1 / 24

THE COMING OF THE CIVIL WAR

THE COMING OF THE CIVIL WAR. 1850: The Decade of Crisis. Out of Many Chapter 15. America in the 1850s. Changes from the market revolution: Geographic expansion Population increase Economic development Nat’l identity in economics, culture, & politics. Expansion & Growth.

akio
Télécharger la présentation

THE COMING OF THE CIVIL WAR

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. THE COMING OF THE CIVIL WAR 1850: The Decade of Crisis Out of Many Chapter 15

  2. America in the 1850s • Changes from the market revolution: • Geographic expansion • Population increase • Economic development • Nat’l identity in economics, culture, & politics

  3. Expansion & Growth • Grew thanks to war & diplomacy • Tripled in size • 31 states by1850 • Nation movedout of the“developing”category

  4. Politics, Culture, & National Identity • National Identity founded on • the principle of Manifest Destiny • Pride in democracy • New middle class values • “American Renaissance” • Short stories • Unrhymed verse • Social critics • Famous novels • The Scarlet Letter • The House of Seven Gables • Moby Dick • Narrative of the Life of Frederick Douglass • Uncle Tom’s Cabin

  5. Harriett Beecher Stowe, author 1852 sold 300,000 copies in first year All-time best seller S criticizes – exaggerated account by woman from ME; not typical N convinced slavery would be ruin of US “So you’re the little woman who wrote the book that made this great war!” UNCLE TOM’S CABIN

  6. Nation Divided • Whether or not slavery should be extended to new territories sparked the nation’s biggest political debate • Prior to the 1840s, the nat’l party system had forced both Whigs & Democrats to forge inter-sectional coalitions • By 1848, sectional splits in religious & other organizations had begun to divide the country

  7. NORTHERN CRITICISMS OF SLAVERY • Violates the principles of the United States & Christian religion (equality of all men) . • Primarily the belief that all humans – slave or free – had the right to choose their own destiny & follow God’s laws. • BUT, most did NOT believe that blacks and whites were equals & did not want blacks to have equal political rights.

  8. SOUTHERN DEFENSE OF SLAVERY: • Necessary to provide an adequate labor supply • “Positive Good” since all basic needs of slaves were met • Better than the unemployment, poverty & crime in the North • Religion – slavery existed in Bible • Science – blacks are racially inferior

  9. ELECTION OF 1848 • SLAVERY is most controversial issue • Democrats run Lewis Cass – “Father of Popular Sovereignty” • Free Soil Party runs Martin Van Buren – Abolition of slavery • Whigs choose Zachary Taylor – totally avoids issue of slavery & focuses on military accomplishments in Mexican War • Taylor wins

  10. CALIFORNIA • GOLD discovered 1848 • GOLD RUSH – 95,000 “Forty-niners” there to mine it by 1849 • Impact of Gold Rush: • Hundreds of thousands of people migrate to CA, many immigrants • San Francisco major commercial center • Mining towns / ghost towns

  11. Rising Debate in Congress • John C. Calhoun • Laid out the states’ rights defense • Claimed that the territories were thecommon property of all the states • Congress could not discriminateagainst slave-owners by preventing them from moving their“property” (a.k.a. slaves) to theterritories • Believed he was invokingConstitutional protections of minorities(a.k.a. slave owners) • Calhoun’s arguments were taken up as dogma by Southern politicians • South started threatening secession if their rights were not protected

  12. Rising Debate in Congress • Daniel Webster & Henry Clay both urged compromise • Problem… • Northerners had come to view Southern insistence on slave-holding rights as a conspiracy to maintain control over the gov’t • North became increasingly hostile to “slave power” • Because all three men were getting older, they left figuring out a solution to younger congressmen, like Stephen Douglas Henry Clay Daniel Webster

  13. COMPROMISE OF 1850 • Actually passed in 5 separate bills • Popular belief that a crisis had been adverted, but in reality it had only been postponed • Provisions favoring the North: • California admitted as afree state • Free states outnumberslave states • All future slave TRADINGprohibited in Washington, D.C.

  14. Provisions Favoring the South: • Slave ownership still allowed in D.C. • Stronger Fugitive Slave Law • Designed to suppress the Underground RR • Slave owners didn’t have to prove ownership to get slaves returned • Slaves had no right to testify in their own behalf • North totally opposed & passed “personal liberty laws” which forbade the capture & return of runaway slaves

  15. The Fugitive Slave Act • The issue of runaway slaves further divided the nation. • The Fugitive Slave Law of 1850 put the full force of the federal government behind slave catchers. • States had previously passed acts against aiding slave catchers. • Mobs of northerners unsuccessfully tried to prevent the law from being carried out. • Black fugitives described their experiences as slaves, helping to raise Northerners’ consciousness.

  16. Provision that could benefit either the North or the South: • Mexican cession would be divided into 2 territories: UT & NM • Slavery would be decided in these 2 territories by popular sovereignty • Stephen Douglas responsible for passage of Compromise of 1850 • P Taylor opposed the Compromise – but he died; P Fillmore signs bill into law

  17. Millard Fillmore #13 • Whig • VP – None • Competent & level-headed • Personally opposed slavery • Issue not worth civil war • Apprenticeship • 14 year old • Carding & clothing • Chopped wood • Joined library @ 18 • Country schoolteacher • Lawyer

  18. Election of 1852 Whigs Democrats Lewis Cass, Stephen Douglas, & James Buchanan all vying for nomination Party turns to Franklin Pierce (NH) Thought to have southern sympathies “Faithful execution” • Unofficial head = William Seward • Doesn’t like pro-Southern Fillmore • Nominates General Winfield Scott • Alienates the southern portion of their party • Will be the last time they nominate a presidential candidate

  19. Franklin Pierce #14 • Democrat • VP – William King • Died after 1 year • People pleaser • Studied law • Was elected to the Senate at 33 • Mexican War veteran • Served under General Scott • “Doughface Democrat”

  20. “Young America”: The Politics of Expansion • “Young America” began with a group of writers & politicians • Believed in Manifest Destiny • Looked southward at Cuba & Central America • “Filibusters” invaded • Purpose? • William Walker • Led 3 invasions of Nicaragua • Became ruler, but later overthrown • Tried again to regain control • Captured & executed in Honduras

  21. Obtaining Cuba • Pierce administration deeply involved • Slave revolts, 1843-44 • Slave owners seeking annexation • Pierce sent minister to Spain to negotiate a deal • Met in Ostend, Belgium • Offered $130 million • Ostend Manifesto • “one people withone destiny” • “wrest” Cuba ifnecessary • Suppose to besecret… • Pierce will be forcedto repudiate it

  22. Japanese Trading • Commodore Matthew Perry • Dispatched to open up trading ports with Japan • Brought steam powered ships • “Giant dragons puffing smoke” • Would take severalmonths before agreement is reached • 2 ports opened in Japan

  23. KANSAS-NEBRASKA ACT • 1854, introduced by STEPHEN DOUGLAS • ACT PROVIDES FOR 2 NEW TERRITORIES FROM REST OF LA PURCHASE: KS & NE • SLAVERY DECIDED BY POPULAR SOVEREIGNTY • REPEALED PORTION OF MO COMPROMISE BANNING SLAVERY N OF 36’30’ LINE • N PROTESTS! - But Act passed anyway

More Related