in 1818 missouri petitioned for statehood as a slave state. this event would upset the balance...

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In 1818 Missouri petitioned for statehood as a slave state. This event would upset the balance between free and slave states in Congress; there were 11 free and 11 slave states in 1820. New York Congressman James Tallmadge introduced an amendment attached to the statehood bill. The Tallmadge amendment would prohibit the further importation of slaves into Missouri and free all the children of slaves once they reach the age of 25. While the amendment failed to pass, it stirred the first national debate on slavery. The potential problem of tipping the scale of power for slave or free states by adding Missouri to the United States was solved by the Henry Clay’s Missouri Compromise of 1820. Elements of the compromise were: 1. Missouri would enter the Union as a slave state 2. Slavery would be prohibited in the rest of the Louisiana Purchase north of the 36 degrees 30 parallel line (excluding Missouri). This line would be called the Missouri Compromise Line which formed the border between The Missouri Compromise (1820)

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Page 1: In 1818 Missouri petitioned for statehood as a slave state. This event would upset the balance between free and slave states in Congress; there were 11

• In 1818 Missouri petitioned for statehood as a slave state. This event would upset the balance between free and slave states in Congress; there were 11 free and 11 slave states in 1820.

• New York Congressman James Tallmadge introduced an amendment attached to the statehood bill. The Tallmadge amendment would prohibit the further importation of slaves into Missouri and free all the children of slaves once they reach the age of 25. While the amendment failed to pass, it stirred the first national debate on slavery.

• The potential problem of tipping the scale of power for slave or free states by adding Missouri to the United States was solved by the Henry Clay’s Missouri Compromise of 1820. Elements of the compromise were:

• 1. Missouri would enter the Union as a slave state• 2. Slavery would be prohibited in the rest of the Louisiana Purchase north of the

36 degrees 30 parallel line (excluding Missouri). This line would be called the Missouri Compromise Line which formed the border between Missouri and Arkansas.

• 3. Maine would enter the Union as a free state• With Missouri a slave state and Maine a free state, the balance between free and

slave states was maintained in the U.S. until 1850.

The Missouri Compromise (1820)

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History of Tariffs in U.S.

• Tariffs- tax on imported goods that became a major source of income for the federal government

• South- want low tariffs• North- want high tariffs• Tariff of 1789- first tariff passed in the United States

was set at 8% of foreign goods’ price• Price of foreign good + tariff (percentage of price of

foreign good) = Total price of good for American buyer.

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The Escalation of Tariff Policies

• Tariff of 1816- the first high protective tariff was passed with moderate Southern opposition and supported by John C. Calhoun, it was set at 25%.

• Tariff of 1824- raised the tariff to 35% despite heavy southern opposition.

• Tariff of 1828- called the Tariff of Abominations where the rate was raised to 50% the cost of the foreign import.

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Reflection Questions• Why did the North want high tariffs?

• Why did the South want low tariffs?

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Reflection Questions Answers• The North wanted high tariffs because it would

incentivize Americans to buy American manufactured products that were based in the North by increasing the cost of imported foreign products.

• The South wanted low tariffs to keep healthy, mutually beneficial trading relations with foreign countries. They also did not want to be pressured to buy the American manufactured product which was usually of lower quality and more expensive than the foreign imports minus the tariffs.

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Nullification Crisis • Tariff of 1832- reduced the rate to 1824 level of 35% but that did not pacify South

Carolina.• Vice-President and former S. Carolina Congressman, John C. Calhoun, drafted and

passed a document called South Carolina Exposition and Protest• This document protested the Tariff of Abominations on the basis of states’ rights

claiming that a state has a right to judge whether a law passed by the federal Congress is constitutional.

• The S. Carolina legislature nullified (ignored) the Tariffs of 1828 and 1832 claiming that the doctrine of states’ rights in the 10th amendment gave them the right to declare federal laws unconstitutional and therefore illegal to implement or enforce.

• South Carolina threatened to secede (withdraw) from the United States if the federal government tried to collect tariffs in their state.

• In response, President Jackson had Congress pass the Force Bill which authorized the President to use military action to enforce the tariff. Jackson then threatened to lead the federal army against the civilian population of S. Carolina and hang John C. Calhoun for treason.

• Before Jackson could march on S. Carolina the proponents of nullification including John C. Calhoun gave in and accepted the 1833 Compromise Tariff imposed by Henry Clay.

