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Events Preceding the Civil
War (1820-1861)
Events Preceding the Civil War
• Westward Expansion
(Manifest Destiny)
• New Territories and
States
• Missouri
Compromise, The
Compromise of
1850, and KansasNebraska Act
• Wilmot Proviso

•
•
•
•

Uncle Tom’s Cabin
John Brown’s Raid
Scott v. Sandford
Differences between
North and South
• Election of 1860
• Secession of Southern
states
Manifest
Destiny

Daniel Boone is showing the
way Westward. Notice the
stance of the young man next
to him. How would you
describe the feeling he shows?

• Manifest Destiny was the idea
that America was destined to
become ―the great nation of
futurity.‖ Of course, that meant
the nation would expand
Westward. Furthermore, it
promoted an idea of American
racial and cultural superiority.
It also opened new
discussions about the spread
of slavery.
http://www.ushistory.org/us/29.
asp
• https://www.mtholyoke.edu/ac
ad/intrel/osulliva.htm
John Gast, American Progress, 1872
Although this painting was created after the war, it sums up the ideas
that Americans had had even before the war about going West.
Americans believed the country should span from sea to sea.
Although it looks like it would have been a huge mural, this painting
was only about 12 ¾ ― X 16 ¾ ― in size!
http://picturinghistory.gc.cuny.edu/item.php?item_id=180
The Invitation
• In 1821 Mexico won its
independence from Spain. • Steve Austin
Mexico issued an invitation:
– First to bring settlers
– Agree to settle in newly
– Brought slaves
independent Mexico
– Did not pay taxes
– Do not bring slaves
– Settled close to the
– Become Catholic or at
United States border
least pay taxes to the
Catholic Church
• If a settler agreed to these
rules, Mexico would sell them
land for cheap. Most got the
land, but didn’t comply with
all the rules.
•

Santa Anna– Dictator of Mexico
– Took an army to this Texas
area to solve the issue
• The Alamo– An old mission at San Antonio
– Travis, Bowie, and Crockett
led a rebellion and sacrificed
themselves to protect Texas
from Santa Anna’s army.
• Sam Houston led a militia formed
for Texas. ―Remember the
Alamo!‖
– Houston and Santa Anna’s
armies fought.
– Houston won.
– Santa Anna was forced to leave
Texas.

The Alamo

Texas became it’s own
country, the Republic of
Texas, for about a
decade, before finally
becoming a state in the
United States.
The Mexican War
• The Land
– Only thing standing in the way of Manifest Destiny
• The United States offered to buy the land for $30 million

• The War
– 3 main military companies
– Took California, New Mexico, and Nevada
– A militia run by Winfield Scott went directly to Mexico
City
• Most Civil War officers gained their first experience from
this war
– Robert E. Lee, Stonewall Jackson, Ulysses S. Grant,
and George Picket
• The New Offer
– Mexico was then offered $15 million.
– Take it or leave it
• ―The Spot Speech.‖
– Lincoln made a name for himself by asking where
was the exact spot that the Mexican War began.
• United States claimed that the Mexican border was
at the Rio Grande. However, Mexico stated that it
was at the Nueces River.
• Mexico claimed that the United States had invaded
their territory, which is why they fought back .
– He gained the nickname ―Spotty Lincoln.‖
New Territories
• California and Texas became new
territories.
• Debate heated up over whether or not
new states would allow slavery.*
• Missouri Compromise(1820)- Proposed
by Henry Clay; kept the number of free
states and slave states equal. Missouri
would be a slave state, and Maine would
be a free state.
 Slavery had already been abolished in the British Empire.
New Territories

• An imaginary line was drawn across the
southern border of Missouri at latitude 36 30
N., but it only applied to the Louisiana
Purchase.
New Territories
• Wilmot ProvisoProposed by David
Wilmot to ban slavery
in the West.
• The House passed it
in 1846, but shortly
afterwards the Senate
defeated it.
Tempers Flair

• California applied for admission to the Union in 1850 to be a
free state.
• The issue was so heated that Senator Henry Foote of
Mississippi pulled a gun on Senator Thomas Hart Benton of
Missouri.
Admission of California as a
State
• In 1849, the number of free states equaled
the number of slave states at 15/15.
• California being a free state would upset
the balance between free and slave states
set by the Missouri Compromise.
Clay vs. Calhoun
Henry Clay
• ―the Great Compromiser‖
• Wanted an agreement
between the North and
South
• Feared that the nation
would break apart
• His plan: ―The
Compromise of 1850‖

