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Chapter 15 Toward Civil War (1840-1861) Section 4 Secession and War

Chapter 15 Toward Civil War (1840-1861) Section 4 Secession and War

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Page 1: Chapter 15 Toward Civil War (1840-1861) Section 4 Secession and War

Chapter 15 Toward Civil War (1840-1861)

Section 4 Secession and War

Page 2: Chapter 15 Toward Civil War (1840-1861) Section 4 Secession and War

A. A

B. B

C. C

D. D

Rate your agreement with the following statement: States should be allowed to leave the Union if they disagree with the policies of the federal government.

A. Strongly agree

B. Somewhat agree

C. Somewhat disagree

D. Strongly disagree A B C D

0% 0%0%0%

Page 3: Chapter 15 Toward Civil War (1840-1861) Section 4 Secession and War

What role did the theory of states’ rights play in the outbreak of the Civil War?

Page 4: Chapter 15 Toward Civil War (1840-1861) Section 4 Secession and War

Election of 1860• The issue of slavery split the

Democratic Party• Northern Democrats

nominated Stephen Douglas• Southern Democrats

(vowed to uphold slavery) nominated John C. Breckinridge

• Moderates formed the Constitutional Union Party and nominated John Bell

• The Constitutional Union Party took no position on slavery

• The Republicans nominated Abraham Lincoln

Page 5: Chapter 15 Toward Civil War (1840-1861) Section 4 Secession and War

Election of 1860 Continued• The Republicans’ platform

was that slavery should be left undisturbed where it existed, but…

• Slavery should be excluded from the territories

• Many Southerners feared a Republican victory would encourage slave revolts

• The Democrats were divided and Lincoln won a clear majority of electoral votes

• The vote went along sectional lines

• Lincoln’s name did not even appear on the ballot of many Southern states

• Lincoln won every Northern state

Page 6: Chapter 15 Toward Civil War (1840-1861) Section 4 Secession and War

A. A

B. B

C. C

D. D A B

C

D

0% 0%0%0%

Which was included in the platform of the Republican Party in the election of 1860?

A. The question of slavery should be decided by popular sovereignty.

B. In a free society, the minority had the right to break up the government.

C. Slavery should be left where it existed but be excluded from the territories.

D. The Missouri Compromise should be reinstated.

Page 7: Chapter 15 Toward Civil War (1840-1861) Section 4 Secession and War

Attempt at Compromise• The Republicans promised

not to disturb slavery where it existed

• Many Southerners did not trust the Republican Party to protect their rights

• December 20, 1860- South Carolina seceded

• Other states debated secessionsecession

• US leaders worked for a compromise

Page 8: Chapter 15 Toward Civil War (1840-1861) Section 4 Secession and War

Attempt at Compromise Continued• Kentucky Senator John John

CrittendenCrittenden proposed Constitutional Amendments to protect slavery in territories below 36°30' north

• Republicans rejected the provision

• They just won on the principle that slavery would not extend in any territories

• Lincoln wrote “the government shall be broken up unless we surrender to those we have beaten”

• Leaders in the South responded “We spit upon every plan to compromise”

• One Southern leader said “No human power can save the Union”

Page 9: Chapter 15 Toward Civil War (1840-1861) Section 4 Secession and War

An anti-Republican cartoon from early 1861 shows supporters of the Crittenden Compromise forcing the "constitutional" remedy down the throat of the uncooperative Republican who is still clutching the Republican Platform with its pledge of "no compromise."

Page 10: Chapter 15 Toward Civil War (1840-1861) Section 4 Secession and War

The Confederacy• By February 1861- Texas,

Louisiana, Mississippi, Alabama, Florida, and Georgia (+South Carolina) had seceded

• February 4th- delegates from these states met to form a new nation

• The Confederate States Confederate States of Americaof America with Jefferson Jefferson DavisDavis as their president

• Southerners justified secession with the theory of states’ rights

• They argued that the states voluntarily entered the Union

Page 11: Chapter 15 Toward Civil War (1840-1861) Section 4 Secession and War

The Confederacy Continued• They defined the

Constitution as a contract among the independent states

• They believed the national government violated that contract by refusing to enforce the Fugitive Slave Act

