Review 1789-1900. Federalist Era President : George Washington, no party, 1789-1797 Washington opposed parties - divisive Alexander Hamilton – supported.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Creating the New Republic Washington’s Inaugural Address Government Bureaucracy Bill of Rights Virginia Declaration of Rights Virginia Statute for Religious.
Advertisements

SECTIONALISM The Union in Crisis. Slavery Divides the Nation Northern Views on Slavery  African Americans inferior in North  Many Northerners were never.
Pippin Ch.5 Secession and Resistance By Matthew Pippin.
G. Washington First President Set lots of precedents – Bank of US – Veto – Whiskey Rebellion – Neutrality – Use of Cabinet – 2 terms No official.

Jeopardy $100 $200 $300 $400 $500 Government/ Legislative Causes $100 $200 $300 $400 $500 Events leading to war $100 $200 $300 $400 $500 People $100 $200.
The Civil War The Great Divide State’s Rights vs. Federal Government Industrial NE vs. Agricultural South Slavery and Slave Culture Patches Constitution.
The Civil War
Unit 3: The Civil War-A Nation Divided
American Civil War The American Civil War (1861–1865) was a conflict between the “United States Federal government” (the "Union") led by Abraham Lincoln.
Civil War UNIT FIVE. From the NORTH or SOUTH? William T. Sherman.
Slavery and States’ Rights Lincoln, Secession, and War
Road to the U.S. Civil War. Economic & Social Divisions, Distrust & Political Conflict → War The South was dependent on growing cotton and slavery A growing.
Antebellum America Overview. Transportation Canals Roads & Turnpikes (National Road) Railroads – North and West – Missing in the South.
The Civil War.
Issues Leading to the Civil War Standard SS8H6a. States’ Rights –States are sovereign – subject to no higher power except for those specifically granted.
Goal 3: Crisis, Civil War, and Reconstruction
The First Five Presidents Notes US 1.7c. George Washington serve d two terms As President First President under US Constitution Established.
Whiskey Rebellion: Farmers in Penn rebelled bc of the excise tax (whiskey). Washington sent the troops to crush the rebellion. PROVED THE NEW GOV’T was.
Unit 5 Test Review: Group Challenge. Unit 5 Review ■Groups will be presented a prompt & will list as many correct answers as possible within 1 minute.
Mr. Johnson APUSH Hopewell High School SECTIONAL CRISES OF THE 1850S.
Don’t Forget... Contestants …Always phrase your answers in the form of a question!
Territory Review Texas was annexed in 1845
North vs. South. There were larger cities and towns - Urban way of life There were more Small towns and farms - Rural way of life People live of farms.
North and South Divided.  Northwest Ordinance (1787) – Prohibited slavery in the Northwest Territory  1808 – International Slave Trade banned  Missouri.
Growth of a New Nation Chapters 6 through 10 Washington Jefferson.
Quick Review: How did America change from 1800 to 1830?
Roberts’ Raid Causes Kansas- Nebraska Act Literature Battlefields
■ Essential Question: – How did America evolve towards greater democracy between 1800 and 1840? – How did President Jackson reflect this change? ■ CPUSH.
Goal 3 The Civil War and Reconstruction Part 1: The Causes.
ACOS # 12: Identify causes of the Civil War from the northern and southern viewpoints. ACOS # 12a: Describe the importance of the Missouri Compromise,
Causes of the Civil War & The Civil War
Chapter 6, Section 5 Finance & States’ Rights p
2016.  Legislative Branch – Makes laws  Judicial Branch – interprets the laws  Checks and balances – limit the power of each branch  Anti-federalists.
Warmup Review Why would the tariff of abominations have such a negative impact on the South’s economy?
Two Nations NorthSouth Against slavery, but prejudice exists. Pro-slavery – viewed it as one big happy family. Believes the North is motivated by profit.
Antebellum Era & Civil War. Slavery The economy of southern states was based on agriculture (farming mainly of crops such as cotton). Slaves were thought.
Man vs. the Mob. Senator ____ of South Carolina declared that the South would not give up its liberty to save the Union. 1. Henry Clay 2. John C. Calhoun.
1/28 Agenda: – South Carolina Secession Declaration – Major civil war battles chart – Strengths and Weaknesses of each side According to the stats which.
The Early National Period The Early National Period The United States will undergo many changes between 1800 and 1845 Territory will expand.
Kind of 1. “ Revolution of 1800”- democratic and peaceful transition of power- wow – JA defeated Kept the financial plan Removed the Alien and Sedition.
Growth and Conflict Unit 1 Chapter 2. A. Key Events of Early Presidencies 1. George Washington’s Presidency  Developed cabinet of advisors  Political.
Chapter 10. Uncle Tom’s Cabin Harriet Beecher Stowe Published in 1852 Sold millions of copies Simon Legree he was from the north and moved to the south,
The Road to the Civil War. The Road to War, Causes of War: Slavery, but what else? ◦ Westward Expansion (of slavery) ◦ State’s Rights ◦ Abolitionists.
Causes of the War: Ch. 15 Previously Discussed….. Nullification Act (No High Tariffs or South Secedes) Missouri Compromise (Henry Clay) Sectionalism Different.
Constitution Compromise Washington’s Precedents.
Growth and Conflict Unit 1 Chapter 2
The Nation Splits Chapter 10.
Unit 3: The Civil War-A Nation Divided
Union soldiers are known as Yanks or Yankees
The 1850s: Road to Secession.
USH Ch 2 The New Republic The Declaration of Independence
Underlying Causes of the Civil War
Essential Question: How did America evolve towards greater democracy between 1800 and 1840? How did President Jackson reflect this change? CPUSH Agenda.
The Civil War North Vs. South.
The Age of Jackson through the Civil War ( )
Bellringer: You Should Know…
Civil War & Reconstruction
The Civil War-A Nation Divided
Ch. 5 Secession & Civil War
Essential Question: How did America evolve towards greater democracy between 1800 and 1840? How did President Jackson reflect this change? Warm up How.
Unit 3: The Civil War-A Nation Divided
The Road to the Civil War
I. Secession A minority of Americans wanted to leave the Union
Essential Question: How did America evolve towards greater democracy between 1800 and 1840? How did President Jackson reflect this change?
Essential Question: How did America evolve towards greater democracy between 1800 and 1840? How did President Jackson reflect this change?
CONFLICT BETWEEN THE UNION NORTH AND THE CONDERATE SOUTH
Quick Review: How did America change from 1800 to 1830?
UNIT 8: CIVIL WAR TEST REVIEW.
I. Secession A minority of Americans wanted to leave the Union
Presentation transcript:

Review

Federalist Era President : George Washington, no party, Washington opposed parties - divisive Alexander Hamilton – supported local industry through subsidies & tax support Excise tax, on distillers, & tariffs, to finance industry Jefferson et al opposed Hamilton – benefit a few at expense of many (farmers) Beginning of struggle between “big govt”.v. “small govt” Strict interpretation.v. loose interpretation Judiciary Act, 1789, created Supreme Court Whiskey Rebellion, 1794 French Revolution

John Adams, Federalist, Jefferson, V-P XYZ Affair, 1798 Alien & Sedition Acts Kentucky & Virginia Resolutions Packing the Judiciary – Midnight Judges

Thomas Jefferson, Republican, Dream of a nation of yeoman farmers Minimum role for federal governmentt Marbury.v. Madison – Supreme Court has judicial review over federal legislation “Marshall Court” will be influential for decades to come Louisiana Purchase, 1803 Lewis & Clark expedition, Aaron Burr – secession ? take Mexico, estab new nation - treason ? Barbary War – pirates in Mediterranean Conflict between France & Britain ~ tension w/ US (impressments, interference w/ freedom of the seas, i.e. trade) Embargo, 1807

James Madison, Republican, War of 1812 failed attack on Canada Andrew Jackson (Indians & New Orleans) British burn White House Hartford Convention Era of Good Feelings ( ) – unity, prosperity – short lived Protective Tariff, 1816

