The Union in Peril - Plain Local Schools
Download
Report
Transcript The Union in Peril - Plain Local Schools
The Union in Peril
1848-1860
Four Main Causes of the
Civil War
Slavery
Constitutional Disputes:
States’ Rights vs. Federal
Rights
Economic Differences:
Industrialized North vs. the
Agricultural South
Political Blunders and
Extremism
Conflict over
Territorial Status
Northern Democrats and the
Whigs supported the Wilmot
Proviso
Were they abolitionists?
The Free-Soilers
They did not demand the end of slavery,
just the extension of it.
They wanted to keep the West for whites
only so there would be no competition with
slaves OR free blacks.
Party slogan: “free soil, free labor, and
free men”
Advocated free homesteads and internal
improvements
Southern Position
Disliked abolitionists and FreeSoilers.
Moderates: wanted an extension
of the Missouri Compromise line
westward
Popular Sovereignty
Proposed by Lewis Cass (MO-D)
Slavery should be determined by
popular vote
The Election of 1848
Lewis Cass (Democrat): platform was
popular sovereignty
Zachary Taylor (Whig): took no
position on slavery in the new
territories
Martin Van Buren (Free-Soil):
Consisted of “conscience” Whigs
and anti-slavery Democrats
Taylor defeated Cass because the
Free-Soil party took away many
Democrats’ votes
The Compromise of 1850
1849: CA Constitution banned slavery
President Taylor supported the free
admission of CA and NM
Taylor’s actions sparked talk of secession
Henry Clay proposed the following:
Admit CA as a free state
Divide rest of Mexican Cession into UT and NM:
allow popular sovereignty to decide the issue
Disputed land in TX and NM to be given to the new
territories in exchange for the assumption of TX
$10 million debt
Ban slave trade in DC but still allow whites to
hold slaves
Adopt and enforce a new Fugitive Slave Law
Compromise Debate
Henry Clay (KY): for compromise
Daniel Webster (MA): argued for compromise to
save the Union and alienated his abolitionist
supporters
John C. Calhoun (SC): argued against compromise
and for states’ rights
William H. Seward (NY): against the compromise and
argued that there was a higher law than the
Constitution
Stephen A. Douglas (IL): prepared the components
of the compromise for separate passage
President Fillmore, succeeding Taylor, signed the
compromises into law.
Fugitive Slave Law
Northerners were obligated to
return escaped slaves to the
South
Fugitive slave cases were
placed under the jurisdiction of
the federal government
They were denied the right of
trial by jury
Underground Railroad
Not dominated by white abolitionists
Northern free blacks and ex-slaves
were the main “conductors”
Harriet Tubman: 19 trips and helped
300 slaves escape
Frederick Douglass and Sojourner
Truth also took an active role
Literature
Uncle Tom’s Cabin (1852) by Harriet Beecher Stowe;
promoted abolitionism in both the North and in
Europe
Lincoln: “So you’re the little woman who wrote the
book that made this great war.”
Impending Crisis of the South (1857) by Hinton
Helper showed that slavery hurt the Southern
economy
Southerners argued that slavery was sanctioned
by the Bible.
George Fitzhugh argued that the northern
capitalist wage system was worse than slavery.
Election of 1852
General Winfield Scott (Whig):
ignored the issue of slavery and
concentrated on internal
improvements.
Franklin Pierce (Democrat-NH):
acceptable to the South because he
supported the Fugitive Slave Law
The Democrats won all but 4 states.
Kansas-Nebraska Act
(1854)
Democrat Stephen Douglas wanted to win
support to build a transcontinental
railroad.
He obtained southern approval by
introducing this bill.
Two states would be formed and popular
sovereignty would decide the issue.
Both territories were located North of
the Missouri Compromise line.
Renewed the sectional controversy.
A new antislavery party was born: the
Republicans.
New Parties
Know-Nothing Party: opposition to
Catholics and immigrants
Republican Party
Founded in 1854 in Racine, WI
Direct reaction to the passage of the
Kansas-Nebraska Act
Coalition of free-soilers, antislavery
Whigs and Democrats made up the party
Asked for a repeal of the KansasNebraska Act and the Fugitive Slave Law
Abolitionists would join later
Election of 1856
Republican: John C. Fremont
(CA)
Know-Nothings: former
President Millard Fillmore
Democrats: James Buchanan
Democrats won, but Fremont
carried 11/16 free states
Bleeding Kansas
Settled by antislavery farmers from
the Midwest
Slaveholders from MO set up
homesteads
New England Emigrant Aid Society:
paid for the transportation of
antislavery settlers
Proslavery Missourians created a
proslavery legislature in
Lecompton, KS
Antislavery settlers created own
The Caning
Senator Charles Sumner attacked
the administration about its handling
of “Bleeding Kansas”
Included personal attacks on SC
Senator Andrew Butler
Butler’s nephew, Congressman
Preston Brooks beat Sumner over
the head with a cane
Northerners were angry and voted
for censure, but Southerners sent
Brooks numerous canes to replace
his broken one