Abraham Lincoln Nichlaus Schwartz. Harris Vs. Tazewell County Summary: In 1835, Harris donated twenty acres of land in Tremont, Illinois, to Tazewell.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
The Republican Party -Birth of the Republican party 1854
Advertisements

Birth of a New Political Party: The Republicans. RANDOM LINCOLN FACT # 1 Lincoln was once quoted, "Whenever I hear anyone arguing for slavery, I feel.
Lincoln-Douglas Debates, John Brown’s Raid. The Republican Party By the mid 1850’s, people who opposed slavery wanted a new political voice. No party.
Section 3 - Slavery Dominates Politics
7 th President of the United States "The moment we engage in confederations, or alliances with any nation we may from that time date the downfall of our.
“Taking the Stump” “I think I’ll give him a trifle in New York currency.” “He looks like a smart little man and if I were not wise, I’d go my pile on.
III. Lincoln/Douglas Debates. A. Who Are They? 1.Abraham Lincoln – 4 terms in Illinois Legislature – 1 term in US Congress – Left Whig party to become.
Abraham Lincoln Zack Laws Photo shows the house where Abraham Lincoln lived in Springfield, Illinois, with presidential candidate Abraham Lincoln.
By: Kyle Look. Summary: In 1835, Harris donated twenty acres of land in Tremont, Illinois, to Tazewell County for the erection of the county courthouse.
By Ryan Christiansen. Summary: Kellogg and Lewis Crain dissolved their business partnership, but Crain owed Kellogg $16,000 to pay off the business's.
Abraham Lincoln By LeRoy Rosenohm. - Abraham Lincoln to Thomas J. Turner in Kemper v. Adams & Bovey, [Law papers].
The Birth of the Republican Party Reaction to _______ _______ __ Reaction to _______ _______ __ –_____ and _______split Anger over Kansas Nebraska Act.
CH LINCOLN’S PATH TO THE WHITE HOUSE
A Nation Divided Political Divisions Chapter 15, Section 3 Pages
Election of 1860 – Dividing Virginia. Who were the major candidates and what were the issues in the election of 1860? How were Richmond, Alexandria, and.
© 2009 abcteach.com 15.3 Challenges to slavery  Points in time  Republican Party is formed  James Buchanan is elected president  1857.
Chapter 10 Sect 3 & 4.
.  The Republicans quickly became a powerful force in politics.  The congressional elections of 1854 were held only months after the party was founded.
Election of 1860 Know your Candidates. Southern Democrat – John Breckinridge Vice President of the US, from Kentucky Vice-Presidential: Joseph Lane, Senator.
Causes of the Civil War part 2. The Republican Party Forms Kansas-Nebraska Act of 1854 split the Whig party Northern Whigs formed the Republican party.
The Nation Breaking Apart Slavery Dominates Politics Chapter 15 Section 2.
LINCOLN & THE LAW Kelly Scharp. Bookmark This Record: /PP/ /PP/
Slavery and Secession Social Studies LLD V Mr. Pinto.
By: Ashley Hoerr. Farmer’s Loan & Trust Co. vs. Great Western Railroad Company  In 1853, the Great Western Railroad Company borrowed $1,000,000 and issued.
Meredith Fahey. Created/Published May 26, 1856 Vermilion County, Illinois Notes Appears to be in Lincoln's hand. Summary: The state's attorney indicted.
Connelly and Way retained Lincoln and Herndon and sued Van de Velde, Kavanaugh, and Myers in an action for an injunction. Connelly and Way owned two lots.
PROPAGANDA Gathering Support. Complete Explanation: Northern Democratic presidential candidate Stephen A. Douglas was widely criticized.
Objective: To examine the importance of the Lincoln – Douglas debates. Abraham Lincoln Stephen Douglas.
a candidate must be: born on US soil at least35 years old at least 35 years old a resident of the US for14 years a resident of the US for 14 years.
LEQ: What was the first state to secede from the United States? This map shows the dates that the Southern states seceded or left the United States. South.
The Presidential Election of Stephen Douglas “The Little Giant” From Illinois.
The Election of Why does this election matter? The United States presidential election of 1860 set the stage for the American Civil War. The nation.
S 3 Challenges to Slavery  In 1854 antislavery Whigs and Democrats joined with the Free- Soilers to create the Republican Party.  Election of 1856 a.
Chapter 15, Section 2.  The party had formed in 1834 to oppose the polices of Andrew Jackson.  Some Southern Whigs joined the Democratic Party.  The.
Chapter 12: Section 4 The Civil War is Coming. The Election of 1860 Around 1860, people were still thinking that the nation was going to avoid a civil.
Lincoln & The Law. / / Abraham Lincoln while a traveling lawyer, taken in Danville, Illinois.
By: Nick Schindler. Illinois v. Overholt & Squier  Created/Published;January 29, 1857 Christian County, Illinois  Notes:Autograph document. Lawyer Lincoln.
Chapter 12: Section 4 The Civil War is Coming. The Election of 1860 Around 1860, people were still thinking that the nation was going to avoid a civil.
LEQ: The Lincoln-Douglas Debates concerned which office in the State of Illinois? This image shows a scene from the fourth Lincoln-Douglas Debate in Charleston,
Lincoln in Springfield
 Item Title  Bill of Complaint in McDaniel v. Thomas, [Law papers].  Author/Creator  Author: Lincoln, Abraham Author: Herndon, William Henry  Created/Published.
By: Amanda Meyer. Lee sued Coburn to collect $600 for five years of labor as a servant. There was no written contract, guarantee, or promise between the.
*Title: Declaration, Praecipe in Faith v. Vandeveer, [Law papers]. * Author/Creator: Author: Abraham Lincoln Author: William Henry Herndon *Summary: Faith.
REPUBLICAN PARTY – a political party formed in the mid 1850’s, majority supported the end to slavery.
Up till now In 1857 the United States Supreme Court's decided against Dred Scott, a slave living in a free territory, in his case for citizenship.
4/24/13 Warm-up: Who debated Lincoln during the 1858 senate race? Objective: Students will display the results of the 1860 election and analyze the sectionalism.
Slavery Divides the Nation. The Dred Scott Case Dred Scott was a slave who traveled with his master from Missouri (slave state) to Illinois & Wisconsin.
The Crisis Deepens: Civil War is Inevitable Dred Scott Decision (1857) Lincoln-Douglas Debates (1858) John Brown’s Raid on Harpers Ferry (1859) Election.
Daily Quiz- 3/21 1. Which of the following political parties would have supported the Republican Party? A. Free Soil Party B. Northern Whigs C. Southern.
James Buchanan - Democrat 15 th President
Lincoln law.
Lincoln the Lawyer A presentation of Abraham Lincoln, as a lawyer. First hand sources from the Library of Congress. Emily Bassett.
. Title: Order in Gatling et al. vs. Great Western Railroad
The Election that Ripped Apart a Nation
UNIT 13.3 SLAVERY & POLITICS MR dickerson.
A Nation Divided Against Itself
Challenges to Slavery Section Two.
UNION PARTY (PRESERVE THE UNION)
Presidential Election
Abraham Lincoln By:Tiarra Scott.
Political Cartoons-Election of 1860
Section 4 – pg 373 The Coming of the Civil War
Unification or Secession?.
By: Devon gulley aka strippa man
The Presidential Election of 1860
Unification or Secession?.
Pictures and Court Cases
Unification or Secession?.
Challenges to Slavery Section Two.
Presentation transcript:

