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Unit 6 THE SECTIONAL CRISIS
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Unit 6 THE SECTIONAL CRISIS. The Problem of Slavery in the Mexican Cession Slavery traditionally kept out of politics Congressional power over slavery.

Jan 02, 2016

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Page 1: Unit 6 THE SECTIONAL CRISIS. The Problem of Slavery in the Mexican Cession  Slavery traditionally kept out of politics  Congressional power over slavery.

Unit 6THE SECTIONAL CRISIS

Page 2: Unit 6 THE SECTIONAL CRISIS. The Problem of Slavery in the Mexican Cession  Slavery traditionally kept out of politics  Congressional power over slavery.

The Problem of Slavery in the Mexican Cession

Slavery traditionally kept out of politics

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

Page 3: Unit 6 THE SECTIONAL CRISIS. The Problem of Slavery in the Mexican Cession  Slavery traditionally kept out of politics  Congressional power over slavery.

Wilmot ProvisoMexican War mobilizes antislavery groups

Wilmot Proviso Amendment to Mexican War Appropriations Bill

by David Wilmot (D–PA) Ban all blacks from new territories to preserve

for white farmers Links racism and anti-slavery

Proviso passes in House, fails in Senate

Battle over the Proviso foreshadows sectional conflict of 1850s

Page 4: Unit 6 THE SECTIONAL CRISIS. The Problem of Slavery in the Mexican Cession  Slavery traditionally kept out of politics  Congressional power over slavery.

Election of 1848Popular sovereignty

What did this say?

Free-Soil candidate Martin Van Buren demands definite limits on slavery

Whig Zachary Taylor takes no position

Taylor wins election with less than 50%

Page 5: Unit 6 THE SECTIONAL CRISIS. The Problem of Slavery in the Mexican Cession  Slavery traditionally kept out of politics  Congressional power over slavery.

California Gold Rush!!!

•January 1848 gold discovered at Sutter’s Mill in California.

•Americans everywhere drop everything, literally, and rush to California, called the gold rush.

•Migration to CA jumps from 400 in 1848 to 44,000 in 1850.

•New migrants call themselves “forty-niners.”

•California applies for statehood as a free state.

S.F. 1847, 1850

Page 6: Unit 6 THE SECTIONAL CRISIS. The Problem of Slavery in the Mexican Cession  Slavery traditionally kept out of politics  Congressional power over slavery.

Statehood for California

•Gold Rush• Population explosion • Skipped requirements to become a territory

•State Constitution • Outlawed slavery• Outrage of Southerners• Location of California

•How should California enter the union?• Free or slave• Balance of power

Page 7: Unit 6 THE SECTIONAL CRISIS. The Problem of Slavery in the Mexican Cession  Slavery traditionally kept out of politics  Congressional power over slavery.

Taylor Takes ChargeTaylor 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

Page 8: Unit 6 THE SECTIONAL CRISIS. The Problem of Slavery in the Mexican Cession  Slavery traditionally kept out of politics  Congressional power over slavery.

Compromise of 1850Henry 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

President Taylor opposes, VP Fillmore supports Clay’s compromise

July 1850, Taylor dies

Compromise passed as separate measures

VIDEO

Page 9: Unit 6 THE SECTIONAL CRISIS. The Problem of Slavery in the Mexican Cession  Slavery traditionally kept out of politics  Congressional power over slavery.

Compromise of 1850

Page 10: Unit 6 THE SECTIONAL CRISIS. The Problem of Slavery in the Mexican Cession  Slavery traditionally kept out of politics  Congressional power over slavery.

Fugitive Slave ActPart of Compromise of 1850

Those accused of being fugitive slaves denied Constitution rights How?

Very unpopular in Abolitionist areas

Anthony Burns case in Boston 1854◦ What happened?

Page 11: Unit 6 THE SECTIONAL CRISIS. The Problem of Slavery in the Mexican Cession  Slavery traditionally kept out of politics  Congressional power over slavery.

Political Upheaval, 1852–1856• Whigs and Democrats manage

controversy in 1850

• Sectionalism destroys both parties in 1850s

Page 12: Unit 6 THE SECTIONAL CRISIS. The Problem of Slavery in the Mexican Cession  Slavery traditionally kept out of politics  Congressional power over slavery.

The Party System in CrisisParties 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

Page 13: Unit 6 THE SECTIONAL CRISIS. The Problem of Slavery in the Mexican Cession  Slavery traditionally kept out of politics  Congressional power over slavery.

The Kansas-Nebraska ActSenator Stephen Douglas (D–IL) wants Kansas and Nebraska open to settlement to facilitate Transcontinental RR to Chicago

1854: Douglas’s Kansas-Nebraska bill Apply popular sovereignty to Kansas, Nebraska Repeal Missouri Compromise line

Act passes on sectional vote

Northerners outraged, Democratic party split

VIDEO

Page 14: Unit 6 THE SECTIONAL CRISIS. The Problem of Slavery in the Mexican Cession  Slavery traditionally kept out of politics  Congressional power over slavery.

