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Fighting against Slavery

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Title: Fighting against Slavery


1
Fighting against Slavery
  • Main Idea
  • The movement to end slavery dominated the Reform
    Era.
  • Reading Focus
  • What was life like for enslaved African Americans
    in the South?
  • How did people in the South fight against
    slavery?
  • What were the major developments in the abolition
    movement?

2
The Lives of Enslaved African Americans
  • Including the colonial period, slavery had been
    an American institution for two centuries.
  • Enslaved African Americans were held in every
    colony, northern and southern.
  • In the North, slavery continued to exist in some
    form until the 1840s.
  • By 1860 nearly 4 million African Americans lived
    in slavery in the South.

3
The Lives of Enslaved African Americans
  • Enslaved men, women, and children worked every
    day of their lives, from the time they were old
    enough to perform chores until they were too old
    to be of any more use to the slaveholder.
  • Most enslaved people lived on farms or
    plantations in the South, where cotton was a
    leading crop.
  • They worked planting, tending, picking,
    processing, and loading cotton.
  • Other jobs included the many other tasks needed
    to maintain a farm or plantation, such as
    constructing and repairing buildings.
  • Other plantation slaves worked as servants in the
    slaveholders house.

4
The Lives of Enslaved African Americans
  • Some enslaved people were skilled artisans, and
    many worked as blacksmiths, bricklayers, or
    carpenters.
  • Some slaves lived in cities where they worked in
    factories and mills, in offices, and in homes.
  • Others worked in mines or in the forest as
    lumberjacks.

5
The Lives of Enslaved African Americans
  • A life of want
  • Enslaved African Americans were provided with
    inadequate food, clothing, and shelter.
  • They seldom received medical care sickness
    rarely stopped their work.
  • They had no rights under the law because it
    viewed them as property.

6
The Lives of Enslaved African Americans
  • Many slaveholders treated their slaves relatively
    well. But they generally did so in order to
    secure loyal service, not out of any great sense
    of humanity.
  • Some slaveholders used a wide variety of
    punishments, such as beating, whipping, starving,
    and threatening a persons family members, to
    ensure obedience.
  • Children were routinely separated from their
    parents, brothers from their sisters, and
    husbands from their wives.
  • African Americans developed ways to survive and
    bring some light into their lives through
    religion, storytelling, and music.

7
The Antislavery Movement in the South
  • In 1860, about 215,000 African Americans in the
    South were free blacks.
  • Former slaves who had been emancipated, or freed,
    by slaveholders
  • More typically, some were free because their
    ancestors had been freed.
  • They still faced harsh legal and social
    discrimination.
  • Free blacks aided people escaping slavery and
    spoke out for freedom.
  • Slave revolts
  • An uprising led by Nat Turner in 1830 became the
    deadliest slave revolt in American history.
  • New laws were enacted to strictly limit the
    movements and meetings of slaves.

8
The Antislavery Movement in the South
  • Some enslaved people chose a nonviolent way to
    end their enslavementthey escaped.
  • They tried to reach the free states of the North
    or Canada or Mexico, where slavery was illegal.
  • No one knows exactly how many slaves escaped.
  • Thousands attempted escape, and although most
    were soon captured, many did make it to freedom.
  • Underground Railroad an informal, constantly
    changing network of escape routes
  • Sympathetic white people and free blacks provided
    escapees with food, hiding places, and directions
    to their next destination, closer to free
    territory.
  • Harriet Tubman famous Underground Railroad
    worker who had escaped slavery and helped
    hundreds of slaves to freedom

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10
The Abolition Movement
  • The abolition movement was a campaign to abolish,
    or end, slavery.
  • No other movement attracted as many followers,
    garnered as much attention, elicited such strong
    feelings, or had such an impact on the history of
    the United States.
  • The abolition movement had deep roots in
    religion.
  • Many religious people in the North saw slavery as
    a clear moral wrong that went directly against
    their beliefs.
  • By 1836 more than 500 antislavery societies
    existed.

