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NORTHSOUTH  By the early 19 th century, northern states had either abolished slavery or put it on the road to extinction  southern states were building.

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Presentation on theme: "NORTHSOUTH  By the early 19 th century, northern states had either abolished slavery or put it on the road to extinction  southern states were building."— Presentation transcript:

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2 NORTHSOUTH  By the early 19 th century, northern states had either abolished slavery or put it on the road to extinction  southern states were building the largest slave society in the New World

3  The colonial surveyor’s line that came to represent the divide between slave and free

4  The South was not merely a society with slaves. It had become a slave society. Slavery shaped the region’s economy, culture, social structure, and politics.  Whites south of the Mason-Dixon line believed that slavery was necessary and just. By making all blacks outcasts, all whites bound themselves together

5  Anti-slavery Southerners were hounded from speaking out; professors, clerics, or politicians who even were slightly anti-slavery were driven from jobs and in some cases the victims of violence

6 Argued about many things. The things they agreed on:  Take land from Indians  Promote agriculture  Uphold white supremacy  Maintain masculine privilege  Defend all of the above from enemies

7  August 1846, Pennsylvania Democrat David Wilmot proposed that Congress bar slavery in all lands acquired in the War with Mexico  Northerners of both parties supported it  Southerners of both parties were outraged  Southerners demanded political parity—equal power in Washington

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9  Should slavery be extended to the territories?  The Wilmot Proviso says no  A compromise of “popular sovereignty” is proposed—let those who live in the territory decide

10  The House of Representatives passed the Wilmot Proviso (it is dominated by northern states)  The Senate rejected the proviso (it is dominated by slave states)  It becomes an issue in the election of 1848

11  All political parties were split between those advocating slavery and those against it

12  Democrats:Lewis Cass (‘popular sovereignty’)  Whigs:Zachary Taylor (Mexican War hero)  Free Soil Party: Martin Van Buren

13  Anti-slavery Whigs and anti-slavery Democrats founded the Free Soil Party, making slavery the central issue of the campaign  Neither the Whigs nor Democrats took an official stand on slavery in the election of 1848

14  Taylor supported the Free Soil approach to the territories—surprising given that he was a Southerner and slaveholder  He encouraged California and New Mexico to draw up constitutions to apply for statehood promptly

15  One of the most contentious and significant sessions in its history  Senator Henry Clay proposed a series of resolutions that sought to balance the interests of the slave and free states: The Omnibus Bill  both the anti-slavery people and the “fire-eaters” or radical secessionist Southerner’s savaged Clay’s plan and it failed

16  Sanctioned compromise, stating that the new territories did not have the climate appropriate for slavery, making it a mute point  Northerners thought he abandoned their cause

17  broke Clay’s compromise into its various parts and skillfully ushered each part through Congress  Combined, the various bills are known as the Compromise of 1850

18  California entered the Union as a free state  New Mexico and Utah would be decided by popular sovereignty  Texas accepted its boundary with New Mexico  Slave trade in Washington DC would be abolished  Fugitive slave laws would be more stringent

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20  It is more a testament to Douglas’s political skills than to real compromise  It preserved the Union, but only temporarily

21  President Zachary Taylor died  President Millard Fillmore succeeds him  California is admitted to the Union  Fugitive Slave Act is passed

22  The most explosive measure of the Compromise of 1850  Southerners thought the North betrayed the Compromise  In the North there were some “personal liberty laws” that provided some fugitives with protection  Brutal enforcement of the Fugitive Slave Act radicalized the North

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