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A Nation Divided

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Title: A Nation Divided


1
A Nation Divided
  • Events leading to the Civil War

2
The Cotton Gin (1794)
  • It is a machine that separates the seeds from raw
    cotton fibers.
  • It was invented by Eli Whitney.
  • Gin is short for engine.

3
The Missouri Compromise (1819)
  • The Missouri Compromise was passed because a
    battle was brewing in Congress over Missouri
    becoming a new state.
  • The plan was to allow Missouri to become a state
    and keep its slaves and Maine would become a
    state and have no slaves.
  • The other part of the Compromise was that a line
    would be drawn from Missouri to the Pacific
    Ocean.
  • Any state wanting to enter the Union south of
    this line had to be a slave state, and any state
    entering the Union north of this line would have
    to be a free state.

4
Compromise of 1850
  • California admitted as a free state
  • Utah New Mexico territories to decide about
    slavery
  • Texas-New Mexico boundary resolved, Texas paid
    10 million by federal government
  • The sale of slaves banned in the D.C., but
    slavery may still continue there
  • Fugitive Slave Act required people in free states
    to help capture and return escaped slaves.

5
Uncle Toms Cabin (1852)
  • Written by Harriet Beecher Stowe
  • Became an instant best seller
  • Stirred strong reactions from the North the
    South
  • Delivered the message that slavery was not just a
    political contest, but a moral struggle

6
The Kansas-Nebraska Act (1854)
  • It created the territories of Kansas and Nebraska
    and allowed settlers in those territories to
    determine if they would allow slavery within
    their boundaries.
  • The act established that settlers could vote to
    decide whether to allow slavery, in the name of
    popular sovereignty or rule of the people.
  • The Kansas-Nebraska Act divided the nation and
    pointed it toward civil war.
  • The act itself nullified the Missouri Compromise
    of 1820 and the Compromise of 1850.

7
Bleeding Kansas (1856)
  • Event triggered from the Pottawatomie Massacre
  • Led by abolitionist John Brown
  • Proslavery settlers attacked the Free-Soilers
  • 200 people were killed
  • A violent battlefield in a civil war

8
Dred Scott v. Sanford (1857)
  • Dred Scott was a slave who sued unsuccessfully
    for his freedom.
  • His case was based on the fact that he was a
    slave, but had lived in states and territories
    where slavery was illegal.
  • The United States Supreme Court ruled seven to
    two against Scott, finding that neither he, nor
    any person of African ancestry, could claim
    citizenship in the United States, and that
    therefore Scott could not bring suit in federal
    court.
  • Essentially, the Supreme Court stated that slaves
    were property.

9
Lincoln-Douglas Debates (1858)
  • Debates between Abraham Lincoln (challenger) and
    Stephen Douglas (incumbent)
  • Race for U.S. Senate for Illinois
  • One of the biggest issues was the topic of
    slavery popular sovereignty
  • Lincoln tried to make Douglas look like a
    defender of slavery
  • Douglas accused Lincoln of being an abolitionist.

10
John Browns Raid at Harpers Ferry (1859)
  • It was an attempt by John Brown to start an armed
    slave revolt by seizing a United States Arsenal
    at Harpers Ferry in Virginia.
  • Within 36 hours of the failed attack, Brown's men
    had fled or been killed or captured by local
    farmers, militiamen, and U.S. Marines led by
    Robert E. Lee.
  • He was tried for treason against the state of
    Virginia, the murder of five proslavery
    Southerners, and inciting a slave insurrection
    and was subsequently hanged.

11
Election of 1860
  • 3 major candidates were vying for office, in
    addition to Lincoln.
  • Democrats split over issue of slavery
  • Lincoln was the winner even though he received
    less than half the popular vote, and no votes
    from the south.
  • This made the outlook for the Union very grim.

12
Confederate States of America formed (1861)
  • Southern states felt they lost their political
    voice with Lincolns election.
  • SC led the way in seceding (to withdraw from) the
    Union.
  • Soon MS, AL, FL, GA, LA, and TX seceded.
  • They met in February of 1861 and formed the
    Confederacy.
  • They elected Jefferson Davis as President of the
    Confederate States of America.

13
Antebellum Southern Plantation Life
14
Characteristics of the Antebellum South
  1. Primarily agrarian.
  2. Economic power shifted from the upper South to
    the lower South.
  3. Cotton Is King! 1860? 5 mil. bales a yr.
    (57 of total US exports).
  4. Very slow development of industrialization.
  5. Rudimentary financial system.
  6. Inadequate transportation system.

