Top Banner
37

Missouri Compromise or Compromise of 1820 Westward expansion The Gag Order Abolition movement.

Dec 28, 2015

Download

Documents

Welcome message from author
This document is posted to help you gain knowledge. Please leave a comment to let me know what you think about it! Share it to your friends and learn new things together.
Transcript
Page 1: Missouri Compromise or Compromise of 1820  Westward expansion  The Gag Order  Abolition movement.
Page 2: Missouri Compromise or Compromise of 1820  Westward expansion  The Gag Order  Abolition movement.

Missouri Compromise or Compromise of 1820

Westward expansionThe Gag OrderAbolition movement

Page 3: Missouri Compromise or Compromise of 1820  Westward expansion  The Gag Order  Abolition movement.

Whigs who broke party line and viewed the Mexican War as a Southern conspiracy to add new slave states in the West

Leaders were Charles Francis Adams and Joshua Giddings

Page 4: Missouri Compromise or Compromise of 1820  Westward expansion  The Gag Order  Abolition movement.

David Wilmot, a Democrat Congressman from Pennsylvania proposed a proviso that would limit the gains the South would reap from the war

Prohibit slavery in any of the new territory gained from Mexico.

Passed the House, but the Senate voted it down

Page 5: Missouri Compromise or Compromise of 1820  Westward expansion  The Gag Order  Abolition movement.

When the U.S conquered Mexico, why didn’t the U.S. keep it all?

The South only wanted the sparsely settled areas because the didn’t want a large population of Mexicans that couldn’t be absorbed.

Page 6: Missouri Compromise or Compromise of 1820  Westward expansion  The Gag Order  Abolition movement.

Slave Power" had: entrenched slavery in the Constitution; caused financial panics to sabotage the

Northern economy; dispossessed Indians from their native

lands; and fomented revolution in Texas and war

with Mexico in order to expand the South's slave empire.

Page 7: Missouri Compromise or Compromise of 1820  Westward expansion  The Gag Order  Abolition movement.

During the 1850s, the American political system incapable of containing the sectional disputes between the North and South

One major political party--the Whigs--collapsed.

Another--the Democrats--split into Northern and Southern factions.

With the breakdown of the party system, the issues raised by slavery exploded.

The bonds that had bound the country for more than seven decades began to unravel.

Page 8: Missouri Compromise or Compromise of 1820  Westward expansion  The Gag Order  Abolition movement.

Exacerbating Southern fears about slavery's future was a sharp decline in slavery in the upper South.

Between 1830 and 1860, the proportion of slaves in Missouri's population fell from 18 to 10 percent; in Kentucky from 24 to 19 percent; in Maryland from 23 to 13 percent.

Feared that in the future the upper South would soon become a region of free labor.

Slave ownership was increasingly concentrated in fewer and fewer hands.

Abolitionists were stigmatizing the South as out of step with the times.

Page 9: Missouri Compromise or Compromise of 1820  Westward expansion  The Gag Order  Abolition movement.

Some white Southerners called for the reopening of the African slave trade.

These people believed that non-slaveholding Southerners would only support slavery if they believed they had a chance of owning slaves themselves.

Most Southern leaders, the best way to demonstrate slavery's viability was through westward expansion.

Page 10: Missouri Compromise or Compromise of 1820  Westward expansion  The Gag Order  Abolition movement.

admitted California as a free state; allowed the territorial legislatures of New

Mexico and Utah to settle the question of slavery in those areas;

set up a stringent federal law for the return of runaway slaves;

abolished the slave trade in the District of Columbia; and

gave Texas $10 million to abandon its claims to territory in New Mexico east of the Rio Grande.

Page 11: Missouri Compromise or Compromise of 1820  Westward expansion  The Gag Order  Abolition movement.
Page 12: Missouri Compromise or Compromise of 1820  Westward expansion  The Gag Order  Abolition movement.

Southern slave owners had a special interest in Spanish-held Cuba. Slavery existed on the island

The Southerners did not want freed slaves so close to their shores and others thought Manifest Destiny should be extended to Cuba.

In 1854 three American diplomats, Pierre Soulé (minister to Spain), James Buchannan (minister to Britain), and John Y. Mason (minister to France) met in Ostend, Belgium. Representing the views of many Southern Democrats, the diplomats issued a warning to Spain that it must sell Cuba to the United States or risk having it taken by force.

Not authorized by President Pierce administration

Page 13: Missouri Compromise or Compromise of 1820  Westward expansion  The Gag Order  Abolition movement.

