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SAT History Sectionalism, Civil War, and Reconstruction Settling the West • Manifest Destiny—it is our duty to expand to the Pacific Coast (fueled nationalism and religious effort—set up by God as a “called nation” to spread the Protestant faith • Mexican War—although Mexicans had encouraged white people to settle, it didn’t know what to do when they were a 2/3 majority. Feb 1848—Treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo—gave the US Texas, New Mexico, and California for $15 million Settling the West 2 • Oregon territory (now OR and WA)— although we went through the 54’40” or fight period, President Polk realized he couldn’t fight two wars, and made a border with the British. • This also served as a counterbalance— Oregon as free to Texas as Slave California Gold Rush • First found in Jan 1848 in the Sierra Nevada Mountains • About 100,000 people rushed in to try to get rich • Although most did not, they did set up cities and government, and became a state soon afterward. Gold Rush Images Native American Issues • Indian Removal Act of 1830 (Jackson)— moved tribes to reservations in Oklahoma and other places • In 1867, they set up two large areas— north of Nebraska and South of Kansas • They threatened force, and the Sioux resisted strongly • George Armstrong Custer went to South Dakota to fight the Sioux—Battle of Little Bighorn, 1876, Sioux overwhelmed them Sioux 2 • They stopped fighting battles with the Sioux, and started using attrition and harassment • Battle of Wounded Knee, 1890, final battle • By 1900, all were in Reservations • Helen Hunt Jackson “A Century of Dishonor’ (1881) tried to raise awareness of the tragedy Native Issues • How should they be “saved”—religion? “civilize them” by teaching them white ways? Total integration? • Dawes Security Act (1887) called for the breakup of reservations and give individuals 160 acre allotments for 25 years • In reality, most of the land ended up in white hands because the Native Americans were forced to sell to buy food and other necessities • Overall, Dawes was a disaster—it tore apart communities, took away lots of land, and emphasized American settlement • Another issue: hunger. White hunters killed buffalo (up to 9 million between 1872 and 1875) just for the hide, but the meat was a staple food for the Indians, and Army generals killed lots of buffalo just to try to drive Native Americans off of lands they wanted. By 1875, Buffalo went from over 20 million to almost zero. Native American Land Map Reality of Indian Land Grants Homestead Act/ Transcontinental Railroad • To promote access to the West, Congress passed the Homestead Act of 1862, which promised free land (160 acres) if the land was used and “improved.” • Since the land was poor for farming, most of the land ended up in the hands of ranchers and railroad builders, who did pay some money for it. Railroads • Pacific Railway Act of 1862—chartered the Union Pacific Railroad company and started the Transcontinental Railroad • Union Pacific built west from Iowa, and the Central Pacific company built east from California, they met in Utah in 1869. • By 1884, there were four lines—people could go from one coast to the other in a week. Railroad Map Wilmot Proviso • 1846, proposed that all new Mexican territory be slave-free • Supported by North, stalled in the Senate due to sectional issues • Northerners pointed to the Northwest Ordinance of 1789 (proof the founding fathers wanted no more slavery) • Southerners (our old friend John C. Calhoun)—all Mexican lands should be slaveholding • Moderates (inc. Polk) suggested to extend the 36’30 line from the Missouri Compromise • Others suggested a vote, or popular soverignty Free-Soil Foundations • Nominated Martin Van Buren (who received 10% of the vote) • Anti-slavery whigs, Liberty (abolitionist party), and some Democrats who supported the Wilmot Proviso Compromise of 1850 • California = free state • New Mexico and Utah would be the rest of the Mexican area, and they could vote • Texas gives up part of New Mexico in exchange for paying $10 million war debt • No slave trade in D.C., but slavery legal there • Strengthen Fugitive Slave Act to require that all states must capture and return runaway slaves Aftereffects of the Great Debate • The Fugitive Slave Act denied alleged slaves a trial, paid commissioners more if they found out he was a slave, authorized Southern marshals/posses to go into the North • 9 Northern states passed personal liberty laws in spite of the FSA • Harriet Beecher Stowe’s “Uncle Tom’s Cabin”—story of a black slave torn from his family, sold repeatedly, and beaten to death (promoted anti-slavery arguments) Kansas-Nebraska Act 1854 • Senator Stephen A. Douglas (IL) proposed a new territory—Nebraska to help with the transcontinental railroad—since it was above 36’30” it would be a free state • To pass this, they voided the Missouri Compromise completely. Aftereffects • Tons of people rushed in to try to change the election voters • Kansas therefore passed slavery, kicked out antislavery legislators, Lecompton (pro-slavery) Constitution • This election was considered a fraud. John Brown • Abolitionist • Led massacre at a proslavery camp, killing 5, led to 200+ dead in “Bleeding Kansas” 1856 • 1859—led large antislavery revolt in VA, tried to seize the federal arsenal at Harpers Ferry to arm a giant slave uprising. He was unsuccessful, caught and hung. Dred Scott • James Buchanan was elected in 1856 on the idea of keeping the peace, and was very unsuccessful • March 1837—Taney gave this decision in the Supreme Court: • Scott can’t sue since no black can become a federal citizen (property even if they’re in free