15
Slaves posing in front of their cabin on a
Southern plantation.
16
The Ledger of John White
  • Matilda Selby, 9, 400.00 sold to Mr. Covington,
    St. Louis, 425.00
  • Brooks Selby, 19, 750.00 Left at Home Crazy
  • Fred McAfee, 22, 800.00 Sold to
    Pepidal,Donaldsonville, 1200.00
  • Howard Barnett, 25, 750.00 Ranaway. Sold out of
    jail, 540.00
  • Harriett Barnett, 17, 550.00 Sold to Davenport
    and Jones, Lafourche, 900.00

17
US Laws Regarding Slavery
  1. U. S. Constitution 3/5s compromise I.2
    fugitive slave clause IV.2
  2. 1793 ? Fugitive Slave Act.
  3. 1850 ? stronger Fugitive Slave Act.

18
Southern Slavery--gt An Aberration?
  • 1780s 1st antislavery society created in Phila.
  • By 1804 slavery eliminated from last northern
    state.
  • 1807 the legal termination of the slave trade,
    enforced by the Royal Navy.
  • 1820s newly indep. Republics of Central So.
    America declared their slaves free.
  • 1833 slavery abolished throughout the British
    Empire.
  • 1844 slavery abolished in the Fr. colonies.
  • 1861 the serfs of Russia were emancipated.

19
Slavery Was Less Efficient in the U. S. than
Elsewhere
  • High cost of keeping slaves fromescaping.
  • GOAL ? raise the exit cost.
  • Slave patrols.
  • Southern Black Codes.
  • Cut off a toe or a foot.

20
A Nation Divided
  • Comprehension Check
  • Take out a sheet of paper and number 1 through 5

21
Quiz
  1. What state was the first to secede from the
    Union?
  2. Who won the Election of 1860?
  3. What was the term was used to describe the
    Souths economy?
  4. Who was elected president of the Confederate
    States of America?
  5. What Act required Northerners to assist with the
    capture and return of runaway slaves?

22
Slave Resistance Uprisings
23
Slave Resistance
  1. SAMBO pattern of behavior used as a charade in
    front of whites the innocent, laughing black man
    caricature bulging eyes, thick lips, big smile,
    etc..

24
Slave Resistance
  1. Refusal to work hard.
  2. Isolated acts of sabotage.
  3. Escape via the Underground Railroad.

25
Runaway Slave Ads
26
Quilt Patterns as Secret Messages
The Monkey Wrench pattern, on the left, alerted
escapees to gather up tools and prepare to flee
the Drunkard Path design, on the right, warned
escapees not to follow a straight route.
27
The Culture of Slavery
  1. Black Christianity Baptists or Methodists
    more emotional worship services. negro
    spirituals.
  2. Pidgin or Gullah languages.
  3. Nuclear family with extended kin links,where
    possible.
  4. Importance of music in their lives. esp.
    spirituals.

28
Southern Pro-SlaveryPropaganda
29
A Nation Divided
  • Activity
  • Photograph Analysis

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39
A Nation Divided
  • The Civil War
  • And
  • Reconstruction

40
Abraham Lincoln
  • Elected president in 1860, in a controversial
    election that split the Democratic.
  • He was virtually an unknown candidate.
  • He inherited a country deeply divided before he
    took office.
  • Seven states had already seceded and formed the
    Confederate States of America.
  • Four more joined barely two months after his
    inaugurationincluding his home state, Virginia.

41
Lincolns Polices
  • Lincoln utilized emergency powers including
    suspension of habeas corpus (incarceration of
    individuals without trial) to prevent Maryland
    and other border states legislators from voting
    for secession.
  • Why would he do this?
  • Because the nations capital is surrounded by
    Maryland, and if Maryland seceded then it would
    have been isolated inside the Confederacy.

42
Lincolns Plan for the Civil War
  • Lincoln and his advisors set up a plan to isolate
    the Confederacy by cutting off trade and
    attempting to constrict its boundaries.
  • It became known as the Anaconda Plan
  • 1. block off southern ports
  • 2. cut Confederacy into to 2 parts by
    controlling the Mississippi River.
  • 3. capture the Confederate capital.

