Sectionalism, States Rights, and Democracy Chapter 11.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Why can’t we all just get along?
Advertisements

SSUSH8: The student will explain the relationship between growing north-south divisions and westward expansion. Explain how slavery became a significant.
Chapter 25 Section 1 The Cold War Begins Section 1 Slavery, States’ Rights, and Western Expansion Contrast the economies, societies, and political views.
Sectionalism, States Rights, and Democracy
Review Game: Sectionalism. Prior to the Civil War, what was the basis of the Northern economy?
C ALL TO F REEDOM HOLT HOLT, RINEHART AND WINSTON Beginnings to A DIVIDED NATION (1848–1860) Section 1: The Debate over Slavery Section 2: Trouble.
Issues Leading to the Civil War Standard SS8H6a. States’ Rights –States are sovereign – subject to no higher power except for those specifically granted.
ROAD TO CIVIL WAR MISSOURI COMPROMISE WHAT WAS THE CONCERN ABOUT ADMITTING MISSOURI AS A STATE? THE BALANCE BETWEEN SLAVE AND FREE STATES IN THE SENATE.
Drill 2/29 Debate issues: What were some of the key issues talked about in the Presidential Debate? How do you feel the candidates did?
Jacksonian Period Did you know that Andrew Jackson is one of the few Presidents to have a time period in our history named specifically for him?
Unity and Sectionalism
Unit 4: A Nation Divided Lesson 2: Tensions over Slavery and popular sovereignty.
South Carolina The History of an American State
Road to Civil War Slavery and the West p
Essential Information US History Early Republic. The Marshall Court John Marshall was Chief Justice of the Supreme Court from He believed in.
Sectionalism I. Industry North : Industrial economy Railroads Clippers increased foreign trade Machines helped produce more goods wave Favors protective.
Relationship between growing North-South divisions and Westward Expansion Standard 8.
Have you ever had to draw a boundary line to keep someone out of your stuff or to keep someone away? Why did this happen? What was the opposing side’s.
Andrew Jackson’s Presidency Nullification Conflict and the National Bank.
James Monroe was overwhelmingly elected president in 1816 and 1820 Monroe’s presidency began during an era of increased nationalism after the War of 1812.
Essential Question: – How did American nationalism increase during the “Era of Good Feelings” under President James Monroe?
Issues Leading to the Civil War Standard SS8H6a. Economy 1800s NORTH Factories –Produced finished goods Paid workers SOUTH Agriculture –Produced mainly.
 Why was the fear of slave revolts especially high among white South Carolinians in the 1800s?  a. the Nat turner rebellion took plan in S.C.  b. Northern.
James Monroe “Era of Good Feelings”.
Jeopardy The Game of Knowledge The Road to War AbolitionistsSectionalismVarious Events Leading to War 100.
Social Studies Chapter 12 Causes of the Civil War
Nullification Background Information write on back of Nullification graphic organizer Protective tariffs, tax on imported goods, had long been a topic.
The Tariff Debate (pages ) Explain in your own words what a tariff is. _______________________________________ Why did many northerners support.
Growing Sectionalism How did social and economic disparity contribute to the rise of sectionalism?
 Practiced based on the belief that states had more authority than the federal government and could determine which laws they wanted to pass within their.
SSUSH8 The student will explain the relationship between growing north-south divisions and westward expansion.
Antebellum Vocabulary 8-4. Sectionalism  Intense focus on local or regional issues or needs.
SC’s Secession from the Union Standard Indicator
TEKS 8C: Calculate percent composition and empirical and molecular formulas. Conflict over Slavery Before 1850.
Sectionalism Standard Indicator What is sectionalism? A: Restriction of interest to a narrow sphere; undue concern with local interests or petty.
From , the North and South became vastly different regions
ACOS # 12: Identify causes of the Civil War from the northern and southern viewpoints. ACOS # 12a: Describe the importance of the Missouri Compromise,
Compare the economic development in different regions (the South, the North, and the West) of the United States during the early nineteenth.
BELLWORK 1. Make sure you get a sheet with closure questions. You have 20 minutes to complete these. No, they do NOT have to be in complete sentences.
Growing Divisions Slavery & States’ Rights. Nullification 1828, Congress passed a high, protective tariff on goods manufactured in Europe. It was also.
Sectionalism Analyze how sectionalism arose from racial tension, including the Denmark Vesey plot, slave codes and the growth of the abolitionist.
THE MISSOURI COMPROMISE AND NULLIFICATION CRISIS.
Tariffs, 2 nd Bank and Secession  EQ: How did Jackson’s actions in reference to the idea of secession delay a civil war?
Events Leading to the Civil War
United, for Now How did racial tensions lead to the sectionalism across the country in the in the early 19th century?
Chapter 3 section 1 Objectives
Essential Question: How did westward expansion increase sectional tensions between the North & South from ? Warm-Up Question: Examine the image.
Antebellum Sectionalism.
Jacksonian Era and Sectional Tensions
Growing Sectionalism How did social and economic disparity contribute to the rise of sectionalism?
Unit 5 Continues… Standard 8-4.3
Slavery and politics Most white Southerners opposed abolition. White writers and public speakers argued slavery was a necessary part of life in the South.
Essential Question: How did American nationalism increase during the “Era of Good Feelings” under President James Monroe?
Andrew Jackson:
CALL TO FREEDOM--Beginnnings to 1877
James Monroe was overwhelmingly elected president in 1816 and 1820
Bellwork What were the consequences (negative or positive) of the War of 1812? Who won the war?
Events leading to Succession
Causes of the American Civil War
What are the key issues and events that led to the Civil War
Essential Question: How did westward expansion increase sectional tensions between the North and South from ? CPUSH Agenda for Unit 5.5: “Sectionalism.
Conflict over Slavery Before 1850
Chapter 12, Lesson 1 ACOS # 12: Identify causes of the Civil War from the northern and southern viewpoints. ACOS # 12a: Describe the importance of the.
James Monroe was overwhelmingly elected president in 1816 and 1820
Agenda 3/6 LEARNING TARGET History Day Presentations
James Monroe was overwhelmingly elected president in 1816 and 1820
Compare the economic development in different regions (the South, the North, and the West) of the United States during the early nineteenth century,
Conflict over Slavery Before 1850
Sectionalism TEST.
What are the key issues and events that led to the Civil War
Presentation transcript:

