Charles Sumner vs. Preston Brooks

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Presentation transcript:

Charles Sumner vs. Preston Brooks Senate violence Charles Sumner vs. Preston Brooks

The Dred Scott decision Dred Scott was a Slave in Missouri Moved to the free territory of Wisconsin Lawsuit Issued Supreme Court Decision Slaves cannot file lawsuits because they were not citizens Slaves are officially deemed property Supreme Court ruled that Congress did not have the power to ban slavery in any of the territories The Missouri Compromise was deemed unconstitutional

“We are now one great…slaveholding community” Reactions “Where will it all end?”

Review After Congress passed the Kansas-Nebraska Act, violence broke out in Kansas because a) the Kansas-Nebraska Act backed up the Missouri Compromise. b) a congressman from Kansas beat up a senator from Nebraska. c) proslavery and antislavery forces were battling to gain control of the Kansas territory. d) slave owners tried to return Dred Scott to slavery. One reason the Supreme Court’s Dred Scott decision shocked some Americans was because the decision declared that a) Congress could outlaw slavery in any territory. b) northern African Americans could ask northern whites for help to end slavery. c) slaves were property in the same way that horses and sheep were property. d) Dred Scott was a second-class citizen.

Review After Congress passed the Kansas-Nebraska Act, violence broke out in Kansas because a) the Kansas-Nebraska Act backed up the Missouri Compromise. b) a congressman from Kansas beat up a senator from Nebraska. c) proslavery and antislavery forces were battling to gain control of the Kansas territory. d) slave owners tried to return Dred Scott to slavery. One reason the Supreme Court’s Dred Scott decision shocked some Americans was because the decision declared that a) Congress could outlaw slavery in any territory. b) northern African Americans could ask northern whites for help to end slavery. c) Dred Scott was a second-class citizen. d) slaves were property in the same way that horses and sheep were property.