• The Compromise Tariff of 1833 would decrease the tariff rate by one-tenth every year until it reached 20% by 1842. (20% is the rate for 1816 tariff)

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Nullification CrisisWhen S. Carolina refused to obey federal laws. They nullified (ignored)the new tariff laws arguing

the tariffs were unconstitutional because they favored the north and hurt the south.

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On which basis did John C. Calhoun base his argument that Southerners

should not have to collect tariffs?

Individual Rights

States’ Rights Republicanism

Popular Sovereignty

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Legal Justifications of Nullification• The South- believed that states’ rights were

supreme over the federal government. They believed that federal authority was limited and (based on the 10th amendment) that the United States was a union of sovereign states who had the right to judge whether a law passed by Congress was constitutional.

• The North- believed in the supremacy of the federal government over states’ rights. Based on the Supremacy clause of the 6th amendment, it was the federal government who held ultimate authority over the states and could decide which laws were constitutional.

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6th Amendment Supremacy Clause

• This Constitution, and the Laws of the United States which shall be made in pursuance thereof; and all treaties made, or which shall be made, under the authority of the United States, shall be the supreme law of the land; and the judges in every state shall be bound thereby, anything in the constitution or laws of any state to the contrary notwithstanding.

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10th AmendmentThe powers not delegated to the United States by the Constitution, nor prohibited by it to the States, are reserved to the States respectively, or to the people.

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Background to Compromise of 1850• With the new territories added to the United States from their

victory in the U.S.-Mexican War came the reinvigorated controversy over balance in Congress between free and slave states.

• In 1846 Pennsylvania Congressmen David Wilmot who represented the antislavery, northeastern segment of the Democratic party, introduced the Wilmot Proviso.

• The Wilmot Proviso proposed banning slavery in territory acquired from Mexico (excluding Texas, who already had a heavy reliance on slave labor)

• This caused a bitter four year debate on how the new territories would be settled.

• Tensions rose even higher when California, which was already fairly populated after the discovery of gold in 1848, applied for admission to the Union as a free state. This would subsequently upset the current balance of 15 slave and 15 free states.

• Henry Clay, who already engineered the Missouri Compromise of 1820 and the 1833 Tariff Compromise, masterminded the Compromise of 1850.

• The compromise successfully delayed the Civil War for 10 years.

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• Wilmot Proviso- a proposal that said that all of the Mexican Cession would be free territory. Southerners said slaves were property. It led to the creation of the Free Soil Party.

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Compromise of 1850• 1. California would be admitted as a free state instead of dividing

California into 2 states(1 free and 1 slave) like the South wanted. • 2. The New Mexico territory would have no slavery restrictions. In the

rest of the Mexican Cession territory (New Mexico, Utah, etc) the people in these areas would be allowed to vote on whether to allow or ban slavery, until this point Congress made this decision. The people would decide the issue of slavery (this is called popular sovereignty).

• 3. The slave trade was abolished in Washington, D.C. People could no longer openly buy and sell slaves in the nation’s capital. Slavery was still legal there, but slave auctions were now illegal.

• 4. Texas gave up the western boundary claim of the Rio Grande River in return for the U.S. to assume Texas’ 10 million dollar debt from the days of the Texas Republic. This ceded land became part of New Mexico territory.

• 5. A stronger, federal, fugitive slave law was passed. The law would ensure the return of runaway slaves even if they were discovered in the North. People in free, northern states were suppose to help capture and return fugitive slaves or face prison and large fines. When a suspected runaway was caught and take to court to determine their identity, the judge received a double fee for finding in favor of the slave master.

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Page 16: In 1818 Missouri petitioned for statehood as a slave state. This event would upset the balance between free and slave states in Congress; there were 11

Consequences of the Compromise of 1850.• 1. California tipped the scale of free and slave states giving

Free States a majority in the Senate. Also the more populated North (free states) held a majority of votes in the House of Representatives. So the free states could now successfully control and manipulate the legislation of the United States Congress at the expense of the slave states’ agenda.

• 2. America improved her surface appearance in the eyes of foreign ambassadors and diplomats who visited Washington, D.C. with the absence of the dehumanizing and brutal slave auctions.

• 3. The fugitive slave law enraged abolitionists and led to the publication of Harriet Beecher Stowe’s, Uncle Tom’s Cabin.

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Uncle Tom’s Cabin• In 1852, Harriet Beecher Stowe, a Northern abolitionist,

published Uncle Tom’s Cabin. • It was a novel that dramatized the cruelties and evils of

slavery, spoke to readers emotionally, and created widespread antislavery support among northerners.

