States Rights Southerners believed that the individual state governments should have more power than the federal government (in Washington DC). They believed.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Scavenger Hunt - Answers
Advertisements

5th Grade Civil War Study Guide
Ch 14 Review Use your whiteboard to answer the following questions about the causes of the Civil War.
Slavery in the North Though legal, slavery was largely unnecessary in the North. By 1804, all Northern states had outlawed slavery within their borders.
Chapter 10 The Union in Peril
The Crisis Deepens Take notes as the lecture is given. You will need to copy the titles and what is in red.
SECTIONALISM The Union in Crisis. Slavery Divides the Nation Northern Views on Slavery  African Americans inferior in North  Many Northerners were never.
EVENTS LEADING TO THE CIVIL WAR 1820’s to 1850’s.
North and South Take Different Paths: By the early 1800’s the North had become reliant on Industry and Commerce, where the south had gone towards plantation.
Click to add text Events Leading to the Civil War.
Compromise and Conflict in the early 19 th century (early 1800s)
Causes of the Civil War 10 Critical Events. US-Mexican War ( ) Starts with a fight over Texas Results in the addition of lots of new territory (S.W.
A Divided Nation: Causes of the Civil War CST Analyze the significance of the Wilmot Proviso (1846), the Compromise of 1850, Henry Clay's role.
States Rights The south believed that the Union is a voluntary group of states and if the central government goes too far, each state has the right to.
Divisive Politics of Slavery How do the North & South differ on Slavery?
THE UNION IN PERIL CHAPTER 10 Review When voters in a territory vote on whether or not to have slavery.
The Road to the American Civil War- Day 1. Early Attempts to Contain Slavery: REVIEW 1820: Missouri Compromise divides the nation at the 36 30’ parallel.
Causes of the Civil War Notes
The Road to Civil War ( ) I’ll provide the information, you provide the visuals.
Divisive Politics of Slavery How do the North & South differ on Slavery?
Causes of Civil War Review Sheet. 1. Abraham Lincoln 2. Stephen Douglas 3. John Brown 4.Henry Clay 5. Harriet B. Stowe 6. Jefferson Davis 7. Dred Scott.
Sectionalism – the greater loyalty many Americans felt toward their own section than to the country as a whole Southerners – economy centered around plantations,
Causes of the CW Continued… Causes of the CW Continued…
YOU MUST WRITE EVERYTHING DOWN, UNLESS I TELL YOU OTHERWISE.
North and South Divided.  Northwest Ordinance (1787) – Prohibited slavery in the Northwest Territory  1808 – International Slave Trade banned  Missouri.
The 1850s: A Decade of Crisis Causes of the Civil War.
TIMELINE of EVENTS Mexican War to the Civil War Causes of the Civil War.
Chapter 15 Causes of the Civil War!. Fugitive Slave Act 1850 Part of the Compromise of 1850 Required Northerners to step up efforts to capture Northerners.
Missouri Compromise, More land=more issues over slavery.
Causes of the Civil War Answer Key.
Compromise and Conflict in the early 19 th century (early 1800s)
Causes for Civil War. Westward Expansion As new territories became states…would they be free or slave? As new territories became states…would they be.
The Forces that Divide the Nation. I. Politics u A. Agricultural South vs. Industrial North – 1. Northern cities, population, manufacturing. – 2. Plantations,
North relies on industry and commerce and the South rely on plantations and agriculture North - Industry South- Agriculture.
Issues Leading to the Civil War Southerners threaten secession to get what they want!!!
COMPROMISE Causes of the Civil War 3.01.
Goal 3 The Civil War and Reconstruction Part 1: The Causes.
EVENTS LEADING TO THE CIVIL WAR Missouri Compromise, 1820 Missouri became a slave state. Missouri became a slave state. Maine became a free state. Maine.
Causes of the Civil War. Harriet Beecher Stowe She wrote Uncle Tom’s Cabin in an effort to gain support for the abolitionist movement.
 Chapter 19.  Transcontinental Railroad required land o Stephen A. Douglas proposed this plan to allow slavery in the new territory in exchange for.
Continued… Repealed the Missouri Compromise 7 7.
Jeopardy The Game of Knowledge The Road to War AbolitionistsSectionalismVarious Events Leading to War 100.
3.01 Trace the economic, social, and political events from the Mexican War to the outbreak of the Civil War Analyze and assess the causes of the.

Chapter 14 “A Divided Nation ” Ms. Monteiro Debate over Slavery Trouble in Kansas Political Divisions Grab Bag
Causes of the Civil War 5 th Grade Social Studies Chapter 12 Lesson 1 Worlds Apart.
SC’s Secession from the Union Standard Indicator
Two Nations NorthSouth Against slavery, but prejudice exists. Pro-slavery – viewed it as one big happy family. Believes the North is motivated by profit.
The Union in Crisis Unit 1 Section 2 Part 1. A. Expansion and Slavery The gold rush caused California to be considered for statehood Argument over whether.
Factors Leading to Sectional Division. Compromise of 1850 Proposed by Senator Henry Clay of Kentucky California admitted to the Union as a free state.
Unit 5: THE UNION IN PERIL THE DIVISIVE POLITICS OF SLAVERY Over the centuries, the Northern and Southern sections of the United States developed.
Objective: Students will understand the events that led to the Civil War.
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.
James Buchanan - Democrat 15 th President
3.01 Trace the economic, social, and political events from the Mexican War to the outbreak of the Civil War Analyze and assess the causes of the.
Events Leading to the Civil War
Causes of the Civil War.
Causes of the Civil War.
Causes of the Civil War.
US HISTORY OBJECTIVE 6.01 AND 6.02
Events Leading to the Civil War
Decade of Crisis
Causes of the Civil War Notes
Causes of the Civil War 10 Critical Events.
Warm Up Define Cash Crop and identify the cash crop of Texas in the 1850’s. (use your book if you need it) Give the Year for each of the following land.
Road to War Decade of Crisis
Causes of the Civil War.
Causes of the Civil War.
Decade of Crisis
The Road to Civil War ( ) Image needed.
Presentation transcript:

States Rights Southerners believed that the individual state governments should have more power than the federal government (in Washington DC). They believed that Federal Power could be misused to do things that the southern states didn’t like, like take away their property (slaves), impose high tariffs on them, and take away other rights.

Slavery Only 25 percent of Southerners owned slaves but almost all Southerners supported slavery while most northerners opposed it. Slavery was important to the booming cotton industry Without firing a gun, without drawing a sword, should they make war on us, we could bring the whole world to our feet... What would happen if no cotton was furnished for three years?... England would topple headlong and carry the whole civilized world with her save the South. No, you dare not to make war on cotton. No power on the earth dares to make war upon it. Cotton is King. -Senator James Henry Hammond of South Carolina

Tariff Disputes Tariff= a tax on imported goods. South= wanted low tariffs to keep prices low on the goods they bought North= wanted high tariffs to protect its manufactured goods against foreign goods.

Free Soil vs Slave Territory Fights Missouri Compromise of 1821 –Missouri was admitted as a slave state –Maine was a free state The Compromise of 1850 –California as a free state –Fugitive slave law –New Mexico territory can vote on slavery.

Cultural and economical Differences South= life revolved agriculture, wealthy planters and the economy they controlled. North= industry; cities were the center of society.

Rise of Abolitionist Abolitionist are people who believed that Slavery was morally wrong and wanted to end it. Some famous abolitionist include: –William Lloyd Garrison foundered of the the famous Abolitionist newspaper the Liberator. –Harriet Tubman leader of the Underground Railroad that helped escaped slaves find their way north. –Frederick Douglass a free black man who was a elegant speaker for the abolitionist movement

Uncle Tom’s Cabin 1852 Book by Harriet Beecher Stowe It portrayed the moral issues of slavery. Tells the story of Tom, a long suffering slave, who helps his nieces escape to freedom. Many southerners believed the book falsely criticized the South and slavery.

Kansas-Nebraska Act 1854 the people in the Kansas-Nebraska territory wanted statehood. There was another huge argument over the territory. According to the Missouri Compromise both new states should have been free soil but Southerners wanted the people to vote on the slavery. The Kansas-Nebraska act was passed that allowed the people in the territories to vote if they wanted Slavery. Only two southerner senators voted against it, including Sam Houston of Texas who said that it would cause the Union to “Go down in a sea of blood and smoking ruin.”

“Bleeding Kansas” Fighting broke out in Kansas against Free-Soil Jayhawks and Border Ruffian’s (pro-slavery). Hundreds are killed in fighting that lasted for over 10 years. Kansas was voted a Free State in 1861

Rise of the Republican Party The Republican Party was established in the early 1850’s to stop the expansion of slavery. The Republicans were made up of Northern Democrats and members of the now extinct Whig party and really became popular around the time of the Kansas-Nebraska Act. They became the party for Abolitionist. Abraham Lincoln and Charles Sumner. Two early important Republicans

1856-Charles Sumner attacked by Preston Brooks Preston Brooks a Senator from South Carolina beat Massachusetts Senator Charles Sumner with his cane on the floor of the U.S. Senate.

Dred Scott Decision 1856 The Supreme Court decision ruled Scott (a slave) was not a U.S. citizen but property of his owner. Dred Scott, a Missouri slave, sued for his freedom after his owner died. His owner had lived in non slave states. Ruling meant no slaves could ever be a U.S. citizen and slaves could be owned even in “free- soil states”

Harpers Ferry 1859: Abolitionist John Brown and his followers seized the federal arsenal at Harper’s Ferry, Virginia. They hoped to stir a slave revolt and end slavery in Virginia. Brown (who had murdered slavery men in Kansas) was captured and hanged. The Southern states were shocked and started organizing southern militias.

Lincoln-Douglas Debates Abraham Lincoln was against slavery and challenged the Author of the Kansas-Nebraska Act, Stephen Douglas, to a serious of debates regarding slavery. These debates became very famous and made Lincoln a political star. Lincoln argued that slaves are not property but human beings who should get basic human rights.

The Election of Abraham Lincoln The south was opposed to Republican Lincoln in the White House and threatened to secede or leave the Union if he won the election of The Democrats split into two parties which caused Lincoln to win with only 40 percent of the votes and became the 16 th President. Southern propaganda of Lincoln. “Thus always to tyrants “

Abe Lincoln in 1860 Abe Lincoln in 1865