11
The Abolition Movement
  • Abolition leaders
  • William Lloyd Garrison published an
    abolitionist newspaper for 35 years, until
    slavery was abolished
  • Sarah and Angelina Grimké sisters who were
    outspoken campaigners for abolition and womens
    rights
  • Frederick Douglass a former slave, supported
    womens rights, but is best remembered as an
    abolitionist leader
  • Opposing abolition
  • Southern slaveholders an attack on their
    livelihood, their way of life, and even on their
    religion
  • Slaveholders and politicians slavery was
    essential to the economy by 1860 cotton
    accounted for about 55 percent of the countrys
    exports
  • Northern workers freedom for slaves might mean
    more competition for jobs

12
The Missouri Compromise
  • There were 22 states in the Union in 1819.
  • In half of the statesthe slave states of the
    Southslavery was legal.
  • In half of the statesthe free states of the
    Northslavery was illegal.
  • This exact balance between slave states and free
    states gave them equal representation in the U.S.
    Senate.
  • If Missouri were admitted as a slave state, the
    balance would be upset.
  • Missouri Compromise of 1820 agreement under
    which Missouri was admitted to the Union as a
    slave state and Maine was to be admitted as a
    free state
  • The agreement also banned slavery in the northern
    part of the Louisiana Territory.
  • The Missouri Compromise kept the balance between
    slave and free states.

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Conflict over States Rights
  • In 1828 Congress raised the tariff on British
    manufactured goods.
  • The tariff was welcomed by industry in the
    northern states because it increased the price of
    British goods and encouraged Americans to buy
    American goods.
  • The agricultural southern states despised the
    tax. It forced southerners to buy northern goods
    instead of the less expensive British goods.
  • Southern cotton growers, who exported most of
    their crop to Britain, opposed interference with
    international trade.
  • The concept that states have the right to reject
    federal laws is called the nullification theory.

15
Conflict over States Rights
  • The issue of nullification and states rights was
    the focus of one of the most famous debates in
    Senate history in 1830.
  • Nullification Crisis
  • When Congress passed another tariff in 1832,
    South Carolina declared the tariff law null and
    void and threatened to secede from the Union if
    the federal government tried to enforce the
    tariff.
  • Jackson received the Force Bill from Congress,
    but South Carolina declared the Force Bill null
    and void as well.
  • Compromise worked out by Henry Clay
  • Tariffs would be reduced over a period of 10
    years.
  • Issues of nullification and of states rights
    would be raised again.

16
The Land of Cotton
  • Main Idea
  • During the early 1800s, the South developedan
    economy based on agriculture.
  • Reading Focus
  • Why was cotton king in the South?
  • How did the cultivation of cotton lead to the
    spread of slavery?
  • What key differences developed between the North
    and the South?

17
King Cotton
  • The combination of the new cotton gin and the
    huge demand for cotton encouraged many American
    farmers to begin growing cotton.
  • Beginning in the 1820s, the number of acres
    devoted to cotton cultivation soared.
  • Cotton Belt A nearly uninterrupted band of
    cotton farms that stretched across the South, all
    the way from Virginia in the East to Texas in the
    West
  • Cotton became so important to the economy of the
    South that people called it King Cotton.

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The Spread of Slavery
  • Farming cotton was a labor-intensive enterprise.
  • The land had to be prepared.
  • The cotton seeds had to be planted.
  • The growing plants had to be tended.
  • The crop had to be picked, cleaned, and formed
    into bales.
  • The first cotton farms were small and run by
    families who didnt own slaves.
  • They were soon followed by wealthier planters who
    bought huge tracts of land.
  • These planters used enslaved African Americans to
    cultivate the cotton.

