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Published byAugustus Barker Modified over 8 years ago
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Warm-Up: Of all the events that you studied in your packet, which do you think had the greatest impact on dividing the nation? EXPLAIN!!!
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Causes of the Civil War
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The Missouri Compromise Missouri applied for statehood as a slave state North: Opposed What would keep slavery from spreading into the rest of the Louisiana Purchase It was north of the Ohio River and east of the Mississippi that was free territory South: Favored The federal government did not have the right to tell states if they could be free or slave It would give them more power in Congress
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The Missouri Compromise The Tallmadge Amendment proposed that Missouri be admitted as a free state North: Favored It would give them more power Abolitionist saw slavery as an evil they needed to end and this was a step in the right direction South: Opposed Congress had no right to tell a state if it can be free or slave If Congress could end slavery in Missouri, they could eliminate it else where.
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The Missouri Compromise 1820 Missouri admitted to the Union as a slave state Maine as a free state Slavery was to be south of latitude 36’ 30 and free to the north in the Louisiana territory
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Missouri Compromise Unravels Abolitionist want to stop slavery in D.C., but Congress refuses North: angered Congressed tabled the issue, halting all debates on slavery South: pleased They did not want to make changes to the slave trade and not talking about it meant not change
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Missouri Compromise Unravels Some Northerners Assisted Fugitive slaves North: tolerated People in the north were sympathetic to slaves and willingly helped them South: Condemned Southerners viewed northerners as bank robbers because they were taking their property and lively hood.
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Missouri Compromise Unravels The Wilmot Proviso: slavery not allowed in Mexican Cession North: favored They wanted to stop slavery from spreading into any new territories South: opposed Maintained that the government could not dictate where slavery was and was not legal
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Missouri Compromise Unravels California applied to be a free state North: favored It would be another free territory They would have more control in Congress South: opposed It would upset the balance of power in Congress It was up to the state whether to be free or not
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Compromise of 1850 California admitted as a free state New Mexico and Utah would be territories open to slavery Slave trade ended in Washington, D.C.
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Compromise Satisfies No One Fugitive Slave law caused bitterness Stated that runaways had no legal rights and those that assisted them could be jailed North: dissatisfied with the law Refused to follow the law Met with widespread opposition South: dissatisfied with the law Felt the law did not do enough Outraged that northerners would not comply making it almost impossible to enforce.
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Compromise Satisfies No One Uncle Tom’s Cabin North: popular It portrayed the reality of the cruelties of slaveries South: unpopular It was met with scorn and curses
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Compromise Satisfies No One Kansas-Nebraska Act said that the slavery issue to be decided by popular sovereignty North: unhappy They didn’t want slavery to spread across the great plains South: pleased It essentially opened the territory to slavery Both abolitionist and slave supporters flocked to the state to help influence the territories The settlement turned violent with conflicts erupting between the two sides.
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Compromise Satisfies No One The Dred Scott Case North: believed he was free He had lived in the free state of Wisconsin he was a free man South: believed he was still a slave He was a slave and was property of the owner and his heirs.
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Dred Scott Decision Scott was not a citizen so he could not sue for his freedom in federal court The Missouri Compromise was unconstitutional. Slaves are property and it does not matter where their owners take them they are still slaves. Fifth Amendment: property cannot be taken away without due process
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From Compromise to Conflict The Lincoln-Douglas debates on slavery Lincoln: slavery is a moral issue Lincoln felt that the real issue was the sentiment that some thought slavery was right and some thought it was wrong, not whether it was unconstitutional of not Douglas: Legal Douglas felt that the Dred Scott case legally settled the slavery issue for good declaring it constitutional.
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From Compromise to Conflict John Brown raid at Harpers Ferry North: reassured Viewed John Brown as a hero for standing up to slavery South: upset It left them uneasy, especially because the north saw him as a hero John Brown predicted that this issue would only be solved with bloodshed
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From Compromise to Conflict Abraham Lincoln elected in 1860 North: happy Lincoln was anti-slavery and he received the majority of his votes in the north South: unhappy New they were now in the minority They no longer had the power to shape policy Feared that Congress would abolish slavery
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Secessoin April 12, 1861 A little more than a month after Lincoln’s inauguration, Southern forces open fire at Fort Sumter in Charleston, SC signaling the beginning of the Civil War.
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