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RENEWING THE SECTIONAL STRUGGLE

Renewing the Sectional Struggle

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Renewing the Sectional Struggle. Activity – Day 1. Working in a group of three, read over the presidential bios (Fillmore, Pierce , Buchanan). - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Renewing the Sectional Struggle

RENEWING THE SECTIONAL STRUGGLE

Page 2: Renewing the Sectional Struggle

Activity – Day 1•Working in a group of three, read over the presidential bios (Fillmore, Pierce, Buchanan).• First, read the quote at the beginning of the page, to each other, for each of the presidents. What stands out to you about the quotes? Discuss as a group and paraphrase. •Next, as you individually read over the biographies, what are the 5 most significant events that took place during each of their presidencies?• For each event, using prior knowledge, write 3 sentences to justify why these events are significant and what they tell you about the events to come in the next decade.

• Finally, discuss within your group what you have found among the three presidential biographies.

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Assignment•Read over the Differing Viewpoints on pg. 460•Complete the “What’s the Angle?” chart for your assignment.

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Activity – Day 2•Working in groups (discussing what you see/read)…•Look through each of the documents 12.3-12.7 using the “Primary Source Analysis Sheets” for the appropriate documents.•Answer all questions that are listed on the worksheets for each of the documents. Be thorough in your responses. Consider the ideas that the documents present at the beginning while reading.•At the end of the packet there are two “end of chapter” questions. Answer these questions on the back of your packet.

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Compromise of 1850

RENEWING THE SECTIONAL STRUGGLE

Page 6: Renewing the Sectional Struggle

Bell Ringer – What is the difference? Why is this an issue?

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Objectives• Discuss the conflicts created by the Mexican War acquisitions and explain how the Compromise of 1850 tried to resolve them. • Show the connection between the proslavery expansionist schemes and the sectional controversy.

Page 8: Renewing the Sectional Struggle

Mexican Cession•Wilmot Proviso•No slavery in territories acquired•NEVER PASSED!!! Why?•Popular Sovereignty – let the people rule•A compromise between two extremes

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Election of 1848•Candidates appeal to both the North and the South•Zachary Taylor (Whig)• “born in Virginia, grew up in Kentucky, plantation in Louisiana”• Does not believe in veto, war hero

• Lewis Cass (Democrat)• Popular sovereignty

•Emergence of the Free Soil party

Page 10: Renewing the Sectional Struggle

Compromise of 1850• California becomes a free state as a result of the Gold Rush•Harriet Tubman acts as an agent against the spread of slavery • Underground Railroad• Senator lead the way to compromise• Clay, Douglas, Calhoun, Webster, Seward• Taylor’s death helped the compromise pass

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Compromise Details and Fugitive Slave Law• Details• What the North got…• Texas loses territory• No slave trade in D.C.• What the South got…• Popular sovereignty in

Mexican Cession lands• Fugitive Slave Law• Fleeing slaves could not

testify• Cost of the case, $5 or $10• Brings about the death of

the Whig Party

Page 12: Renewing the Sectional Struggle

Kansas-Nebraska Act

RENEWING THE SECTIONAL STRUGGLE

Page 13: Renewing the Sectional Struggle

Bell Ringer•Was the Compromise of 1850 a wise effort to balance sectional differences or a futile attempt to push the slavery issue out of sight?

Page 14: Renewing the Sectional Struggle

Objectives•Examine the Kansas-Nebraska Act and explain why it brought wrath in the North.

Page 15: Renewing the Sectional Struggle

Expanding South of the Border (and West)• Franklin Pierce was prepared to be a Southern tool• Events in Nicaragua by Billy Walker spur a “slavocracy” theory•Ostend Manifesto attempts to acquire Cuba for the US• Relations open in China and Japan on behalf of Matthew Perry

Page 16: Renewing the Sectional Struggle

Opening the West•US government considers creating a transcontinental railroad• James Gadsden appointed minister to Mexico•Why Mexico?

