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Chap 15 The Nation Breaking Apart 1846-1861

The American Revolution
Creating America A History of the United States

AB
Wilmot Provisoan 1846 proposal that outlawed slavery in any territory gained from the War with Mexico
Free-Soil Partya political party dedicated to stopping the expansion of slavery
Henry ClaySenator from Kentucky who helped create the Missouri Compromise in 1820 and later crafted a plan to settle the California statehood problem
Daniel WebsterSenator from Massachusettes who supported the Compromise of 1850 in order to keep the Union together
Stephen A. DouglasSenator from Illinois who believed that the people of each territory should decide whether or not to allow slavery
Compromise of 1850a series of Congressional laws intended to settle the major disagreements between free states and slave states, created the Fugitive Slave Act
Harriet Beecher Stoweauthor of Uncle Tom's Cabin written because of her outrage with the Compromise of 1850
Uncle Tom's Cabina novel published by Harriet Beecher Stowe in 1852 that portrayed slavery as brutal and immoral
Fugitive Slave Actan 1850 law to help slaveholders recapture runaway slaves
popular sovereigntya government in which the people rule; a system which the residents vote to decide an issue
Kansas-Nebraska Actan 1854 law that established the territories of Kansas and Nebraska and gave their residents the right to decide whether to allow slavery
John Brownan extreme abolitionist
Republican Partythe political party formed in 1854 by opponents of slavery in the territories
John C. FremontRepublican nominated in 1856 and spoke in favor of admitting CA and KS as free states
James BuchananDemocrat nominated to be president in 1856 whose goal was to maintain the Union
Dred Scott v. Sanfordan 1856 Supreme Court case in which a slave, Dred Scott, sued for his freedom because he had been taken to live in territories where slavery was illegal; the Court ruled against Scott
Roger B.TaneyChief Justice in 1857 said Dred Scott was not a U.S. citizen and could not sue the U.S. courts and Scott was bound by the Missouri slave code
Abraham Lincoln1858 chosen by Illinois Republicans for U.S. Senate seat
Harpers Ferrya federal arsenal in Virginia that was captured in 1859 during a slave revolt
platforma statement of beliefs
secedeto withdraw
Confederate States of Americathe confederation formed in 1861 by the Southern states after their secession from the Union
Jefferson Davispresident of the Confederacy
Crittenden Plana compromise introduced in 1861 that might have prevented secession
36 - 30 linethe definining line of the Missouri Compromise
Missouri Compromisethe legislation that was overturned by the Dred-Scott decision
Charles Sumnerwas attacked for criticizing AP Butler (caning)
Southerners opposed tarrifsbecause high tariffs were placed on European manufactured products
The Missouri Compromise was an example ofwhether slavery should expand into western territories
The artwork "Tragic Prelude" isa depiction of the historical event "Harpers Ferry"
Roger B. Taneythe Chief Justice who ruled in the Dred Scott Case, "slaves have no rights which the white man is bound to respect"
Because of "Uncle Tom's Cabin"the North was exposed to slavery's morally questionable activities
The attack on Harpers Ferry was motivated byreligious opposition to slavery
Increased Abolitionists' activities in the Northan effect of the raid on Harper's Ferry
An argument over whether states can overrule an act passed by CongressThe Nullification Crisis
An escaped slave is caught an returned because of theFugitive Slave Act
African Americans in the North faceddiscrimination and segregation
rocky soul, large urban areas, banking and trade describe theNorth
Climate and soil suitable for an agricultural economyfeatures of the South and the western territories
Support for the abolitionist movement came because of this bookUncle Tom's Cabin by Harriet Beecher Stowe


ESL Teacher
Canyon Vista MS
Austin, TX

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