• Also by denying Southern states equal rights in the territories

• Because of these reasons, the states had a right to leave the Union

Page 12: Chapter 15 Toward Civil War (1840-1861) Section 4 Secession and War

Reaction to Secession• Many Southerners welcomed

secession• They rang church bells and

celebrated in the streets• Other Southerners voiced

concern about the future• Robert E. Lee- “I only see that

a fearful calamity is upon us”• In the North, some

abolitionists preferred to allow the Southern states to leave

• Many Northerners believed the Union must be preserved

• For Lincoln the issue was “whether in a free government the minority have the right to break up the government whenever they choose”

Page 13: Chapter 15 Toward Civil War (1840-1861) Section 4 Secession and War

Lincoln Takes Office• Lincoln would not take

office until March 4, 1861• Buchanan was president

and said that the Southern states had no right to secede from the Union, but…

• He had no power to stop them from doing so

• When Lincoln took office, people wondered what he would say and do

• What would happen in the slave states of Virginia, North Carolina, Kentucky, Tennessee, Missouri, and Arkansas

• If the US used force against the Confederate States, the remaining slave states might secede

Page 14: Chapter 15 Toward Civil War (1840-1861) Section 4 Secession and War

Lincoln Takes Office Continued• In his Inaugural Address,

Lincoln spoke to the seceding states directly

• Lincoln mixed toughness with words of peace

• Lincoln said secession would not be permitted

• “The Union of these States is perpetual (forever)”

• Lincoln vowed to hold federal property in the South

• Including forts and military installations

• Also was going to enforce the law of the US

Page 15: Chapter 15 Toward Civil War (1840-1861) Section 4 Secession and War

Fort Sumter• Confederate forces started

taking U.S. forts within their states

• Lincoln didn’t want to start a war, but allowing the Confederates to keep them would amount to admitting their right to secede

• The day he took office he received a message from the commander of Fort Fort SumterSumter

• Fort Sumter was a fort on an island guarding Charleston Harbor

• The message warned that the fort was low on supplies and the Confederates demanded its surrender

Page 16: Chapter 15 Toward Civil War (1840-1861) Section 4 Secession and War

Lincoln’s Response to Fort Sumter• Lincoln responded with

a message to Governor Francis Pickens of South Carolina

• Lincoln said he was sending an unarmed group with supplies to Fort Sumter

• Lincoln promised that the US forces would not “throw in men, arms, or ammunition” unless they were fired upon

• Lincoln left the decision to start shooting up to the Confederates

• Jefferson Davis ordered his forces to attack Fort Sumter before the supplies arrived

Page 17: Chapter 15 Toward Civil War (1840-1861) Section 4 Secession and War

A. A

B. B

C. C

D. D A B

C

D

0% 0%0%0%

Why did Lincoln decide not to send armed troops to Fort Sumter?

A. He wanted to leave the decision to start fighting up to the Confederates.

B. The fort was already well stocked with ammunition.

C. He feared loss of life of Union troops.

D. He wanted to surrender Fort Sumter to theConfederates.

Page 18: Chapter 15 Toward Civil War (1840-1861) Section 4 Secession and War

Fort Sumter Under Fire• Confederate guns opened

fire on April 12th, 1861• High seas kept Union relief

ships from reaching the fort• Fort Sumter surrendered on

April 14th

• 1000s of shots were fired, but there were no loss of life

• President Lincoln issued a call for troops, and volunteers quickly signed up

• Meanwhile, Virginia, North Carolina, Tennessee, and Arkansas voted to join the Confederacy

• The Civil War had begun

Page 19: Chapter 15 Toward Civil War (1840-1861) Section 4 Secession and War

What role did the theory of states’ rights play in the outbreak of the Civil War?- The theory held that the Constitution was a contract among independent states, which the states agreed to voluntarily.- When the federal government violated the rights of the states, as Southerners believed it had, the contract was void.-Southerners used this theory to justify secession

What role did the theory of states’ rights play in the outbreak of the Civil War?