•Gadsden Purchase leads to the organization of the Nebraska territory

Page 17: Renewing the Sectional Struggle

Kansas-Nebraska Act•Determined by popular sovereignty• Repeals the Missouri Compromise• Indirectly wrecks the Compromise of 1850• Controversy over Act brings about the Republican party• Support stopping the spread of slavery

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DRIFTING TOWARD DISUNION, 1854-1861

Page 19: Renewing the Sectional Struggle

Bell Ringer•Turn to page 439 in your textbook and read over Harriet Beecher Stowe and an excerpt from her book, Uncle Tom’s Cabin. Answer the questions within the reading.•Based on what you read, why would Abraham Lincoln refer to Harriet Beecher Stowe as the “Little lady that started the great war?”

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Objectives• Explain how the events of the late 1850s developed in a chain reaction.• Analyze the Kansas conflict as a small-scale rehearsal for the Civil War.

Page 21: Renewing the Sectional Struggle

Stowe and Helper: Literary Incendiaries•Harriet Beecher Stowe• Published Uncle Tom’s Cabin, presents evils of slavery • Helps Britain stay out of war

•Hinton Helper• The Impending Crisis of the South• Use of statistics to portray

who was hurt the most by slavery• Banned in the South

Page 22: Renewing the Sectional Struggle

Bleeding Kansas• “Border ruffians” pour in from Missouri, set up fraudulent government• John Brown leads followers to make “Bleeding Kansas” a reality• Lecompton Constitution leads to slaves in Kansas, despite vote• Buchanan becomes a strong supporter of the South and slavery

Page 23: Renewing the Sectional Struggle

Effects of Bleeding Kansas in Government• Preston Brooks attacks Charles Sumner, beats him with a cane• Election of 1856 candidates• John C. Fremont (Rep.)• James Buchanan (Dem.)• Millard Fillmore (K-N)• Results show apathy

toward slavery• What is the symbolism behind this picture?

Page 24: Renewing the Sectional Struggle

Social Issues of the Late 1850s•Dred Scott sues for freedom, master appeals• C.J. Roger Taney, slave is not a citizen • Goes against the 5th amendment, due process• Results in more impassioned abolitionists• The government and Constitution favor the South

•North is hard hit by the Panic of 1857

Page 25: Renewing the Sectional Struggle

Assignment•Compare and Contrast the efforts of the following people:•Harriet Beecher Stowe• John Brown•Dred Scott•Complete the assignment based on the following criteria:• Intentions•Methods• Emotional appeal• Results/Impact on slavery•What their actions say about 19th century culture

Page 26: Renewing the Sectional Struggle

EMERGENCE OF LINCOLN

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Bell Ringer• Look at the image on page 451. How is the painting an “allegorical expression of the pathos (emotional appeal to audience) of Brown’s martyrdom?”

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Objectives•Use the Lincoln-Douglas debates to explain the rise of Lincoln and the Republican party.• Examine the 1860 election and its consequences.

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Illinois Rail-Splitter• Lincoln was looking to replace Douglas as senator• Most famous debate came with the most famous question about slavery• Douglas supports the Freeport Doctrine – popular sovereignty• Lincoln only wins the moral victory• Statement ruins Douglas’s chances at presidency

Page 30: Renewing the Sectional Struggle

John Brown: Murderer? Martyr?• Brown plans to invade the South• Use slaves at Harper’s Ferry• Portrays himself as a martyr• Reflects actions of a radical North

Page 31: Renewing the Sectional Struggle

Election of 1860•Candidates•Stephen Douglas (N-Dem.)• John C. Breckinridge (S-Dem.)• John Bell (K-N)•Abraham Lincoln (Rep.)• Platform helps all regions (except the South)•Wins with 40% of popular vote

Page 32: Renewing the Sectional Struggle

Secession and Collapse of the Union• South Carolina threatens to secede, 6 states follow the lead•Confederate States of America nominate Jefferson Davis as president• James Crittendon attempts a compromise to mend fences• The South hopes to relive history in their attempts

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Assignment• “Somebody, Wanted, But, So, Then”•For this assignment you will summarize the events that took place in chapters 18 & 19. You can divide each side up into two parts or try summarize the chapter as a whole, you decide. •The objective of this assignment is to present the big picture of the content we just covered and identify the major events that took place.