The Kansas-Nebraska Act of 1854

Page 15: Unit 6 THE SECTIONAL CRISIS. The Problem of Slavery in the Mexican Cession  Slavery traditionally kept out of politics  Congressional power over slavery.

The Kansas-Nebraska Act

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

“Anti-Nebraska” candidates sweep North in 1854 congressional elections

Democrats become sole Southern party

Free-Soil Party grows stronger and becomes Republicans

• Ostend Manifesto• What did this say?

Page 16: Unit 6 THE SECTIONAL CRISIS. The Problem of Slavery in the Mexican Cession  Slavery traditionally kept out of politics  Congressional power over slavery.

Congressional Election of 1854

Page 17: Unit 6 THE SECTIONAL CRISIS. The Problem of Slavery in the Mexican Cession  Slavery traditionally kept out of politics  Congressional power over slavery.

Kansas and the Rise of the Republicans

Republican party unites former Whigs, Know-Nothings, Free-Soilers, Northern Democrats

Appeals to Northern sectional sympathies

Defends West for white, small farmers from Slave Power

“Bleeding Kansas” helps Republicans Struggle among abolitionists, proslavery forces for control of

Kansas territory Republicans use conflict to appeal for voters

“Bleeding Kansas”

Page 18: Unit 6 THE SECTIONAL CRISIS. The Problem of Slavery in the Mexican Cession  Slavery traditionally kept out of politics  Congressional power over slavery.

Brooks beats Sumner

VIDEO

What does this show about politics during this period?

Page 19: Unit 6 THE SECTIONAL CRISIS. The Problem of Slavery in the Mexican Cession  Slavery traditionally kept out of politics  Congressional power over slavery.

Election of 1856Republican 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

Election really two elections: North: Freemont vs. Buchanan South: Fillmore vs. Buchanan

Republicans make clear gains in North

Page 20: Unit 6 THE SECTIONAL CRISIS. The Problem of Slavery in the Mexican Cession  Slavery traditionally kept out of politics  Congressional power over slavery.

The House Divided, 1857–1860Sectional quarrel becomes virtually irreconcilable under Buchanan

Growing sense of deep cultural differences, opposing interests between North and South

Page 21: Unit 6 THE SECTIONAL CRISIS. The Problem of Slavery in the Mexican Cession  Slavery traditionally kept out of politics  Congressional power over slavery.

Cultural SectionalismMajor Protestant denominations divide into Northern and Southern entities over slavery

Southern literature romanticizes plantation life

South seeks intellectual, economic independence

Northern intellectuals condemn slavery

Uncle Tom’s Cabin an immense success in North

Page 22: Unit 6 THE SECTIONAL CRISIS. The Problem of Slavery in the Mexican Cession  Slavery traditionally kept out of politics  Congressional power over slavery.

The Dred Scott CaseDred Scott v. Sanford (1857): Supreme Court can decide on slavery in the territories

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

Page 23: Unit 6 THE SECTIONAL CRISIS. The Problem of Slavery in the Mexican Cession  Slavery traditionally kept out of politics  Congressional power over slavery.

The Lecompton Controversy

1857: Rigged Lecompton convention drafts constitution to make Kansas a slave state

People of Kansas repudiate Lecompton Constitution by 6 to 1 margin in 1858

Lecompton incident more evidence to Republicans of slave power conspiracy

How did this hurt Douglas politically?

Page 24: Unit 6 THE SECTIONAL CRISIS. The Problem of Slavery in the Mexican Cession  Slavery traditionally kept out of politics  Congressional power over slavery.

Debating the Morality of Slavery

“A house divided against itself cannot stand. I believe that this government cannot endure permanently half slave and half free.”

1858 Senatorial DebatesLincoln

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

Douglas accuses Lincoln of favoring equality

What effect do the debates of 1858 have on Lincoln’s political career?

Page 25: Unit 6 THE SECTIONAL CRISIS. The Problem of Slavery in the Mexican Cession  Slavery traditionally kept out of politics  Congressional power over slavery.

The South’s Crisis of FearOctober, 1859: John Brown raids Harper’s Ferry

Brown executed How did this increase sectionalism even

further?

To Southerners, Republicans seen as radical abolitionists

Southerners convinced they must secede on election of Republican president

Page 26: Unit 6 THE SECTIONAL CRISIS. The Problem of Slavery in the Mexican Cession  Slavery traditionally kept out of politics  Congressional power over slavery.

Election of 1860Abraham Lincoln nominated

Was he seen as a radical or a moderate?

Lincoln wins by carrying North

Democrats split:

Northern Democrats Stephen Douglas Continued support for popular sovereignty

Southern Democrats John Breckenridge Federal protection of slavery in territories

John C. Breckenridge

What happened during the Democratic Convention of 1860?

Page 27: Unit 6 THE SECTIONAL CRISIS. The Problem of Slavery in the Mexican Cession  Slavery traditionally kept out of politics  Congressional power over slavery.

Election of 1860: Outcome

2 contests North: Lincoln vs. Douglas South: Bell vs. Breckenridge

Republicans get majority with all but 3 Northern electoral votes although only 40% of popular vote

nationwide

What are the long and short term effects that the South is concerned about?