Download - Political Action on Slavery
Political Action on Slavery
Missouri Compromise, Wilmot
Proviso, Compromise of 1850
Missouri Compromise
• The Missouri Compromise was passed in
1820 and prohibited slavery in the former
Louisiana Territory north of the 36 30’
parallel except within the boundaries of the
proposed state of Missouri. To balance the
number of "slave states" and "free states,"
the northern region of what was then
Massachusetts was admitted into the United
States as a free state to become Maine.
Map of the Missouri Compromise
Adding to the Slave Issue
• Tariff of Abominations (Tariff of 1828) - The clash between John C.
Calhoun and Andrew Jackson. South Carolina felt controlled by the
Federal Government (an unfair tariff).
• Nat Turner's Rebellion - A black minister who led a massacre of
50+ southerners. REACTION - white militias killed hundreds of
blacks.
• The Nullification Crisis (1832) - Similar to VA and KY Resolutions,
stating a Constitution law "null and void." In this case federal tariffs.
More anger and resentment from the South.
The Amistad Case
• Noted by historian, Samuel Eliot
Morison as, "... The most important
court case involving slavery before
being eclipsed by that of Dred Scott.”
• Involved the non-importation law of
1807. African slaves took over the
clipper ship, La Armistad. They were
granted their freedom as the Spanish
violated this law.
• Video includes: John Quincy Adams
and Martin Van Buren
• John Quincy Adams connecting equal
rights and the Declaration of
Independence.
Wilmot Proviso
• The Wilmot Proviso, one of the major events leading to the
American Civil War, would have banned slavery in any
territory to be acquired from Mexico in the Mexican War or in
the future, including the area later known as the Mexican
Cession, but which some proponents construed to also include
the disputed lands in south Texas and New Mexico east of the
Rio Grande.
Compromise of 1850
Sectional Issues
• California statehood
• Southerners
threatening secession
• Underground
Railroad and issues
over the Fugitive
Slave Law
• Proposed by Henry
Clay
The Compromise of 1850 overturned the
Missouri Compromise and left the overall issue
of slavery unsettled.
Which received the better deal?
Kanas-Nebraska Act
• Started by Stephen Douglas
of Illinois.
• Introduced the idea of
popular sovereignty to
decide whether a state would
have slaves.
• Led to Bleeding Kansas, as
northerners and southerners
rushed to inhabit the territory.
• Passing of the bill split the
Whig party, leading to the
modern Republican party.
The “Little Giant”
Kansas-Nebraska Act, 1854
Caning of Charles Sumner
Southern Representative from South Carolina Preston Brooks
attacked the northern Senator from Massachusetts over his
“Crime Against Kansas” speech.
Trends in Antebellum America,
1800-18601. New intellectual and religious movements.
(Shakers, transcendentalists, etc.)
2. Social reforms. (Lowell System, Seneca Falls, William Lloyd Garrison, etc.)
3. Industrial Revolution
4. Second Party System (Popular vote increased)
5. Federalists Legacy (Marshall decisions & small stumble of states’ rights)
6. Increase in American Nationalism (Manifest Destiny, War of 1812)
7. Expansionism (Pioneers, internal improvements)
Economic and Religious Reasons to move westward.
Major Pioneer Settlers
• Donner Party – Took all possible measures to
survive an unexpected winter.
http://www.history.com/topics/donner-party
• Sutter’s Mill, 1848 (GOLD!)
Pony Express
• Between April
1860 and
November 1861.
• Could receive
newspapers and
letters within 10
days.
• Moving from New
York, to Missouri,
to San Francisco.
Dred Scott Decision, was a landmark
decision by the U.S. Supreme Court. It
held that the federal government had
no power to regulate slavery in the
territories, and that people of African
descent (both slave and free) were not
protected by the Constitution and were
not U.S. citizens.