Abraham Lincoln Nichlaus Schwartz

Harris Vs. Tazewell County Summary: In 1835, Harris donated twenty acres of land in Tremont, Illinois, to Tazewell County for the erection of the county courthouse. In 1849, the legislature authorized the removal of the county seat to Pekin, Illinois, and specified that the Tremont courthouse be used for education. Harris retained Lincoln and sued to recover the property from the school trustees, but the circuit court ruled for the trustees. Harris appealed to the Illinois Supreme Court, and Lincoln argued that the land had been given on the condition that it be used as the county seat. The supreme court rejected Lincoln's argument and affirmed the judgment. Justice Trumbull ruled that Harris had given the land unconditionally, but had "the land been granted upon condition that it should be used for a particular purpose, it would unquestionably have reverted to the donor when it ceased to be thus used." Date: September 16, 1851-Tazewell County, Illinois Digital ID: lprbscsm scsm

Phillips Vs. Beal Summary: Phillips owned 160 acres of land in Tazewell County. Phillips retained Lincoln and sued Beal in an action of ejectment because Phillips claimed that Beal unlawfully withheld twenty acres from him. Beal pleaded not guilty, but a jury found for Phillips and awarded $0.01 in damages. Date: July 01, 1853 Tazewell County, Illinois Digital ID:

Abraham Lincoln while traveling lawyer, taken in Danville, Illinois Creator(s): Amon T. Joslin (photographer) Date: May 27th, 1857 Digital ID:

Lincoln, Congressman-elect from Illinois. Three-quarter length portrait, seated, facing front Creator(s): Nicholas H. Shepherd Date: 1846 or 1847 in Springfield, IL Digital ID: digital file from color film copy transparency post