James Monroe, Republican, High foreign demand for cotton, grain, tobacco Recession of 1819 (worse in West) Dartmouth College v. Woodward, & McCullough v. MD (1819) Missouri Compromise, 1820 Expansion of West Transportation revolution (steamboat, canals, national highway) Cotton Kingdom Urbanization (Erie Canal ~ NYC) Industrialization Monroe Doctrine, 1823 Nationalism in “culture” – Noah Webster, Washington Irving, James Fenimore Cooper 2nd Great Awakening (begins 1801, Ky, continues into 1830s)

Jacksonian Democracy ( ) 1824 – the “corrupt bargain” election (JQ Adams & Clay “rob” Jackson) Jackson represents the “common man”. Jackson expands suffrage, so the “common man” can vote = Jacksonian Democracy. De Tocqueville, “Democracy in America”. Jackson uses the veto and establishes Presidential authority over Congress. Jackson defies the Supreme Court by Indian Removal Act, 1830 (Cherokees – Worcester.v. Georgia), Trail of Tears results. Jackson fights a running battle with Henry Clay and his American System. Whigs (Clay & Webster) v. Democrats (Jackson & Van Buren) – 2 party system becomes established.

Jacksonian Democracy ( ) Jackson stands for small govt, but NOT for nullification (remember, Jackson is President and nullification or secession reduces the power of the feds. John C. Calhoun is influential as South-North disputes blow up over slavery, tariffs, BUS, federally funded internal improvements. Tariff of Abominations (1828 – is slavery the real issue?), SC nullifies the tariff, Jackson responds with the Force Bill (1833) and SC backs down. Civil War is averted for a few more years. Webster – Hayne Debate, 1830 (Senate, Webster makes stirring speech about the union being “one and inseperable” – again, it’s the nullification / secession issue). Jackson fights Nicholas Biddle to destroy the BUS. Jackson declares the US “neutral”, but assists Texas break free from Mexico (1836)

Slavery Issue Missouri Compromise (1820) Abolitionists active (Wm Lloyd Garrison, 1831, The Liberator) States’ rights = right to have slaves Therefore the whole nullification / secession thing is really about slavery. Manifest Destiny; Louisiana Purchase; Texas; Mexican Land – slavery is issue in each Free Soil Party Slave revolts (Nat Turner, Denmark Vesey) Underground Railroad (Harriet Tubman) Wilmot Proviso

Social Issues Transcendentalists (Thoreau, Emerson) Utopian movements everywhere, inspired by Romanticism Beginning of Temperance Movement Feminism movement – Seneca Falls, 1848 Prison reform 2nd Great Awakening (began 1801, but took off in 1831)

Demographics Population moving west rapidly East becoming less significant Canals & railroads & national roads assist westward movement Immigration from Britain, Germany, Ireland Cities growing, as are health issues in cities Mormon migration westward (1846, Great Salt Lake)

Foreign Policy Mainly having to do with contiguous territory Obviously foreign policy is driven by “Manifest Destiny” idea (term coined in 1844) Texan independence (1836), Canada (Webster-Ashburton Treaty, 1842), Oregon Treaty (1846), Mexican War (1846)

Industrialization Growth of cities as a result Lowell System of employment in NE Tariffs to protect American industry (Clay’s Am. System)

Economic Issues Panic of 1837

Sectional Conflict & Causes of Civil War, Politics Growing concerns and disputes regarding slavery Wilmot Proviso, 1846 (re. Mexican Cession land). Free Soil Party, 1848 & 1852 Abolitionists, Underground Railroad 1850 Compromise (Clay, Calhoun, Webster, Douglas)  N. got California ; slave trade abolished in DC  Popular Sovereignty in rest of Mexican Cession land  S. got tougher Fugitive Slave Law ; Texas’ debt paid by feds Wm Seward : “a higher law” than the Constitution National joy that a Compromise had been reached Joy was short-lived

