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Slavery, States Rights,

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William Lloyd Garrison, Abolitionist publisher in the first. issue of his paper, The Liberator ... David Harold* John Wilkes Booth. Conspirators in Lincoln's ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Slavery, States Rights,


1
Slavery, States Rights, the Civil War
2
Slavery in the Territories
  • Territories were area owned by the US, but that
    were not yet states.
  • The spread or expansion of slavery into those
    areas was possible, the question was how to
    decide if slavery would be allowed there.

3
Leading Senators States Rights
4
Abolitionists
  • Those who favored the immediate end (or
    abolition) of slavery, with no compensation to
    slave owners.
  • I will be as harsh as truth, and uncompromising
    as justice. On this subject slavery, I do
    not wish to speak with moderation I am in
    earnest I will not equivocate I will not
    excuse I will not retreat a single inch AND I
    WILL BE HEARD.
  • William Lloyd Garrison,
  • Abolitionist publisher in the first
  • issue of his paper, The Liberator

5
Frederick Douglass
  • Escaped Maryland slave abolitionist.
  • Brilliant, self-educated
  • Author of Narrative of the Life of Frederick
    Douglass which showed inhumanity of slavery and
    humanity of slaves.
  • Wanted to work within the Union to end slavery.
  • Very influential publisher of The North Star.

6
Uncle Toms Cabin,orLife Among the Lowly
  • Published in 1852.
  • Sentimentally depicted the cruelty of slavery.
  • Very widely read in North also made in to a
    play.
  • Beecher Stowe had never seen a slave plantation.
  • Lincoln called her, the little lady who wrote
    the book that made this big war.

7
Fugitive Slave Act
  • Required northern citizens to help return escaped
    slaves to their owners in the South.
  • Included penalties for aiding escaped slaves,
    that included a 1,000 fine!
  • Also required Northern law enforcement officials
    to help track and capture slaves.

8
The Underground Railroad
9
The Underground Railroad
  • Secret routes that escaped slaves followed to
    freedom in the North or Canada.
  • Conductors, passengers, stations.

10
Slave Protests
  • Slowing work
  • Slave Songs
  • Gabriel Prosser (1800)
  • Denmark Vessey (1822)
  • Nat Turner (1831)

11
Missouri Compromise (1820)
  • Henry Clay
  • Missouri
  • Maine
  • 360 30

12
The Mexican War 1846-48
  • Causes
  • Texas annexation
  • Manifest Destiny
  • Racism
  • Sectional support
  • American victory brings new territory, the
    Mexican Cession

13
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14
Compromise of 1850
  • California (thanks to the Gold Rush) is ready for
    admission as a free state.
  • No slave to balance it. South demands a
    tougher Fugitive Slave Law.
  • Popular sovereignty to be used in Mexican
    Cession land to decide if slavery would be
    allowed (not use 360 30)
  • Not a real compromise nobodys pleased

15
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16
Dred Scott v. Sanford
  • Facts of the case
  • Court decision
  • Taneys opinion of the court.
  • Effects

17
Lincoln-Douglas Debates
  • The Little Giant

18
Kansas-Nebraska Act
  • Idea of Stephen Douglas to gain a railroad route
    through his home state of Illinois gain
    southern support for his Presidential bid in
    1860.
  • Kansas-Nebraska Act of 1854
  • Kansas Nebraska would be opened for settlement
    leading to statehood.
  • the decision if the territory of Kansas would be
    admitted to the Union as a slave or free state
    was to be decided by "Popular Sovereignty" or a
    vote of the territorial residents. 

19
Bleeding Kansas
  • Competing settlers - violence
  • Border ruffians
  • Beecher Bibles

20
Pottawatomie Massacre (1856)
  • In response to a pro-slavery attack on Lawrence,
    Kansas, John Brown and 6 others (including his 4
    sons) attacked slave owning settlers.
  • Taking sabers, they hack to death 5 settlers near
    Pottawatomie River, on May 24, 1856.
  • Brown claimed responsibility but escaped arrest.

21
John Brown Harpers Ferry
  • Federal arsenal in Harpers Ferry.
  • Brown 21 others plan to capture arsenal and arm
    slaves so they can rise up against slave owners.
  • Oct. 16, 1859, Arsenal captured but Marines
    surround it. 10 of Browns men killed Brown
    others captured.
  • Brown tried, found guilty of treason, and hanged

22
John Browns Legacy
  • John Brown died on a scaffold for the slave,
  • Dark was the hour when we dug his hallowed grave
  • Now God avenges the life he gladly gave
  • Freedom reigns today.
  • Glory, glory hallelujah, Glory, glory hallelujah
  • Glory, glory hallelujah, Freedom reigns today!
  • John Browns body lies a-mouldering in the grave
  • John Brown lives in the triumph of the brave
  • John Browns soul not a higher joy can crave
  • Freedom reigns today!