Abraham Lincoln at home Creator(s): John Adams Whipple Date: 1860 Summary: Photo shows the house where Abraham Lincoln lived in Springfield, Illinois, with presidential candidate Abraham Lincoln standing on the terrace, with his sons Willie and Tad. Digital ID: digital file from original

A satire on Douglas's July 1860 campaign tour of upstate New York and New England. (See also "Stephen Finding His Mother," no ) Here a double-entendre in the use of the word "stump," playing on its use as a colloquialism for both campaigning and a wooden leg. In the center Douglas, wearing a wooden leg, speaks with John Bell of Tennessee, Constitutional Union presidential candidate (far left), and influential Democrat Virginia governor Henry A. Wise. Douglas claims, "Gentlemen ps'm going to see my mother,' and solicit a little help, for in running after a nomination, I fell over a big lump of Breckenridge [i.e., rival Democratic candidate John C. Breckinridge], and have been very lame ever since." Bell remarks to Wise, "I think I'll give him a trifle in New York currency." Wise responds, "He looks like a smart little man, and if I were not Wise I'd go my pile on him." At right incumbent James Buchanan offers another stump to Breckinridge, his own favorite, saying, "Here Breck, as Dug has taken the stump you must stump it too." Breckinridge replies, "Well old Buck, if you say so, I suppose I must, but I know it will be of no use, for I feel that I haven't got a leg to stand on." His right foot is bandaged, possibly a souvenir of his defeat by Douglas at the May Democratic Convention in Baltimore. Abraham Lincoln, leaning against a rail fence at the far right, declares confidently, "Go it ye cripples! wooden legs are cheap, but stumping won't save you." Creator(s): Currier & Ives Date: July 1860 Digital ID:

A general parody on the field of presidential candidates and their supporters in the 1860 campaign. At the far left stands Constitutional Union party vice presidential candidate Edward Everett, as a muscle man holding aloft a barbell on which rests running mate John Bell. Everett boasts, "There is nothing like having the Constitution, to give us strength to put up this Bell successfully." Bell states, "I have perfect confidence in Mr. Everett's ability to uphold me." Though holding second place on the ticket, the former senator from Massachusetts Everett was much more popular in the Northeast than Tennessean Bell. To the right of Bell and Everett is "Tribune" editor Horace Greeley. His political ambitions are mocked by the artist who shows him vainly attempting to climb up on a horizontal bar labeled "Nomination for Governor." Greeley complains, "I've been practising at it a long time, but can never get up muscle enough to get astride of this bar." Abraham Lincoln (center), who has successfully mounted a balance beam constructed of wooden rails, advises Greeley, "You must do as I did Greely, get somebody to give you a boost, I'm sure I never could have got up here by my own efforts." His cross bar, labeled "For President," represents the Republican nomination, which Lincoln won largely through Greeley's powerful support. Occupying the foreground is James Watson Webb of the New York "Courier," who tries a backward somersault. His wager here, "I'll bet a quarter I can beat any man in the party at turning political Summersets," is a swipe at Webb's mid-1850s conversion from Whig to Republican. At far right stands Lincoln's former competitor for the Republican nomination, William H. Seward, on crutches and with bandaged feet. He warns Lincoln, "You'd better be careful friend, that you don't tumble off; as I did before I was fairly on, for if you do you'll be as badly crippled as I am." (For a similar reference to political cripples in this campaign, see ""Taking the Stump" or Stephen in Search of His Mother," no ) Near Seward the two sectional Democratic candidates compete in a boxing match. Stephen A. Douglas, the regular Democratic nominee, faces southern Democrat John C. Breckinridge. Douglas taunts his opponent, "Come at me Breck, and after you cry enough, I'll take a round with the rest of them." In response Breckinridge asserts, "If I can do nothing else I can at least prevent you from pulling Lincoln down." Creator(s): Currier & Ives Date: circa 1860 Digital ID:

Abraham Lincoln, head-and-shoulders portrait, facing left. Creator(s): Alschuler, Samuel G.,Alschuler, Samuel G. Date: November 25, 1860 Digital ID:

Lincoln Picture Summary: Abraham Lincoln, head and shoulders portrait, facing right Creator(s): Alexander Hesler Date: June 3, 1860 Digital ID:

Lincoln Home Summary: Abraham Lincoln at his home in Springfield, Illinois, with a large crowd of people gathered outside after a Republican rally, August 8, 1860 Creator(s):Shaw, William, photographerShaw, William Date: August 8, 1860 Digital ID: