The Antebellum Presidents: Part 3

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Chapter 18.3 and 18.4 Political Divisions lead to Secession The Kansas-Nebraska Act allowed slavery to expand into new territories that will soon become.
Advertisements

Slavery Dominates Politics
Chapter 9 Section 3 Troubles Build. 1) The debate over slavery was turning ________________________. Senator __________________________ of Massachusetts.
Section 3 - Slavery Dominates Politics
A Mighty Avalanche-Issues Chart Causes of the Civil War.
Toward Civil War Ch 16.
Dred Scott Decision, March 1857 Dred Scott was a slave who moved from a Missouri a slave state to free states Illinois and Wisconsin In 1846 Scott sues.
R OAD TO C IVIL W AR : Secession and War. T HE ELECTION OF 1860 The issue of slavery eventually caused a break in the Democratic Party before the 1860.
Secession. Introduction  The decision of the Supreme Court on the Dred Scott Case will allow for the spread of slavery across all of the territories.
Chapter 14, Section 2 Compromises Fail.
The Election of 1860 Click the mouse button to display the information. John Brown’s raid on Harpers Ferry was a turning point for the South.  Southerners.
Chapter 15, Section 4 Secession and War. Election of 1860  The Northern Democrats nominated Stephen Douglas  The Southern Democrats nominated John C.
© 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.
Sectionalism. Slavery The main sectional conflict between the North and the South was not only the existence of slavery, but its expansion into western.
Chapter 15, Section 3.  In April, the Democratic Convention was held in Charlestown, S.C. It was clear that Northern and Southern Democrats held differing.
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 Union Dissolves Ch.6 Sec.3 Election of 1860 – Stephen Dougles (D) – John Breckenridge (D) – Abraham Lincoln (R) – John Bell (CU) Lincoln wins despite.
Section 3: Slavery Dominates Politics Section 4: Lincoln ’ s Election and Southern Secession.
Section 3-The Crisis Deepens Click the mouse button or press the Space Bar to display the information. Chapter Objectives Section 3: The Crisis Deepens.
Chapter 15: Pp Allowed Maine to join the Union as a free state and Missouri to join as a slave state Banned slavery north of 36 30’ N latitude.
Events Which Lead To War. Expansion and Slavery Issues  After gaining territory, Congress had to decide whether the territories would be slave or free.
15-03 Road to Civil War Challenges to Slavery Road to Civil War Secession and War.
CHAPTER 8 SECTION 3 THE UNION DISSOLVES Fort Sumter.
North and South Divided.  Northwest Ordinance (1787) – Prohibited slavery in the Northwest Territory  1808 – International Slave Trade banned  Missouri.
Section 4 Slavery and Secession Why did the South secede?
Click the mouse button to display the answer. Political Developments The Kansas-Nebraska Act destroyed the Whig Party.  Every Northern Whig in Congress.
The Crisis Deepens & Start of the War Chapter 14.
Hosted by PeopleLegislationTerms Events/ Places
Slavery and Secession Section 10-4 pp Slavery Dominates Politics The Dred Scott Decision – Decided by Chief Justice Roger B. Taney – Court ruled.
Slavery in the 1850s: Changing National Politics Chapter 10 Section 3.
Section 1: THE NATION SPLITS APART. BLEEDING KANSAS The victory over Mexico in 1848 raised questions about continued expansion… Would new territories.
Chapter 11 A Nation Divided Against Itself SECTION 4.
ACOS # 12: Identify causes of the Civil War from the northern and southern viewpoints. ACOS # 12a: Describe the importance of the Missouri Compromise,
JAMES BUCHANAN DEMOCRAT JOHN “PATHFINDER” FREEMONT REPUBLICAN – united against the spread of slavery in the West MILLARD FILLMORE American Party /Know-Nothing.
Chapter 25 Section 1 The Cold War BeginsThe Union in Crisis Section 2 Trace the growing conflict over the issue of slavery in the western territories.
Chapter 15, Section 5.  1860 Abraham Lincoln was nominated to run for president with the Republican Party.
DRED SCOTT DECISION  Dred Scott was a slave  Owner had taken him north of Missouri Compromise Line  Sued for freedom  Court Ruled  Slaves did not.
Chapter 14 Review.
Slavery Dominates Politics Disagreements over slavery led to the Formation of the Republican Party and Heightened Sectional Tensions.
15-03 Road to Civil War Challenges to Slavery.
The Crisis Deepens: Civil War is Inevitable Dred Scott Decision (1857) Lincoln-Douglas Debates (1858) John Brown’s Raid on Harpers Ferry (1859) Election.
Road to the Civil War Jefferson Davis Abraham Lincoln.
DRED SCOTT – an African American who had been a slave and moved by his master to a state where slavery was illegal.
Chapter 10 The Civil War Lesson 3 The Nation Divides.
The Road to the Civil War. Republicans Challenge Slavery People were looking for a new political party that would share concerns about the spread of slavery.
Causes of the CIVIL WAR. Founding Documents Declaration of Independence “All men are created equal” “life, liberty and pursuit of happiness” Right to.
Challenges to Slavery & Seccession. Republican Party Antislavery political party formed in 1854 Antislavery political party formed in 1854 Free-Soilers.
Civil War Notes Prelude To War: Part I D. Slavery and Secession Buchanan’s Presidency is plagued with controversies over slavery Dred Scott Decision Lecompton.
James Buchanan - Democrat 15 th President
Jump Start Explain how popular sovereignty was involved in the Kansas-Nebraska Act How did the Kansas-Nebraska Act lead to increased division between the.
Political Divisions cause the Nations to Divide
The Dred Scott Decision 1857
Secession.
Chapter 12, Lesson 4 ACOS # 12: Identify causes of the Civil War from the northern and southern viewpoints. ACOS # 12a: Describe the importance of the.
Test Review Chapter 16.
Slavery Dominates Politics
CH 15 ROAD TO CIVIL WAR.
AIM: What sparked the start of the Civil War
Chapter 10- Section 4 “Lincoln, Secession, and War”
Challenges to Slavery Section Two.
Causes of the Civil War.
Road to Civil War.
Ch. 15 Sec. 3, 4 “Political Divisions & Nation Divides” P
Causes of the Civil War.
Steps Leading to Civil War
O.
Challenges to Slavery & Seccession
CH 15 ROAD TO CIVIL WAR.
Causes of the Civil War Chart
Presentation transcript:

The Antebellum Presidents: Part 3

Election of 1856 Republicans nominated explorer John C. Fremont Democrats nominated career politician and moderate James Buchanan Know-Nothings nominated former president Millard Fillmore American voters elected the Democrat, rather than either of the candidates from the two upstart parties

James Buchanan 1791 – 1868 15th President (1857-61) Only unmarried President Believed that South could only be kept in the Union through concessions and compromise, but this infuriated Northern supporters Failed to successfully deal with increasingly violent sectionalism

Dred Scott 1799 – 1858 Slave who sued for his freedom on the grounds that his master, an Army officer, had carried him into states and territories where slavery was illegal Was given freedom by his owner in 1857 after Scott had lost his case in the Supreme Court

The Dred Scott Decision 1857 Dred Scott v. Sandford Southern-dominated Supreme Court under Chief Justice Roger Taney ruled that since persons of African ancestry were not citizens of the U.S. but were instead private property, they were not protected by U.S. laws and could not sue in U.S. courts The Court also overturned the Missouri Compromise as unconstitutional, ruling that Congress could not pass laws that denied citizens their right to private property (slaves) without “due process” (5th Amendment)

Kansas & the Lecompton Constitution President Buchanan encouraged Kansas to apply for statehood, which would force them to decide the slavery issue there and end the violence A Constitutional Convention was called in the territory’s capital of Lecompton, but was boycotted by abolition supporters, who believed it was a trap The result was a state constitution that allowed slavery in Kansas Congress refused to admit Kansas under the Lecompton constitution in 1858 – Kansas would not become a state until 1861