23
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24
Causes of the Civil War
  • States Rights - settle once and for all if
    states can nullify laws and/or secede
  • Slavery after the Emancipation Proclamation,
    one goal of the war was to free at least some
    slaves.
  • Economic differences between North and South
    disputes between the more rural, agricultural
    South and the increasingly urban, manufacturing
    North.

25
The Confederacy
  • Pres. Jefferson Davis
  • Capital Richmond, VA
  • Commanding General Robert E. Lee
  • 9 million (incl 3 mil. slaves)
  • Potential army of 600,000
  • 15 of nations factories
  • Economy dependant on sale of cotton to Europe
  • Far better military leaders

26
The Union
  • Pres. Abraham Lincoln
  • Capital Washington, DC
  • Commanding General George McClellan, later
    Ulysses S. Grant
  • 22 million people
  • Potential army of 1,000,000
  • 85 of nations factories (92 of manufactured
    goods)
  • Over twice as much RR miles as CSA

27
Lincoln the Constitution
  • Raised an army without Congressional action
  • Took money (2,000,000) from the US Treasury
    without Congressional approval
  • Suspended habeas corpus
  • Arrested dissenter suspected spies
  • Many jailed without every being charged
  • Some spend years in jail
  • Censored the press
  • Used military courts to try Confederate
    sympathizers

28
Ft. Sumter
  • Ft. Sumter was a US army fort in Charleston, SC
    harbor.
  • The South attacks this Union fort, beginning the
    war.
  • Ft. Sumter was forced to surrender to the
    Confederates

29
The Norths Anaconda Plan
  • Surround the South and crush it. In the same
    way an anaconda snake constricts its prey.
  • Keep dividing the South and attacking it at
    different points until defeated.

30
1st Bull Run 1861
  • 1st major battle of the Civil War.
  • South routs the North.
  • North realizes war will be neither quick nor easy.

31
Antietam 1862
  • Union misses a great opportunity to hurt Robert
    E. Lees army.
  • Single bloodiest day in American military history
    (over 23,000 killed).
  • A very slight Union victory, but it provides
    Lincoln a chance to issue

32
Emancipation Proclamation
  • Declared slaves in areas still in rebellion on
    Jan. 1, 1863, were free.
  • A very clever political document.
  • Abolitionists
  • Border states
  • Actual effect
  • Changes the goal of the war for the Union.

33
Chancellorsville 1863
Gen. Thomas Stonewall Jackson
  • A smaller Confederate army defeats a much larger
    Union force.
  • A victory for Robert E. Lee Stonewall
    Jackson.
  • Jackson is accidentally shot and killed by one of
    his soldiers.

34
Gettysburg Vicksburg
  • July 1-3 , 1863
  • Gen. George Meade stops Lees invasion of the
    North
  • Pickett's charge
  • The South will spend the rest of the war strictly
    on defense!
  • Key city on the Mississippi River.
  • Union put it under seige
  • Unconditional Surrender Grant
  • Surrenders early July 1863
  • Gives Union control of Miss. R.
  • Splits CSA

Turning point of the war!
35
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36
Taking Richmond
  • Lee v. Grant
  • Ulysses S. Grants strategy
  • Union Advantage
  • Butcher Grant
  • Slow, steady progress, but costly in lives
  • 1864 Lincoln running for re-election

37
Shermans March to the Sea
  • Attempt to divide the Confederacy from the
    Mississippi River to the Atlantic Ocean
  • Total Warfare scorched earth policy.
  • War is hell. Gen. Sherman

38
Appomattox
  • Robert E. Lees army
  • Grant Surrender terms
  • April 9, 1865.

39
Lincolns Assassination
  • Lincoln to attend My American Cousin at Fords
    Theatre.
  • April 15, 1865.
  • John Wilkes Booth his goals.
  • Sec. of State William Seward
  • Dr. Samuel Mudd
  • Booth surrounded by Union troops.

40
Assassination Plot
Lewis Paine
David Harold
Mary Suratt
John Wilkes Booth
George Axelrod
John Suratt
41
Conspirators in Lincolns Assassination Are Hanged
42
Matthew Brady
Lucretia Mott
Horace Mann
43
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44
Andersonville Prison Camp
  • Notorious Confederate prison camp for Union POWs
    in Georgia.
  • Only opened for 14 months, it held 53,000
    prisoners but over 13,000 died!
  • Thats an average of 40 per day!
  • Shermans troops uncover the horror there and
    many starved prisoners
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