Sectional Conflict & Causes of Civil War, Politics “Uncle Tom’s Cabin” whipped up the slavery issue – H.B. Stowe’s response to Fug Slave Law Kansas-Nebraska Act, 1854 (Douglas) popular sovereignty trans-continental railroad repealed Missouri Compromise Bleeding Kansas (Free Soilers, John Brown), 1856 Preston Brooks “canes” Charles Sumner, 1856 Dred Scott v. Sanford, 1857 Chief Justice, Roger B. Taney, Md. Delivered extreme Southern position on slavery issue North outraged (refused to accept decision) Lincoln - Douglas Debates, 1858 Lincoln = slavery should be extended Douglas = popular sovereignty Freeport Doctrine – Douglas defied Dred Scott ruling

Sectional Conflict & Causes of Civil War, Politics Decline of the 2 party system (split by slavery issue ; also by “nativism” – Know Nothing Party took votes from Whigs) – tougher to deal with slavery when there is no opposition party to support Growth of Republican Party (Lincoln) to replace Whigs – result of opposition to Kansas-Nebraska Act. Ran Millard Fillmore in 1856 (lost) Democrats split into North & South. John Brown’s Raid, Harper’s Ferry, 1859 South convinced that all North was fanatically anti-slavery Hinton Rowan Helper’s book “The Impending Crisis in the South”  argued that slavery was economically harmful to South  South outraged Fear that poor whites in South would turn against slavery Election of Abraham Lincoln, 1860 Crittenden Compromise, failed

Presidents General Zachary Taylor, Whig, (died) ; Millard Fillmore, Franklin Pierce, Democrat, James Buchanan, Democrat, Abraham Lincoln, Republican, 1860 ~

Economics Growth and prosperity Tremendous growth of railroads ~ national market ~ big business Steamboat trade inland, clipper ships at sea ~ tremendous trade Textile industries booming in NE (inventions) South profiting due to cotton sales – King Cotton – slave labor the key Free labor in North = expensive ~ incentive to use machines Agriculture shifting to Midwest (grain, livestock) ~ railroads help Cyrus McCormick, mechanical reaper & thresher Panic of 1857 (over-speculation, bad banking practices, Crimean War cut European investments to US)

Foreign Policy Commodore Perry pressures Japan to trade, 1853 Westward expansion – tried to annex Hawaii ; Gadsden Purchase 1853 (for transcontinental railroad); tried to buy Cuba

Civil War, Numerous causes, but SLAVERY the most obvious. Desire of South to secede is the catalyst. North says secession is unconstitutional. North claims it is fighting to preserve the Union. Emancipating slaves won’t become a war goal until South opens fire on N. troops at Fort Sumter, Charleston harbor, SC, April 12, North has numerous advantages – greater wealth to finance war, 3-to-1 population advantage (plus new immigrants during war), industrial might, superior transportation /railway network, superior navy which can partially blockade South, and astute President in Lincoln. South has advantage of superior military leaders (Stonewall Jackson, Robert E. Lee, Johnston). North is hampered for first couple of years by timid or aged generals (McDowell, McClellan, Winfield Scott). Later promote younger more determined generals such as U.S. Grant, Sherman, Sheridan. South is physically large, thus difficult for North to conquer. South’s President, Jefferson Davis, proved indecisive. Much of fighting conducted in South, giving advantage to South of knowing the terrain, and having friendly civilians. South’s population is one-third slave (can’t use in army, can’t trust not to rebel).

Strategy North wants to capture South’s capital, Richmond, Va., Southern capital. 2 Battles of Bull Run. South successful, but both armies raw & poorly trained. Peninsula Campaign to capture Richmond. (Spring, 1862, McClellan loses his nerve, and retreats). North wants to starve the South – hence naval blockade (Anaconda Plan). But coastline too long to adequately blockade. North wants to split South in 2, along the Mississippi R., thus dividing and conquering. Need to capture New Orleans (April 1862). Meanwhile, Western campaign, Tennessee. Battle of Shiloh. US Grant first noticed here. Northern diplomacy. Stop South being recognized by Britain or France. South hoped that cotton would lure allies. It didn’t. Slavery was a stronger issue, and neither Br nor France would support the institution of slavery. Naval battles ? Ironclads. “Virginia” (South) fights “Monitor” (North), May Stalemate. Finish. Lee invades the Pennsylvania, to relieve pressure on Richmond. Lee’s army meets Meade’s Army of the Potomac at Gettysburg, July Decisive battle, bloodiest of the entire war. Lee is defeated, but Meade allows Lee to escape back to Virginia. Grant captures Vicksburg, Mississippi, July, 1863, thus giving North control of entire Miss. R. South cut in two. 1864, Grant sends Sherman to capture Atlanta, Ga., while Grant himself leads Army of Potomac on another assault on Richmond. Sherman takes Atlanta, then marches to the sea at Savannah, cutting a swath of destruction (Dec. 1864). Lee forced to surrender at Appomattox Courthouse, Va., April 9, Lincoln assassinated, April 14, 1865, in Washington D.C.