John Calhoun
• Senator of South Carolina
• Refused a compromise
• Demanded that fugitive or
runaway slaves be
returned to their owners
• Last reported words
1850: ―The Poor South!
God knows what will
become of her now!‖
Compromise of 1850
• Composed of FIVE parts:
1. Allowed California to enter Union as free
state
2. Formed territories of New Mexico and
Utah, and decision of slavery based on
popular sovereignty
3. Ended slave trade in Washington, D.C.
4. Created a strict slave law
5. Settled a border dispute between Texas
and New Mexico
Fugitive Slave Act Modified
• All citizens required to report runaway
slaves
• Helping fugitive slaves would result in a
$1000 fine and jail
• Judges given rewards for sending
runaway slaves back to South
• Antislavery advocates in North outraged
• Forced even non-slaveholders to be a part
of the slavery system
Author: Harriet
Beecher Stowe

• Antislavery Bestseller
• Published in 1852
• Showed the evils of
slavery and Fugitive
Slave Act
• Popular in North and
hated in the South
• Southern complaint: did
not give a true picture of
slave life
• Made more northerners
see slavery as immoral
Tensions build in Kansas
• Proslavery and
antislavery settlers
moved into the
Kansas territory.
• Many farmers from
neighboring states
moved to the territory
in hopes of gaining
cheap land.
Kansas-Nebraska Act
• Proposed by Stephen
Douglas.
• Established territories
of Kansas and
Nebraska.
• Gave settlers popular
sovereignty to decide
on slavery issue.
Abraham Lincoln
• After hearing about the events that took
place in Kansas, Abraham Lincoln
predicted that bloodshed would occur.

• At this time, he was a young lawyer from
Illinois.
Northern Outrage
• Many northerners were unhappy
with the Kansas-Nebraska Act
because it repealed the Missouri
Compromise.
Two Governments in Kansas
• Proslavery:
• Antislavery:
• Elections in 1855,
• Refused to abide by
established a
laws of the proslavery
proslavery legislature.
government.
• New laws were
• Established their own
passed that made
governor and
helping slaves escape
legislature.
punishable by death
Bleeding Kansas
• Proslavery raid on the town of Lawrence.(Antislavery
stronghold)
• John Brown, an abolitionist, struck back by
murdering five proslavery settlers. (Pottawatomie
Creek Massacre)
• These events led to even more violence, and by
1856, more than 200 people had been killed.
Violence in the
Senate…Again!

*In his "Crime Against Kansas" speech, Sumner identified two Democratic senators
as the principal culprits in this crime—Stephen Douglas of Illinois and Andrew Butler
of South Carolina. He characterized Douglas to his face as a "noisesome, squat, and nameless animal . . . not a proper model for an American
senator." Andrew Butler, who was not present, received more elaborate treatment.
Mocking the South Carolina senator's stance as a man of chivalry, the
Massachusetts senator charged him with taking "a mistress . . . who, though ugly to
others, is always lovely to him; though polluted in the sight of the world, is chaste in
his sight—I mean," added Sumner, "the harlot, Slavery."

Senator Charles Sumner of
Massachusetts criticized Andrew
Butler of South Carolina for
Butler’s proslavery views.

• Butler’s nephew, Congressman Preston
Brooks, responded a few days later by
marching into the Senate chamber and
beating Sumner with a cane. *
http://www.senate.gov/artandhistory/history/minute/The_
Caning_of_Senator_Charles_Sumner.htm
Dred Scott

• Scott was a slave from
Missouri who had lived in
Wisconsin and Illinois.
(two free states)
• After Scott returned to
Missouri, his owner died.
Scott sued for his freedom.
• This led to the Supreme
Court case known as Dred
Scott v. Sandford.
What unusual thing do you notice about his
signature? What do you know about the culture of
the time period that might cause this?
Dred Scott
• Scott’s lawyers argued that he
had lived in a free territory, so
he was a free man.
• Court ruled that Scott could
not file a lawsuit because he
was not a citizen.
• Court decision stated that
slaves were considered to be
property.
• The Supreme Court also ruled
that Congress could not outlaw
slavery, which made the
Missouri Compromise
unconstitutional.
The Republican Party
• Formed to give a voice against slavery.
• Supporters of the new party fed up with
Whigs and Democrats.
• Main goal was to keep slavery out of
western territories.
Republicans did not
yet have the
elephant symbol
Lincoln v. Douglas for Senate in
1858
Lincoln’s views
• Slavery was morally
wrong.
• Wanted to prevent the
spread of slavery.