Sectionalism, States Rights, and Democracy Chapter 11

Sectionalism:

Sectionalism Nationalism & the United States  Lasted only a short while.Sectionalism Develop between the North and South Because of differences in economy, culture, and political interests.  Sectionalism is loyalty to a particular region or section of a country instead of to the nation as a whole  Opposite of nationalism

NorthSouth Economy Political Parties Slave Labor Abolition – end slavery

Sectionalism Differences between the two regions 1st developed as a result of the different geographies of the regions.  The North’s industrial economy Developed trading, small farms, and industries  The South’s agricultural economy Developed the plantation system. Different political beliefs - The political parties & the regions took different positions on the issues of the day.  Southerners tended to be Democratic- Republican Followers of Thomas Jefferson who called themselves Republicans  New Englanders tended to be Federalists (and later Whigs).

Sectionalism & Slave Labor When America was first being colonized, both regions had slavery. emancipated(set free)  After the American Revolution, the Northern states slowly emancipated (set free) their slaves There was little need for slave labor in the industrial North  The invention of the cotton gin led the South to become even more economically dependent upon slave labor.

What did the large number of immigrants to the Northern industries do to the House of Representatives? How did the slave population continue to increase in South Carolina even after the slave trade was outlawed?

Sectionalism & Representation Northern Industry  Attracted European immigrants  Allowed the North to have a larger representation in the House of Representatives. The South Did not attract many immigrants Although the international slave trade was outlawed in 1808, the numbers of slaves grew due to higher birth rates and smuggling.

What did the South view as the only “respectable” job? How did Southerners respond to Northern criticism about slavery?

Sectionalism & Abolition The growing abolition movement caused even more regional tension. Southerners Believed that planting was the only respectable job Feared that the abolitionist opinions would force them to give up slavery. Tried to keep anti-slavery propaganda out of their region, Northerners Abolitionists convinced large Northern audiences of the evils of the ‘peculiar institution.’ Southerners responded in anger to abolitionists’ criticism, claiming that slavery was actually good, because it cared for workers throughout their lives.

Describe the slave population in the south by the 1820s.

Slavery in the South South Carolina, by the 1820’s  The black population surpassed the white population  There was an African American majority in most Southern states  Sectionalism increased as a result of the growing slave population.