43
The Emancipation Proclamation
  • Document issued by Lincoln that virtually freed
    slaves in the states that had already seceded
    from the Union (it did not apply to slaves in
    border states).
  • It caused many slaves to join Union Armies in
    Confederate states under attack and diverted more
    resources from the Confederate War effort to
    recapture fleeing slaves.

44
Civil War
  • Military Political Leaders

45
Ulysses S. Grant
  • Was a determined and tough Union General whose
    initials U.S. came to be called unconditional
    surrender after campaigns in Fort Donelson
    Fort Henry.
  • After winning victories at Shiloh Vicksburg, he
    was promoted to commander of all Union armies.

46
William Tecumseh Sherman
  • Commissioned by Grant to lead a military division
    of Mississippi.
  • Lead a campaign of total war through Georgia and
    took on Robert E. Lee in Virginia.
  • Responsible for the burning of Atlanta.

47
Robert E. Lee
  • Perhaps the most brilliant military tactician in
    the war.
  • His soldiers followed him dutifully until he was
    forced to surrender to Grant at Appomattox.

48
Stonewall Jackson
  • Brilliant field commander under Robert E. Lee.
  • Taught military strategy at the Virginia Military
    Institute prior to the Civil War.

49
Jefferson Davis
  • Graduate of West Point/
  • Elected President of the Confederacy.
  • Was initially successful in mobilizing the
    Confederacy for warhe was unable to maintain the
    balance of military necessity and political will
    to keep the Confederacy from collapsing.

50
Civil War
  • Major Battles

51
  • North had an enormous advantage over the South in
    terms of population and resources.
  • The North would draft immigrants (Irish) as they
    arrived to the docks of New York.
  • The Union drafts caused several riots, especially
    in New York City.
  • The Confederacy firing on Fort Sumter in 1861
    started the Civil War.
  • The Battle of Antietam was the bloodiest battle
    in a single day. It had a total of 26,000
    casualties. It resulted in a standoff and
    convinced European countries to refuse to
    recognize the Confederacy.
  • Why was this important?

52
  • One of the last major Confederate holdouts for
    control of the Mississippi river was Vicksburg.
  • The siege of Vicksburg lasted two
    monthsconfederate soldiers were trapped in caves
    starving to death from the constant barrage of
    artillery. They eventually surrendered to Grant.
  • The 3-day battle of Gettysburg proved to be the
    most decisive battle of the war.
  • It was also the costliest.

53
  • Casualties totaled 23,000 for the Union and
    28,000 for the Confederacy.
  • The most famous maneuver of the battle was the
    suicide charge ordered by Lee known as Picketts
    Charge.
  • It resulted in the Confederate soldiers being
    slaughtered in an open field charge.
  • The Battle of Atlanta was a long campaign for
    control of Georgia.
  • Shermans March was a wide path of destruction
    from Atlanta to Savannah.
  • In 1863, the Civil ended with the South
    surrendering to the North at Appomattox.

54
Reconstruction
55
The End of the South
  • In 1863, Lincoln proposed a lenient policy for
    re-admitting states that seceded from the Union.
  • It was known as the Ten Percent Plan, which
    allowed states to be re-admitted with only 10 of
    eligible voters swearing an oath of allegiance.
  • The Radical Republicanspassed the Wade Davis
    billwhich required a majority of Southern voters
    to take an oath supporting the Constitution and a
    more radical reconstruction plan.

56
  • It was the Radical Republicans who wanted to
    destroy the political power of the slaveholders
    and give African American males the right to
    vote.
  • Lincoln was assassinated by John Wilkes Boothe,
    and Andrew Johnson (V.P.) continued his lenient
    plan.
  • Johnson allowed all states to re-enter except
    Texas.
  • The Radical Republicans passed legislation
    strengthening the Freedmens Bureau and the Civil
    Rights Act of 1866.

57
Andrew Johnson
  • Johnson vetoed all bill giving civil rights to
    black males and he his veto was overridden by the
    Senate.
  • It was the first time in history a major piece of
    legislation was ever enacted over a presidential
    veto.
  • The Radical Republicans passed the 14th amendment
    and passed the reconstruction act of 1867.
  • After Johnson fired Secretary of War Edwin
    Stanton, the Radical Republics passed articles of
    impeachment of Johnson.
  • The trial went to the Senate in 1868 and the vote
    was 35 to 19 for impeachment and removal of
    Johnson.
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