• Douglas won the election
by a slim margin.

Douglas’s views
• Western territories should
decide slavery issue by
popular sovereignty.
• Personally disliked
slavery.
John Brown’s Raid

• John Brown who led
another raid, this time on
a Federal arsenal at
Harper’s Ferry, Virginia,
hoping to start a slave
insurrection.
• Although Brown took
control of the arsenal, the
rest of the plan fell apart.
U.S. Marine Col. Robert
E. Lee led the group that
captured Brown. Brown
was later hanged.
Presidential Election of 1860
• Democratic party split in two:
• Southern democrats -supported slavery in
the territories. Represented by John
Breckinridge.
• Northern democrats- refused to support
slavery in the territories. Represented by
Stephen Douglas.
Election of 1860
• Constitutional Union party- established to
try and heal the split between the North
and South. Represented by John Bell of
Tennessee.
• Republican party- Represented by
Abraham Lincoln.
• Abraham Lincoln won the northern states,
which sealed the election.
Southern Reaction
• Abraham Lincoln’s election left the South
feeling like they had no representation in
the federal government.

• As a result, South Carolina seceded on
December 20, 1860 and Alabama, Florida,
Georgia, Louisiana, Mississippi, and
Texas followed by 1861.
http://sunsite.utk.edu/civilwar/reasons.html

Secession documents
The Confederacy
• Southerners felt they could secede because Declaration
of Independence said people could abolish government.
• Confederate States of America was formed, and
Jefferson Davis of Mississippi was the President.
The Civil War Begins
• Lincoln stated that
there would be no war
unless South started
it.
• Confederate forces
began taking over
forts in the South.
• Located in South Carolina
• Important to the Confederacy, because it
guarded Charleston Harbor
• Confederate forces demanded the fort to
surrender, but the commander refused.
• Confederate forces fired on the fort until it
surrendered.
• This event marked the start of the Civil War.

Fort
Sumter

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Events preceding the civil war(2325764)