areas) • Congress could not forbid slavery in ANY U.S. Territory • Missouri Compromise and Kansas-Nebraska Act unconstitutional • While Buchanan hoped this case would help bring peace, in reality, it made everything much worse between the North and the South. Death of the Whigs • Whigs were not united about slavery—it was regionalized • Some went with the Know-Nothing Party (because members met secretly and refused to identify themselves) • The Know-Nothings also had sectional issues due to Kansas-Nebraska • Republicans= antislavery (came together as Northern Democrats, Anti-slavery Whigs, and Free Soil people)—all disapproved of K-N, but some wanted the Missouri Compromise, and others wanted total elimination of slavery Lincoln-Douglas Debates: 1858 Lincoln-Douglas • 1858 ran against each other for Senate from Illinois— 1860 ran against each other for President • Series of debates held throughout the state (although the state legislature did the actual voting) • Douglas wanted popular sovereignty and the “Freeport Doctrine” (territorial governments could forbid slavery by refusing to enact slave codes, even though this was in violation of Dred Scott) • Lincoln did not aim to abolish slavery, but just to limit it to where it already was • Douglas won the seat, but the Southern was disappointed in him due to his denial of Dred Scott • Lincoln lost, but became a national spokesman for antislavery Election of 1860 1860 Election • Republicans – Lincoln • Democrats (Northern) – Douglas • Constitutional Union (Whigs and KnowNothings) – John Bell (opposed KN Act and Lecompton Constitution)—the goal was compromise • Democrats (Southern) – John C. Breckinridge, KY (current VP) 1860 Election Notes • Lincoln was not even on the ballot for nine Southern states! • Lincoln won a popular majority in all but 3 states where he won the electoral votes (closest states: California, Oregon, Illinois) • Douglas—broad, even support (but only one state) • Bell – Kentucky/Tennessee/Missouri • Breckenridge: all slave states but Missouri Civil War/Reconstruction Themes: • After Lincoln’s election, sectional differences over slavery and the question of states’ rights versus federal power erupted in the Civil War. • After the war, Lincoln favored a mild Reconstruction of the South, though Congress was dominated by Radical Republicans who favored a harsher reconstruction plan in order to punish the South for secession and for slavery. After Lincoln’s assassination, Congress overwhelmed Andrew Johnson, who had taken over as president, and instituted punitive Reconstruction policies. • Blacks in the South, freed during the Civil War, gained considerable rights during radical Reconstruction. Through both legal and illegal means, Southerners fought against the granting of these rights. After the failure of radical Reconstruction, Southerners used the Supreme Court’s Plessy v. Ferguson decision to institutionalize segregation and the discrimination of blacks. A Nation Towards War • During the election, states hinted that if Lincoln won, they would leave (even though he promised not to interfere with Southern slavery) • Dec 1860 – S.C. left • By Feb 1861—Alabama, Mississippi, Florida, Georgia, Louisiana, and Texas joined them • They met to establish the Confederate States of America and chose Jefferson Davis as President Secession Map Succession • Lincoln: Your secession is “legally void” and agreed to preserve the Union by whatever means necessary—even if that meant freeing no slaves • April 1861, Confederate troops fired on Ft. Sumter, SC, forcing surrender of federal troops • Lincoln: We must suppress the insurrection • The threat of troops caused Virginia, Arkansas, Tennessee and North Carolina to leave • Note; Maryland, Delaware, Kentucky and Missouri were slave states that did NOT leave. North v. South military issues • • • • Northern advantages: 22 million vs. 11 million people 2.1 million vs. 800,000 soldiers Income tax, better tax collection, moer money from bonds (the South had severe inflation, 300%+/year) • 90% of the industry in the North, 70% of the railroad tracks—South had to import arms until they could build factories, and could not easily ship to troops • North had more food—they were geared to grain, not cotton or tobacco • Southern advantages: • Geography (easier to protect than to attack, and could maintain defenses without much movement • Stronger military tradition • Stronger morale (fewer defectors than North) Civil War • Confederate general: Robert E. Lee • Union general: Ulysses S. Grant (1864) • Battles were very, very bloody, thousands killed in all major battles • Emancipation Proclamation—freed all slaves in Southern territory (not the slave states in the union or parts of the South the North controlled) • What the proclamation did was gain support of European liberals, appeased Radical Republicans, made abolishing slavery a key objective of the war • After this, 200,000 blacks joined the Northern army • Grant started to win big in 1864, along with Sherman’s destruction of Atlanta and Georgia (burning everything) • Lincoln won easily in the 1864 election • Surrender of Richmond, April 9, 1865 • May 1865: Jefferson Davis captured in Georgia What to do when the war ends: • Lincoln: wanted to be forgiving...his plan “Ten Percent Plan” (Dec 1863) pardoned lower-ranking Confederate forces, and when 1/10 of the new state had taken the oath to the Union and established a new government, Lincoln would recognize it • Republicans saw two problems—it was far too lenient and that it didn’t do anything for freed slaves. They also felt that they should be in charge of Reconstruction • July 1864 Wade-Davis Bill, each Confederate state run by a military governor, half must