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Published byAleesha Glenn Modified over 9 years ago
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Civil War - Causes
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Sectionalism: placing of the interest of one’s region ahead of the nation
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Economic Differences North –Tariff on British goods made the sale of Northern goods increase –North=rich! –Transportation links: mass canals, RRs = commerce South –Tariff on British goods bad! It reduced exports and the British bought less cotton –South=mad! –Transportation links: no canals, few RRs connecting to big cities
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Cultural Differences North –Fast –paced lifestyle –Work outside the home South –Farming –Old fashioned –Self-sufficient –Land of chivalry
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Political Differences North –Federal Power South –State Power Virginia
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Range of Opinions Proslavery –Southern Plantation owners who believed in slavery and its necessity for daily life Popular Sovereignty –Belief that residents of a territory should be able to choose for themselves Free Soil –A political party formed to oppose the extension of slavery within the US Abolition –The ending of legalized slavery
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Congressional Efforts at Settling the Issue Missouri Compromise Missouri Compromise –A series of laws enacted in 1820 to maintain the balance of power between slave states and free states –Maine = free –Missouri = slave
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Congressional Efforts at Settling the Issue Compromise of 1850: Fugitive Slave Law California = free; Utah and New Mexico use popular sovereignty for slavery Slave trade in DC is illegal, but not slavery Stricter fugitive slave laws
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Congressional Efforts at Settling the Issue Popular Sovereignty Intention to allow people to choose for themselves in their own territory Effect on Kansas – flooded with pro and anti slavery folks – led to riots John Brown – remember him?
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Abolitionists A person seeking the legal end of slavery!
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Abolitionists Frederick Douglass Former slave, lecturer Active in the Underground Railroad Supported Women’s Suffrage, attended Seneca Falls convention in 1848 Harriet Tubman Conductor on the Underground RR – made 19 trips Former slave – as a child struck on head by overseer with a lead weight Helped 300 slaves escape Had a bounty on her head
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Abolitionists Angelina and Sarah Grimke Daughters of a SC slaveholder Angelina published An Appeal to Christian Women of the South Raised money petitioned Congress William Lloyd Garrison Editor of the newspaper called The Liberator, published 1831-1865 Demanded an immediate end to slavery
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Harriet Beecher Stowe 1852 published Uncle Tom’s Cabin Lincoln was quoted as saying: “so this is the little lady who started the war”
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Civil War Secession Map
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cwmap.pdf
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