St. Louis, Cincinnati,
Milwaukee, Indianapolis, Chicago
B. The
Urbanizing North
C. The
Oligarchic South
--1860: 5.6 million
whites
--1700 own around 100
slaves
--46,274 own around 20
slaves
--slave
population was 3.84 million
--26,000
free blacks in the South
--36% of families in
South own
slaves in 1830
--25% of families in
South own
slaves in 1860
--By 1850, 20 percent
of adult white southerners
could not read or
write, compared to a national figure of 8 percent.
DO THESE DIFFERENCES
MATTER?
Wilmot
Proviso (1846)
II. COMPROMISE OF 1850
1845: 15-13 (Texas and Florida)
1846: 15-14 (Iowa)
1848: 15-15 (Wisconsin)
- Fugitive
Slave Act
- Abolish
slave trade in D.C.
- Cali in as
Free State
- Popular
Sovereignty in new territories
- Resolved
boundary dispute btw. Texas and New Mexico
III. The Trouble
Escalates:
A. Transcontinental
Railroad
--Stephen Douglas
B. Kansas-Nebraska Act
C. “Bleeding Kansas” (1854-1858)
--New
England Emigrant Aid Company
--“Beecher’s
Bibles”
--John Brown
--Pottawatomie
Creek (May 24, 1856)
D. The Caning of Sumner (1856)
SOUTHERN RESPONSE:
And, to add the
crowning glory to the good work, the slaves of Columbia have already a handsome
subscription, and will present an appropriate token of their regard to him who
has made the first practical issue for their preservation and protection in
their rights and enjoyments as the happiest laborers on the face of the globe.(source in class)
IV. Party Politics
A. Decline of the Whigs
B. Rise and Fall of the
"Know-Nothings"
C. Rise of the Republicans
--The Election of 1856--
Buchanan(Dem.) vs. Fremont(Rep.) in
North
Buchanan vs. Fillmore
in South
(American/Know-Nothing/Whig)
V. On the Verge of
War:
A. Dred Scott
An Excerpt from Booker
T. Washington’s Up From Slavery.
Washington recounts
a conversation with an elderly black man who said he had been born in Virginia
and sold into Alabama in 1845. I asked him how many were sold at the same time.
He said, “There were five of us: myself and brother and three mules.”
B. Panic of 1857
C. Lincoln-Douglas Debate for Senate
(Rep.) (Dem.)
D. John Brown's Raid…the book
discussion
E. The Election of Lincoln
Lincoln (Rep.)
Douglas (Dem.) {border and North}
Breckinridge (Dem.) {South}
Lincoln’s
First Inaugural Address: March 4, 1861
In
your hands, my dissatisfied fellow-countrymen, and not in mine,
is the momentous issue of civil war. The Government will not assail you.
You can have no conflict without being yourselves the aggressors. You
have no oath registered in heaven to destroy the Government, while I shall have
the most solemn one to "preserve, protect, and defend it."
I
am loath to close. We are not enemies, but friends. We must not be enemies.
Though passion may have strained it must not break our bonds of affection. The
mystic chords of memory, stretching from every battlefield and patriot grave to
every living heart and hearthstone all over this broad land, will yet swell the
chorus of the Union, when again touched, as surely they will be, by the better
angels of our nature.
Fort
Sumter, the first official “battle” of the Civil War, would occur a month
later (April 12, 1861)
VI. WAR...The
Crucial Year: 1863
Emancipation
Proclamation (1/1/63)
Battle of Gettysburg
(July 1-3, 1863)
The Gettysburg
Address (11/19/63)
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