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Activity • At the beginning of class you will be assigned one of the 10 quotes. It is your responsibility as a group to complete the following task by the end of the class period:• Create a Poster/Collage – At the center of the poster should

be the quote you were assigned (write it big enough to see from the back of the classroom). Surrounding the quote should be images (drawn or clipped from magazines) that represent the events that took place during the 1850s in relation to the slave issue.• Develop an Argument – Explain to the class why your quote

best represents the time period discussed in Chapters 18 & 19. You need to come up with 3 solid points and justify them to the class. Please write out your explanation on a separate sheet of paper to be turned in.

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Activity Continued•Order of presentation•Pictures – explain how they relate•Read the quotation – explain the meaning•Quote – justify

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REVIEW

Page 37: Renewing the Sectional Struggle

Question 1A.The government of each new territory

should be elected by the peopleB.The American public should vote on

whether to admit states with or without slavery

C.The people of a territory should determine whether or not to permit slavery

D.The United States should assume popular control of the territory acquired from Mexico

Page 38: Renewing the Sectional Struggle

Question 2A.The desire of antislavery forces to

gain a new state for their causeB.The threat that Mexico would

reconquer the territoryC.The need to have a government

capable of building a transcontinental railroad

D.The large and unruly population drawn into the state by the discovery of gold

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Question 3A.William Seward and Zachary

TaylorB.Henry Clay and Daniel WebsterC.John C. Calhoun and Abraham

LincolnD.Stephen Douglas and Harriet

Tubman

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Question 4A.The North B.The SouthC.Neither the North nor the SouthD.Border States

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Question 5A.Canada and AlaskaB.Venezuela and ColombiaC.Nicaragua and CubaD.Hawaii and Japan

Page 42: Renewing the Sectional Struggle

People, Places, Events•Lewis Cass•Zachary Taylor•California•District of Colombia•Harriet Tubman•Daniel Webster•William Seward•Utah and New Mexico

•Franklin Pierce•Winfield Scott•Nicaragua•Matthew Perry•Cuba•Kansas and Nebraska•Stephen A. Douglas

Page 43: Renewing the Sectional Struggle

Question 6A.Greatly strengthened northern

antislavery feelingB.Argued that nonslaveholding whites

suffered the most from slaveryC.Increased the desire for sectional

compromise on the issue of slaveryD.Was based on Stowe’s long personal

experience with slavery in the Deep South

Page 44: Renewing the Sectional Struggle

Question 7A. The Democrats’ surprising loss

of the White HouseB. The support immigrants and

Catholics gave to the American Party

C. Rise of the Republican partyD. The absence of the slavery issue

from the campaign

Page 45: Renewing the Sectional Struggle

Question 8A. Its economy was fundamentally

stronger than that of the NorthB. It ought to take new steps to

develop its own banking and manufacturing institutions

C. It would be wise to support the Homestead Act

D. Its economic future was closely tied to that of the North

Page 46: Renewing the Sectional Struggle

Question 9A. Whether secession from the Union

was legalB. Whether the people of a territory

could prohibit slaveryC. Whether Illinois should continue to

prohibit slaveryD. Whether Kansas should be

admitted to the Union as a slave or a free state

Page 47: Renewing the Sectional Struggle

Question 10 A. With an electoral majority derived

only from the NorthB. With a majority of both the

electoral and the popular voteC. Primarily because of the divisions

in the Democratic partyD. With an electoral majority evenly

derived from all sections of the nation

Page 48: Renewing the Sectional Struggle

People, Places and Events•Harriet Beecher Stowe•Hinton Helper•New England Emigrant Aid Company• John Brown• James Buchanan•Charles Sumner•Preston Brooks• John C. Fremont

•Dred Scott•Harpers Ferry, VA•Stephen A. Douglas•Pottawatomie Creek, KS• John C. Breckenridge•Montgomery, AL• Jefferson Davis