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Slavery and Kansas  Fugitive Slave Act  Underground Railroad  Harriet Tubbman  Harriet Beecher Stowe  Uncle Tom’s Cabin  Kansas-Nebraska Act  Bleeding.

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Presentation on theme: "Slavery and Kansas  Fugitive Slave Act  Underground Railroad  Harriet Tubbman  Harriet Beecher Stowe  Uncle Tom’s Cabin  Kansas-Nebraska Act  Bleeding."— Presentation transcript:

1 Slavery and Kansas  Fugitive Slave Act  Underground Railroad  Harriet Tubbman  Harriet Beecher Stowe  Uncle Tom’s Cabin  Kansas-Nebraska Act  Bleeding Kansas  John Brown

2 Fugitive Slave Act  Each case looked at by a federal commissioner $10 if returned to slavery $5 if freed  Anyone helping a fugitive slave could face $1000 fine and 6 months in jail

3 Fugitive Slave Act cont.  Northerners created Personal Liberty Laws No runaway slave could be imprisoned Had to be tried by a jury Cost those trying to get a slave back a lot of money

4 Underground Railroad  “conductors” hid slaves as they ran to freedom in Canada

5 Harriet Tubbman  Runaway Slave  “Conductor” of the U.RR.  Made 19 trips to Canada Freed 300 slaves  Could stay in Northern states or go to Canada

6 Harriet Beecher Stowe  Author of Uncle Tom’s Cabin  Plot was melodramatic and stereotypical Put a face on slavery Made it a moral issue  Stowe did little research to write the book

7 Stowe Cont. “So you’re the little lady who started this big war” -Abraham Lincoln

8 Kansas Nebraska Act  Stephen Douglas Pushed the issue of popular sovereignty on the new territory of Kansas Convinced that the open prairie could not support slavery Southerners saw this as a way to flood the area with slave supporters If agreed to, it would repeal the Missouri Compromise

9 Kansas Nebraska Act Bill would divide into two territories Nebraska in north Kansas in south  Did repeal the Missouri Compromise  Pres. Franklin Pierce signed bill into law in 1854

10 Bleeding Kansas  Settlers poured into Kansas to support their own views on slavery  Rivals created two seats of government Proslavery government set up at Lecompton created a constitution with pro-slavery views Abolitionist government set up in Topeka

11 Bleeding Kansas cont.  Lawrence, KS was founded by abolitionists People of Lawrence were branded as traitors Lawrence was sacked May 21, 1856  Posse of 800 men were sent to Lawrence  Burned anti-slavery headquarters  Destroyed two newspaper offices  Killed 5 men

12 John Brown  Believed that God had called upon him to fight slavery  Pottawatomie Massacre In response to sacking of Lawrence  Pulled 5 proslavery men from their beds and cut off their head and stabbed them with swords Brown fled Served as a rallying cry for proslavery

13 Violence in the Senate  Sen. Charles Sumner Anti-Slavery  Verbally attacked those who were proslavery including Sen. Andrew Butler from S.C.  Rep. Preston Brooks Pro-Slavery  Nephew of Sen. Butler  Attacked Sumner on the floor of the senate with a cane

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