Denmark Vesey :

Denmark Vesey Plot The Denmark Vesey plot caused Southerners to become even more fearful and controlling of their slaves. Vesey was a free black carpenter in Charleston who supposedly organized a revolt of 9,000 followers to help free his race from slavery. The revolt was discovered before it took place and Vesey was hanged.

What happened to slave codes after the Denmark Vesey plot was discovered?

Denmark Vesey Plot Slave codes  Developed as a result of the Stono rebellion  The General Assembly passed laws that prohibited slaves from meeting, learning to read and write and that regulated all aspects of slaves’ lives  Were strengthened to better protect white society.

What three things did the South think would happen if slavery didn’t expand to new territories?

New Territories & Slavery Southerners Feared that if slavery could not expand into the territories 1.The national government would be in the hands of the North 2.Slavery would be outlawed 3.Southerners would have a large African American population that they could not control Both sides became more stubborn in their beliefs Were less willing to compromise on the issue of expansion of slavery into the territories

Why was the North concerned about Missouri joining the Union as a slave state?

New Territories & Slavery As the United States continued to grow, the North and South disagreed on allowing slavery in new territories. Northern states Concerned about Missouri joining the Union as a slave state  It was the first state admitted from the Louisiana Purchase  It would upset the equal balance of slave and free states’ votes in the Senate

The Missouri Compromise

1.Admitted Missouri as a slave state and Maine as a free state. 2.It also tried to avoid future controversy by drawing a line westward from Missouri’s southern border, at the 36 30’ latitude line 3.Prohibiting slavery in the Louisiana Territory north of that line. The South learned from this crisis the importance of maintaining the balance of Senate votes from slave and free states.

The Missouri Compromise

What was the protective tariff designed to do? Who did the tariff benefit?

Protective Tariffs In 1828, South Carolinians opposed a high protective tariff  Designed to raise import taxes on goods coming from foreign countries in order to make them more expensive than goods produced in the United States.  This would benefit the emerging industries in the North. Since South Carolina was largely agricultural, a protective tariff would raise the price of the manufactured goods that South Carolinians would buy from the industrial north or from Great Britain. Therefore southerners objected to raising the protective tariff.

Protective Tariff Political cartoon of the results of the protective tariffs.

Protective Tariff For example:: SC could buy a chair from Great Britain for $5 The chairs from the North were $8  The protective tariff placed a tax on the chairs from Great Britain raising the cost to $9.  South Carolina could still buy the chairs from Great Britain, but they would have to pay more  Could also buy chairs from the North but it was still more expensive than if they only had to pay $5. (Note: these numbers are not real prices.)

The Nullification Crisis In 1828 the United States Congress passed a protective tax Vice President John C. Calhoun, of SC, anonymously wrote a booklet claiming that it was a states’ right to declare such a law unconstitutional and nullify it through a special state convention. If states could do this, then they could declare anything they didn’t like unconstitutional, and would weaken the federal government. Both Washington, D.C. and South Carolina debated this opinion. Andrew Jackson John Calhoun

Nullifiers: Unionists:

The Nullification Crisis South Carolinians split into a States’ Rights Party, or Nullifiers, and a Union party Unionists. Nullifiers believed that states should have the right to nullify laws made by the federal government Unionists did not believe states should nullify laws. In 1832, the Nullifiers won control of the South Carolina General Assembly. Nullifiers Unionists

What did the SC Nullifiers do when the Tariff of 1832 was passed?

Tariff of 1832  Passed by the United States Congress  The South Carolina legislature called a meeting and … nullified the tariff John C. Calhoun Resigned the vice presidency strong voice against the tariff and for nullification. Entered the U. S. Senate where he was a strong voice against the tariff and for nullification.

What did President Andrew Jackson do when the Tariff of 1832 was nullified by South Carolina?

The Nullification Crisis President Andrew Jackson Condemned the nullifiers Said it was treason for a state to ignore federal laws. He urged Congress to pass a Force Bill that would authorize the national government to send troops to collect the tariff in South Carolina. The South’s reaction to Jackson’s Force Bill.

What finally ended the Nullification Crisis? How did South Carolina react to the Force Bill?

The End of the Crisis The Compromise Congress lowered the tariff South Carolina repealed (took back) the nullification However,  South Carolina nullified the Force Bill  Asserting a state’s right to declare an act of Congress to be unconstitutional in that state. The states’ right idea would continue to develop.