Title: Instructor ESources PowerPoint Presentation Chapter 5 Union and Disintegration
1Instructor E-SourcesPowerPoint Presentation
Chapter 5Union and Disintegration
- The History of Texas
- Harlan Davidson, Inc.
-
2Learning Outcomes (5)
- think about the implications for Texas throughout
the 1830s, 1840s and 1850s as southerners
migrated insignificant numbers, - understand the political process encompassing the
slavery issue that brought vast economic and
social changes to the south, - discuss the role that Texas played in the Civil
War.
3Chapter 5Union and Disintegration
- An ethnically culturally diverse people
- Immigrants from the Lower South
- Immigrants from the Upper South
- Demographic Growth
- Slavery
- The politics of sectionalism
4The Texas Economy at Midcentury
- Rural growth
- Land policy
- A plantation economy
- Slavery
- Plantation elite
- Small farmers
- Urban Industrialization
- Commerce the port of Galveston
- Infant industries
- Transportation
5Texas Society at Midcentury
- Inequality the egalitarian myth
- Black Texans
- Free Blacks
- Slaves
- Mexican Americans
- American Indians
- Comanches
- Settler clashes
6Texas Society at Midcentury
Leñeros, Tejano wood hauler, with donkeys
7Texas Society at Midcentury
- Demographic patterns
- Women
- Liberating frontier?
- Male-dominated culture
- Education
- the perpetual school fund
- A university endowment
- Newspapers Literature
- Religion
8Texas Politics at Midcentury
- Sectional troubles
- Slavery the compromise of 1850
- New Mexico territory, indemnity, public debt
- Whigs, Democrats, Know-Nothings, Republicans
- 1859 a tumultuous year
- Disintegration
- The secession debate
- Governor Houston
- Texans the Confederate States of America
9Texas the Civil War
- Who wanted War?
- The Texas Front
- War on the Texas frontier
- Protecting the Texas coast
- The Confederate Front
- The Texas Rangers
- Hoods Texas Brigade
- Texas cotton the CSA economy
- Internal dissent
10The Confederates evacuating Brownsville, Texas
sketched by an English artist
11Union soldiers on Elizabeth Street in
Brownsville, Texas Drawing from a photograph
12Texas the Civil War
- Behind the lines
- Mobilization recruitment
- Unionist sentiment
- Black seeking freedom
- Confederate Texans ethnic violence
- Texas at Civil Wars end
- An uncertain future
- Legal slavery dead
- The rough road to Reconstruction
13Key Words Terms (5)
- Texas Preemption Act
- H. L. Kinney
- Richard King
- Mifflin Kenedy
- Juan Nepomuceno Cortina
- Major Robert Simpson Neighbors
- John S. Rip Ford
- Melinda Rankin
- Elise Waerenskjold
- Telegraph and Texas Register
- New Braunfels Zeitung
- El Bejareno (San Antonio)
- Henderson K. Yoakum
- Juan N. Seguin
- Ferdinand Roemer
- peculiar institution
- Whigs
- Know-Nothings
- Constitutional Union party
- Secession
- Brigadier General David E. Twiggs
- Lt. Richard W. Dowling
- Albert Sidney Johnston
- Francis R. Lubbock
- Pendleton Murrah
- Santos Benavides