Chapter 11: Sectional Conflict Increases

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Chapter 11: Sectional Conflict Increases 11.1 An Uneasy Balance

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Chapter 11: Sectional Conflict Increases. 11.1 An Uneasy Balance. I. Debate Reopens. Gag Rule Agreement not to speak of slavery Debates end in violence- duel between Reps. from Maine and Kentucky Annexation of Texas Texas admitted Set up dividing line- Missouri Comp- 36°30’ - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Transcript of Chapter 11: Sectional Conflict Increases

Page 1: Chapter 11: Sectional Conflict Increases

Chapter 11: Sectional Conflict Increases

11.1 An Uneasy Balance

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I. Debate Reopens

A. Gag Rule1. Agreement not to speak of slavery2. Debates end in violence- duel between Reps. from

Maine and Kentucky

B. Annexation of Texas1. Texas admitted 2. Set up dividing line- Missouri Comp- 36°30’

C. Popular Sovereignty and Wilmot Proviso1. Each new territory to vote 2. Proviso- South threatens to secede- cut from bill

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II. The 1848 Election

A. Lewis Cass- Dem. Party- popular sovereigntyB. Gen. Zachary Taylor- Whig Party- no platformC. Martin Van Buren- Free-Soil Party- no more

slavery in new territoryD. Taylor wins by a slim margin

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III. The Slavery Issue in Congress

A. Dec. 1849- Tempers ran highB. California as a free stateC. Tougher Fugitive Slave Law

1. State officials did not have to assist federal officials in capture

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IV. Clay’s Proposal

A. Proposal to Senate1. California as free state2. End slave trade not slavery in D.C.3. New Mexico and Utah – pop sov.4. Tougher Fugitive slave law

B. Reaction1. fire-eaters threaten secession

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V. The Great Debate in Congress

A. John C. Calhoun- fire-eater argued for dual presidency

B. Daniel Webster- supported Clay’s Compromise

C. Clay’s measures pass- Compromise of 1850

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Fun Facts

• Zachary Taylor's horse grazed on the White House lawn.

• Zachary Taylor was known as "Old Rough and Ready." Plain, unassuming, and downright messy, he almost never wore a proper uniform. "He wears an old oil cap," said one man, "a dusty green coat, a frightful pair of trousers and on horseback he looks like a toad."