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The Far West and Territorial Crisis. I. Geopolitics and the expansion of American power Oregon Texas Mexican- American War.

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Presentation on theme: "The Far West and Territorial Crisis. I. Geopolitics and the expansion of American power Oregon Texas Mexican- American War."— Presentation transcript:

1 The Far West and Territorial Crisis

2 I. Geopolitics and the expansion of American power Oregon Texas Mexican- American War

3 A. Oregon 1.American – British control 2.Midwestern & Yankee settlers 3.“54’40 or fight!”

4 B. Tejas 1.1821 – Mexican Independence Moses Austin Stephen F. Austin 2. Tejanos & tension Alamo, 1836

5 3. Republic of Texas (1836) - struggle for admission (1845) 4. Disputed boundaries

6 C. Mexican-American War, 1846- 1848 1.James K. Polk - politics of expansion 2. Plan backfires Henry David Thoreau Civil Disobedience

7 3. Wilmot Proviso, 1846 - breakdown of national party system - southern Dems & Whigs unite - northern Whigs & Dems lose credibility - 1848, Free Soil Party

8 II. Territorial Crisis and Coming of the Civil War

9 A. Questions remaining 1.California Gold Rush 2.Slavery in D.C. 3.Fugitive Slave Act

10 B. Compromise of 1850 1.California admitted as free state 2.Popular Sovereignty in other territories 3.Slave trade abolished in D.C. 4.Fugitive Slave Act of 1850

11 The Republic is saved… …not quite Left open the possibility that slavery could or could not expand Reopened “constitutionality” of slavery Fugitive Slave Act wildly unpopular in North

12 III. Things Fall Apart

13 A. Popular Sovereignty 1.Stephen Douglas

14 2. Kansas-Nebraska Act, 1854 - violation of MO Compromise 3. Race to settle Plains

15 B. “Bleeding Kansas” 1.1855, Lecompton Constitution 2.Open warfare Sack of Lawrence, 1856 Pottawatomie Creek Massacre, 1856 Violation of Popular Sovereignty

16 C. Dred Scott Case, 1857 Dred Scott Roger Taney 1. Constitution protected slavery everywhere

17 South: Any further opposition to spread of slavery was a threat to Constitutional rights of Southerners North: Texas, Mexico, Compromise of 1850, Kansas-Nebraska, Dred Scott… …victory of the Slave Power Conspiracy

18 1854 – (modern) Republican Party coalition formed in opposition to (spread of) slavery Free Soilers, Free Labor Ideology progressives, northern Whigs, industrialists Abolitionists 1 region – 1 unifying issue

19 D. 1860 1.4 candidates, one result (Lincoln, Douglas, Bell, Breckinridge) 2.Pro-slave faction permanent minority

20 E. Southern Radicals 1. Deep South revolt -Dec. 20, 1860 – South Carolina Convention -followed by MS, AL, GA, LA, TX by February -Montgomery Convention, Feb. 1861 Confederate States of America

21 2. Confederate Constitution strong states’ rights no abolition of slavery Jefferson Davis

22 F. Presidential response 1.“Lame Duck” Buchanan 2.Abraham Lincoln 3.April 1861, Ft. Sumter


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