The Nation Breaking Apart

30
THE NATION BREAKING APART Growing Tensions Between North and South

description

The Nation Breaking Apart. Growing Tensions Between North and South. Missouri Compromise 1820. Author: Henry Clay Missouri would be admitted as a Slave State. Maine would be admitted as a Free State. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Transcript of The Nation Breaking Apart

Page 1: The Nation Breaking Apart

THE NATION BREAKING APART

Growing Tensions Between North and South

Page 2: The Nation Breaking Apart

Missouri Compromise1820

Author: Henry Clay Missouri would be admitted as a Slave

State. Maine would be admitted as a Free State. All territory in the Louisiana Territory above

the 36, 30 Latitude Line, slavery would be outlawed.

Page 3: The Nation Breaking Apart

Wilmot Proviso1846

David Wilmot, House of Representatives

(Pennsylvania) Outlaw slavery in any territory won from

Mexico. South: Bill was unconstitutional, congress

had no right to stop them from bring their property into the new territories. Constitution protected their property rights.

House: Passed Senate: Failed

Page 4: The Nation Breaking Apart

Wilmot Proviso1846

Results: Creation of the Free Soil Party. Dedicated to to stopping the spread of slavery. “Free Soil, Free Speech, Free Labor, and Free

Men”. Made slavery a key issue in politics from that

point on.

Page 5: The Nation Breaking Apart

The Compromise of 1850Author: Henry Clay

NORTH SOUTH California: Free State

Slave trade would be abolished in Washington D.C.

Congress would not pass anymore laws about slavery in the territories won from Mexico.

Congress would pass a stronger Fugitive Slave Law.

Page 6: The Nation Breaking Apart

People accused of being escaped slaves could be arrested at any time.

No right to a jury trial. Required Northerners to help recapture

runaway slaves. Created the Federal Marshalls. Judge would decide their fate.

$5 for releasing the person. $10 for turning the person over the

slaveholder.

The Fugitive Slave Act

Page 7: The Nation Breaking Apart

The Kansas-Nebraska Act1854

Author: Stephen Douglas, Senator (Illinois )

Organize the governments for the Nebraska Territory.

Divided into the Kansas and Nebraska Territories.

Page 8: The Nation Breaking Apart

The Kansas-Nebraska Act1854

The issue of slavery would be decided by Popular Sovereignty.

Popular Sovereignty:

The People Decide!!!!

Page 9: The Nation Breaking Apart

Bleeding Kansas Kansas Territory would be the first place

Popular Soverneigty would be put to the test.

Both Proslavery and Antislavery people rushed into Kansas.

Election would held in March of 1855.

More Proslavery people were in Kansas at the time of the election.

Page 10: The Nation Breaking Apart

Bleeding Kansas Border Ruffians: 5,000 Missourians

crossed the boarder and voted .

Kansas Territory became a slave territory. Capital was in Topecca.

Antislavery people called the election fixed and formed their own government. Capital was in Lawrence.

Page 11: The Nation Breaking Apart

Bleeding Kansas May, 1855: Sack of Lawrence

Mob attacks Lawrence Destroys offices and the Govener’s home

John Brown: Extreme Abolitionist

Page 12: The Nation Breaking Apart

Bleeding Kansas Pottawatomie Massacre:

John Brown and seven others attack Pottawatomie Creek.

Five Proslavery men were killed.

Civil war broke out in Kansas that lasted for three years.

Became known as “Bleeding Kansas”

Page 13: The Nation Breaking Apart

The Dred Scott Case Dred Scott: Slave of a Military Doctor from

Missouri.

Owner took him into Wisconsin & Minnisota territories, which are both free territories.

After the death of the doctor, Aboloitionists talked Dred Scott into sueing for his freedom.

Page 14: The Nation Breaking Apart

The Dred Scott Case Dred Scott v. Sanford: Reached the

Supreme Court in 1857.

Chief Justice Roger B. Taney delivered the courts ruling.

Page 15: The Nation Breaking Apart

The Dred Scott Case Dred Scott was not a citizen. (Slaves were Property/U.S. Constitution)

As a result, he could not sue in U.S. Courts.

Scott’s time in the free territories did not matter in his case, because he had to abide by Missouri’s slave codes.

Page 16: The Nation Breaking Apart

The Dred Scott Case Congress could not ban slavery in the

territories.

