chapter 17 section 1 in both the north and south, people were divided over slavery. a central issue...
TRANSCRIPT
Chapter 17 section 1
Efforts to Save the Union
In both the North and South, people were divided over slavery. A central issue was whether to allow slavery in new territories.
Some moderates proposed giving voters in each territory popular sovereignty.
Popular sovereignty- the right of voters to decide an issue for themselves.
Northern radicals demanded an end to slavery everywhere in the United States. However, Southern radicals insisted on the right to extend slavery into all new territories.
The Issue of Slavery
An ongoing cause of tension was the balance of power in the Senate. Congress put off admitting Minnesota and Oregon as free states because it would have upset the balance of power between free and slave states in the Senate.
Balance of Power in the Senate
The Democrats and Whigs avoided the topic of slavery in the Election of 1848.
Election of 1848 Democratic Candidate- Senator Lewis Cass
(northern moderate)Whig candidate- General Zachary Taylor
( hero of war with Mexico)Free Soil Party candidate- Martin Van Buren
(former President)
Election of 1848
Angry antislavery forces formed the Free Soil Party, which won enough northern votes away from the Democrats that Zachary Taylor, the Whig candidate, was elected our 12th President
Zachary Taylor (Whig) 12th POTUSMillard Fillmore (Whig) Vice President
Results of the Election of 1848
Election of 1848
Zachary Taylor 12th POTUS
California applied to join the Union as a free state, so Congress agreed to Henry Clay’s Compromise of 1850.
The Compromise of 1850 admitted California as a free state but left the question of slavery in the New Mexico and Utah territories to be decided by sovereignty.
The Compromise also included a strict Fugitive Slave Law. The new Fugitive Slave Law required the return of escaped slaves, even slaves who had reached the North.
Slavery was still legal in Washington, D.C. but the slave trade was to be abolished in Washington, D.C.
Compromise of 1850
California 1850
Compromise of 1850 Map
Henry Clay
Fugitive Slave Law Advertisement 1850
President Zachary Taylor fell ill from cholera and died on July 9, 1850. The new President was Millard Fillmore, who was Taylor’s Vice-President. Fillmore was a supporter of the Compromise of 1850 and helped it pass.
Millard Fillmore (Whig) -13th POTUS
Vice President takes Over
Millard Fillmore 13th POTUS