Homefront Public morale hard to maintain in North. Copperheads were Southern supporters in North. Conscription in North, 1863, caused discontent. Draft-dodging and desertion problems in N. and S. High tariffs & income tax (constitutional) in North to pay for war. “Greenbacks” issued by feds. South issued their own paper money. Inflation. Scarcity of food, and men, in South. Lincoln suspended “habeas corpus”. Stretched his Constitutional powers to the limit, and beyond. Davis (in South) met opposition from state governors who wanted to keep “states rights”, and who saw Richmond as a threat to their liberty. Emancipation Proclamation from Lincoln, 1 January, Gave North the moral high ground. Desperation from Lincoln ? Waited until after “victory” at Battle of Antietam. No Proclamation earlier in war for fear of upsetting Border states, who could have swung their allegiance to South. Northern public tired of war and continuing casualties. Low morale Election in North. Lincoln re-elected with V-P Andrew Johnson (Tennessee). Sherman captures Atlanta, lifts Northern spirits, gives big boost to Lincoln. McClellan runs for Democrats, calling for a negotiated peace with South.

The Gilded Age: Politics Period of Republican Party supremacy President , Ulysses S Grant- good soldier, not a great president. Waving the bloody shirt = reviving glorified memories from war, and reminding the electorate as to who was “the enemy.” Corruption – an embarrassingly large number of Grant’s cabinet members were guilty of corruption. Did Grant know, or was he out of touch with reality ? Horace Greeley (influential NY editor) first Republican, then switched to Democrats. Republicans re-nominated Grant. Election of 1876  R = Hayes, D = Tilden, 19 contested states, FL, LA and SC all sent in 2 sets of ballots, one Republican and one Democrat. Constitutional crises, who counts the ballots, House under D control Senate under R control, which ever one counted would favor in the interests of their party.  Compromise of 1877 set up an electoral count act and an electoral commission to count the votes. D accepted Republican returns and in return Federal troops removed from SC & LA.

The Gilded Age: Social Issues U.S moral stature was in question, bred waste, extravagance, speculation & graft. Because of compromise of 1877 black rights suffered, federal troops were gone, southern states added literacy requirements, voter registration laws and poll taxes, blacks can no longer vote California has 75,000 Asian newcomers, 9% of pop, racism against Chinese. Irish especially racist, lead by Denis Kearney resented competition of cheap labor. 1879, Congress said no more Chinese laborers in the country.

The Gilded Age: Economic Issues Paralyzing economic depression, 1873, based on over-speculation, huge inflation, problems with silver, no more silver being sold to treasury to mint, then silver production goes up, people now want silver dollars Bland-Allison Act, states the treasury will buy $2 –4 million worth of silver a month. Basic economic agreement between Democrats and Republicans.

Corruption Jay Gould & Jim Fisk = two millionaires tried to corner gold market, 1869, day named black Friday tried dive the gold price up the wall, treasury compelled to release gold, this was unexpected to the con artists. Tweed ring NYC mayor Boss Tweed, cheated the books pocketed much of the cities money. Thomas Nast NYT cartoonist exposed Tweed. Samuel L Tilden, was prosecutor for case. Credit Mobilier scandal, hired to build, union pacific railway, hired themselves to do the job made extra $20,000 per mile of track laid.