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Sectional Struggle 1848 - 1854. 1a., b. Slavery In The New Territories  The short term effect of the Mexican War – more territory  The long term effect.

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Presentation on theme: "Sectional Struggle 1848 - 1854. 1a., b. Slavery In The New Territories  The short term effect of the Mexican War – more territory  The long term effect."— Presentation transcript:

1 Sectional Struggle 1848 - 1854

2 1a., b. Slavery In The New Territories  The short term effect of the Mexican War – more territory  The long term effect – it brought the issue of slavery center stage in American politics  Will slavery be in the new territories?  One proposed solution was popular sovereignty  This solution appealed to many moderates  Moderates were those who didn’t like slavery, but yet didn’t fight against it with all their being (Lincoln was a moderate)  1) The states were allowed to vote on the issue and choose to be either a slave or free state  2) It put the issue of slavery into the laps of the people so the government didn’t have to solve the issue  Sectional political parties arose – the Free-Soiler party  They were against slavery in all new U.S. territories.

3 1c. Slavery In The New Territories  The Election of 1848  Zachary Taylor is elected president – Taylor garnered popularity from his success as a general in the Mexican War  Sectional tensions arose under his administration when California applied for statehood as a free state in 1849  This threatened the equal balance of free and slave states, which were at 15 states each  Southerners were also concerned about the North harboring fugitive slaves – facilitated by Harriet Tubman and the Underground Railroad

4 President Zachary Taylor

5 The United States - 1845

6 2a. The Compromise of 1850  California’s request for statehood sparked a historic debate in Congress between three legendary politicians  1) Henry Clay – 73 yrs old; Kentucky senator; he urged the Congress to admit CA as a state and that the North obey the Fugitive Slave Law  2) John C. Calhoun – 68 yrs old; dying; wanted slavery and the South left alone  3) Daniel Webster – 68 yrs old; Illinois senator; didn’t like slavery but didn’t want the country to split, supported Clay’s compromise

7 2b. The Compromise of 1850  President Taylor dies suddenly in 1850 after just a year in office  He is replaced by his VP Millard Fillmore  Admitted California as a free state  It took disputed area from the slave-holding state of Texas which was given to New Mexico  Abolished the slave trade in Washington, D.C.  Tightened the Fugitive Slave Law  The North came out with the better end of the bargain in the Compromise of 1850  The North gained the rich state of CA. The FSL was bad for the South; it intensified the abolition movement and the North did not enforce the law honestly.

8 The United States – 1850-53

9 President Millard Fillmore

10 3. Expansionism in the 1850s  The Election of 1852 – Franklin Pierce is elected  Expansionist  American lawyer and politician William Walker tries to gain Nicaragua as a slave-owning, English-speaking colony for the South but he was stopped by a coalition of Latin American troops  The Clayton – Bulwer Treaty – 1850 – The U.S. and Britain have a brief dispute over who has the rights to canal territory in Nicaragua  Matthew Perry – opens the U.S. to trade in Japan, albeit through intimidation in 1854  Southern states also schemed for the island of Cuba especially in response to the admission of California as a free state.  In the Ostend Manifesto Spain would be forced to sell it to the U.S. but the manifesto leaked, and the Northern states stopped American acquisition of Cuba

11 3. The Kansas Nebraska Act - 1854  Illinois Senator Stephen Douglas boldly tries to solve the sectional issue again with the Kansas-Nebraska Act of 1854  All new territories could choose to be slave or free by popular sovereignty  This threw out the Missouri Compromise of 1820  Some criticize Douglas’ move here; many believe the Kansas-Nebraska Act was the final push that put the country on the inevitable path to Civil War.

12 Stephen Douglas

13 President Franklin Pierce


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