Title: Steps to the Civil War
1Steps to the Civil War
2Missouri Compromise
- 1820
- 11 slave states and 11 free states
- Missouri territory became eligible for statehood
- Northern congressman would not support statehood
for - Missouri since it would be admitted as a slave
state - Henry Clay proposed compromise-Missouri enter as
slave - slave state and Maine enter as a free state.
Proposed no - slavery north of 36, 30 extending into
Louisiana Purchase. - Compromise accepted.
3- Thomas Jefferson expressed his opinion on the
Missouri Compromise in a letter to John Holms
dated April 22, 1820. Jefferson writes that the
Missouri question, "like a fire bell in the
night, awakened and filled me with terror. I
considered it at once as the knell of the Union."
-- Library of Congress
4Map of the United States in 1820
5War with Mexico
- 1830- 20,000 Americans living in Texas 2,000
slaves. - American settlers did not obey Mexican laws
- - abolish slavery, learn Spanish and convert to
- Catholicism.
- 1836- Texans begin seeking independence from
Mexico. Santa Anna crushed rebels at the Alamo - Texans declare themselves a republic-want
annexation to the U.S. President Tyler supports
idea. Enlists Calhoun to help. Alienates
northerners. - 1844- annexation rejected
- 1845-President Polk pushed through admittance of
Texas as a state.
6- Border question emerges in 1845. U.S. wants Rio
Grande - River. Mexico wants Nueces River-150 miles
north of Rio - Grande.
- Polk sends Zachary Taylor with troops to the Rio
Grande River - and Slidell as negotiator to Mexico.
- Slidell refused. Polk orders Taylor to advance,
Mexicans - attack.
- No formal declaration of war by Polk
- Easy victory for Americans.
- Treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo 1848 U.S. acquires
more territory - from Mexico- New Mexico, Utah, California and
Arizona - Wilmot Proviso
7Campaign Banner for James K. Polk
8Hand Colored Lithograph of General Taylors
Encampment By Daniel Whiting 1847
9Composed and arranged at the request of General
Taylor
10Ornamental Map of the United States 1848
11Untitled Cartoon- 1847
12Propaganda Pamphlet 1848
13(No Transcript)
14Expansion of Slavery?
- Two compromises to resolve issue of slavery in
territories - Extend Missouri Compromise to Pacific. South
supports and North rejects. - Popular Sovereignty-Lewis Cass. Allow states to
choose themselves whether they are free or slave.
15Henry Clay, The Great Compromiser, introducing
the Compromise of 1850 in the Senate Chambers
16Compromise of 1850
- 1849 80,000 Americans moved to California
territory-mostly men in search of gold. - President Taylor suggests California be admitted
as state using popular sovereignty. - California chose to be free-protect chances for
gold. - Union was a stake
17- Henry Clay proposed a compromise
- California be admitted as a free state
- The southwest (Utah and N. Mexico territories) be
- organized into states. Southerners would be
free to - bring slaves.
- Lands around Texas would go to the New Mexico
- territory
- Slave trade abolished in Washington D.C. (not
slavery itself) - A more effective Fugitive Slave Law- to be
enforced in the North. - Stephen Douglas(D-Ill) pushed it through by
calling for provisions to be voted on separately.
18Map of Territorial Expansion in 1850
19(No Transcript)
20Kansas-Nebraska Act 1854
- January 1854- Stephen Douglas proposed bill to
organize land west of Missouri into Nebraska
territory. - To win over southerners Douglas proposed
dividing region into Kansas and Nebraska and
allow for popular sovereignty to be used to
determine slavery in these territories - Bill passed creating a split in the Democratic
party- Know Nothings and Republicans emerge.
21Bleeding Kansas
- North and South both want control of Kansas
- Both regions sent outsiders to Kansas to
influence the vote on slave state status. - November 1854-Missourians cross over state line
and vote to sway vote toward pro-slavery. - 1855- Pro-slavery legislature is elected in
Kansas. - Anti-slavery settlers refuse to accept this
legislature-hold own elections. - 1856-two governments in Kansas
- May 1856-pro-slavery group attacks an
anti-slavery town. - John Brown responds with attack on pro-slavery
settlement-murders 5 men. - By end of 1856- 200 men had been killed in Kansas
22Portrait of John Brown
23Excerpt of speech by Charles SumnerSir,
speaking in an age of light, and in a land of
constitutional liberty, where the safeguards of
elections are justly placed among the highest
triumphs of civilization, I fearlessly assert
that the wrongs of much-abused Sicily, thus
memorable in history, were small by the side of
the wrongs of Kansas, where the very shrines of
popular institutions, more sacred than any
heathen altar, have been desecrated where the
ballot box, more precious than any work, in ivory
or marble, from the cunning hand of art, has been
plundered and where the cry "I am an American
citizen" has been interposed in vain against
outrage of every kind, even upon life itself. Are
you against sacrilege? I present it for your
execration. Are you against robbery? I hold it up
to your scorn. Are you for the protection of
American citizens? I show you how their dearest
rights have been cloven down, while a tyrannical
usurpation has sought to install itself on their
very necks.
Attack of Charles Sumner (MA) by Preston Brooks
on floor of Congress.
24Removal of Senator Charles Sumner
25Dred Scott vs. Sanford 1857
- Dred Scott was a slave of a man who lived in
Illinois, Wisconsin and Missouri - Sued for freedom when owner died. Based case on
having lived in free soil states
26Dred Scott Decision Supreme Court declared that
blacks are not citizens therefore they cannot sue
in federal court. Declared the Missouri
Compromise unconstitutional Dred Scott not
eligible to due process of law because he was
living in territories Decision threatened
popular sovereignty and convinced many
Northerners that the Supreme Court was pro-slavery
27Map of the Election of 1860
28Election of 1860
- 4 candidates for President
- 1. Douglas-Northern Democrat
- 2. Breckinridge-Southern Democrat
- 3. Bell- Constitutional Union
- 4. Lincoln-Republican
- Lincoln won the electoral college in the North
and the West. - Lincoln was viewed by the south as an
abolitionist. - Response of southern states to election was
secession - - South Carolina secedes from the Union in
December 1860. Six other states follow in
February of 1861.
29Portrait of Abraham Lincoln