1 / 18

CAUSES OF THE CIVIL WAR

THE ROAD TO SECESSION. CAUSES OF THE CIVIL WAR. The Missouri Compromise The Problem: In 1819, 11 states permitted slavery and 11 did not, giving an equal balance of representation. Slaveholding Missouri asked to join the Union.

vidar
Download Presentation

CAUSES OF THE CIVIL WAR

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. THE ROAD TO SECESSION CAUSES OF THE CIVIL WAR

  2. The Missouri Compromise • The Problem: • In 1819, 11 states permitted slavery and 11 did not, giving an equal balance of representation. • Slaveholding Missouri asked to join the Union. • Admitting a slave state would shift the balance in favor of the Southern slave states. • Should territories of the Louisiana purchase be admitted as slave states or free states?

  3. The Missouri Compromise The Solution: House Henry Clay proposed the “Missouri Compromise” which would allow Missouri’s admittance as a slave state while simultaneously admitting Maine as a free state. The Compromise also prohibited slavery in the remainder of the Louisiana Purchase north of 36-30N latitude.

  4. THE MISSOURI COMPROMISE

  5. The Compromise of 1850 The Problem: • After acquiring the Mexican Cession, the US must again decide whether the territories there will be admitted as slave states or free states.

  6. The Compromise of 1850 The Solution: • California would be admitted as a free state • The New Mexico territory would have no restriction on slavery. • The slave trade, but not slavery itself, would be abolished in the District of Columbia (Washington D.C). • A stronger Fugitive Slave Law that was criticized in Harriet Beecher Stowe’s, Uncle Tom’s Cabin.

  7. THE COMPROMISE OF 1850

  8. Kansas-Nebraska Act The Problem: • In 1854 Stephen Douglas proposes that “popular sovereignty” should be how the slavery issue should be decided in new territories. • This would overturn the Missouri Compromise. • He makes this proposal to get Southern support for a railroad in the North.

  9. Kansas-Nebraska Act The Response: • The law passed, overturning the Missouri Compromise. • The act led to bloodshed in Kansas when it was time to vote. • Critics of the act formed a new political party, The Republicans, “overnight”. • They wanted to let slavery continue in the South, but not extend it to any new territories.

  10. Kansas-Nebraska Act

  11. The Dred Scott v. Sanford The Problem: • Dred Scott, a Southern slave, was taken to the North by his master and then back to slavery in the South. • Scott sued for his freedom. • Should he be considered “Free” because he had been on free soil and then taken back to slavery?

  12. Dred Scott The Decision: • The court states: • Scott is not a citizen, so he is not entitled to bring a lawsuit before the court. • Africans could never become citizens because they were not included when the Constitution was written. • Slaves are property and Congress has no right to take away slaveholder’s property. • What it means: • Congress can’t legally prohibit slavery in new territories. • The Missouri Compromise was unconstitutional.

  13. THE DRED SCOTT DECISION

  14. Dividing Issues The Problem: • Lincoln-Douglas debates (1858): • Debates during election for state Senator • 7 debates, each 3 hours long, entirely about slavery • Lincoln says: • Dred Scott decision wrong, African Americans are humansbeings with rights and no person could claim a moral right to enslave them. • Lincoln lost the election, but his position was clear. • John Brown’s Raid (1859): • A white abolitionist that starts a slave revolt at Harpers Ferry. It is ended quickly, he is tried and executed. • He is a hero in the North. • The South is alarmed and fearful.

  15. Dividing Issues The Problem Continued: • Election of 1860: • Lincoln is the Republican Candidate. • 2 Democrat candidates because North and South can’t agree on one. • Lincoln wins but did not take a single Southern state. • What is the South to do?

  16. The Nation Splits Apart • 6 Weeks after Lincoln is elected, South Carolina secedes – They followed the same process to leave the Union that they did to join it (Special convention and vote) • By February 1861 - Texas, Louisiana, Mississippi, Alabama, Florida, and Georgia joined in secession as well (Eventually there would be 11) • The Confederate States of America was born • Capital: Montgomery, AL (Richmond, VA) • President: Jefferson Davis

  17. THE SOUTH SECEEDS

  18. THE CIVIL WAR BEGINS…

More Related