The Knights of the Golden Circle was a secret antebellum organization that sought to establish a slave empire encompassing the southern United States, the West Indies, Mexico, and part of Central America

Knights hoped to control the commerce of the area and have a virtual monopoly on the world's supply of tobacco, sugar, and perhaps rice and coffee

Page 14: Missouri Compromise or Compromise of 1820  Westward expansion  The Gag Order  Abolition movement.

Federal judges and special commissioners would decide the status of African Americans in the North

Denied Constitutional rights of trials Violence breaks out in the North

protecting free African Americans Popular movements in the North

helped to make enforcement of the law moot.

Page 15: Missouri Compromise or Compromise of 1820  Westward expansion  The Gag Order  Abolition movement.

Stephen Douglas's bill created two territories, Kansas and Nebraska, and declared that the Missouri Compromise was "inoperative and void."

With solid support from Southern Whigs and Southern Democrats and the votes of half of the Northern Democratic members of Congress, the measure passed.

Page 16: Missouri Compromise or Compromise of 1820  Westward expansion  The Gag Order  Abolition movement.

Douglas had long insisted that the democratic solution to the slavery issue was to allow the people who actually settled a territory to decide whether slavery would be permitted or forbidden.

Popular sovereignty, he believed, would allow the nation to "avoid the slavery agitation for all time to come."

Page 17: Missouri Compromise or Compromise of 1820  Westward expansion  The Gag Order  Abolition movement.
Page 18: Missouri Compromise or Compromise of 1820  Westward expansion  The Gag Order  Abolition movement.

A combination of antislavery radicals, old-line Whigs, former Jacksonian Democrats, and antislavery immigrants, the Republican Party was committed to barring slavery from the western territories

"Free labor, free soil, free men," (former Free Soiler’s slogan)was the Republican slogan.

Page 19: Missouri Compromise or Compromise of 1820  Westward expansion  The Gag Order  Abolition movement.

Since Nebraska was too far north to attract slave owners, Kansas became the arena of sectional conflict.

For six years, proslavery and antislavery factions fought in Kansas as popular sovereignty degenerated into violence.

Two state constitutions passed. One declared Kansas slave territory, while the other supported freemen

Page 20: Missouri Compromise or Compromise of 1820  Westward expansion  The Gag Order  Abolition movement.
Page 21: Missouri Compromise or Compromise of 1820  Westward expansion  The Gag Order  Abolition movement.

On May 21, 1856, 800 proslavery men, many from Missouri, marched into Lawrence, Kansas, to arrest the leaders of the antislavery government.

The posse burned the local hotel, looted a number of houses, destroyed two antislavery printing presses, and killed one man

Page 22: Missouri Compromise or Compromise of 1820  Westward expansion  The Gag Order  Abolition movement.

Sumner accused Senator Butler of taking "the harlot, Slavery," for his "mistress" and proceeded to make fun of a medical disorder from which Senator Butler suffered

Two days later, Senator Butler's nephew, Congressman Preston Brooks of South Carolina, entered a nearly empty Senate chamber.

Sighting Sumner at his desk, Brooks charged at him and began striking the Massachusetts senator over the head with a cane.

He swung so hard that the cane broke into pieces.

Brooks caned Sumner, rather than challenging him to a duel, because he regarded the Senator as his social inferior.

Page 23: Missouri Compromise or Compromise of 1820  Westward expansion  The Gag Order  Abolition movement.

Brooks then quietly left the Senate chamber, leaving Sumner "as senseless as a corpse for several minutes, his head bleeding copiously from the frightful wounds, and the blood saturating his clothes.“

It took Sumner three years to recover from his injuries and return to his Senate seat.

Page 24: Missouri Compromise or Compromise of 1820  Westward expansion  The Gag Order  Abolition movement.

United States presidential election November 4, 1856

James Buchannan (D) John C. Fremont (R)Millard Fillmore (A)Buchanan won 174 Electoral College votes

to 114 for Fremont. Fremont did not receive a single vote south of

the Mason-Dixon Line, but he carried eleven free states.

Page 25: Missouri Compromise or Compromise of 1820  Westward expansion  The Gag Order  Abolition movement.

John Brown, a devoted Bible-quoting Calvinist who believed he had a personal duty to overthrow slavery, announced that the time had come "to fight fire with fire" and "strike terror in the hearts of proslavery men.

The next day, in reprisal for the "sack of Lawrence" and the assault on Sumner, Brown and six companions dragged five proslavery men and boys from their beds at Pottawatomie Creek, split open their skulls with a sword and cut off their hands

Page 26: Missouri Compromise or Compromise of 1820  Westward expansion  The Gag Order  Abolition movement.

