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The Sectional Crisis

14. The Sectional Crisis. The Compromise of 1850. North and South conflict violently over slavery’s extension into the territories No Federal authority to regulate slavery limited what North could do Professional politicians mediate conflict

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The Sectional Crisis

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  1. 14 The Sectional Crisis

  2. The Compromise of 1850 • North and South conflict violently over slavery’s extension into the territories • No Federal authority to regulate slavery limited what North could do • Professional politicians mediate conflict • Foreshadows what is to come – Preston Brooks vs. Charles Sumner

  3. The Problem of Slaveryin the Mexican Cession • Congressional power over slavery includes: • Setting conditions to make territories states • Forbidding slavery in new states • Mexican Cession of 1848 puts status of slavery in new territory into question

  4. The Wilmot Proviso Launches the Free-Soil Movement • Mexican War mobilizes antislavery groups • Wilmot Proviso – Ban slavery in territory acquired from Mexico • Proviso passes in House, fails in Senate • Battle over the Proviso foreshadows sectional conflict of 1850s

  5. Squatter Sovereignty andthe Election of 1848 • Democratic presidential candidate Lewis Cass proposes popular sovereignty • Congress allows territorial settlers to decide • Free-Soil party formed to limit extension of slavery – racial prejudice and fear of labor competition from slaves

  6. Taylor Takes Charge • Taylor proposes admitting California and New Mexico as states immediately • South reacts angrily • Not enough time for planters to settle • Immediate admission would result in no slavery • Proposed Nashville convention prompts fears of Southern secession

  7. Forging a Compromise • Henry Clay’s 1850 compromise package • California admitted as a free state • Slave trade prohibited in District of Columbia • Strong fugitive slave law • Enlarged New Mexico territory to be admitted on basis of popular sovereignty

  8. Forging a Compromise • President Taylor opposes, VP Fillmore supports Clay’s compromise • July 1850, Taylor dies • Compromise passed as separate measures

  9. The Compromise of 1850

  10. Forging a Compromise:The Fugitive Slave Law • Part of Compromise of 1850 • Those accused of being fugitive slaves denied Constitution rights • Very unpopular in Abolitionist areas • Anthony Burns case in Boston 1854

  11. Political Upheaval, 1852–1856 • Whigs and Democrats manage controversy in 1850 • Sectionalism destroys both parties in 1850s

  12. The Party System in Crisis • Parties need new issues after 1850 • Democrats succeed: • Claim credit for the nation’s prosperity • Promise to defend the Compromise of 1850 • Whigs fail, become internally divided • 1852: Whig Winfield Scott loses in a landslide to Democrat Franklin Pierce

  13. The Kansas-Nebraska ActRaises a Storm • Senator Stephen Douglas (D–IL) wants Kansas and Nebraska open to settlement to facilitate Transcontinental RR to Chicago and stimulate economy • 1854: Douglas’s Kansas-Nebraska bill • Apply popular sovereignty to Kansas, Nebraska • Repeal Missouri Compromise line

  14. The Kansas-Nebraska ActRaises a Storm • Act passes on sectional vote • Northerners outraged, Democratic party split • Act was catastrophe for sectional harmony

  15. The Kansas-Nebraska Actof 1854

  16. The Kansas-Nebraska ActRaises a Storm • KS-NE Act seen as North making concessions to South, but not getting anything in return • Whig indecision causes party to disintegrate • Mass defection among Northern Democrats

  17. The Kansas-Nebraska ActRaises a Storm • “Anti-Nebraska” candidates sweep North in 1854 congressional elections • Democrats become sole Southern party • Free-Soil Party grows stronger and becomes Republicans • President Pierce’s effort to acquire Cuba provokes antislavery firestorm

  18. An Appeal to Nativism:The Know-Nothing Episode • Know-Nothings (American Party) appeals to anti-Catholic, anti-immigrant sentiment – especially against Germans and Irish • 1854: American Party surges – popular issues of time but did not address slavery • Party fails: Probable cause: No response to slavery

  19. Kansas and the Rise of the Republicans • As result of the Kansas-Nebraska Act the Republican party unites former Whigs, Know-Nothings, Free-Soilers, Northern Democrats • Defends West for white, small farmers from Slave Power – stop extension of slavery in territories • Civil War in Kansas is rehearsal for later

