Leading up to Kansas-Nebraska Act - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Leading up to Kansas-Nebraska Act

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Antislavery settlers elected own governor and legislature Two governments resulted in chaos Armed gangs roamed the territory Bleeding Kansas Proslavery ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Leading up to Kansas-Nebraska Act


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Leading up to Kansas-Nebraska Act
  • Compromise of 1850 dealt w/ Mexican Cession (CA
    New Mexico Territory, Utah Territory)
  • Did not deal with land that was part of the LA
    Purchase (Missouri Compromise of 1820)

3
Kansas-Nebraska Act - 1854
  • Senator Douglas - IL proposed setting up a
    government for Nebraska Territory by dividing it
    into 2 territories - Kansas and Nebraska(part of
    LA Purchase)
  • Settlers in each territory decide issue of
    slavery by popular sovereignty

4
Reaction to Kansas-Nebraska Act
  • Southerners hoped slave owners from MO would move
    into Kansas and make it a slave state
  • Northerners - MO Compromise already banned
    slavery in Kansas and Nebraska

5
Reaction to Kansas-Nebraska Act
  • Kansas-Nebraska Act would overturn/repeal
    Missouri Compromise
  • Slavery could now spread to areas that were free
    for over 30 years
  • Some challenged Fugitive Slave Act

6
Kansas consisted of
  • Abolitionists brought over 1,000 settlers from
    New England
  • Proslavery settlers also came
  • Proslavery groups from MO rode across border -
    Border Ruffians - fought with antislavery groups

7
Two Governments
  • 1855 Kansas held elections for governor and
    legislature
  • Border Ruffians voted illegally and helped elect
    proslavery legislature- passed laws to support
    slavery
  • Antislavery settlers refused to accept new laws

8
Two Governments Continued
  • Antislavery settlers elected own governor and
    legislature
  • Two governments resulted in chaos
  • Armed gangs roamed the territory

9
Bleeding Kansas
  • Proslavery men raided town of Lawrence - (founded
    by abolitionists) destroyed homes and smashed
    press of Free-Soil newspaper - 1856
  • John Brown - abolitionist - and other men attack
    town of Pottawatomie Creek - murder 5 proslavery
    settlers at night

10
Bleeding Kansas
  • Both sides engaged in guerrilla warfare - hit and
    run tactics
  • Late 1856 over 200 people killed
  • Newspapers started calling the territory
    Bleeding Kansas

11
Dred Scott Case
  • Dred Scott was a slave in Missouri
  • He moved with his owner to Illinois and Wisconsin
    Territory - slavery not allowed
  • Scott returned to MO with his owner who then died
  • Antislavery lawyers helped Scott file a lawsuit

12
Dred Scott Case
  • Scotts lawyers argued that since he lived in a
    free state/territory, he became a free man
  • 1857 - Supreme Court decided - Scott could not
    file a lawsuit b/c a slave was not a citizen

13
Dred Scott Case Continued
  • Slaves considered property - (5th Amendment -
    cannot have property taken away w/o applying the
    law)
  • Congress did not have the power to outlaw slavery
    in any territory

14
Dred Scott Case Continued
  • MO Compromise - unconstitutional b/c denies
    people right to their property

15
Reaction to Dred Scott Case
  • Slave owners - slavery now legal in all
    territories
  • African Americans - condemned ruling - held
    public meetings
  • Northerners hoped that slavery would eventually
    die out if restricted to the South

16
Reaction to Dred Scott Case
  • Northerners worried now slavery could spread to
    the West

17
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