The Civil War - Wright State University
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The Civil War
Social Studies Lesson Power Point
Laura G. Sarah T. Sheena S.
ED 639
The Civil War- Factors
Leading Up to the War
8th grade American History
Objectives
At the completion of this lesson, students
will be able to:
recognize the political, economic,
geographic, and social factors that
influenced the outbreak of war
Identify and define the major events/acts
Materials
Textbook
Atlas
Handouts-maps, court materials, political
cartoons
Colored pencils
Note-taking materials
Useful Websites
The History Place
Civilwar.com
American Civil War
The Civil War
The American Civil
War Page
Economic Issues
Tariffs, Tariffs, Tariffs
A tariff is a tax paid on imports
Hurt South because it raised the price of goods
that they had to buy; Protected North because they
could make their own goods and made it easier to
compete with foreign goods
South was paying almost 87% of tariff revenue
while abolitionists were attacking their way of life.
How would this make you feel?
Tariff of Abomination-1828, was revised in 1833
under threat of secession
Secession and
Nullification
Idea 1st appeared during War of 1812 when New
Englanders were upset with the war
The 1828 Tariff was viewed as unfair and threatening
to the South
VP John C. Calhoun wrote “The South Carolina
Exposition and Protest” advocating the right to nullify
federal laws –South Carolina followed his advice
Andrew Jackson managed to avoid a war during the
Nullification Crisis by allowing a reduced tariff to be
passed
Key issue was about states’ rights
The Issue of Slavery and
Expansion
The Constitution failed to end slavery
It gave South an advantage in House and the
Presidency with the 3/5 clause
Cotton Gin (by Eli Whitney) revived the
importance of cotton and therefore slavery
Slavery was an important aspect to the
Southern economy- cash crops/plantations
Only 26% of whites in South owned slaves, yet
slaves were 1/3-1/2 of the population
Why would non-slave holders support slavery?
Abolition
The religious revivals of the 1820’s made
ABOLITIONISM an important issue
Believed slavery was evil; wanted to abolish slavery.
Used publications (The Liberator), petitions, and
more extreme measures to end slavery.
Others:
Free-soilers- wanted to only limit the expansion of slavery
Colonialists- wanted to end slavery and return them back
to Africa; advocated by Monroe, Lincoln, and many other
politicians and Northerners
What present day country is a result of this idea?
Frederick Douglass
Runaway Slave
Joined abolitionist movement; was anti-colonization
Was hired by William Lloyd Garrison as a speaker;
became world famous
Also supported equal political rights for women
May 1845, 5,000 copies of his book Narrative of the
Life of Frederick Douglass, an American Slave were
published
1847 published own paper North Star in Rochester,
NY
During Civil War, served as advisor to Lincoln
What made Douglass so famous and so controversial?
The Missouri Compromise
•Created by Henry Clay
•Admitted Missouri as a slave state (1821), Maine as
a free state (1820); Kept the balance; Created
free/slave line at 36’30°N in hopes of resolving future
issues
•Western expansion was the desire and fear of both
sides
•New states would create an imbalance in
Congress
•Made the imbalance of states and slavery a major
issue in the political arena
The Compromise of 1850
Collection of 5 compromises created by Henry
Clay as a way to keep the Union together
following the acquisition of territory from the
Mexican War
Texas would relinquish the disputed land (for $10
million to pay off its debt to Mexico)
NM, NV, UT, & AZ would be added without
mentioning slavery
Slave trade would be abolished in DC (slavery
would still be legal)
California would be a free state
Fugitive Slave Law would be enacted
Compromise of 1850
Kept the Union together for
another decade, but…
The Fugitive Slave Law was the
most controversial of the acts
It required citizens to aid in the
recovery of fugitive slaves and
denied fugitives to a trial by jury
Abolitionists resolved to end
slavery immediately
The Kansas-Nebraska Act
Passed by Congress on May
30, 1854; allowed the people of
Kansas and Nebraska to decide
whether they would be free or
slave
Repealed the Missouri
Compromise since the states
were north of the 36’30°N line
Upset many Northerners who saw
line as a permanent agreement;
was supported by many
Southerners as a way of
expanding slavery and political
support
Aftermath of K-N Act: Bloody Kansas
Both pro- and anti-slavery settlers rushed to
Kansas to affect the vote
Pro-slavery won out, but the election was seen
as fraudulent; another anti-slavery election
was held- Result? 2 legislatures!
Violence erupted, led by John Brown
President Pierce sent troops to stop the
violence; another election was held, but it too
was charged with fraud and Congress refused
to recognize Kansas as a state (until 1861 as a
free state)
John Brown
•Raised in North by deeply religious, radical abolitionists
•Met Frederick Douglas in 1847
•Waged a war against those who supported slavery in Kansas
•On Oct. 16,1859, he led 21 other men on an assault against
Harper’s Ferry, a federal arsenal.
•Was put down by Federal troops led by Lee
•He was tried of treason and executed
•Seen as a martyr for the abolitionist cause and a major threat
to Southerners (and many Northerners)
•List some reasons why both Southerners and Northerners would be
opposed to abolition.
Dred-Scott Decision-1857
Dred Scott was a slave who lived in Illinois
and Wisconsin (free states), then was moved
back to Missouri (a slave state)
He appealed to the Supreme Court in hopes to
gain his freedom
Court ruled that Scott was black, therefore not
a citizen and had no right to sue and should
be treated as property
This ruling incited abolitionists; however,
Douglass believed the decision would bring to
light the issue of slavery and its eventual
downfall
Student Activities
1. Write a persuasive letter for war
from the viewpoint of a Southerner
or a Northerner
1-2 pages in length
Use at least 3 of the discussed
factors to create your argument
2. Complete a Map
Activity and Answer the
Questions
On the map:
Identify the territories and
the new states that were
added and when
identify the states that
remained in the Union
the border states
the states that seceded
with the dates of secession
3. Analyze the political
cartoons.
What do the cartoons mean?
Who is the intended audience?
Compare with a modern
political cartoon. What are the
similarities? Differences?
4. Divide into 2 groups, 1 a defense team and 1 a
prosecuting team. Recreate the trial of Dred Scott
using the arguments of the historical players and
original arguments.
5. Create a timeline of events that helped
lead to the eruption of the Civil War in 1861.