THE ROAD TO THE CIVIL WAR - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 41
About This Presentation
Title:

THE ROAD TO THE CIVIL WAR

Description:

Kansas was a mighty stake in the ... gangs from both sides roamed the territory and attacked the opposition Proslavery forces took Pierce s recognition as ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:163
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 42
Provided by: Preferr1568
Category:
Tags: civil | road | the | war | gangs | kansas

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: THE ROAD TO THE CIVIL WAR


1
THE ROAD TO THE CIVIL WAR
Part 3 Failure to Establish Effective Compromises
2
1) Missouri Compromise of 1850
3
Compromise of 1850
  • Sectional strife over the new territories started
    soon after the end of the Mexican-American War
  • During the Gold Rush, settlers had flooded into
    California, and the populous territory wanted
    statehood
  • Californians had already drawn up a state
    constitution

4
Californias constitution prohibited slavery, and
so the south opposed Californias bid for
statehood
5
Proslavery forces argued that southern California
should be forced to accept slavery, in accordance
with the boundary drawn by the Missouri
Compromise of 1820
  • The debate grew so hostile that Southern
    legislators began to discuss openly the
    possibility of secession.
  • This led to one of the most intense debates in
    American History.

6
Comp of 1850

Compromise of 1850
  • John C. Calhoun
  • North should honor the Constitution and enforce
    the Fugitive Slave Law
  • South wanted California
  • Threatened to secede from U.S.
  • U.S. should have two Presidents---one from the
    North and one for the South
  • These were his state sovereignty theories
  • Daniel Webster
  • Secession is impractical impossible
  • How would we split the land?
  • The military?
  • Compromise at all cost
  • Preserve the Union
  • Henry Clay
  • The Great Compromiser, with John C. Calhoun,
    Daniel Webster and Stephen Douglas, propose this
    compromise.

7
Picture/S.Douglas
STEPHEN DOUGLAS
  • U.S. Senator from the state of Illinois
  • Solved the slavery issue through Popular
    Sovereignty
  • Let the people in each territory decide through
    the process of voting whether they want slavery
    or not.
  • Along with Henry Clay, Daniel Webster and John
    C. Calhoun they proposed the Compromise of 1850.

Compromise of 1850
  • California will be a free state
  • Enforce Fugitive Slave Law
  • Popular Sovereignty
  • Stop slave trade in Washington, D.C.

8
(No Transcript)
9
Map Comp of 1850
Popular Sovereignty Allow the people in a
territory to vote on whether they want slavery to
exist or not in their state.
10
FUGITIVE SLAVE LAW
  • The stricter enforcement of the Fugitive Slave
    Law was denounced by Abolitionists
  • Harriet Beecher Stowe publishes Uncle Toms Cabin
  • Abolitionists refuse to enforce the law
  • Underground Railroad becomes more active

11
Fugitive Slave Law
FUGITIVE SLAVE LAW
RESPONSE BY ABOLITIONISTS An immoral law makes
it a mans duty to break it, at every hazard.
For virtue is the very self of every man. It is
therefore a principle of law that an immoral
contract is void, and that an immoral statute is
void. The Fugitive Slave Law is a statute which
enacts the crime of kidnapping, a crime on one
footing with arson and murder. A mans right to
liberty is as inalienable as his right to life
Ralph Waldo Emerson 3 millions of the American
people are crushed under the American Union! The
government gives them no protection the
government is their enemy, the government keeps
them in chains! The Union which grinds them to
the dust rests upon us, and with them we will
struggle to overthrow it! The Constitution which
subjects them to hopeless bondage is one that we
cannot swear to support. Our motto is, No Union
with Slaveholders.We separate from them, to
clear our skirts of innocent blood.and to hasten
the downfall of slavery in America, and
throughout the world! William Lloyd Garrison
12
2) Uncle Toms Cabin
13
Picture/Stowe
ABOLITIONISTS
  • Harriet Beecher Stowe, Abolitionist, authored the
    book Uncle Toms Cabin
  • Book was used as propaganda to show the
    inhumanity of slavery.
  • Southerners were enraged by this book and called
    it lies.

