Sectional Conflict Leads to Civil War
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Transcript Sectional Conflict Leads to Civil War
Sectional Conflict Leads to
Civil War
An Uneasy Balance
Annexation of Texas
– Swayed balance
towards South
– Even gave Texas
ability to divide into
five states
Popular Sovereignty
– Citizens will choose to
permit slavery or not
Wilmont Proviso
– Idea to forbid slavery
in Mexican Cession
– South angrily shot
down the Proviso
Election of 1848
Zachary Taylor
– Mexican War Hero
– Man above politics
Compromise of 1850
Proposed by Henry Clay
– California admitted as Free State
– Slave trade abolished in Washington D.C.
– New Mexico split in to two territories (Utah)
and given popular sovereignty
– Tougher Fugitive Slave Laws
Taylor opposes Compromise but dies in July
of 1850, Millard Fillmore takes office and
supports Compromise
Responses to Compromise
John C. Calhoun – “if
something decisive is
not now done…the
South will be forced to
choose between
abolition and
secession…the
responsibility of
saving the Union rests
on the North, and not
the South.”
Election of 1852
Franklin Pierce
– Democrat from New
Hampshire
– Won in a landslide
– Ineffective President
– Labeled “northern man
with southern
principles”
Fugitive Slave Act
Law made assisting
runaway slaves a federal
crime
– Authorized arrest of
runaway slaves in free
states
– “we saw a man on
horseback riding at a quick
pace, and by his side a tall
negro coming steadily
along. We saw one chain
going from his wrists to the
saddle another was around
his ankles – giving him just
enough room to walk –
following them were two
large thick-headed fiercelooking dogs.”
Northerners came face to
face with the reality of
slavery
“we have submitted to
slavery long enough, and
must not stand it any
longer. I am done
catching [African
Americans] for the
South.”
Many northerners became
strong abolitionists due to
this issue
Uncle Tom’s Cabin
Novel by Harriet
Beecher Stowe which
depicted slavery in the
South
– Sold 2 million copies
by the end of the 1850s
South accused Stowe
of misrepresentation
– Issued their own
response and proslavery propaganda
Kansas-Nebraska Act: 1854
Territories would be organized based on
popular sovereignty
– Consequently repealing the Missouri
Compromise
A “great scheme for extending and
perpetuating the supremacy of slave power”
– New York Times
1850
1854
Kansas Elections
Pro and Anti Slavery
citizens were now pitted
against each other
– Emigrant Aid Company
helped anti-slavery families
move to territories
– Pro-Slavery countered –
“we are playing for a
mighty stake, if we win, we
can carry slavery to the
Pacific Ocean.” – Senator
David Atchinson of MO
Kansas Elections
– 5,000 pro-slavery Missouri
residents crossed into
Kansas
– Voters had to “swear” to be
citizens of the territory
– Pro-slavery legislature
elected
• Ban of abolitionist
“propaganda”
– Abolitionists refused to
recognize new government
and set up their own
“Bleeding Kansas”
Mob of 700 pro-slaverymen from Missouri
raided Lawrence, Kansas in 1856 –
headquarters of free state party
Abolitionist, John Brown led Pottawatomie
Massacre
Violence Reaches Capitol
Senator Charles Sumner declares “crime
against Kansas”
Sumner ridicules pro-slavery Senator,
Andrew Butler
Butler’s relative, Senator Preston Brooks
beat Sumner unconsciously with a cane
Republican Revival
Made up of Anti-
Slavery Whigs and
Democrats
– Firmly opposed to the
expansion of slavery
– 1856 Election
• Pierce is overlooked by
own party and James
Buchanan was
nominated by the Dems
and wins fairly easily
Lecompton Constitution
– Protected the rights of slave
holders in Kansas
– Gave voters the right to
decide if more slaves could
come to Kansas
– Stephen Douglas –
denounced constitution and
popular sovereignty was
discredited
– Eventually Kansas was
admitted to the Union in
1861 as a free state
Dred Scott Case
After owner’s death, Scott
sued for his freedom due
to prior residency in IL,
and WI
Supreme Court ruling –
Scott was not a citizen and
could not sue for freedom
Chief Justice Taney –
“being of inferior order”
having “no rights which
the white man was bound
to respect” – concluded
that A-A would never have
rights of a U.S. citizen
Scott Decision Continued
Taney says Government can not limit expansion of
slavery
Missouri Compromise is a violation of 5th
Amendment
Abolitionists were outraged and looked for action
to be taken
– “This atrocious decision furnishes final confirmation of
the already well-known fact that, under the Constitution
and government of the United States, the colored
people are nothing and can be nothing but an alien,
disfranchises, and degraded class” – angry remarks of
Robert Pervis
Prelude to 1860 Election
1858 Illinois Senate
Election
– Rep. Abraham Lincoln
• Fervently against slavery
– Stephen Douglas –
incumbent seeking 3rd term
Series of 7 heated debates
centered around the issue
of slavery
Douglas narrowly wins
senate race
John Brown Raid’s
Harper’s Ferry
– Brown’s raiders seized
a federal arsenal
– Brown’s receives no
additional support and
is attacked by federal
troops led by Robert E.
Lee
– Brown is hung on
December 2, 1859
– To many he died a
martyr
Election of 1860
Last Straw
Lincoln’s victory seemed to the South as a victory
for abolition
South responds by seceding from the Union
Confederate States of America is formed with
Jefferson Davis at is president
– Confederate States began as South Carolina, Alabama,
Florida, Georgia, Louisiana, Mississippi and Texas;
later joined by Arkansas, North Carolina, Virginia, and
Tennessee
– West Virginia separates from Virginia and becomes a
Union State in 1863