• It was the most influential piece of propaganda for the abolitionist movement by selling over 300,000 copies the first year.

• It persuaded many northerners to join the abolitionists and oppose the Fugitive Slave Act.

• It was banned in the South and refuted as a book of lies and falsehoods to sway public opinion against the institution of slavery in America.

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Page 19: In 1818 Missouri petitioned for statehood as a slave state. This event would upset the balance between free and slave states in Congress; there were 11

Kansas-Nebraska Act• In 1854 the Kansas-Nebraska Act was passed which

allowed the people of the Kansas and Nebraska territories to decide for themselves whether they wanted slavery in their territories. The majority of the people’s will would decide the issue of slavery, called popular sovereignty.

• This act pleased southerners at the chance of entrenching slavery even further into society and new territories.

• However, the act enraged northerners because it repealed the 1820 Missouri Compromise which had prohibited slavery in this area by declaring “forever” free the Louisiana Purchase north of the 36 degree 30’ parallel (excluding Missouri).

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Bleeding Kansas• Many antislavery settlers, New England immigrants financed by New

England abolitionist Eli Thayer’s Emigrant Aid Society, moved to Kansas in the hopes of swaying popular sovereignty towards a free state.

• Also many proslavery settlers mostly from Missouri came to Kansas in the hopes of swaying popular sovereignty towards a slave state.

• Two governments, one free and one slave, were set up in Kansas with their own capitals and they both applied for statehood.

• The result was in 1856 these rival governments and the desire to sway popular sovereignty caused a small scale civil war in Kansas which lasted 4 months and caused 200 deaths. The armed conflicts deemed “Bleeding Kansas” was finally stopped by the United States army.

• It can be argued that the true first shots of the Civil War were fired in Kansas between antislavery and proslavery settlers.

• Widespread voting fraud, corruption, intimidation, and violence plagued Kansas’ voting process that would determine the territory as a slave or free state. (Example: 6,000 ballots were cast, yet there were only 1,500 voters in Kansas)

• John Brown led the violent, antislavery settlers where in Pottawattamie, Kansas they killed 5 proslavery settlers and hacked up their bodies.

• Kansas was eventually admitted into the Union as a free state in 1861.

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The Formation of the Republican Party (1854)• Dissatisfaction with the Kansas-Nebraska Act led to new political

alignments: for the first time, sectional political parties developed as North and South divided over slavery issue.

• The Republican party was created by a coalition of northerners committed to stopping expansion of slavery into the territories. The party was comprised of antislavery supporters from several parties including Whigs, Democratic, Free Soil, and American Party (a secret, anti-Catholic, anti-immigrant party nicknamed the “Know-Nothing” party)

• Republican party believed in keeping slavery out of new territories, a protective tariff for northern manufacturing, and free western farmland.

• The Whig Party died as northern Whigs joined the Republican party, and southern Whigs joined the Democratic party.

• The Democratic Party split into northern and southern factions. Despite the split they still won the presidency in 1856 with the appointment of Democratic President James Buchannan.

• The formation of the Republican Party is a direct cause of the Civil War because Southerners held the misconception that Republicans wanted the abolishing of all slavery in the United States (including in the South) instead they in fact simply wanted to stop the spread of slavery into new western territories.

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Dred Scott Decision• In 1857, Dred Scott, a Missouri slave, sued for his freedom after briefly living (12

years) with his owner on free soil in the North (Wisconsin and Illinois). When his owner dies he and his wife sue for their freedom instead of being inherited by his owner’s widow.

• The Southern dominated Supreme Court headed by Chief Justice Roger Taney ruled:

• 1. Slaves are not citizens, so they do not have the right to sue. • 2. Slaves are property. They are not people or citizens and do not have any civil

rights at all. • 3. Free blacks are not citizens of the U.S. They are merely escaped property,

regardless of how long they have been free or where they lived. • 4. Using the 5th amendment protection of property clause and they new statute

that slaves are property, the decision said Congress could not ban slavery from the territories or limit slaveholders from taking their property anywhere in the United States.

• 5. The Missouri Compromise, which banned slavery in the Louisiana Purchase below the 36 degree 30 parallel (excluding Missouri), was unconstitutional.

• 6. Supreme Court said only states and not the federal government could make laws concerning slavery.

• The Dred Scott Decision pleased Southerners and shocked the Northerners who had vast multitudes join the Republican Party to stop the spread of slavery.

• Side note: The owner’s widow remarries, returns Scott family to their original owners and those owners set him free.