14
In the closing scenes of Harriet Beecher Stowes
novel, Uncle Toms brutal master, Simon Legree,
orders the 1200.00 slave savagely beaten (to
death) by two fellow slaves. Through tears and
blood Tom exclaims, No! no! no! my soul aint
yours Masr! You havent bought it-----ye cant
buy it! Its been bought and paid for by One
that is able to keep it. No matter, no matter,
you cant harm me! I cant? said Legree,
with a sneer well see----well see! Here,
Sambo, Quimbo, give this dog such a breakin in
as he wont get over this month!
Reading/Toms Cabin
15
Antislavery sentiments in the North grew stronger
in 1852 with the publication of Uncle Toms Cabin
  • Stowe, a Northerner, based her damning depictions
    of plantation life on information provided her by
    abolitionist friends
  • She wisely avoided political preaching, instead
    playing on peoples sympathies
  • The book sold more than a million copies and was
    turned into a popular play that toured America
    and Europe
  • It was an extremely powerful piece of propaganda,
    awakening antislavery sentiment in millions who
    had never before given the issue much thought
  • It was in this atmosphere that Franklin Pierce,
    perceived in both the North and South as a
    moderate, was elected President

16
FUGITIVE SLAVE LAW
  • SOUTHERNERS RESPOND
  • Southerners threatened secession and war
  • A series of novels are published that portray
    slavery in a positive light
  • Believed FSL should be enforced because of the
  • 5th Amendment (Constitution protects property)
  • Supremacy Clause (Federal law is higher than
    state law)

17
3) Kansas-Nebraska Act (1854)
18
Map Comp of 1850
  • Congress wanted to build railways through the
    unorganized territory above Texas
  • Stephen Douglas sought to address this with the
    Kansas-Nebraska Act (1854)

19
Kan. Neb Act
KANSAS AND NEBRASKA ACT
  • Douglas formulated and ushered through Congress
    a law that also gave popular sovereignty to
    residents in the newly formed named Kansas-
    Nebraska Territory
  • However, it did not specify when or how they
    were to decide this issue

20
  • By opening the territories to slavery, the
    Kansas-Nebraska Act repealed the Missouri
    Compromise of 1820, further destabilizing the
    political situation

21
Map Kan/Neb Act
Popular Sovereignty Allow the people in a
territory to vote on whether they want slavery to
exist or not in their state.
22
4) Bleeding Kansas
23
Bleeding Kansas
  • The Kansas-Nebraska Act provoked violence in the
    territories
  • Both abolitionists and proslavery groups rushed
    into the territories, planning to form
    governments in hopes of winning the two future
    states for their side
  • Just prior to the election for Kansas
    legislature, thousands of proslavery Missourians
    temporarily relocated in Kansas, resulting in an
    illegal, proslavery government

24
Bleeding Kan
BLEEDING KANSAS
After the passage of the Kansas-Nebraska Act in
1854, the Kansas territory became a battleground.
Pro-slavery and antislavery supporters rushed to
settle in Kansas. The territory was torn by
battles and massacres. The issue also bitterly
divided the nation and led to the formation of
the Republican Party.
25
The new legislature, which President Franklin
Pierce recognized, promptly declared Kansas a
slave territory
  • Abolitionists refused to accept this outcome and
    set up their own government
  • Soon after, gangs from both sides roamed the
    territory and attacked the opposition

26
Proslavery forces took Pierces recognition as a
license to expel the abolitionists, and they
demolished the abolitionist city of Lawrence.
27
Map Bleeding Kan
BLEEDING KANSAS
  • This was considered to be the first acts of
    violence between pro-slavery settlers and
    anti-slavery settlers.
  • More than 200 people died in the conflict, which
    is how Kansas came to be known as Bleeding
    Kansas, or Bloody Kansas, during this period

