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AP Chapter 15. The Coming Crisis. America in 1850. E conomically, culturally and politically Americans had forged a strong national identity With rapid expansion westward the issue of slavery became more important
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AP Chapter 15 The Coming Crisis
America in 1850 • Economically, culturally and politically Americans had forged a strong national identity • With rapid expansion westward the issue of slavery became more important • Thoreau, Nathanial Hawthorne, Whitman, Herman Melville, Douglas and Emily Dickinson were scholars who helped feed Americas desire for information
The Scarlet Letter and The House of the Seven Gables by Hawthorne • Moby Dick by Melville • Narrative of the Life of Frederick Douglas by Douglas • Uncle Tom’s Cabin by Harriet Beecher Stowe • All of these novels were part of the American Renaissance of literature
Political Parties • Politicians from all sections of the country cooperated b/c they knew their party would not succeed w/o national appeal • Sectional differences ran deep in all parties but they knew that a member of their own party was better than that of the opposing party
Compromise of 1850 • Issue of balance of power rose again • Calhoun, Webster and Clay argued their views for the last time • California became a free state • NM and UT Territories slavery would be decided by popular sovereignty • Slave trade was banned in Washington D.C. • Fugitive Slave Law had to be enforced
It was important that the balance of power remained the same in the Senate • Stephen Douglas (IL) pushed the compromise through Congress • North and South both believed in manifest destiny and soon developed fixed stereotypes of each other • The different visions of both regions became fixed
The Fugitive Slave Act • Northern abolitionist had urged slaves to escape and even assisted them along the Underground Railroad • Northerners often refused to return runaways which angered the South • The act increased the power to capture and return the slaves and became a federal govt. issue
The law penalized those that did not assist in the recapturing of slaves • Northern views became even more supportive of abolishing slavery altogether
Election of 1852 • Gen. Scott (W) vs. Franklin Pierce (D) and Pierce won easily • Pierce received a huge percentage of the immigrant vote which showed the power of the political machines • Reformers complained of corruption and vote buying
Young America Movement • Began by a group of writers and politicians from the NY Democratic Party • Supported the principles of Manifest Destiny • Americans tried to force the Spanish to sell Cuba to us but it failed • Ostend Manifesto- secret document that threatened to take Cuba from Spain and embarrassed the Pierce Presidency
Pierce sent Admiral Matthew Perry across the Pacific to Japan in 1854 • Perry was able to negotiate a trading agreement with Japan • Pierce’s goal was to expand U.S. influence but his presidency suffered b/c of the slavery issue
Kansas-Nebraska Act 1854 • Douglas wanted Chicago of his home state of Illinois to become a major railroad center for the transcontinental RR • To do this he needed the Kansas and Nebraska territory to be organized into states • The issue of popular sovereignty, balance in the Senate and the Missouri Compromise became major problems
Debate and protest rose up throughout the country • Eventually an agreement was made that called for popular sovereignty to decide the future of slavery in these territories and repealed the Missouri Compromise • Neither side was particularly satisfied with the result of this agreement
Bleeding Kansas • Supporters from both sides poured into Kansas to determine the outcome of the vote • Violence erupted from both sides and several fraudulent elections were held • John Brown led his sons on a raid against pro-slavery people and killed 5
Politics of Nativism • Whig Party eventually collapsed • Know-Nothing Party (American Party)- rose up and counted many former Whigs as members and were hugely anti-immigrant • Know-Nothings resented the immigrants for taking their jobs • Eventually the party split over the issue of slavery
Republican Party • Many members were former Whigs or Know-Nothings • Stopping the expansion of slavery along with temperance, tariffs and transportation were some of the parties main ideas • Because of the divisions within the country the Republicans quickly rose to power
Election of 1856 • James Buchanan (D) defeated John C. Freemont (R) and Fillmore (KN) • The election was divided along sectional lines • Republican Party was now a strong sectional party • 1856 election had one of the highest voter turnouts ever
Dred Scott v. Sandford (1857) • Slave who sued for his freedom in 1846 b/c he and his family had spent so much time in free states (IL, WI, IA) but moved back to MO • Chief Justice Roger B. Taney said that slaves/blacks were not citizens and could not sue, Cong. could not deny property rights and slaves were property • Huge victory for the South and angered/motivated abolitionists
Lecompton Constitution • Proslavery draft written in Kansas that was rejected by two governors but supported by Buchanan • Congress eventually defeated the draft • Kansas was refused admission as a state mainly b/c of the Const. and fraudulent elections • Kansas finally became a free state in 1861
Panic of 1857 • Credit crunch that caused an economic crisis in the North • South was not impacted as badly b/c of the high prices of cotton • Economic problems were also brought into the sectional argument
John Brown’s Raid • 1859 John Brown led a raid on Harper’s Ferry in Virginia • Harpers Ferry was a federal arsenal and Brown wanted to arm the slaves for a revolt • Browns raid failed and he was executed but viewed as a martyr • The raid renewed southerners fear of a slave rebellion
Election of 1860 • Stephen Douglas (Northern Democrats) • John Breckenridge (Southern Democrats) • John Bell ( Const. Union Party (South) • Abraham Lincoln had the support of the Republican Party • Republicans did not campaign in the South and Lincolns name did not even appear on the ballot in 10 states
Democrats had divided their vote and Lincoln won with 40% of the popular vote • 2nd highest voter turnout in U.S. history 81.2% • Southerners were furious and immediately moved towards secession • S. Carolina was the first to secede followed by 6 others states soon after
Southerners feared emancipation of the slaves and that northerners threatened their way of life • Buchanan did nothing and Lincoln refused to compromise • Horace Greely said “Go in peace” • Crittenden Compromise- failed compromise that would have protected slavery, enforced the fugitive slave law and extend the 36 30 line
Confederate States of America • Wrote their own Const. that was similar to ours but gave more rights to the states and made the abolition of slavery nearly impossible • Jefferson Davis of MS was elected president and Alexander Stephens was VP
Lincolns Inauguration • Lincoln remained firm in his stance leading up to his March inauguration • Fearing assassination Lincoln had to sneak into the capital • Lincoln assumed the presidency on March 4th 1861 and in 6 weeks we would be at war
Conclusion • Strong sectional differences drastically divided the country • Americans were unable to solve the issue of the extension of slavery • Political parties were torn apart over the issue • Election of 1860 led to the outbreak of the Civil War