Upload
derick-park
View
218
Download
0
Tags:
Embed Size (px)
Citation preview
Slave States vs. Free States
• As U.S. territory grows, new states are created.
• States in the North are considered Free States (no slavery)
• Southern states are considered Slave States.
• …it’s not necessarily all about slavery.
Slave States vs. Free States
• The abolition movement is still in its infancy.
• The creation of slave states vs. free states is mostly about political & economic power.
• To understand, we have look at how America had developed two very different ways of life…
Life in the North
• 2½ times the population of the south due mostly to immigrants looking for work in factories
• 70% of all US railroad track • The North was industrial – 110,000
factories vs. 20,000 in the South• In 1860 – production of over $1.5 Billion
in goods (the South produced just $155 million)
Life in the SouthLife in the South
1. Primarily agrarian
2. “Cotton Is King!” * 1860--> 5 million bales a yr. (57% of total US exports).
3. Slow development of industry
4. Rudimentary financial system: $47 million in banking deposits compared to $207 million in the North.
5. Inadequate transportation system: many farmers still used water routes to transport cargo.
Why does the South want Slave States?
• The South needs to expand their agricultural economy & sees the addition of new states as the perfect answer.
HOWEVER… • The addition of a new Free State meant 2
more senators & additional congressmen in the House of Representatives that would vote in agreement with other northern states
Protecting a Way of Life
• Southerners needed to maintain at least an equal number of slave states to free states so that they have equal representation in Congress (or better).
• …otherwise, legislation would be passed that was agreeable to the northern way of life – not the southern.
The Missouri Compromise
• Maine admitted as a free state• Missouri admitted as a slave state,
but..• Slavery not allowed in any new
states created above Missouri’s southern border.
Uh Oh – more land, more issues
• Slave states vs Free states again…• The Compromise of 1850
• California admitted as a free state• Utah & New Mexico as slave territories• Banned Slave trade in Washington DC
• Fugitive Slave Law• Escaped Slaves are now the government’s
responsibility
Uncle Tom’s Cabin
1852
Uncle Tom’s Cabin
1852 Popular Book that brought cruelties of slavery to the attention of the public
Popular Book that brought cruelties of slavery to the attention of the public
Uncle Tom’s CabinHarrietBeecherStowe
1811 - 1896So this is the lady
who started the Civil War.
-- Abraham Lincoln
Kansas – Nebraska Act, 1854• “popular sovereignty” to decide free or
slave
• Pro-Abolition & Pro-Slavery forces flood Kansas to sway the vote often clashing with one another - “Bloody Kansas”
Bloody Kansas
• This led to a series of violent acts in the divided territory.• Tempers flared on all sides of the slavery
issue, dragging the country closer to war.
•Militant abolitionist
John Brown & few followers crept into a pro- slavery settlement outside of Lawrence, Kansas.
•They dragged five men
out of their homes & hacked them to
death with swords.
Dred Scott - 1857• Slaves are
property
• Slaves (& former slaves) were not citizens
• Property rights are guaranteed by the Constitution (5th amendment)
• Missouri Compromise declared unconstitutional
John Brown• Brown returns east
from Kansas & plans a war in Virginia against slavery.
• October 16, 1859, he & 21 men (5 blacks & 16 whites) raided the federal arsenal at Harper’s Ferry.
Election of 1860
• Birth of the Republican Party
• Who was their first candidate?
• The Republicans win the election without winning any Southern States
• The South sees this as a complete loss of political power in Washington
Secession
• 11 southern slave states seceded from the US/Union starting in 1860 w/ S. Carolina– SC, MS, FL, AL, GA, LA, TX, VA, AR, TN, NC
• Confederate States of America– Capital: Montgomery, Alabama (until May 29,
1861) then Richmond, Virginia– President: Jefferson Davis– VP: Alexander Stephens