  20. Kansas and the Rise of the Republicans • Republican Party a sectional party • “Bleeding Kansas” helps Republicans • Violent struggle between abolitionists and proslavery forces for control of Kansas territory creates a Civil War • Pro-slavery people come from MO to vote illegally in Kansas election (fraud election) • Popular Sovereignty failed

  21. “Bleeding Kansas”

  22. Sectional Division in the Election of 1856 • Republican John C. Frémont seeks votes only in free states • Know-Nothing Millard Fillmore champions sectional compromise • Democrat James Buchanan defends the Compromise of 1850, carries election

  23. Sectional Division in the Election of 1856 • Election really two elections: • North: Freemont vs. Buchanan • South: Fillmore vs. Buchanan • Republicans make clear gains in North • End of two party system

  24. The House Divided, 1857–1860 • Sectional quarrel becomes virtually irreconcilable under Buchanan • Growing sense of deep cultural differences, opposing interests between North and South • Division was increasing seen in cultural and intellectual terms

  25. Cultural Sectionalism • Major Protestant denominations divide into Northern and Southern entities over slavery • Southern literature romanticizes plantation life • South seeks intellectual, economic independence

  26. Cultural Sectionalism • Northern intellectuals condemn slavery • Uncle Tom’s Cabin an immense success in North • Harriet Beecher Stowe author of Uncle Tom’s Cabin • Most important example of literary abolitionism

  27. The Dred Scott Case • Dred Scott v. Sanford (1857): Supreme Court can decide on slavery in the territories • Court refuses narrow determination of case

  28. The Dred Scott Case • Major arguments: • Scott has no right to sue because neither he nor any other black, slave or free, is a citizen • Congress has no authority to prohibit slavery in territories, Missouri Compromise unconstitutional • Ruling supports Republican claim that an aggressive slave power dominated all branches of federal government • South likes decision

  29. The Lecompton Controversy • After fraud election, two capitals set up in Kansas – slavery capital at Lecompton – free capital at Lawrence • 1857: Rigged Lecompton convention drafts constitution to make Kansas a slave state • Congress has bitter debates and rejects Lecompton Constitution • People of Kansas repudiate Lecompton Constitution by 6 to 1 margin in 1858

  30. The Lecompton Controversy • Lecompton incident more evidence to Republicans of slave power conspiracy • Lecompton and Dred Scott case destroy Stephen Douglas’s hopes of unified Democratic party protecting popular sovereignty

  31. Debating the Morality of Slavery • Lincoln • Decries “Southern plot” to extend slavery • Promises to work for slavery’s extinction • Casts slavery as a moral problem • Defends white supremacy in response to Douglas

  32. Debating the Morality of Slavery • Douglas accuses Lincoln of favoring equality • Lincoln loses election, gains national reputation

  33. The South’s Crisis of Fear • October, 1859: John Brown raids Harper’s Ferry • Robert E. Lee sent to defeat Brown • Brown executed, many Northerners see him as martyr • Event increased southern fears of northern hostility

  34. The South’s Crisis of Fear • Hinton Helper’s Impending Crisis of the South asked poor white Southerners to overthrow planter dominance and abolish slavery • Endorsed by House Republican leader John Sherman

  35. The South’s Crisis of Fear • To Southerners, Republicans seen as radical abolitionists • Southerners convinced they must secede on election of Republican president

  36. The Election of 1860: Republicans • Abraham Lincoln nominated • Home state of Illinois crucial to election • Seen as moderate • Platform to widen party’s appeal • High tariffs for industry • Free homesteads for small farmers • Government aid for internal improvements • Lincoln wins by carrying North

  37. The Election of 1860: Democrats • Party splits • Northern Democrats • Stephen Douglas • Continued support for popular sovereignty • Southern Democrats • John Breckenridge • Federal protection of slavery in territories

  38. The Election of 1860: Constitutional Union Party • Candidate John Bell • Promises compromise between North and South

  39. Election of 1860: Outcome • 2 contests • North: Lincoln vs. Douglas • South: Bell vs. Breckenridge • Republicans get electoral majority with all but 3 Northern electoral votes, although only 40% of popular vote nationwide

  40. Election of 1860: Outcome • South sees this as beginning of permanent minority status in American politics • Deep South political leaders launch secession movements

  41. Explaining the Crisis • Republicans a strict sectional party • Fundamental conflict of ideals • Southern ideals • Paternalism, generosity, prosperity • Slavery defended on the grounds of race

  42. Explaining the Crisis • Northern ideals • Inspired by evangelical Protestantism • Each person free and responsible • Slavery tyrannical and immoral

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