- The theory held that the Constitution was a contract among independent states, which the states agreed to voluntarily.- When the federal government violated the rights of the states, as Southerners believed it had, the contract was void.-Southerners used this theory to justify secession

Page 20: Chapter 15 Toward Civil War (1840-1861) Section 4 Secession and War

Chapter 15 Section 4 Quiz

Page 21: Chapter 15 Toward Civil War (1840-1861) Section 4 Secession and War

Who was not a presidential candidate in 1860?

John C. C

alhoun

John Bell

Abraham Li

ncoln

John Bre

ckinrid

ge

25% 25%25%25%A. John C. Calhoun

B. John Bell

C. Abraham Lincoln

D. John Breckinridge

Page 22: Chapter 15 Toward Civil War (1840-1861) Section 4 Secession and War

Southerners justified secession with the theory of

consti

tutional ri

ghts.

federa

l rights.

the U

nion's erro

rs.

state

s' r

ights.

25% 25%25%25%A. constitutional rights.

B. federal rights.

C. the Union's errors.

D. states' rights.

Page 23: Chapter 15 Toward Civil War (1840-1861) Section 4 Secession and War

The 1860 presidential candidate whose name did not appear on the ballot in most

Southern states was

Abraham Li

ncoln.

John Bre

ckinrid

ge.

John Bell.

Stephen A. D

ouglas.

25% 25%25%25%A. Abraham Lincoln.

B. John Breckinridge.

C. John Bell.

D. Stephen A. Douglas.

Page 24: Chapter 15 Toward Civil War (1840-1861) Section 4 Secession and War

Who was the senator from Kentucky who tried to save the Union by proposing a last-

minute compromise?

John Calhoun

John Bell

Henry

Clay

John Critt

enden

25% 25%25%25%A. John Calhoun

B. John Bell

C. Henry Clay

D. John Crittenden

Page 25: Chapter 15 Toward Civil War (1840-1861) Section 4 Secession and War

Based on the graph, who lost the 1860 presidential

election?

Bell

Breckinrid

ge

Dougla

s

all of t

he above

25% 25%25%25%

A. Bell

B. Breckinridge

C. Douglas

D. all of the above

Page 26: Chapter 15 Toward Civil War (1840-1861) Section 4 Secession and War

The first state to vote to secede was

South

Carolin

a.

Maryland.

Miss

ouri.

Georgia.

25% 25%25%25%A. South Carolina.

B. Maryland.

C. Missouri.

D. Georgia.

Page 27: Chapter 15 Toward Civil War (1840-1861) Section 4 Secession and War

The US president when the Civil War started (Fort Sumter) was

Stephen Douglas.

Robert E. L

ee.

Jefferso

n Davis.

Abraham Li

ncoln.

25% 25%25%25%A. Stephen Douglas.

B. Robert E. Lee.

C. Jefferson Davis.

D. Abraham Lincoln.

Page 28: Chapter 15 Toward Civil War (1840-1861) Section 4 Secession and War

Southerners justified secession with the theory of

popular sovereignty.

state

s' r

ights.

federa

lism.

consti

tutionalis

m.

25% 25%25%25%A. popular sovereignty.

B. states' rights.

C. federalism.

D. constitutionalism.

Page 29: Chapter 15 Toward Civil War (1840-1861) Section 4 Secession and War

What event marked the beginning of the Civil War?

Linco

ln–Douglas

...

Linco

ln inaugura

tion

South

Carolin

a sece

ding

Fort

Sumter attac

k

25% 25%25%25%A. Lincoln–Douglas debates

B. Lincoln inauguration

C. South Carolina seceding

D. Fort Sumter attack

Page 30: Chapter 15 Toward Civil War (1840-1861) Section 4 Secession and War

The Confederate president was

Willi

am Seward.

Abner Doubleday.

Jefferso

n Davis.

Francis

Pickens.

25% 25%25%25%A. William Seward.

B. Abner Doubleday.

C. Jefferson Davis.

D. Francis Pickens.

Page 31: Chapter 15 Toward Civil War (1840-1861) Section 4 Secession and War

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Page 32: Chapter 15 Toward Civil War (1840-1861) Section 4 Secession and War

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