the politics of slavery sg #3, 4
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The Politics of Slavery SG #3, 4. The beginnings of the political discussion on slavery. Southern slave supporters passed a series of gag rules after northerners submitted anti-slave petitions. Strengthened southern state’s rights philosophy with reaction to tariff nullification crisis. - PowerPoint PPT PresentationTRANSCRIPT
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The Politics of Slavery
SG #3, 4
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The beginnings of the political discussion on slavery
Henry Clay's Missouri Compromise (1820)
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Andrew JacksonOwned over 100 slaves on his plantation the Hermitage
Abolitionism grew during his presidency in the North , flooding the mails with literature.
Strengthened southern state’s rights philosophy with reaction to tariff nullification crisis
Southern slave supporters passed a series of gag rules after northerners submitted anti-slave petitions
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James G. Birney: Liberty Party
Minor political party created after a separation from William Lloyd Garrison
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Post Jackson Politics
1840 election
Virginia planter, pro-state’s rights, supporter of Texas annexation and slavery
John Tyler: Whig or…. Turns DemocratWilliam Henry Harrison:
Dies after one month
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1844: Quite a mess of an election
Texas annexation announced by Tyler, passed on 1st day of Polk’s presidency
Whigs picked Henry Clay to run again
No magic for the Great Compromiser: Birney took votes away from free soil Whigs
As a result: James K. Polk (D) was elected
Anti-Slavery Van Buren sought Dems. nomination, Polk selected as dark horse
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Polk: Mr. Manifest Destiny
•Polk: Tennessee slaveholder, bought more during his presidency.
•Mr. Polk’s War: Mexican-American War led to Mexican Cession (CA, UT, NV, Part of CO, AZ and NM)
•A Slavocracy?
•Added Oregon to America
•Rejected Wilmot Proviso (banning slavery in Mexico territory), advocated extending Missouri Comp line to Pacific
•Gadsden Purchase and wanted purchase of Cuba
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Most of Mexican Cession below Missouri Comp. line
Gadsden Purch. made to make southern transcont. RR route-strengthening southern economy
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Free Soil IdeologyFree Soil supporters claimed that the South was stagnating, rejecting values of progress and individualism and threatening democracy
THEY FEARED OF A NATION OF SLAVEHOLDERS! A SLAVOCRACY!
Free Soil-ites advocated not for abolitionism necessarily, but a limit on spread of slavery
Ideology split Whigs, helped form the Republican Party
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Election of 1848
Zachary Taylor (W), war hero, no political experience
Lewis Cass (D), pro-slavery advocate
Martin Van Buren runs for the Free Soil Party, supporting limit on spread of slavery
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The Mexican Cession-Result of the The Mexican Cession-Result of the Treaty of Guadalupe HidalgoTreaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo
The Mexican Cession-Result of the The Mexican Cession-Result of the Treaty of Guadalupe HidalgoTreaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo
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Events of the 1850’s
SG #5,6
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-Taylor threatens veto of the 1850 Compromise Bill but….
dies after gastroenteritis: he ate milk, cherries and pickles at a 4th of July picnic
-Mexican Cession and California statehood threatens Union, southerners threaten secession.
-Politics dominated by Clay, Webster, and Calhoun one more time: What to do?
Stephen Douglas separates the Bill into 5 Bills, Millard Fillmore becomes president, supports 1850 Compromise
1850 Compromise passes as five separate bills:
1. California admitted as free state
2. Slave trade abolished in D.C.
3. Utah and New Mexico admitted with pop sov
4. Fugitive Slave Law passed
5. Texas gave up land to NM and Arizona
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1852 Election: Calm before the Storm
Democrat candidate: Franklin Pierce from NH
Scott runs as anti-slavery Whig, loses pro-slavery Whig support, splits party and loses election
President Franklin Pierce:
-Doughface: Northerner with southern sympathies
-Young America movement: Supported Ostend Manifesto: seize Cuba
-Kansas/Nebraska Act, Bloody Kansas sinks his presidency
Whigs dump Fillmore, nominate Gen. Winfield Scott
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Kansas Nebraska Act 18541. Stephen Douglas
promotes northern route for transcont RR
2. Southerners accept popular sov. for both Nebraska and Kansas
3. Nebraska goes for free soil
The Storm arrives! Northern Whigs, Free-Soilers and Northern Democrats hate the K/N Act. It destroys the sacred Missouri Compromise!
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Bleeding Kansas
Sacking of free-town Lawrence, KS May 22, 1856
Border ruffians from Missouri
Kansas implodes into violence as Missouri ruffians and pro slavery-ites invade
Republican Party is born-Northern Whigs and Dems and Free-Soilers
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-John Brown depicted as the savior of African Americans in the US
John Brown in Kansas and in West Virginia
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May 22, 1856: The caning of Charles Sumner (MA) by Preston Brooks (SC)
-Sumner had attacked the Fugitive Slave Law, Stephen Douglas, Comp of 1850 and Brook’s uncle Andrew Butler from SC
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1856: James Buchanan defeats John C. Fremont, Millard Fillmore helps as Know-Nothing candidate draining Republican votes from Fremont
Buchanan: utterly helpless as president, promises in inaugural to not run again:
Help!: Dred Scott Case, Lecompton Constitution, L-D Debates, Harper’s Ferry all blow up his presidency
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Dred Scott: May 1857, the worst case in Supreme Court history?
-SCCJ Taney, former slaveholder, rules:
-Scott has no rights as a citizen
-Fed govt had no right to enact Comp of 1820 therefore slavery is legal everywhere!
Fall of 1858: Lincoln-Douglas Debates in Illinois
Nation is captured by Illinois senate race and discussion about slavery-Douglas wins, but Lincoln makes a name for himself