The Lincoln-Douglas Debates 1858 Republicans ran Abraham Lincoln against Democrat Stephen Douglas for U.S. Senate in Illinois The 2 men participated in a series of public debates centered on slavery Lincoln opposed the spread of slavery, Douglas promoted popular sovereignty Douglas argued the Freeport Doctrine – that the Dred Scott decision was correct, but that states wanting to keep slavery out only needed to refuse to pass any laws which would enable slavery Douglas won re-election, but Lincoln won national attention for himself & the Republican Party

John Brown 1800 – 1859 Businessman who experienced bankruptcy, the death of his wife and a number of his children before becoming an ardent abolitionist Moved to Kansas in 1856 and participated in the murder of 5 pro-slavery settlers (The Pottawatomie Massacre) and the more organized fighting between abolitionist and pro-slavery forces When fighting died down in Kansas, Brown returned east

John Brown’s Raid on Harper’s Ferry Oct. 16-18, 1859 Brown mounted an attack on the federal armory at Harper’s Ferry, VA in an effort to seize weapons with which to arm slaves and start a rebellion Brown took the armory, but local slaves did not rebel and no support came Brown’s forces were defeated by U.S. Marines led by Col. Robert E. Lee and Brown was captured, tried and hung for treason

South Turns Against the Republicans After John Brown’s Raid, Southerners became convinced that abolitionists were determined to destroy the Southern way of life The Republican Party was closely tied to the abolitionist cause Southern leaders vowed that they would rather dissolve the Union than tolerate a Republican-led government

The Election of 1860 Democratic Party Split Northern Democrats who favored popular sovereignty nominated Stephen Douglas Southern Democrats who demanded federal protection of slavery nominated John Breckinridge Republicans nominated Abraham Lincoln Former Whigs created the Constitutional Party, which argued that the Union could still be preserved through upholding the Constitution, and nominated John Bell

South Carolina Secedes When Lincoln won the election, the South was outraged On Dec. 20, 1860, South Carolina seceded from the Union President Buchanan declared secession to be illegal but hesitated to use military force to stop it U.S. forces in South Carolina retreated to the safety of Ft. Sumter in Charleston Harbor South Carolina was quickly followed in secession by Mississippi, Florida, Alabama, Georgia, Louisiana, and Texas

Abraham Lincoln 1809 – 1865 16th President (1861-65) Republican His election prompted the South to secede; Lincoln had to decide whether to let them leave the U.S. or use military force to make them stay – he chose to fight Although anti-slavery, Lincoln was willing to offer protections for Southern slavery to keep the Union whole

The Crittenden Compromise Sen. John Crittenden of Kentucky proposed amending the U.S. Constitution to forever guarantee slavery where it already existed, and reinstating the Missouri Compromise line Most Republicans refused to support the compromise

Jefferson Davis Feb. 1861: Secessionist states declared themselves to be an independent nation, the Confederate States of America The Confederates wrote a new constitution and elected former Mississippi senator Jefferson Davis as their President

Ft. Sumter April 1861: Lincoln announced that he intended to reinforce and resupply the Union troops at Ft. Sumter The South demanded that Ft. Sumter surrender; when the fort refused, it was bombarded with cannon-fire for 33 hours (this marks the official beginning of the U.S. Civil War) April 13, 1861: Ft. Sumter surrendered to South

The Upper South Secedes Lincoln began to build an army to fight the secessionist This prompted states in the “Upper South” to secede in support of the Confederacy Virginia, Arkansas, North Carolina, & Tennessee all left the Union to join the Confederacy

The Border States Must Decide Lincoln needed the remaining 4 slave states (Delaware, Maryland, Kentucky, and Missouri) to stay in the Union Delaware freely committed to the North, even voting to abolish slavery Lincoln imposed martial law in Maryland (in order to protect Washington D.C.) Kentucky sided with the North after Confederate forces invaded the state Missouri voted to stay with the North

The Confederate States of America NOT THIS ----- -----THIS

North vs. South