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Legislation Regarding Slavery

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Legislation Regarding Slavery The Wilmot Proviso Stated that states acquired by the U.S. would not be open to slavery neither slavery nor involuntary servitude ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Legislation Regarding Slavery


1
Legislation Regarding Slavery
2
The Wilmot Proviso
  • Stated that states acquired by the U.S. would not
    be open to slavery
  • neither slavery nor involuntary servitude shall
    exists in any.. lands won from Mexico
  • Both Democrats and Whigs split over the question
    of whether to limit the expansion of slavery

3
Free-Soil Party
  • United in support of the Wilmot Proviso to form
    this political party
  • Promised free soil, free speech, free labor, and
    free men
  • Main goal was to keep slavery out of the western
    territories
  • Nominated Martin Van Buren

4
Popular Sovereignty
  • Policy stating that voters in a territory, not
    Congress, should decide whether or not to allow
    slavery there

5
Compromise of 1850
  • Proposed by Henry Clay
  • California would be admitted as a free state
  • New Mexico and Utah would use popular
    sovereignty, or citizens voting on an issue
  • The slave trade would be ended in Washington,
    D.C.
  • Texas would give up its claims to New Mexico in
    return for 10 million
  • Fugitive Slave Act had to be enforced

6
Compromise of 1850
  • South (Calhoun) liked the idea because of popular
    sovereignty
  • North (Webster) liked the idea because California
    was a free state

7
Fugitive Slave Act, 1793
  • Stated that runaway slaves that are captured must
    be returned to bondage
  • Citizens that assisted a fugitive slave could be
    fined or imprisoned

8
Resistance Against the Fugitive Slave Act
  • A few northern states struck back, passing
    personal liberty laws
  • This nullified the Fugitive Slave Act and allowed
    the state to arrest slave catchers for kidnapping

9
Resistance Against the Fugitive Slave Act
Continued
  • Harriet Tubman
  • Led over two dozen trips to the north helping
    slaves escape to freedom
  • Also known as Black Moses
  • Harriet Beecher Stowe-
  • Published Uncle Toms Cabin
  • Now gave slavery a face that most Americans had
    never seen and made it a moral issue

10
Douglas Presses for Popular Sovereignty
  • Senator Douglas introduced a bill in 1854 to set
    up a government in the Nebraska Territory
  • The territory would be organized under the idea
    of popular sovereignty

11
Debates of the Kansas-Nebraska Act
  • Douglas amended the bill to divide the territory
    into Kanas and Nebraska
  • Intended
  • Kansas- slave state
  • Nebraska- free state
  • Northerners pointed out it would nullify the
    Missouri Compromise

12
Kansas-Nebraska Act
  • Created potential for slavery in Kansas and
    Nebraska territories by allowing for popular
    sovereignty

13
Two Governments Established
  • By 1855, proslavery settlers had set up a
    territorial government near the boarder of
    Missouri, a slave state
  • Northern abolitionists rushed to Kansas
  • Border Ruffians coerced local voters to vote for
    proslavery candidates
  • Legislature then passed proslavery laws
  • By 1856, there were two different governments in
    Kansas

14
Bleeding Kansas
  • Clashes between the two rival groups which led to
    hundreds of deaths
  • Reporters characterized the territory as
    Bleeding Kansas

15
Statehood for Kansas
  • Congress did not know what to do about admitting
    Kansas into the union since the elections had
    been rigged
  • Kansas submitted 4 constitutions, but Congress
    did not accept them as a state until 1861

16
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17
The Whig Party Disintegrates
  • Millard Fillmore (the last Whig President)
    angered the South by supporting California
    entering as a free state
  • Northerners left the party due to his support of
    the Fugitive Slave Act
  • Nominated Winfield Scott, but lost to the
    Democrats

18
Other Political Parties
  • Know-Nothings or American Party
  • Members responded I know nothing when
    questioned about their nativist organization
  • Later divided over the issue of slavery expanding
  • Republican Party
  • Started in 1854
  • Took supporters from other political parties that
    were antislavery

19
Dred Scott
  • Missouri slave who sued for freedom
  • His master had taken him to the free state of
    Illinois and Wisconsin Territory, where slavery
    was outlawed (Missouri Compromise)
  • Between 1834 and 1838 Scott had lived mostly on
    free soil

20
Dredd Scott Decision
  • Supreme Court ruled that slaves were not citizens
    but property, and therefore could not sue for
    freedom
  • Ruled the Missouri Compromise was
    unconstitutional
  • Chief Justice Roger B. Taney led the court

21
Dredd Scott Decision
22
Lincoln-Douglas Debates
  • A series of debates in 1858 between Abraham
    Lincoln and Stephen Douglas in order to be
    elected to the U.S. Senate
  • Lincoln wanted to stop slave expansion
  • Douglas favored popular sovereignty

23
Lincoln-Douglas Debates
  • Douglas issued the Freeport Doctrine
  • Stated that the people of a state have the right
    to outlaw slavery because of popular sovereignty
    despite what the Supreme Court ruled
  • Douglas won the election by a slim margin

24
The Election of 1860
  • Candidates for President
  • Abraham Lincoln- slavery should not be allowed in
    the territories
  • Stephen Douglas- popular sovereignty
  • John Bell- federal government should support
    slavery and defend the union
  • John Breckinridge- federal government must
    protect slavery

25
Lincoln Wins the Presidency!
  • Lincoln wins without winning a single southern
    state
  • After election is confirmed, South Carolina
    summoned a state convention- December 20, 2860
    they seceded
  • Deep southern states soon followed
  • February 1861- Confederate State of America
    formed
  • Formed own constitution, but stressed the
    importance of freedom for each state and
    guaranteed the protection of slavery

26
War Begins
  • Lincoln takes office on March 4, 1861
  • Fort Sumter was one of the only forts left in the
    Unions control, and also one of the most
    important
  • Lincoln had to decide if he would send in
    supplies to the fort or let the Confederates take
    the fort
  • He sends in supplies and Confederates attack and
    the fort had been captured on April 15, 2861
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