240 likes | 359 Views
Section 2 Assessment. Chapter 16, Section 2. Which one of the following statements was NOT a part of the Compromise of 1850? a) California was admitted to the Union as a free state. b) The slave trade ended in Washington, D.C.
E N D
Section 2 Assessment Chapter 16, Section 2 Which one of the following statements was NOT a part of the Compromise of 1850? a) California was admitted to the Union as a free state. b) The slave trade ended in Washington, D.C. c) Southern states that objected to the compromise could secede peacefully. d) A strict fugitive slave law required northerners to return runaway slaves. Uncle Tom’s Cabin affected attitudes toward slavery because it a) described the cruelty of slavery. b) showed that most slaveholders acted as kind guardians. c) argued that northerners didn’t really know what slavery was like. d) explained why northerners should return fugitive slaves. Want to connect to the American Nation link for this section? Click here.
The Crisis Deepens Chapter 16, Section 3 • What was the goal of the Kansas-Nebraska Act? • Why did violence erupt in Kansas and in the Senate? • What impact did the Dred Scott case have on the nation?
The Problem The Compromise of 1850 dealt mainly with the Mexican Cession, and not with the lands that were part of the Louisiana Purchase. Provisions of the Kansas-Nebraska Act • Nebraska Territory was to be divided into two territories—Kansas and Nebraska. • The settlers in each territory would decide the issue of slavery by popular sovereignty. The argument for the act • Many people thought the act was fair because the Compromise of 1850 had applied popular sovereignty in New Mexico and Utah. • Southerners hoped slave owners from Missouri would move into Kansas and make Kansas a slave state. The argument against the act • The Missouri Compromise already banned slavery in Kansas and Nebraska. In effect, the Kansas-Nebraska Act would overturn the Missouri Compromise. • Northerners protested by challenging the Fugitive Slave Act. The Kansas-Nebraska Act Chapter 16, Section 3
The Kansas-Nebraska Act Chapter 16, Section 3
Violence Erupts in Kansas Chapter 16, Section 3 • Kansas settlers were to settle the slavery issue by popular sovereignty. Proslavery and antislavery settlers fought for control of Kansas. Abolitionists brought in settlers from New England. Proslavery settlers also moved into Kansas, and proslavery bands from Missouri—Border Ruffians—often rode across the border into Kansas. • In 1855, Kansas held elections. Border Ruffians voted illegally, helping to elect a proslavery legislature. Antislavery settlers refused to accept the legislature and elected their own governor and legislature. Kansas had two governments. • A band of proslavery men raided the town of Lawrence, destroying homes and smashing the press of a Free-Soil newspaper.
Violence Erupts in Kansas (continued) Chapter 16, Section 3 • Abolitionist John Brown led a band to the town of Pottawatomie Creek and killed five proslavery settlers there. • The killings at Pottawatomie Creek led to more violence. Both sides engaged in guerrilla warfare, or the use of hit-and-run tactics. Newspapers started calling the territory “Bleeding Kansas.”
Violence Erupts in the Senate Chapter 16, Section 3 • Charles Sumner of Massachusetts was the leading abolitionist senator. In one speech he denounced the proslavery legislature of Kansas and viciously criticized his southern foes, especially Senator Andrew Butler of South Carolina. • A few days later Butler’s nephew, Congressman Preston Brooks, marched into the Senate chamber and with his cane beat Sumner until he was unconscious.
The Dred Scott Case Chapter 16, Section 3 What was the Dred Scott Case? Dred Scott filed a lawsuit, that is, a legal case brought to settle a dispute between people or groups. Dred Scott had been enslaved in Missouri. He moved with his owner to Illinois and then to the Wisconsin Territory, where slavery was not allowed. Scott with his owner returned to Missouri. When his owner died, Scott claimed that because he had lived in a free territory, he had become a free man. The case reached the Supreme Court as Dred Scott v. Sandford. What did the Supreme Court decide? • Scott could not file a lawsuit because, as an enslaved person, he was not a citizen. • Slaves were considered to be property. • Congress did not have the power to outlaw slavery in any territory. This decision meant the Missouri Compromise was unconstitutional.