  • 1. Events Preceding the Civil War (1820-1861)
  • 2. Events Preceding the Civil War • Westward Expansion (Manifest Destiny) • New Territories and States • Missouri Compromise, The Compromise of 1850, and KansasNebraska Act • Wilmot Proviso • • • • Uncle Tom’s Cabin John Brown’s Raid Scott v. Sandford Differences between North and South • Election of 1860 • Secession of Southern states
  • 3. Manifest Destiny Daniel Boone is showing the way Westward. Notice the stance of the young man next to him. How would you describe the feeling he shows? • Manifest Destiny was the idea that America was destined to become ―the great nation of futurity.‖ Of course, that meant the nation would expand Westward. Furthermore, it promoted an idea of American racial and cultural superiority. It also opened new discussions about the spread of slavery. http://www.ushistory.org/us/29. asp • https://www.mtholyoke.edu/ac ad/intrel/osulliva.htm
  • 4. John Gast, American Progress, 1872 Although this painting was created after the war, it sums up the ideas that Americans had had even before the war about going West. Americans believed the country should span from sea to sea. Although it looks like it would have been a huge mural, this painting was only about 12 ¾ ― X 16 ¾ ― in size! http://picturinghistory.gc.cuny.edu/item.php?item_id=180
  • 5. The Invitation • In 1821 Mexico won its independence from Spain. • Steve Austin Mexico issued an invitation: – First to bring settlers – Agree to settle in newly – Brought slaves independent Mexico – Did not pay taxes – Do not bring slaves – Settled close to the – Become Catholic or at United States border least pay taxes to the Catholic Church • If a settler agreed to these rules, Mexico would sell them land for cheap. Most got the land, but didn’t comply with all the rules.
  • 6. • Santa Anna– Dictator of Mexico – Took an army to this Texas area to solve the issue • The Alamo– An old mission at San Antonio – Travis, Bowie, and Crockett led a rebellion and sacrificed themselves to protect Texas from Santa Anna’s army. • Sam Houston led a militia formed for Texas. ―Remember the Alamo!‖ – Houston and Santa Anna’s armies fought. – Houston won. – Santa Anna was forced to leave Texas. The Alamo Texas became it’s own country, the Republic of Texas, for about a decade, before finally becoming a state in the United States.
  • 7. The Mexican War • The Land – Only thing standing in the way of Manifest Destiny • The United States offered to buy the land for $30 million • The War – 3 main military companies – Took California, New Mexico, and Nevada – A militia run by Winfield Scott went directly to Mexico City • Most Civil War officers gained their first experience from this war – Robert E. Lee, Stonewall Jackson, Ulysses S. Grant, and George Picket
  • 8. • The New Offer – Mexico was then offered $15 million. – Take it or leave it • ―The Spot Speech.‖ – Lincoln made a name for himself by asking where was the exact spot that the Mexican War began. • United States claimed that the Mexican border was at the Rio Grande. However, Mexico stated that it was at the Nueces River. • Mexico claimed that the United States had invaded their territory, which is why they fought back . – He gained the nickname ―Spotty Lincoln.‖
  • 9. New Territories • California and Texas became new territories. • Debate heated up over whether or not new states would allow slavery.* • Missouri Compromise(1820)- Proposed by Henry Clay; kept the number of free states and slave states equal. Missouri would be a slave state, and Maine would be a free state.  Slavery had already been abolished in the British Empire.
  • 10. New Territories • An imaginary line was drawn across the southern border of Missouri at latitude 36 30 N., but it only applied to the Louisiana Purchase.
  • 11. New Territories • Wilmot ProvisoProposed by David Wilmot to ban slavery in the West. • The House passed it in 1846, but shortly afterwards the Senate defeated it.
  • 12.
  • 13. Tempers Flair • California applied for admission to the Union in 1850 to be a free state. • The issue was so heated that Senator Henry Foote of Mississippi pulled a gun on Senator Thomas Hart Benton of Missouri.
  • 14. Admission of California as a State • In 1849, the number of free states equaled the number of slave states at 15/15. • California being a free state would upset the balance between free and slave states set by the Missouri Compromise.
  • 15. Clay vs. Calhoun Henry Clay • ―the Great Compromiser‖ • Wanted an agreement between the North and South • Feared that the nation would break apart • His plan: ―The Compromise of 1850‖ John Calhoun • Senator of South Carolina • Refused a compromise • Demanded that fugitive or runaway slaves be returned to their owners • Last reported words 1850: ―The Poor South! God knows what will become of her now!‖
  • 16. Compromise of 1850 • Composed of FIVE parts: 1. Allowed California to enter Union as free state 2. Formed territories of New Mexico and Utah, and decision of slavery based on popular sovereignty 3. Ended slave trade in Washington, D.C. 4. Created a strict slave law 5. Settled a border dispute between Texas and New Mexico
  • 17.
  • 18. Fugitive Slave Act Modified • All citizens required to report runaway slaves • Helping fugitive slaves would result in a $1000 fine and jail • Judges given rewards for sending runaway slaves back to South • Antislavery advocates in North outraged • Forced even non-slaveholders to be a part of the slavery system
  • 19. Author: Harriet Beecher Stowe • Antislavery Bestseller • Published in 1852 • Showed the evils of slavery and Fugitive Slave Act • Popular in North and hated in the South • Southern complaint: did not give a true picture of slave life • Made more northerners see slavery as immoral
