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Chapter 13 A House Divided, 1840–1861
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Fruits of Manifest Destiny Continental Expansion Caused slavery moved to center of national politics by 1840s: Nearly all land east of Mississippi was in white hands Economic crisis pushed settlers west Manifest Destiny increased in these years The Mexican Frontier: New Mexico and California Mexico achieves independence from Spain in 1821 Opens up a new frontier for American settlers
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Give Me Liberty!: An American history, 3rd Edition Copyright © 2011 W.W. Norton & Company Map 13.1 The Trans-Mississippi West, 1830s – 1840s
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Fruits of Manifest Destiny The Texas Revolt Mexico allowed Americans to settle in hopes of developing area By 1830, Americans outnumbered Tejanos Slavery exacerbated tensions Mexico had abolished slavery, but Texas local authorities allowed American settlers to bring slave with them Texas revolted from Mexico in 1835, won independence in 1837.
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Fruits of Manifest Destiny The Election of 1844 Henry Clay – Whigs James K. Polk – Democrats Polk “first dark horse candidate in American history!” Days before Polk’s inauguration, Texas was annexed by Congress
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Give Me Liberty!: An American history, 3rd Edition Copyright © 2011 W.W. Norton & Company Map 13.2 The Mexican War, 1846 - 1848
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Give Me Liberty!: An American history, 3rd Edition Copyright © 2011 W.W. Norton & Company Map 13.3 Gold – Rush California
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A Dose of Arsenic Victory over Mexico raised the fatal political issue that plunged the nation into civil war Expansion of slavery into the West The Wilmot Proviso: 1846 Proposed the prohibiting of slavery from all territory acquired from Mexico Passed the House Failed the Senate
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Give Me Liberty!: An American history, 3rd Edition Copyright © 2011 W.W. Norton & Company Map 13.4 Continental Expansion through 1853
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A Dose of Arsenic The Free Soil Appeal Popular in North Western Territories = economic advancement Slavery prevents economic growth for the laborers Southern rebuttal Violation of equal rights Fed gov’t had no right to keep them from brining property into territories
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A Dose of Arsenic Crisis and Compromise California asked to be admitted in 1850 Compromise of 1850 CA = Free Stronger Fugitive Slave Law Status of slavery in territories acquired from Mexico would be left to a vote by inhabitants U.S. would pay off Texas debt accumulated while “independent”
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Give Me Liberty!: An American history, 3rd Edition Copyright © 2011 W.W. Norton & Company Map 13.5 The Compromise of 1850
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A Dose of Arsenic The Fugitive Slave Issue Allowed federal commissioners to determine alleged fugitives w/o a jury or testimony Local authorities could not interfere Required individual citizens to help Contradiction of southern states’ rights argument!
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A Dose of Arsenic Douglas and Popular Sovereignty Strong believer in western development Needed formal governments to be instituted for this to happen South opposed this! Pop Sovereignty Status of slavery would be dicided by the local settlers, not Congress
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A Dose of Arsenic The Kansas-Nebraska Act Allowed fo popular sovereignty in the two territories Shattered the Democratic Party Led to the emergence of a new party dedicated to ending the expansion of slavery – THE REPUBLICAN PARTY
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Give Me Liberty!: An American history, 3rd Edition Copyright © 2011 W.W. Norton & Company Map 13.6 The Kansas-Nebraska Act, 1854
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The Rise of the Republican Party The Rise and Fall of the Know-Nothings “I know nothing” Nativist sentiment The Free Labor Ideology Primary goal to open the west to the free market See Seward in Voices of Freedom*
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The Rise of the Republican Party Bleeding Kansas and the Election of 1856 Fueled Republican Party’s growth Two rival governments emerge Pro- Slavery (Illegal) Free- Soilers Fighting breaks out 200 people die Seemed to discredit Stephen Douglas’s popular sovereignty policy 1856 Election James Buchanan and John C. Freemont Showed the parties had reorganized
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Give Me Liberty!: An American history, 3rd Edition Copyright © 2011 W.W. Norton & Company Map 13.7 The railroad network, 1850s
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The Emergence of Lincoln Lincoln’s rise to power & the impending sectional crisis Abraham Lincoln’s nick name, “The Railsplitter,”
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The Emergence of Lincoln The Dred Scott Decision Traveled to Missouri w/ owner Sued upon return Court sided w/ owner See Excerpt* The Decision’s Aftermath Mo. Compromise unconstitutional? Slavery = legal & constitutional in ALL western territories! Buchannan attempts to admit Kansas as a slave state, but Douglass, with the republicans, blocks him!
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The Emergence of Lincoln Lincoln and Slavery Lincoln re-enters politics in 1854, b/c of the KNA! Willing to compromise Halt the expansion ONLY! Believed in “some” or basic rights for blacks Own their own labor
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The Emergence of Lincoln The Lincoln-Douglas Campaign 1858 Illinois Senate Election Douglas v. Lincoln Lincoln – “the nation will not survive half-slave and half free” Lincoln- Douglass Debates Classic of American History Different definitions of Freedom @ the heart Lincoln – Freedom = abolishing slavery (eventually) Douglas – resided in local self-government Douglas wins; but, Lincoln is now on the MAP!
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The Emergence of Lincoln JJohn Brown at Harpers Ferry 11859 AArmed slave revolt PPlan made “little sense” (GML 525) NNorth = Hero SSouth = Radical Terrorist and/ or Insane **Last words – (GML 525) TThe Rise of Southern Nationalism NNationalism: ________________________________. FFuture more favorable outside the Union PPROTECTION OF SLAVERY was key issue ““Slavery is our king” – SC politician
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TThe Democratic Split DDouglas’s position of Kansas alienated pro-slave southerners SSouthern Dems v. Northern Dems TThe Nomination of Lincoln RRepublican for president 1860. LLincoln’s positives: ccommitment to preserving the Union mmoral opposition to slavery appealed to abolitionists. NNo association with the nativist, Know-Nothing wing of the party, And he could ensure Illinois’s votes. TThe 1860 Republicans Platform was at its core against the expansion of slavery!
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The Election of 1860 Two different elections!?!?!? Lincoln carried all of the North Breckinridge carried most slave states Bell carried the upper South Douglas had support in all areas of country, but not enough North pop = Lincoln victory! NORTHSOUTH Lincoln v. DouglasDouglas v. Breckinridge, v. John Bell
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1861 Political Cartoon “Lincoln the Cat”
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