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Reflection Question• What power did the Supreme Court exercise

when they declared the Missouri Compromise of 1820 unconstitutional?

UNCONSTITUTIONAL

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Reflection Question Answer

• The power of judicial review

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What is the significance of the Dred Scott V. Sanford case?

Slaves in Missouri would be freed.

Scott won his case and it led to freeing of many other slaves.

Because slaves are considered property, the gov’t cannot limit its

expansion.

Slavery would be made illegal in all states.

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Harper’s Ferry (1859)• In 1859, fanatical, violent abolitionist John Brown and his followers

seized a federal arsenal (where guns, ammunition, weapons are held) at Harper’s Ferry, Virginia.

• They hoped to provide arms to slaves in the surrounding countryside who would rise up and kill their masters thereby making themselves free.

• Brown was quickly defeated by the United States Army, headed by Colonel Robert E. Lee who ended the raid by surrounding, capturing, and killing most of Brown’s men.

• John Brown was put on trial for treason and the 5 murders of proslavery settlers during “Bleeding Kansas”. He was found guilty and hanged.

• He became a martyred hero for many Northerners, but was also seen as a real threat to the South who now held the view that many Northerners would come into the South to incite slaves to massacre their owners (the northern conspiracy).

http://www.history.com/topics/harpers-ferry

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Election of 1860• Northern Democrats held a convention in Baltimore, Maryland and nominated Stephen

A. Douglas for president who ran on the promise of not extending slavery into western territories.

• Southern Democrats held another convention in Charleston, S. Carolina where they nominated John Breckinridge who ran on the promise of extending slavery into the western territories and annexing Cuba as a slave state.

• Another party called the Constitutional Union Party who were made up of old Whigs, Democrats, and Know-Nothings nominated John Bell. Bell did not take a position on slavery and his party’s only goal was to preserve the Union and not see it divided.

• Lastly, the Republican party nominated Abraham Lincoln who ran mainly on the promise that he would not extend slavery into the western territories. Lincoln’s other platforms consisted of a railroad for the Northwest, high protective tariff for manufacturers in Northeast, would settle new territories and make land cheap for farmers and western settlers, and they would not raise the requirements for immigrants to become citizens. The Republican party left out slave owners because they were a small percentage of the population.

• Even if Democratic ticket was not split, Republicans still would have won because they hold a larger percentage of the population.

• South threatens to secede if Lincoln is elected President. They felt that Lincoln was an abolitionist and he would abolish slavery in the South thereby destroying their way of life, economy, and livelihood.

• In reality, Lincoln on many occasions had voiced that he was not an abolitionist and he did not want to end slavery in the South, but he did feel slavery was morally wrong and he would not extend it into the western territories.

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Abraham Lincoln is elected President and Initial Secession

• Lincoln is elected the 16th president of the United States on November 6, 1860 (the first Republican president) by winning 59% of electoral votes. (40% of popular vote)

• The south validated their threat of secession when S. Carolina became the first state to secede on November 20, 1860.

• S. Carolina legislature drafted and passed a Declaration of Causes which included three reasons for secession: state sovereignty, rise to power of a sectional party (Republicans), and the election of a president “whose opinions and purposes are hostile to slavery.”

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The Confederate States of America• S. Carolina seceded on November 20, 1860.• By February 1861 six other states had seceded: Texas, Louisiana,

Mississippi, Alabama, Florida, and Georgia. • Delegates from these 7 seceded states met up in Montgomery,

Alabama on February 4, 1861 to form a new nation and government called the Confederate States of America. (all this took place during Lincoln’s lame duck period)

• They chose Jefferson Davis as the Confederacy’s President. Jefferson was a Mississippi senator, former colonel in U.S. army, and former secretary of war.

• The seceded states also drafted and passed the Confederate Constitution or Constitution on the Confederate States which was similar to the U.S. constitution but differed in:

• 1) establishing state sovereignty• 2) protecting slavery in states and territories• 3) banned protective tariffs• 4) limited the president to one six year term • The Confederacy was based in Montgomery, Alabama until the attack

on Ft. Sumter.

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Justification for Secession

• The South believed they had voluntarily entered the Union and they were free to voluntarily leave it.

• They saw the United States constitution as a voluntary contract among independent states. So the refusal of the U.S. government to enforce the Fugitive Slave Act, its tariff policies, and its denial of southern states equal rights in the territories, and had violated this contract.

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Page 41: In 1818 Missouri petitioned for statehood as a slave state. This event would upset the balance between free and slave states in Congress; there were 11
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