  • 20. Tensions build in Kansas • Proslavery and antislavery settlers moved into the Kansas territory. • Many farmers from neighboring states moved to the territory in hopes of gaining cheap land.
  • 21. Kansas-Nebraska Act • Proposed by Stephen Douglas. • Established territories of Kansas and Nebraska. • Gave settlers popular sovereignty to decide on slavery issue.
  • 22. Abraham Lincoln • After hearing about the events that took place in Kansas, Abraham Lincoln predicted that bloodshed would occur. • At this time, he was a young lawyer from Illinois.
  • 23.
  • 24. Northern Outrage • Many northerners were unhappy with the Kansas-Nebraska Act because it repealed the Missouri Compromise.
  • 25. Two Governments in Kansas • Proslavery: • Antislavery: • Elections in 1855, • Refused to abide by established a laws of the proslavery proslavery legislature. government. • New laws were • Established their own passed that made governor and helping slaves escape legislature. punishable by death
  • 26. Bleeding Kansas • Proslavery raid on the town of Lawrence.(Antislavery stronghold) • John Brown, an abolitionist, struck back by murdering five proslavery settlers. (Pottawatomie Creek Massacre) • These events led to even more violence, and by 1856, more than 200 people had been killed.
  • 27. Violence in the Senate…Again! *In his "Crime Against Kansas" speech, Sumner identified two Democratic senators as the principal culprits in this crime—Stephen Douglas of Illinois and Andrew Butler of South Carolina. He characterized Douglas to his face as a "noisesome, squat, and nameless animal . . . not a proper model for an American senator." Andrew Butler, who was not present, received more elaborate treatment. Mocking the South Carolina senator's stance as a man of chivalry, the Massachusetts senator charged him with taking "a mistress . . . who, though ugly to others, is always lovely to him; though polluted in the sight of the world, is chaste in his sight—I mean," added Sumner, "the harlot, Slavery." Senator Charles Sumner of Massachusetts criticized Andrew Butler of South Carolina for Butler’s proslavery views. • Butler’s nephew, Congressman Preston Brooks, responded a few days later by marching into the Senate chamber and beating Sumner with a cane. * http://www.senate.gov/artandhistory/history/minute/The_ Caning_of_Senator_Charles_Sumner.htm
  • 28.
  • 29. Dred Scott • Scott was a slave from Missouri who had lived in Wisconsin and Illinois. (two free states) • After Scott returned to Missouri, his owner died. Scott sued for his freedom. • This led to the Supreme Court case known as Dred Scott v. Sandford. What unusual thing do you notice about his signature? What do you know about the culture of the time period that might cause this?
  • 30. Dred Scott • Scott’s lawyers argued that he had lived in a free territory, so he was a free man. • Court ruled that Scott could not file a lawsuit because he was not a citizen. • Court decision stated that slaves were considered to be property. • The Supreme Court also ruled that Congress could not outlaw slavery, which made the Missouri Compromise unconstitutional.
  • 31. The Republican Party • Formed to give a voice against slavery. • Supporters of the new party fed up with Whigs and Democrats. • Main goal was to keep slavery out of western territories. Republicans did not yet have the elephant symbol
  • 32. Lincoln v. Douglas for Senate in 1858 Lincoln’s views • Slavery was morally wrong. • Wanted to prevent the spread of slavery. • Douglas won the election by a slim margin. Douglas’s views • Western territories should decide slavery issue by popular sovereignty. • Personally disliked slavery.
  • 33. John Brown’s Raid • John Brown who led another raid, this time on a Federal arsenal at Harper’s Ferry, Virginia, hoping to start a slave insurrection. • Although Brown took control of the arsenal, the rest of the plan fell apart. U.S. Marine Col. Robert E. Lee led the group that captured Brown. Brown was later hanged.
  • 34. Presidential Election of 1860 • Democratic party split in two: • Southern democrats -supported slavery in the territories. Represented by John Breckinridge. • Northern democrats- refused to support slavery in the territories. Represented by Stephen Douglas.
  • 35. Election of 1860 • Constitutional Union party- established to try and heal the split between the North and South. Represented by John Bell of Tennessee. • Republican party- Represented by Abraham Lincoln. • Abraham Lincoln won the northern states, which sealed the election.
  • 36.
  • 37.
  • 38. Southern Reaction • Abraham Lincoln’s election left the South feeling like they had no representation in the federal government. • As a result, South Carolina seceded on December 20, 1860 and Alabama, Florida, Georgia, Louisiana, Mississippi, and Texas followed by 1861. http://sunsite.utk.edu/civilwar/reasons.html Secession documents
  • 39. The Confederacy • Southerners felt they could secede because Declaration of Independence said people could abolish government. • Confederate States of America was formed, and Jefferson Davis of Mississippi was the President.
  • 40. The Civil War Begins • Lincoln stated that there would be no war unless South started it. • Confederate forces began taking over forts in the South.
  • 41. • Located in South Carolina • Important to the Confederacy, because it guarded Charleston Harbor • Confederate forces demanded the fort to surrender, but the commander refused. • Confederate forces fired on the fort until it surrendered. • This event marked the start of the Civil War. Fort Sumter