Long Term and Immediate Causes of the Civil War - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Long Term and Immediate Causes of the Civil War

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Title: Long Term and Immediate Causes of the Civil War


1
Long Term and Immediate Causes of the Civil War
  • Social Studies Solutions
  • 19-20
  • You need a blank piece of paper!

2
Key Event How does it lead to division?
Compromise of 1820
Sectionalism (Slavery, Economics, Tariffs, Land, etc.)
Wilmot Proviso
Compromise of 1850 (Stronger Fugitive Slave Law)
Uncle Toms Cabin
Kansas-Nebraska Act
Dred Scott v. Sanford
Lincoln-Douglas Debates
John Browns Raid
Election of 1860
3
Review of LONG TERM causes
  • Question of States Rights vs. Federal Rights
  • Idea of Nullification
  • Compromise of 1820
  • Debate over slavery
  • Sectionalism
  • Compromise of 1850

4
Uncle Toms Cabin
  • Depicted evils of slavery to public
  • Written by Harriet Beecher Stowe
  • Uncle Tom, Simon Legreecharacters in the book
  • 1852sold over 1 million copies
  • Why? The undecided now favor anti-slavery side,
    angers Southerners

5
Kansas-Nebraska Act popular sovereignty will
determine slavery in Kansas-Nebraska territory
  • 1854popular sovereignty passed as law in
    Compromise of 1850
  • Rush to populate state with voters leads to
    Bleeding Kansas abolitionist and pro-slavery
    sides result to violence!
  • Foreshadows fighting in Civil War, shows popular
    sovereignty will not work

6
  • Sumner/Brooks Incident fight in the US Senate,
    Brooks beats Sumner with a cane for his attacks
    on slavery in the South, foreshadows Civil War

7
Dred Scott v. Sanford
  • 1857
  • Scott is a slave ? he is taken into free states ?
    sues for freedom based on Missouri Compromise ?
    Supreme Court (majority Southern) rules
  • Blacks are not citizens, slaves are property
  • Cant ban slavery
  • Missouri Compromise is illegal

8
Development of Republican Party
  • Topic of slavery has come to dominate political
    parties
  • By 1850differences have peaked within Whigs,
    Democrats, and Free-Soilers those that oppose
    slavery form a new party
  • The Republicans official party policy was to
    oppose the growth of slavery where it didnt
    already exist

9
Political Parties (1850-1860)
Party Established Major Platform
Free-Soil 1848 Anti-extension of slaver, pro-labor
Know-Nothing 1854 Anti-immigration, anti-Catholic, nativism
Whig 1834 Pro-business Divided on slavery
Republican 1854 Opposed expansion of slavery into territories
Democratic 1840 States rights Limited Govt Divided on slavery
10
Lincoln-Douglas Debates
  • Senate Race 1858 Stephen Douglas (Democrat) and
    Abraham Lincoln (Republican)
  • Debate over slavery neither man favored slavery,
    so how argue it?
  • Douglas issues Freeport Doctrineslavery needs
    certain laws in order to exist, if you dont want
    slavery dont pass the laws
  • Douglas goes on to win election, but Lincoln
    gains national fame from the debates

11
John Browns Raid
  • John Brownextreme abolitionist
  • Attempted to capture Harpers Ferry (a military
    arsenal in Virginia) with the intent to arm
    slaves to rebel
  • He and his men were surrounded and forced to
    surrender
  • Brown found guilty and then hangedbecomes a
    martyr for abolitionists
  • Southerners believe Brown represents Northerners
    who want control of the South

12
Southern Secession
  • 1860 electionslavery had divided the parties
    Republican Lincoln pledges to stop spread of
    slavery (not end it), Douglas and Breckinridge
    split the Democratic vote, John Bell runs under
    Constitutional Party
  • LINCOLN wins election of 1860 with NO SOUTHERN
    ELECTORAL VOTES
  • South secedes due to fear of no voice in govt
    and losing the only way of life (slavery) ever
    known
  • Dec. 24, 1860 State of South Carolina secedes
    (withdraw) from the Union

13
Confederate States of America
  • Officially formed before Lincoln takes office
  • Jefferson Davis is elected President
  • South Carolina leaves first followed by
    Mississippi, Florida,
  • Alabama, Georgia,
  • Louisiana and Texas

14
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15
Response of North
  • This country will be drenched in bloodthe
    people of the Northare not going to let the
    country be destroyed without a might effort to
    save it
  • Can the use of force preserve the nation?
  • Lincoln says states do not have the right to
    secede

16
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17
Review Questions
  • Which event convinced many Southerners that they
    had lost their voice in the national government?
  • The Dred Scott decision
  • The issuance of the Freeport Doctrine
  • John Browns raid at Harpers Ferry
  • Lincolns election as president

18
  • 2. Which of the following was the LEAST divisive
    issue in the election of 1856?
  • The candidacy of James Buchanan
  • The Kansas-Nebraska Act
  • The expansion of slavery
  • The rise of the Republican Party

19
  • 3. Why did Kansas become a center of controversy
    over the issue of slavery?
  • Because it extended the power of the Missouri
    Compromise
  • Because the Kansas-Nebraska Act opened the
    territory to slavery and popular sovereignty
  • The Know-Nothing Party disagreed with opening the
    territory to slavery
  • All of the above

20
  • 4. Why did most Free-Soilers object to slavery?
  • They believed slavery was morally wrong
  • They believed the South should be forced to
    industrialize
  • They believed that white workers could not get
    jobs in competition w/ slaves
  • The party actually had no opinion on slavery

21
  • 5. What was the significance of the Dred Scott
    decision?
  • It declared slaves were property
  • It effectively repealed the Missouri Compromise
  • It stated that because Scott was a slave, he had
    no rights in court
  • All of the above

22
  • 6. What was the significance of the election of
    1856 for Abraham Lincoln?
  • He won the election
  • His debates against his opponent, Stephen Douglas
    afforded him national attention
  • Stephen Douglas became president
  • Lincoln learned nothing about running for office
    in the national spotlight

23
  • 7. So youre the little lady that started this
    big war, stated by Lincoln, most likely refers
    to whom?
  • Harriet Tubman
  • Harriet Beecher Stowe
  • Elizabeth Cady Stanton
  • Sojourner Truth

24
Civil War Timeline Part 1
  • Create a timeline (events must be in order by
    month and year)
  • Include 2 major facts about each eventshould
    include significance of event!
  • Give your timeline a title
  • Include at least 3 pictures
  • This is the 1st part of the timeline, you will
    complete the 2nd half on Thursday. The entire
    timeline will count as a QUIZ GRADE!
  • Due at beginning of class on Friday!
  • John Browns Raid
  • Kansas-Nebraska Act
  • Compromise of 1850
  • Lincolns Election
  • Dred Scott v. Sanford
  • Compromise of 1820
  • Uncle Toms Cabin
  • Lincoln-Douglas Debates

25
Civil War Timeline Part 1
  • Create a timeline (events must be in order by
    month and year)
  • Include 2 major facts about each eventshould
    include significance of event!
  • Give your timeline a title
  • Include at least 3 pictures
  • This is the 1st part of the timeline, you will
    complete the 2nd half on Thursday. The entire
    timeline will count as a QUIZ GRADE!
  • Due at beginning of class on Friday!
  • John Browns Raid
  • Kansas-Nebraska Act
  • Compromise of 1850
  • Lincolns Election
  • Dred Scott v. Sanford
  • Compromise of 1820
  • Uncle Toms Cabin
  • Lincoln-Douglas Debates
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