Title: Chapter 15 Toward the Civil War (1840-1861)
1Chapter 15 Toward the Civil War (1840-1861)
- Section 1 Slavery and the West
2Chapter Time Line
3Chapter Time Line
4Section 1-Polling Question
Rate your agreement with the following statement
It is better to compromise to get something
accomplished than to stand 100 firm on what you
believe. A. Strongly agree B. Somewhat
agree C. Somewhat disagree D. Strongly disagree
- A
- B
- C
- D
5Essential Question
Did the compromises that Congress made
effectively address slavery and sectionalism?
6Missouri
- 1819- Missouri applied for statehood
- Slavery was legal in Missouri
- This sparked an angry debate in Congress
- There were 22 states in the Union
- 11 slave states/ 11 free states
- Each state got two votes (Senate)
- Adding another state would tip the balance
between slave states and free states
7North and South
- The North and South had different economies and
were competing for new land in the West - At the same time, many Northerners wanted to
restrict or ban slavery - Southerners opposed these antislavery efforts
(even those that disliked slavery) - Southerners resented the interference by
outsiders in Southerners affairs - This grew into sectionalism between the North and
South
8What to do with Missouri
- Senate suggested allowing Missouri join as a
slave state and Maine join as a free state - The Senate wanted to settle the issue of slavery
in the territories for good - Senate proposed banning slavery in the rest of
the Louisiana Purchase north of 3630' N latitude - Speaker of the House Henry Clay guided the bill
through the House of Representatives (passed by a
close vote) - Maine was the 23rd state and Missouri was 24th
- The Missouri Compromise preserved the balance
between slave and free states - This was a temporary solution in the debate over
slavery
9Section 1
Who drafted the Missouri Compromise? A. Henry
Clay B. James Monroe C. James Polk D. Thomas
Jefferson
- A
- B
- C
- D
10Slavery
- The debate over slavery erupted again in the
1840s - Texas was added and slavery was already legal
there - Texas Annexation was the main issue in the
presidential election of 1844 - Texas became a state in 1845
- Shortly after the Mexican War began,
Representative David Wilmost from Pennsylvania
introduced a proposal - The Wilmot Proviso would ban slavery in any lands
the US would get from Mexico
11Section 1
Which of the following was a proposal to ban
slavery in any lands acquired from Mexico? A. The
Compromise of 1850 B. The Wilmot Proviso C. The
Missouri Compromise D. The Freeport Doctrine
- A
- B
- C
- D
12Southerners Response
- Southerners protested the Wilmot Proviso
- Southerners felt this endangered slavery
everywhere - They wanted New Mexico and California open to
slavery - John C. Calhoun (SC) countered with another
proposal - It said that neither Congress nor any territory
had the authority to ban slavery from a territory
or regulate it - Neither proposal passed, but caused bitter debate
- By the next election, the US gained New Mexico
and California, but took no action on slavery
13Election of 1848
- 1848- The Whigs selected Zachary Taylor as their
candidate - Taylor was a Southerner and a hero of the Mexican
War - The Democrats chose Senator Lewis Cass of
Michigan - Both candidates ignored the issue of slavery
- The failure to take a stand angered voters
14Election of 1848 Continued
- Many opponents of slavery left their parties and
formed the Free-Soil Party - Free Soil, Free Speech, Free Labor, and Free
Men - The Free-Soil Party chose former president Van
Buren as their candidate - Taylor won, but the Free-Soil Party gained
several seats in Congress
15Issues in the US
- California applied for statehood in 1849 (After
the Gold Rush) - Meanwhile, antislavery forces wanted to ban
slavery in Washington, D.C. - Southerners also wanted a national law that
required states to return fugitive enslaved
people - The key issue was the balance of power in the
Senate (30 states 15/15) - Southerners talked about seceding from the Union
16Compromising
- 1850- Senator Henry Clay proposed that California
enter as a free state - The rest of the new territories would have no
limits on slavery - The slave trade (Not slavery itself) would be
banned in Washington D.C. - Clay also pushed for a stronger fugitive slave
law - Senator John C. Calhoun opposed the plan
- Calhoun felt that the Union could be saved only
by protecting slavery - Senator Webster supported the plan
- Webster said that slavery had little chance in
the new territories because the land was not
suited for plantations
17The Compromise of 1850
- President Taylor was an opponent of Clays plan
- But Taylor died unexpectedly and Millard Fillmore
took over as president - Fillmore favored the compromise
- To end the crisis, Illinois Senator Stephen A.
Douglas divided Clays plan into 4 parts Each
part would be voted on separately - Fillmore had several Whigs abstain on parts they
opposed - The 5 parts passed and became known as the
Compromise of 1850
18The Parts of the Compromise of 1850
- California would be admitted as a free state.
- The new Mexico territory would have no
restrictions on slavery. - The new Mexico-Texas border dispute would be
settled in favor of new Mexico. - The slave trade but not slavery it self would be
abolished in the district of Colombia. - Stronger fugitive state law.
19Essential Question
- Did the compromises that Congress made
effectively address slavery and sectionalism? - -Compromises dealt primarily with immediate
issues - Admittance of new states
- Maintaining balance in Congress
- The compromises did not address slavery at the
national level
20Chapter 15 Section 1 Quiz
21By admitting a free state and Missouri, a
slaveholding state, to the Union at the same
time, the Senate could remain balanced.
- True
- False
22The Wilmot Proviso allowed California to enter
the Union as a free state.
- True
- False
23John C. Calhoun countered David Wilmot's proposal.
- True
- False
24Zachary Taylor adopted a proslavery platform for
the 1848 presidential election.
- True
- False
25President Fillmore was in favor of the Compromise
of 1850.
- True
- False
26An exaggerated loyalty to a particular region of
the country is called
- abolitionism.
- fugitive slave law.
- Free-Soil Party.
- sectionalism.
27The plan that preserved the balance between slave
and free states in the Senate was the
- North-South Compromise.
- Missouri Compromise.
- Maine Compromise.
- Slavery Compromise.
28The main issue in the presidential election of
1844 was the
- annexation of Texas.
- annexation of Maine.
- annexation of New Mexico.
- annexation of Missouri.
29Who proposed that neither Congress nor local
governments had the authority to ban slavery from
a territory?
- Daniel Webster
- John C. Calhoun
- Henry Clay
- Zachary Taylor
30President Millard Fillmore persuaded several Whig
representatives to not cast votes, or to
- secede.
- become a fugitive.
- abstain.
- increase sectionalism.
31Participant Scores
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32Team Scores
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