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Chapter 8teen *

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Title: Chapter 8teen *


1
Chapter 8teen
  • Presented By Isabella and Steven

2
Breaking the Congressional Logjam
  • President Taylor had helped the cause of
    Concession (as by granting something as a right,
    accepting something as true, or acknowledging
    defeat) by dying
  • It took Congress 7 months to pass the Compromise
    of 1850
  • "Fire-eaters" of the south hated the idea and had
    boycotted Northern goods.

3
Defeat and Doom for the Whigs
  • Franklin Pierce accepted into the slavery wing of
    the Democratic party
  • His platform revived the Democrats commitment to
    territorial expansion as pursued by President
    Polk and endorsed the Compromise of 1850
  • Compromise of 1850 California is a free state,
    New Mexico and Utah to popular sovereignty, ended
    the slave trade in Washington DC, and introduced
    a more stringent fugitive slave law
  • The Whig platform praised the Compromise of 1850
    as a lasting arrangement, less enthusiastically
    than the Democrats though
  •  Antislavery Whigs of the North had accepted
    Scott as their nominee but absolutely deplored or
    disapproved his platform which endorsed the
    hated Fugitive Slave Law

4
Defdeat and Doom for the Whigs ( continuation )
  • Southern Whigs doubted Scotts loyalty ti the
    Compromise of 1850 and the Fugitive Slave Law,
    accepted the platforn but spat on the candidate
    unlike the northerners who spat on the platform
    but accepted the candidate
  • The election of 1852 was fraught with frightening
    significance, it marked the effective end of the
    disorganized Whig party
  • Whigs had won only to presidential elections
    (1840 and 1848) both with wat heroes, but
    finally ended with the disgrateful Fugitive Slave
    Law
  • Henry Clay and Daniel Webster who were both
    leaders and statesmen  died during the 1852
    campaign but the good they had done to the nation
    lived long after their death the preservation
    of a united United States.

5
The Senates deliberations over the Compromise of
1850 -Henry Clay of Kentucky, Daniel Webster of
Massachusetts, and John C. Calhoun of South
Carolina. Webster called for a compromise to
preserve the Union while Calhoun argued that the
Union could only be preserved if Northerners
respected the Southern institutions including
slavery. In this painting Clay has the floor,
Calhoun stands third from the right, and Daniel
Webster, head in hand sits on the left.
6
Expansionist Stirrings South of the Border
  • After the victory over the Mexican War, Gold had
    been discovered in California
  • Led to the California Gold Rush
  • Atlantic-to-Pacific was the only route 
  • This troubled the two American continents because
    whoever held imperial control had control over
    all maritime nations of the united nations
  • New Granada and the United States had felt
    unsecured by the British appearance within the
    area in the port of San Juan del Norte
  • It guaranteed the American right to transport
    across the isthmus in return for Washington's
    pledge
  • This provided a legal cover for the assertion of
    American control over the Panama Canal Zone in
    1903

7
Expansionist Stirrings South of the Border (cont.)
  • Also led to the construction of the First
    "Transcontinental" railroad
  • The Clayton-Bulwer Treaty of 1850 avoided a
    "full-blown" confrontation by stating that
    neither America nor Britain would fortify or seek
    exclusive control over any future isthmian
    waterway
  • This was later rescinded by the Hay Paunceforte
    Treaty of 1901
  • negotiated in 1899 and 1901 by Secretary of
    State, John Hay and British Ambassador, Julian
    Paunceforte
  • Southern "slavocrats" strive for southward
    expansion for new slave trade

8
Expansionist Stirrings South of the Border (cont.
II)
  • President Polk offered 100,0000 for the land of
    Cuba
  • Cuba was sugar-rich 
  • Spaniards rejected the offer and said they would
    rather see the island sink into the sea rather
    than have it in the hands of the hated Yankees

9
Pacific Railroad Promoters and the Gadsden
Purchase
  • Another legacy of the Mexican War was
    transportation problems with California and
    Oregon being eight thousand miles west of the
    nation's capitol
  • Sea routes to and from the Isthmus of Panama were
    too long and traveling by wagon was slow and
    dangerous
  • Land transportation was so imperative or
    absolutely necessary / required, that camels were
    being used as their way of transportation from
    the west to the east, but that didn't work out as
    planned
  • Decisions were made to have railroad routes to
    the Pacific Coast put in the north, since they'd
    reap rich rewards in wealth, population and
    influence
  • The southerners then were eager to extend
    railroads through the southwestern territory all
    the way to California

10
Pacific Railroad Promoters and the Gadsden
Purchase ( continuation )
  • The best railway route ran slightly south of the
    Mexican border
  • Secretary of War Jefferson Davis appointed James
    Gadsden as minister of Mexico, in 1853 he
    negotiated a treaty ceding to the United States
    the Gadsden Purchase.
  • The Gadsden Purchase acquired additional land
    from Mexico for 10 million to facilitate the
    construction of a southern transcontinental
    railroad
  • Many schemes proposed in Congress for organizing
    territories were denied by the Southerners - they
    didn't want to help or facilitate northern
    railroads

11
Douglass Kansas-Nebraska Scheme
  • Senator of Illinois, Stephen A. Douglas wanted to
    pass the Kansas-Nebraska Act
  • This would divide the Nebraska Terr. into two
    sections Kansas and Nebraska
  • His goal was to break the North-South over
    deadlock over westward expansion
  • The status of slavery would depend on popular
    sovereignty
  • Kansas would remain a Slave-State while Nebraska
    would become a Free-State
  • The Missouri Compromise of 1820 had forbidden
    slavery in the Nebraskan Terr. which was located
    North of the 3630' line

12
Douglass Kansas-Nebraska Scheme (cont.)
  • Douglass foes accused him of angling for
    presidency in 1856
  • He declared repeatedly that he didn't care
    whether slavery was voted up or down the
    territories 
  • Northerners felt the Missouri Compromise as an
    intolerable breach of faith, that they'd resist
    to tall future southern demands for slave
    territories
  • As Abraham Lincoln had said, North wants to give
    the West " a clean bed, with no snakes in it. "
  • Northerners saw Douglass as a traitor for not
    doing much to stop slavery, but his population
    still remained in the Democratic Party and in
    Illinois as a stronghold of population
    sovereignty - the belief that the legitimacy of
    the state is created by the will of its people

13
Congress Legislates a Civil War  
  • The Kansas-Nebraska Act was a "curtain-raiser to
    a terrible drama" 
  • It wrecked the Compromises of 1820 and 1850
  • It led to a Civil War
  • The Fugitive Slave Act of 1850 caused more
    tension between the North and South
  • The new Republican Party had sprung up in the
    Middle-West, mostly in Wisconsin and Michigan
  • The party protested against slavery
  • In result, the Republican Party was not allowed
    in the Southern areas of the Mason-Dixon Line 

14
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