What impact did the Dred Scott Case have? White southerners were overjoyed. The decision meant that slavery was legal in all territories. White southerners African American northerners Northern African Americans condemned the ruling and asked whites to join their efforts to end slavery. White northerners White northerners were shocked. They had hoped that if slavery were kept to the South, it would eventually just die out. Now, slavery could spread. The Dred Scott Case Chapter 16, Section 3
Section 3 Assessment Chapter 16, Section 3 After Congress passed the Kansas-Nebraska Act, violence broke out in Kansas because a) the Kansas-Nebraska Act backed up the Missouri Compromise. b) a congressman from Kansas beat up a senator from Nebraska. c) proslavery and antislavery forces were battling to gain control of the Kansas territory. d) slave owners tried to return Dred Scott to slavery. One reason the Supreme Court’s Dred Scott decision shocked some Americans was because the decision declared that a) Congress could outlaw slavery in any territory. b) northern African Americans could ask northern whites for help to end slavery. c) slaves were property in the same way that horses and sheep were property. d) Dred Scott was a second-class citizen. Want to connect to the American Nation link for this section? Click here.
Section 3 Assessment Chapter 16, Section 3 After Congress passed the Kansas-Nebraska Act, violence broke out in Kansas because a) the Kansas-Nebraska Act backed up the Missouri Compromise. b) a congressman from Kansas beat up a senator from Nebraska. c) proslavery and antislavery forces were battling to gain control of the Kansas territory. d) slave owners tried to return Dred Scott to slavery. One reason the Supreme Court’s Dred Scott decision shocked some Americans was because the decision declared that a) Congress could outlaw slavery in any territory. b) northern African Americans could ask northern whites for help to end slavery. c) slaves were property in the same way that horses and sheep were property. d) Dred Scott was a second-class citizen. Want to connect to the American Nation link for this section? Click here.
The Republican Party Emerges Chapter 16, Section 4 • Why did the Republican party come into being in the mid-1850s? • What events lay behind the rapid emergence of Abraham Lincoln as a Republican leader? • How did Americans react to John Brown’s raid on Harpers Ferry?
The Republican Party Emerges Chapter 16, Section 4 Who formed the Republican Party? • A group of Free-Soilers, northern Democrats, and antislavery Whigs Why did they form a new party? • They believed that neither the Whigs nor the Democrats would take a strong enough stand against slavery. What was the goal of the party? • Its main goal was to keep slavery out of the western territories. A few Republicans hoped to end slavery in the South as well.
How Abraham Lincoln Became Leaderof the Republican Party Chapter 16, Section 4 • Abraham Lincoln was born in Kentucky. Later, he lived in Indiana and Illinois. • Lincoln opened a store in Illinois. He studied law and entered politics. • He served eight years in the state legislature and one term in Congress. • He opposed the Kansas-Nebraska Act, so he ran for the Senate in 1858. • During the Senate campaign, he debated Stephen Douglas seven times. • Lincoln: Slavery is wrong. African Americans are entitled to all the natural rights in the Declaration of Independence, so slavery should not extend to the territories. However, it can remain in the states where it already exists. • Douglas: The slavery question should be settled by popular sovereignty. • Douglas narrowly won the election. However, during the campaign, Lincoln became known throughout the country.
The Impact of John Brown’s Raid Chapter 16, Section 4 • In 1859, John Brown led followers, including five African Americans, to Harpers Ferry, Virginia. He planned to raid a federal arsenal, or gun warehouse. • Brown took over the arsenal. He expected that would inspire a slave uprising, but none took place. • Troops killed ten raiders and captured Brown. He was tried for murder and treason, or actions against one’s country. • Brown gave a moving defense of his actions. Nevertheless he was found guilty and sentenced to death. John Brown was hanged. • To many northerners, John Brown became a martyr because he was willing to give up his life for his beliefs. • White southerners were outraged at the northern response. Many southerners became convinced that the North wanted to destroy slavery and the South along with it.