A war of revenge erupted in Kansas.

Before it was over, guerilla warfare in eastern Kansas left 200 dead.

Page 27: Missouri Compromise or Compromise of 1820  Westward expansion  The Gag Order  Abolition movement.

In 1846, a Missouri slave, Dred Scott, sued for his freedom.

Scott argued that while he had been the slave of an army surgeon, he had lived for four years in Illinois, a free state, and Wisconsin, a free territory, and that his residence on free soil had erased his slave status.

In 1850 a Missouri court gave Scott his freedom, but two years later, the Missouri Supreme Court reversed this decision and returned Scott to slavery.

Scott then appealed to the federal courts.

Page 28: Missouri Compromise or Compromise of 1820  Westward expansion  The Gag Order  Abolition movement.

In March 1857, Chief Justice Roger B. Taney announced the Court's decision. By a 7-2 margin, the Court ruled that Dred Scott had no right to sue in federal court, that the Missouri Compromise was unconstitutional, and that Congress had no right to exclude slavery from the territories.

The South rejoices

Page 29: Missouri Compromise or Compromise of 1820  Westward expansion  The Gag Order  Abolition movement.

The 1858 Senate campaign pitted a little-known lawyer from Springfield named Abraham Lincoln against Senator Stephen A. Douglas, the front runner for the Democratic presidential nomination in 1860.

Lincoln accepted the Republican nomination with the famous words: "'A house divided against itself cannot stand.' I believe this Government cannot endure permanently half-slave and half-free."

Page 30: Missouri Compromise or Compromise of 1820  Westward expansion  The Gag Order  Abolition movement.

For four months Lincoln and Douglas crisscrossed Illinois, traveling nearly 10,000 miles and participating in seven face-to-face debates before crowds of up to 15,000.

Lincoln insisted that black Americans were equal to Douglas and "every living man" in their right to life, liberty, and the fruits of their own labor.

Page 31: Missouri Compromise or Compromise of 1820  Westward expansion  The Gag Order  Abolition movement.

Lincoln outdebates Douglas and maneuvers him to make some anti slavery statements

Lincoln loses the election but becomes a national player.

Page 32: Missouri Compromise or Compromise of 1820  Westward expansion  The Gag Order  Abolition movement.

Brown's plan was to capture the federal arsenal at Harpers Ferry, Virginia (now West Virginia), and arm slaves from the surrounding countryside.

His long-range goal was to drive southward into Tennessee and Alabama, raiding federal arsenals and inciting slave insurrections.

Failing that, he hoped to ignite a sectional crisis that would destroy slavery.

Page 33: Missouri Compromise or Compromise of 1820  Westward expansion  The Gag Order  Abolition movement.

At 8 o'clock Sunday evening, October 16, John Brown led a raiding party of approximately 21 men toward Harpers Ferry, where they captured the lone night watchman and cut the town's telegraph lines.

Encountering no resistance, Brown's raiders seized the federal arsenal, an armory, and a rifle works along with several million dollars worth of arms and munitions.

Brown then sent out several detachments to round up hostages and liberate slaves.

Page 34: Missouri Compromise or Compromise of 1820  Westward expansion  The Gag Order  Abolition movement.

John Brown's assault against slavery lasted less than two days.

Five of Brown's party escaped, ten were killed, and seven, including Brown himself, were taken prisoner.

He was found guilty of treason, conspiracy, and murder, and was sentenced to die on the gallows.

Page 35: Missouri Compromise or Compromise of 1820  Westward expansion  The Gag Order  Abolition movement.

I...am now quite certain that the crimes of this guilty land will never be purged away but with blood."

After Harpers Ferry, Southerners increasingly believed that secession and creation of a slaveholding confederacy were now the South's only options.

Page 36: Missouri Compromise or Compromise of 1820  Westward expansion  The Gag Order  Abolition movement.

Northern Democrats selected Stephen Douglas as their candidate.

Southern Democrats choose John C. Breckinridge as their nominee.

Constitutional Union Party, which consisted of conservative former Whigs, Know Nothings, and pro-Union Democrats nominated John Bell of Tennessee for President.

the Republican Party nominated Abraham Lincoln

Page 37: Missouri Compromise or Compromise of 1820  Westward expansion  The Gag Order  Abolition movement.

Lincoln's name did not appear on the ballot in 10 states.

Lincoln won only 39.9 percent of the popular vote, but received 180 Electoral College votes, 57 more than the combined total of his opponents.