To do so would violate the 5th Amendment. (Property Rights)

Declared the Missouri Compromise Unconstitutional.

Page 17: The Nation Breaking Apart

Lincoln—Douglas Debates

The Republican Party grew out of the problems caused by the Kansas-Nebraska Act.

No room for comprimise on the expansion of slavery.

The violance in Kansas was the Democrats (Southern slave holders) fault.

Republicans quickly gained support in the Northern states.

Page 18: The Nation Breaking Apart

Lincoln—Douglas Debates After the Supreme Court made it’s ruling

on the Dred Scott Case, the Republicans charged that the Democrats wanted to legalize slavery everywhere.

Illinois: Senate Seat Republicans nominate Abraham Lincoln Democrats renominate Stephen Douglas

Page 19: The Nation Breaking Apart

Lincoln—Douglas Debates“A House Divided Against Itself Cannot

Stand” Stephen Douglas

Author Kansas-Nebraska Act

Popular Sovereignty

Abraham Lincoln

Little known Lawyer Southerns wanted to

expand slavery everywhere

Page 20: The Nation Breaking Apart

Lincoln—Douglas Debates

The two men debated all over Illinois (7 times).

Lincoln: Slavery was “a moral, a social and a political

wrong.” It should be stopped from spreading, but not

to abolish it completely.

Page 21: The Nation Breaking Apart

Lincoln—Douglas Debates Douglas:

Popular Sovereignty was most the democratic method to use.

Dred Scott case made Popular Sovereignty unconstitutional.

“The people have the lawful means to introduce or exclude it as they please.”

Douglas won relection.

Page 22: The Nation Breaking Apart

Harpers Ferry Federal Arsenal in Harpers Ferry, Virginia.

John Brown and 18 men, 13 whites & 5 blacks.

Capture the arsenal and use the arms to rally the local slaves to join him to start a rebellion.

October 16, 1859 attack took place and they were able to capture the arsenal.

Page 23: The Nation Breaking Apart

Harpers Ferry

No slaves came to join him and his gang.

They were surounded by Federal troops led by Robert E. Lee.

When the fight was over, 10 had been killed and Brown and six of his men had been captured.

Page 24: The Nation Breaking Apart

Harpers Ferry Results:

John Brown was put on trial for Murder and Treason.

Found guilty and sentenced to hanged.

North: On the day he was to be Hanged. Abolitionists rang church bells and fired guns in his honor.

South: The people were horrified by his actions and were in disbelief by the reactions in the North.

Page 25: The Nation Breaking Apart

Election of 1860

Republican Party: Nominates Abraham Lincoln.

Platform: Stop the spread of slavery in the new territories.

Democratic Party: Divided Platform: Northern Democrats wanted to

use Popular Sovereignty, Southern Democrats wanted no boundries on slavery.

Page 26: The Nation Breaking Apart

Election of 1860 Democrats split the party:

Northern Democrats Nominate Stephen Douglas Platform: Popular Sovereignty Southern Democrats Nominate John Breckinridge Platform: Slavery allowed in territories

New Party: Constitutional Union Party: Nominate John Bell Platform: To save the Union

Page 27: The Nation Breaking Apart

Election of 1860VOTER MAP ELECTORAL VOTE

Electoral

Popular

Lincoln 180 1,865,593

Douglas 12 1,382,713

Breckinridge 72 848,356

Bell 39 592,906

Page 28: The Nation Breaking Apart

Response to the Election Southern

During the campaign, the Southern States alsways said, if Lincoln was elected, they would secede.

They joined the Union voluntarily, so they had the right to leave the same way.

On December 20, 1860, South Carolina was the first state to leave the Union. Followed by Mississippi, Florida, Alabama, Georgia,

Louisiana, and Texas.

Page 29: The Nation Breaking Apart

Response to the Election Northern

President Buchanan: U.S. Constitution was framed to prevent this from happening.

Majority rules and the Southerners were not willing to live by the election results.

Crittenden Plan: Author John Crittenden Adding 6 amendments to the Constitution Proposed 4 resolutions

Page 30: The Nation Breaking Apart

Crittenden Compromise Author: John Crittenden Compromise:

Amendments to the Constitution.

The continuation of slavery where it already existed.

Compensation for the owners of fugitive slaves.

It also proposed to reenact the Missouri Compromise to extend the boundary to the Pacific.