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The Union in Peril. Sectionalism and the Civil War Ms. Garratt. Major Events Leading to War . Sectionalism Missouri Compromise 1820 Compromise of 1850 KS-NE Act 1854 Bleeding KS 1855 Sumner in Senate 1855 Free Soilers. Republican Party Dred Scott Decision John Brown
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The Union in Peril Sectionalism and the Civil War Ms. Garratt
Major Events Leading to War • Sectionalism • Missouri Compromise 1820 • Compromise of 1850 • KS-NE Act 1854 • Bleeding KS 1855 • Sumner in Senate 1855 • Free Soilers • Republican Party • Dred Scott Decision • John Brown • Lincoln-Douglas Debates • Election of Lincoln • Harriet Beecher Stowe • Border ruffians
North South Differences North South • Industrial • River Power • Harsh winters • Wage labor • Agrarian (cotton, tobacco) • Slave labor • Mild weather all year
Slavery in the Territories • California - • Compromise of 1850 • CA as free state • Fugitive Slave Law • DC • Popular Sovereignty (letting the people decide whether or not to allow slavery) • in NM & UT territories • Secession
Underground Railroad & Uncle Tom’s Cabin • Fugitive Slave Law • Slaves denied trials • Vigilance committees • Harriet Tubman – conductor
Bleeding Kansas • First test of popular sovereignty in Kansas. • Supporters and opponents of slavery moved in to populate KS • Election took place but 1000s of border ruffians illegally voted • Lecompton gov set up. • Anti-slavery forces set up rival gov • Violence breaks out and KS earns the title of bleeding KS
Republican Party • Opponents of the KS-NE Act form the Republican Party. • Opposed to slavery in the new territories. • Whigs, Free Soilers, Democrats & other parties joined. • Chief goal was to resurrect the Missouri Compromise • Election of 1856 John C. Fremont was their candidate. • Had Fremont won many believe that the South would have seceded then
John Brown • Wanted to organize slaves & lead a rebellion. • Attacked Harpers Ferry (a federal arsenal) • The slave uprising Brown hoped for never occurred. • Federal troops put down the uprising. • Brown was tried & excuted • In the North church bells rang, guns fired salutes. • They considered Brown a martyr • South became more paranoid • Some whites suspected of anti-slavery views were attacked by mobs.
Election of Lincoln 1860 election Lincoln was a moderate Opposed extension of slavery into new territories but reassured South that he would not interfere with their slaves HE NEVER THREATENED TO END SLAVERY. South felt threatened by him His name didn’t even appear on the ballots of most southern states
Southern Secession Question of “states rights” v federal control SC was first to secede followed by 10 other states Set up confederate gov in Montgomery Jefferson Davis - president
North/South Resources & Strategies Chart on page 169 Three part strategy Compare with South
Emancipation Proclamation Deceptive Border states
Battles Bull Run Antietam Gettysburg Vicksburg Total War – Sherman March
Politics of Reconstruction • Lincoln’s Ten Percent Plan • “with malice toward, charity for all” • Johnson’s Fifty Percent Plan • Difference crush planter aristocracy • 7 states • Radicals & rift with Pres Johnson • Refused to seat representatives from states • Vetoed Civil Rights Act 1866 (2) • Vetoed Freedman’s Bureau Act • Congress overrode vetos
Radicals and moderates join together to shift presidential control of Reconstruction to the Congress 1866 elections Reconstruction act of 1867
Johnson’ s Impeachment Violation of Tenure in Office Act Pres could not remove cabinet member during term of president without Senate approval