Section 4 Assessment Chapter 16, Section 4 When the Republican party was formed in the 1850s, its main goal was to a) attract southern support for popular sovereignty. b) see to it that Abraham Lincoln became President. c) end slavery in all states of the United States. d) keep slavery out of the western territories. During his campaign for the United States Senate in 1858, Abraham Lincoln argued that a) African Americans were entitled to all of the natural rights listed in the Declaration of Independence. b) each and every state should decide slavery for itself. c) slavery should be decided in the western territories by popular sovereignty. d) slavery should be ended in the South. Want to connect to the American Nation link for this section? Click here.
Section 4 Assessment Chapter 16, Section 4 When the Republican party was formed in the 1850s, its main goal was to a) attract southern support for popular sovereignty. b) see to it that Abraham Lincoln became President. c) end slavery in all states of the United States. d) keep slavery out of the western territories. During his campaign for the United States Senate in 1858, Abraham Lincoln argued that a) African Americans were entitled to all of the natural rights listed in the Declaration of Independence. b) each and every state should decide slavery for itself. c) slavery should be decided in the western territories by popular sovereignty. d) slavery should be ended in the South. Want to connect to the American Nation link for this section? Click here.
A Nation Divides Chapter 16, Section 5 • How did the electon of 1860 reflect sectional divisions? • How did the South react to the election results? • How did the Civil War begin in 1861?
The Election of 1860 Chapter 16, Section 5 The Democratic party split in two: Northern Democrat and Southern Democrat. • Northern Democrats nominated Stephen Douglas. • Southern Democrats nominated John Breckinridge. Some Americans tried to heal the split by forming a new party, the Constitutional Union party. • The Constitutional Union party nominated John Bell. • The Republicans nominated Abraham Lincoln.
The Election of 1860 Chapter 16, Section 5
How the South Reacted to the Election of 1860 Chapter 16, Section 5 • Many southerners thought that Lincoln’s election meant the South no longer had a voice in national government. They believed the President and Congress were against them. • Senator John Crittenden of Kentucky introduced a bill to extend the Missouri Compromise line to the Pacific. He proposed an amendment to the Constitution that would guarantee slavery south of the compromise line forever. His proposals received little support. • Other southerners believed secession was their only choice. On December 20, 1860, South Carolina became the first state to secede. By late February 1861, Alabama, Florida, Georgia, Louisiana, Mississippi, and Texas had followed. • At a convention in Montgomery, Alabama, the seven states formed a new nation, the Confederate States of America. Jefferson Davis became its president.
How the Civil War Began Chapter 16, Section 5 • When Lincoln took office, he warned that no state could lawfully leave the Union. • Jefferson Davis had already ordered Confederate forces to begin seizing federal forts in the South. • President Lincoln had to make a decision. Should he let Confederates take over federal property and look like he was admitting that states had a right to leave the Union? Or should he send troops to hold the forts and risk a war? • By April 1861, the Union held only four forts in the South. Food supplies at one—Fort Sumter in South Carolina—were running low. Lincoln notified the governor of South Carolina that he was going to ship food to Fort Sumter. He said he would not send troops or weapons. • The Confederates demanded that Fort Sumter surrender to them. The Union commander refused to give in. The Confederates opened fire. The Union troops ran out of ammunition and had to surrender.
Section 5 Assessment Chapter 16, Section 5 To many southerners, Lincoln’s election meant southern states had to secede from the Union because a) the Democratic party had split in two. b) they believed that Lincoln’s election meant the South no longer had a voice in the national government. c) they were looking for a way to compromise. d) they wanted to save the Union. The Civil War began when a) Southern Democrats all voted for Breckinridge. b) South Carolina seceded from the Union. c) the Confederates fired on Fort Sumter. d) Lincoln sent a shipload of weapons to Fort Sumter. Want to connect to the American Nation link for this section? Click here.
Section 5 Assessment Chapter 16, Section 5 To many southerners, Lincoln’s election meant southern states had to secede from the Union because a) the Democratic party had split in two. b) they believed that Lincoln’s election meant the South no longer had a voice in the national government. c) they were looking for a way to compromise. d) they wanted to save the Union. The Civil War began when a) Southern Democrats all voted for Breckinridge. b) South Carolina seceded from the Union. c) the Confederates fired on Fort Sumter. d) Lincoln sent a shipload of weapons to Fort Sumter. Want to connect to the American Nation link for this section? Click here.