vow allegiance to the Union, then a state convention could be called to overturn secession and outlaw slavery • Lincoln “pocket vetoed” this act, which left it all in a deadlock. Radicals 1864-65 • Congress established the “Freedmen’s Bureau” to offer slaves education, employment, economic help, and legal aid • 13th Amendment: abolished slavery • April 1865—Lincoln assassinated by John Wilkes Booth, proConfederacy Actor, Andrew Johnson now president Andrew Johnson • Southern Democrat who opposed Secession, brought on the ticket for peace • When Johnson became President, he modified Lincoln’s plan slightly and implemented it (Congress was on recess) • This plan pardoned almost all Southerners (except high officers and plantation owners), required governments to ratify the 13th Amendment and denounce secession • Problem: The Confederate forces now in charge down there refused to ratify the 13th and in fact passed black codes to repress blacks. These codes included bans on blacks testifying against whites, curfews for blacks, licenses for blacks to work outside farms (SC) • Radical Republicans attacked the codes, and Johnson defended them. Dec 1865—Congress Strikes Back • Congress came back to Washington and was angry with Johnson. Radical Republicans (leader: Senator Charles Sumner, Rep. Thaddeus Stevens) set out to reset up Reconstruction on Congress’s terms. • Called for black voting rights, confiscation of Confederate estates, and military occupation of the South • Congress passed the Civil Rights Act (full citizenship and civil rights) and an extention to the Freedman’s Bureau— both of them over Johnson’s veto! • 14th Amendment—all persons born or naturalized in the US are citizens and have equal rights (overturning Dred Scott, which said blacks couldn’t be citizens)—Johnson was heavily against it and so was the South, but in the election of 1866, Radicals gained enough votes to pass it (by letting blacks vote in 1866) The Mandate of 1866 • Radical Republicans held 2/3 in the house and 4/5 of the Senate • Basically, the President was meaningless, since all of his vetoes could be overridden • Reconstruction Act of 1867 (over veto)— invalidated all Presidential Reconstruction governments, martial (military) law over the states (all but TN) • Military districts run by Generals • Must pass 14th Amendment to be let back in • 14th Amendment ratified in 1868 (after 7 Southern states agreed to it) Impeachment • Mar 1867, Congress passed two acts which limited the President’s power—Tenure of Office Act prohibited Johnson from removing civil officers without Senate Approval, and the Command of the Army Act meant that the President could only issue orders through Grant (who could not be fired without the Senate’s approval) (both vetoed and overturned) • August 1867, Congress out of session, Johnson suspended Secretary of War Edwin Stanton and replaced him with Grant. • Republicans refused to approve, and called for impeachment for violations of the Tenure of Office Act. • In reality, they just wanted to get rid of Johnson, who was hostile to both them and Reconstruction. • Trial: March-June 1868, one vote under 2/3 to get rid of him, so he stayed (albeit powerless) 15th Amendment • Proposed 1869, passed 1870—all citizens can vote regardless of race, color, or previous condition of servitude. • Undermining this was the Ku Klux Klan (KKK) which tried to intimidate blacks out of voting • Enforcement Acts of 1870 and 1871 meant to protect black voters • Blacks had voting power until the end of Reconstruction, and then effectively lost it in spite of this amendment due to the Supreme Court Reconstruction Governments • Republicans dominated elections • To help blacks, states raised taxes and had large debts • Blacks had guaranteed male suffrage • Many of these governments were unsound and corrupt • Southern moderates who helped Republicans (scalawags) and Northerners just trying to make money (carpetbaggers) were issues to many— the KKK attacked them (print and physical) Radical Reconstruction Ending • Sumner and Stevens died, and others became more moderate • Large corruption in “reconstructed” governents • Economic Panic of 1873 drew energy away from the South • The Supreme Court read the 14th and 15th Amendments very narrowly (examples: the 14th only protected national citizenship, not state citizenship (which allowed state voting restrictions), and the 15th did not mandate suffrage, but just made it illegal to prohibit it based on race, color, or servitude) • Key Parts of the Enforcement Acts of 1870-1 now unconstitutional Grant • 1868, was elected president • Was rather corrupt and had a huge drinking problem • Black Friday (1869)—Grant’s brother-in-law tried to corner the gold market • Whiskey Ring (1875)—Grant’s personal secretary took bribes from distillers so they didn’t have to pay taxes • Belknap scandal (1876) (Secretary of War William Belknap was impeached for accepting bribes to sell Indian trading posts) • Republicans started to splinter and Reconstruction lost momentum Panic of 1873 • Over-expansion of railroads and business caused a stock market crash in 1873 • Largest bank in the US failed • 25% of railroads shut down • Between this and the scandals, Reconstruction lost steam • After the 1872 Republicans, moderates were able to pass Amnesty Acts of almost all Confederate people. By promising tax cuts and using violence, Democrats regained the South (in 1877, won every state) The Democratic South • • • • • Cut exenses Ended social programs Revised tax system to help landowners (effectively) limited rights of minorities Hayes-Tilden Compromise—very close 1876 election in the House. Republicans won the White House, but promised to end Reconstruction.