20
The Spread of Slavery
  • As the amount of money made by growing cotton
    increased, so did the number of plantations.
  • The growth of cotton farming led directly to an
    increase in demand for enslaved African Americans.
  • Although the importation of enslaved people had
    been banned in 1808, they were routinely smuggled
    into southern ports.
  • These people, and the children of enslaved
    parents, were cruelly bought and sold by slave
    traders to provide workers for the cotton fields.

21
The Spread of Slavery
  • By 1840 the number of enslaved African Americans
    had risen to nearly 2.5 million.
  • As cotton farms spread, so too did slavery.
  • Enslaved African Americans accounted for about
    one-third of the population of the South.
  • About one-fourth of the white families in the
    South owned slaves (most had fewer than 20).

22
Differences between the North and the South
  • Southern crops
  • Cotton, sugarcane, sugar beets, tobacco, and rice
  • These crops led the economy of the South.
  • By 1840 the South was a thoroughly agricultural
    region.
  • Northern goods
  • Since colonial times, farming was important.
  • The Industrial Revolution made manufacturing and
    trade the base of the Norths economy.

23
Differences between the North and the South
  • North
  • Trade and industry encouraged urbanization, and
    so cities grew in the North much more than in the
    South.
  • The Industrial Revolution and the revolutions in
    transportation and communication had the greatest
    impact on the North.
  • Northern businesses seized new technology in
    pursuit of efficiency and growth.
  • South
  • There was relatively little in the way of
    technological progress.
  • Many southerners saw little need for labor-saving
    devices when they had an ample supply of enslaved
    people to do their work.

24
Differences between the North and the South
  • Different points of view
  • In the North, urban dwellers were exposed to many
    different types of people and tended to view
    change as progress.
  • In the South, where the landscape was less prone
    to change and where the population was less
    diverse, people tended to place a higher value on
    tradition.
  • Physical distance
  • Relatively few southerners had the means or
    motivation to travel extensively in the North,
    and relatively few northerners had ever visited
    the South.

25
Differences between the North and the South
  • South
  • Slavery was legal.
  • It was viewed by most white people as an
    absolutely vital part of the economy.
  • To many, it was a practice sanctioned by their
    Christian religion.
  • North
  • Slavery was illegal.
  • Ever-increasing numbers of people viewed it as
    evil.
  • Few realized the differences would lead to war.

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Texas Independence
  • The Main Idea
  • American settlers in Texas revolted against the
    Mexican government and created the independent
    Republic of Texas.
  • Reading Focus
  • What system did the Spanish use to settle Texas?
  • How did Americans begin to move into Texas?
  • What were the causes and effects of the Texas
    Revolution?

28
The Spanish Settle Texas
The original inhabitants were Native Americans,
living in Texas for thousands of years.
The Spanish explorers were the first Europeans to
visit Texas, crossing it several times during the
1500s. Spain claimed Texas based on these
explorations. Finding little wealth in the
region, they made no attempt to settle.
In 1689, the Spanish discovered the ruins of a
French fort built on the coast that had been
destroyed by local Indians. Alarmed that the
French would try to claim the land, the Spanish
came up with a plan to settle Texas.
29
The Spanish Settle Texas
  • The mission system
  • The Spanish attempted to settle Texas by building
    missions, small settlements designed to convert
    the Indians to Christianity.
  • The Spanish had effectively used the mission
    system in Mexico.
  • They built two dozen missions and presidios
    between the late 1600s and 1700s they also built
    San Antonio and Nacogdoches.
  • Despite Spanish hopes, the missions failed and
    the towns never flourished.
  • The mission system ends
  • Native Americans rejected mission life, where
    they were expected to give up their culture as
    well as their religion.
  • Some Indian groups viewed the Spanish as
    dangerous trespassers, attacking the missions and
    towns.
  • The system was built to convert the Indians and
    to thwart French claims. In 1762, France ceded to
    Spain much of its land claim in North America.
  • By 1800, Spain still claimed Texas, but had only
    three settlements in the region.