(Led by John Brown)
Attacks by free-states Attacks by pro-slavery
states
28
5) The Dred Scott Decision
29
DRED SCOTT DECISION
  • Slave from Missouri traveled with his owner to
    Illinois Minnesota both free states.
  • His master died and Scott wanted to move back to
    Missouri---Missouri still recognized him as a
    slave.
  • He sued his masters widow for his freedom since
    he had lived in a free state for a period of
    time.
  • Court case went to the Supreme Court for a
    decision-----National issue
  • Can a slave sue for his freedom?
  • Is a slave property?
  • Is slavery legal?

30
Chief Justice Roger Taney wrote the majority
decision
  • He declared that slaves were property, not
    citizens and that no black person could ever be a
    citizen of the US
  • Because blacks were not citizens, Taney argued,
    they could not sue in federal courts, as Scott
    had done
  • He ruled that Congress could not regulate slavery
    in the territories, as it had in the Missouri
    Compromise

31
DRED SCOTT DECISION
  • Supreme Court hands down the Dred Scott decision

Slaves cannot sue the U.S. for their freedom
because they are property. They are not citizens
and have no legal right under the
Constitution. Supreme Court legalized slavery by
saying that Congress could not stop a slaveowner
from moving his slaves to a new territory The
decision not only nullified the Missouri
Compromise but also the Kansas-Nebraska Act, and
the concept of popular sovereignty.
  • North refused to enforce Fugitive Slave Law
  • They felt this was further evidence of the Slave
    Powers domination of government
  • Southerners call on the North to accept the
    decision if the South is to remain in the Union.

32
Reading/Scott decision
DRED SCOTT DECISION
Chief Justice Roger B.Taney in the case of Dred
Scott referred to the status of slaves when the
Constitution was adopted.
They had (slaves) for more than a century before
been regarded as beings of an inferior order and
altogether unfit to associate with the white
race, either in social or political relations
and so far inferior that they had no rights which
the white man was bound to respect. This opinion
was at that time fixed and universal in the
civilized portion of the white race.
33
In the North, the Supreme Court decision was
viciously denounced
  • Even those who lacked strong abolitionist
    sentiments feared that the decision tilted the
    balance of power too far in the Souths favor
  • Many regarded the decision as further proof of a
    Slave Power that would soon dominate the entire
    country, perhaps even forcing slavery on those
    states that did not want it
  • In response, many Northern states passed laws
    weakening the fugitive slave act.

Personal Liberty Laws Laws in Northern states
that required a trial by jury for all alleged
fugitives and guaranteed them the right to a
lawyer
34
6) Death of John Brown
35
Picture/J.Brown
JOHN BROWN
  • Violent abolitionist
  • Involved in the Bleeding Kansas
  • Murdered 5 pro-slavery men in Kansas
  • Wanted to lead a slave revolt throughout the
    South by raising an army of freed slaves and
    destroying the South.

36
Picture/J.Brown
JOHN BROWN
  • Attacked a U.S. Ammunition depot in Harpers
    Ferry, Virginia in Oct. of 1859 to capture
    weapons and begin his slave revolt.

37
Picture/J.Brown
JOHN BROWN
  • Unsuccessful and captured by USMC under the
    leadership of Robert E. Lee
  • Put on trial for treason.

38
Picture/J.Brown Hanging
JOHN BROWN
  • He was found guilty of treason and sentenced to
    death.
  • His last words were to this effect I believe
    that the issue of slavery will never be solved
    unless through the shedding of blood.
  • Northerners thought of John Brown as a martyr to
    the abolitionist cause.
  • Southerners were terrified that if John Brown
    almost got away with this, there must be others
    like him in the North who are willing to die to
    end slavery.
  • Souths outcome To leave the U.S. and start
    their own country.

39
John Brown Martyr or Madman?
40
(No Transcript)
41
Reading/Tubman on Brown
42
(No Transcript)
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com