Chapter 14 The Union in Peril
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Transcript Chapter 14 The Union in Peril
The Wilmot Proviso
Amendment added to a congressional
appropriations bill prohibiting slavery for
ever existing in any territories acquired
from Mexico
Popular Sovereignty
The idea that individual territories
applying for statehood should decide the
issue of slavery for themselves.
The Compromise of 1850
California entered the Union as a free
state
Territorial governments were organized in
New Mexico and Utah to apply the
principle of popular sovereignty
The slave trade was abolished in the
District of Columbia
A new Fugitive Slave Act of 1850
Consequences of
Compromise
Political alignment along party lines grew
stronger
Previously unheard, Americans were now
discussing ideals of higher law than the
Constitution: succession and disunion (the USA
was still a new concept!)
Abolitionists stepped up work on the
Underground Railroad and several states
prohibited elected officials and organizations
from participation in slave hunting
The Kansas-Nebraska Act
Stephen Douglas of the Whig party, introduced a
bill organizing the Nebraska Territory (which
included Kansas)
Southerners opposed the organization of the
territory unless slavery was permitted
Douglas suggested the application of popular
sovereignty to the issue as the entire territory fell
north of the Missouri Compromise line
Issue inflamed all sides of the slavery issue,
dragging the country closer to war.
“Young America”
Americans dedicated to the ideals of a
nationalistic vision that included slavery
and was modeled upon the revolutions of
the era in Europe
Specifically interested in the expansion of
America into the Latin American
continent and the Caribbean
The Know-Nothings
Nativist political action party comprised
mostly of former Whigs who were
dedicated to staunching the tide of
foreign immigrants to the United States
If asked about their affiliation with the
group, members were told to respond, “I
Know Nothing.”
“Bleeding Kansas”
On the eve of the Civil War, militant
abolitionist John Brown and a few
followers crept into a pro slavery
settlement outside of Lawrence, Kansas
They dragged five men out of their
homes and hacked them to death with
swords
This act led to a series of violence in the
divided territory
Sectional Splits in the
Democratic Party
Dred Scott v. Sanford: Supreme Court decision
regarding the claims of freedom of a slave that
had been transported into a free state.
The constitutional crisis in Kansas: the proslavery Lecompton constitution was created
without a mandate from majority of settlers of
Kansas; it led to an uncertain status for Kansas
and divided the Democrats further
The Lincoln-Douglas debates in Illinois:
Lincoln’s persuasive debates regarding
slavery drew away a substantial chunk of
the Democratic party.
John Brown’s Raids: Still on the lose after
the Kansas massacre, John Brown hope
to provoke a general uprising of eastern
slaves by attacking the federal arsenal at
Harper’s Ferry, Virginia. Brown was
captured, tried, executed, and eventually
became a martyr for the abolitionist/
Unionist cause
Secession
On December 20, 1860, South Carolina
seceded from the Union; by February, six other
Deep South states had followed her lead.
A week later a delegation met in Montgomery,
Alabama to create the Confederacy.
On April 12, shelling of Fort Sumter signaled the
start of the American Civil War.