30
Americans Move into Texas
  • Moses Austin
  • In 1820, Austin proposed to Spanish colonial
    officials that, in exchange for land, he would
    build a colony in Texas. The Spanish agreed, but
    Austin died before he could start. His son,
    Stephen F. Austin, would carry out his wish for a
    colony. By 1824 about 300 families lived on farms
    and ranches throughout Austins colony.
  • Mexican independence and the empresarios
  • Mexico gained its independence in 1821. The new
    government wanted Texas settled. They assigned
    large amounts of land to empresarios, contractors
    who recruited settlers and established colonies.
    Austin was the most successful of the
    empresarios.
  • By 1830, Texas had more than a dozen colonies
    with 30,000 settlers. This included several
    thousand enslaved Africans and 4,000 Tejanos, or
    Texans of Mexican heritage.

31
The Texas Revolution
American settlers in Texas had to agree to
certain conditions in exchange for receiving
land. They had to surrender their American
citizenship swear allegiance to Mexico adopt
the Roman Catholic religion and hold the land
for seven years.
The settlers ignored the Mexican rules. They kept
bringing in slaves, even after Mexico outlawed
slavery. Settlers were still Americans, not
Mexican. In 1830, Mexico passed a law halting
American immigration and sent troops to Texas to
enforce it.
Tensions in Texas
Mexican officials suspected that the U.S. wanted
to acquire Texas. Originally claimed as part of
the Louisiana Purchase, the U.S. had dropped its
claim. But when an offer was made to buy a large
part of Texas for 1 million, Mexicans refused,
but their fears of U.S. intentions were
confirmed.
International tensions
32
The Texas Revolution Begins
Tensions between settlers, now calling themselves
Texans, and the Mexican government grew
continually worse.
After several bloody protests, Texans held
conventions to discuss the best course of action.
A plan to make Texas a separate Mexican state
failed. The new Mexican president, Antonio López
de Santa Anna, supported a strong central
government and enforced new laws banning state
militias.
War came when violence erupted at Gonzales over
possession of a cannon. Though small, it was the
first battle of the Texas Revolution, and hopes
for a peaceful resolution between the Texans and
Mexico diminished. At a meeting, called the
Consultation, the settlers founded a government
and asked Sam Houston to raise an army.
33
From the Alamo to Independence
The Alamo
Rebel Texan forces captured San Antonio, which
contained a fort called the Alamo. Santa Anna led
an army into Texas to punish the rebels and put
down the unrest once and for all.
Santa Anna
On February 23, 1836, Santa Annas force of 6,000
soldiers reached San Antonio. A demand of
surrender was met with cannon fire from William
Travis. The Mexican army laid siege to the fort,
pounding it for 12 days and nights. The fort was
finally stormed, with nearly all defenders killed.
March 2, 1836
While the Alamo was under siege, a small group of
Texans met at Washington-on-the-Brazos to issue
the Texas Declaration of Independence. They wrote
a constitution for the new, independent nation.
34
Fighting for Independence
  • The Runaway Scrape
  • Santa Annas army continued to defeat the Texan
    rebels. Prisoners were held in the presidio at
    Goliad.
  • After Mexican soldiers executed 340 prisoners at
    Goliad, Houston retreated to the east with his
    poorly trained army.
  • Word of Houstons retreat and the news of the
    Goliad Massacre started a panic.
  • In what would be called the Runaway Scrape,
    thousands of Texans, including many Tejanos, fled
    Santa Annas advancing army.
  • Texans victorious
  • Santa Annas army followed Houstons forces to
    San Jacinto, where Houston managed to take the
    Mexican army by surprise. Texans shouted,
    Remember the Alamo! and Remember Goliad! as
    they won a quick victory.
  • The captured Santa Anna was forced to sign the
    Treaties of Velasco, ending the war. Mexico had
    to withdraw its troops and recognize Texas
    independence.
  • Problems with Mexico continued for the Republic
    of Texas.

