights in
territory
• N. opposition from younger antislavery lawmakers
• William Seward- argue a higher law than the constitution
• 1850- death of Taylor brings in Millard Fillmore
• Desire compromise
• Stephen Douglas step in- pass each part separately
Compromise passes
• Added to help South accept loss of CA to antislavery forces
• Purpose to track down fugitive slaves, capture them, return to
owners
• Fugitive slave cases under fed.gov.
• Authority given to US commissioners to issue warrants, arrest
fugitives
• No trial by jury if claimed to be free, not fugitive
• Enforcement resisted by antislavery groups  division b/t N &
S on issue
• Underground Railroad
Fugitive Slave Law
• Emotions of people affected by laws, also popular books
• Harriet Beecher Stowe- Uncle Tom’s Cabin
• Conflict b/t Tom and owner (Simon Legree)
• Show slave owners as cruel, inhuman; present MORAL
issue of slavery
• Could be overcome
• Southerners see as “untruth,” proof that N prejudiced
against Southern way of life
Uncle Tom’s Cabin, 1852
• 1857- Hinton Helper wrote non-fiction, Impending Crisis
of the South
• Attack slavery through statistics- show as institution that
weakened South’s economy
• Book banned in South, circulated in North by antislavery,
Free-Soilers
Southern
Antislavery View
Category
Free States
Slave States
Slave States as %
of Free States
Population
18, 484, 922
9,612, 979
52%
Patents for New
Inventions
1,929
268
14%
Value of Church
buildings
$67, 778, 477
$21,674, 581
32%
Newspapers,
periodicals
1,790
740
41%
Bank Capital
$230,100,840
$109, 078, 940
47%
Value of Exports
$167, 520, 098
$107,480,688
64%
• Proslavery whites argue slavery was positive, good for
slaves & masters
• Slavery sanctioned in Bible, grounded in philosophy &
history
• Contrast conditions of N. wage workers w/ familial bonds
of slavery (patriarchy)
• George Fitzhugh- Sociology of the South (1854),
Cannibals All! (1857)
• Question principle of equal rights for unequal men, attack
capitalistic wage system (worse than slavery)
Southern Reaction
NATIONAL PARTIES IN CRISIS
• Division in Dem., Whig party weak
• Whigs- Gen. Winfield Scott
• Attempt to ignore slavery, focus on improving roads,
harbors
• Drove out antislavery, Southern factions (fighting  party
on verge of split)
• Dems- Franklin Pierce
• Favor compromise, supported Fugitive Slave Law (was a
Northerner- NH)
• FP win electoral votes in all but 4 states = Whigs on the
out
Election of 1852
• 1854- Dems control White House, Congress
• SD propose bill to split Nebraska Terr. into Kansas &
Nebraska, allow settlers to decide slavery based on pop.
sovereignty. Passes both houses & pres.
• Douglas plan to build RR, promote western settlement
• Need southern support to build transcontinental RR through
central US and not south
• KS, NE both above 36/30  South see as opportunity to
expand slavery in areas that had been closed
Kansas-Nebraska Act
• K-N effectively repeal MO Comp.  cap blown off regional
tensions
• SD assume those into KS antislavery farmers from Midwest
• Problem? “Border Ruffians”
• Response – New England Emigrant Aid Co. (1855)
•  FIGHTING b/t pro, antislavery groups
• Proslavery gov. in Lecompton
• Antislavery gov. in Lawrence
• John Brown, Pottawatomie Creek
• Other violence: Sumner-Brooks incident
Bleeding Kansas
NEW POLITICAL PARTIES
• Sectional divisions in US + nativist feeling
• Ethnic tension from WASP groups vs. immigrant Germans,
Irish Catholics
•  American Party
• Oppose Catholics, immigrants
• Into N. cities
• Support drawn from Whigs  weakening of party
Know-Nothing Party
• 1854- Wisconsin
• Response to passage of K-N Act
• Free-Soilers + antislavery Whigs & Dems
• Purpose to oppose spread of slavery INTO
TERRITORIES
• Repeal K-N Act, Fugitive Slave Law
• Bleeding Kansas + violence  abolitionists joining
Birth of the Republican
Party
• Republicans 1st test- Fremont
• No expansion of slavery, free homesteads, protective tariff
• Know-Nothings- Fillmore
• Dems- James Buchanan
• Incumbent Pierce, Douglas too close to K-N Act
(controversy)
• Popular sovereignty
• Buchanan take majority of pop. & electoral vote
• Freemont- 11/16 free states  shows Republicans may not
need South to take White House
Election of 1856
CONSTITUTIONAL ISSUES
• JB seen as weak president (1857-1861)
• Challenge in ‘57 to decide on Kansas
• Proslavery constitution submitted
• JB know majority of setters opposed
• JB ask Congress to accept Lecompt. Const. and enter KS
as slave
• Congress reject
• Many Dems agree w/ Republicans & oppose
• 1858- settlers reject proslavery constitution in vote
Lecompton Constitution
•
•
•
•
•
1857
Proslavery decision of Taney Court
Scott = slave, into free states = freedom?
 lawsuit against owner
Decision?
• Scott not a citizen
• Slaves = property, so protected by 5th
•  Congress cannot exclude slavery from territory
•  MO Comp = unconstitutional
Dred Scott v. Sandford