Chapter 14.  The Compromise of 1850  Popular Sovereignty  Zachary Taylor  Henry Clay  The Fugitive Slave Act.

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Presentation transcript:

Chapter 14

 The Compromise of 1850  Popular Sovereignty  Zachary Taylor  Henry Clay  The Fugitive Slave Act

 Winfield Scott  Franklin Pierce  The Second Party System  New issues  The extension of slavery

 The Kansas-Nebraska Act  Stephen Douglas  Repealing the Missouri Compromise  Popular sovereignty  Kansas

 The reaction to the Kansas-Nebraska Act  Free Soil  The extension of slavery into the west

 Manifest Destiny  Cuba  1854  The Ostend Manifesto

 Southern Whigs  Northern Whigs  The Know Nothings  The Order of the Star Spangled Banner  Slave Power

 The Republican Party  Who were the Republicans?  Free Soil

 “Bleeding Kansas”  Popular Sovereignty  Pro-slavery Missourians  The Lecompton Legislature  Topeka  President Pierce’s reaction

 Charles Sumner  Andrew Butler  Accusations  Preston Brooks  “a new southern hero”

 The Election of 1856  John C. Fremont  James Buchanan  Millard Fillmore  Results of the election

 Dred Scott V Sanford  The ruling the Supreme Court  The Missouri Compromise  The reaction of Republicans

 The Lecompton Constitution  Buchanan  Stephen Douglas  Splitting the Democrats

 The Lincoln- Douglas Debates  Free Soil  The Freeport Doctrine  The Dred Scott Decision

 John Brown  Harper’s Ferry, VA  New Fears  The Abolitionist View  The Southern View

 Secession  The Election of 1860  The Republican Platform  Splitting the Democrats  The Results

 The Deep South  December 1860  The Confederate States of America  The Upper South

 John Crittenden  The Crittenden Plan  Lincoln’s response to Crittenden  Fort Sumter  Lincoln’s reaction to Fort Sumter  The Upper south secedes