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War with Mexico
  • The Main Idea
  • Soon after annexing Texas, the United States
    declared war on Mexico.
  • Reading Focus
  • What were the arguments for and against the
    annexation of Texas?
  • What created tensions between the United States
    and Mexico in the 1840s?
  • What were the causes and effects of the
    Mexican-American War?

38
The Annexation of Texas
  • Proponents
  • Americans who believed in Manifest Destiny wanted
    to admit Texas to the Union.
  • Supporters viewed the Texas Revolution in the
    spirit of the American Revolution.
  • Southerners supported annexation because Texas
    allowed slavery, and its admission would boost
    the Souths political power.
  • Opponents
  • Americans were concerned that the U.S. would have
    to bear the substantial Texas debt.
  • Northerners opposed annexation because it would
    spread slavery westward and increase slave
    states voting power in Congress.
  • A major argument in Congress was that the
    Constitution said nothing about admitting an
    independent nation.

39
The Annexation of Texas
  • A Republic for nine years
  • The annexation question was a significant issue
    in the 1844 presidential election. When James K.
    Polk, the pro-annexation candidate, won, Mexico
    warned that it would consider the annexation of
    Texas as a declaration of war.
  • Tyler signs the joint resolution
  • Outgoing president John Tyler signed the joint
    resolution of Congress into law just three days
    before the end of his term, in March 1845.
  • Texas becomes a state
  • Voters in Texas overwhelmingly approved
    annexation, and Texas became a part of the United
    States on December 29, 1845.

40
Tensions between the United States and Mexico
Mexico responds
The annexation of Texas enraged the Mexican
government. Mexico had refused to recognize the
Republic of Texas, and they broke off diplomatic
ties with the U.S. after the vote for annexation.

Polk and Manifest Destiny
In March 1845, James K. Polk became president. He
wanted the nation to acquire the land between
Texas and the Pacific Ocean. These sparsely
populated territories, New Mexico and California,
belonged to Mexico. Polk sought an opportunity to
acquire these remote regions.
The boundary dispute
The U.S. needed to secure the boundary between
Texas and Mexico. Texans put the border at the
Rio Grande. Mexico maintained it was at the
Nueces River. There were also disputes about
money, and Polk wanted these issues resolved.
41
Slidells Trip
In the fall of 1845, Polk sent a special envoy to
Mexico.
John Slidell arrived with a U.S. offer to cancel
the 3 million in claims against Mexico in
exchange for Mexicos recognition of the Rio
Grande as its boundary with the U.S. He was
further authorized to pay Mexico up to 30
million to purchase New Mexico and California for
the United States.
Neither of the rivals for Mexicos presidency
would meet with him. An angry Slidell recommended
to Polk that Mexico be punished.
42
The Mexican-American War
The war starts
While Slidell was in Mexico, Polk ordered General
Zachary Taylor to take his troops into the
disputed border territory. The U.S. used the
event of a minor skirmish to declare war on
Mexico.
Fighting the war
American forces under Taylor advanced into
northern Mexico. General Winfield Scott marched
his forces into Mexico City. In a matter of
months, U.S. forces had captured New Mexico and
California. When their capital fell, the Mexican
government was forced to give in.
Results of the war
The Treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo (1848) forced
Mexico to turn over a huge tract of land known as
the Mexican Cession, while the U.S. paid Mexico
15 million. Debate continues over whether the
Mexican-American War was justified.
43
Wilmot Proviso
  • August 1846, Representative David Wilmot from
    Pennsylvania proposed an amendment to a war bill,
    known as the Wilmot Proviso.
  • Stated that slavery shall never exist in any
    territory gained from Mexico.
  • Wilmot believed President Polk was
    pro-Southern.
  • Polk compromised with Britain for Oregon but went
    to war with Mexico
  • Proviso outraged Southerners.
  • Bill passed the House of Representatives but
    Senate refused to vote on it.
  • John C. Calhoun argued that Congress had no right
    to ban slavery in the territories.
  • Represented the growing anger of many Southerners.

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