The document discusses tensions between the North and South leading up to the Civil War. It describes key events like the Kansas-Nebraska Act which repealed the Missouri Compromise and allowed settlers to decide if they would permit slavery, fueling violence in "Bleeding Kansas." The Dred Scott decision inflamed tensions by ruling that slaves were property and blacks could not be citizens. The Lincoln-Douglas debates saw Lincoln argue against slavery's expansion while Douglas supported popular sovereignty. John Brown's raid on Harpers Ferry further raised tensions before Southern states began seceding from the Union.
2. WARM- UP/ TEXTBOOK WALK
In your notebook/paper, please answer the
following:
1. What is the name of Ch. 10?
2. What page/color section is the index? What is it used
for?
3. On what page/ section can you find reference maps?
4. Name one topic from Chs. 10- 20 that you would like
to know more about.
5. Name one topic from Chs. 10- 20 in which you
already know about.
3. The Slave System
Eli Whitney’s invention of cotton gin=
separated seeds from cotton increased
speed of cotton production
Made cotton industry extremely profitable $$
$$ to South
Cotton belt- an area from North Carolina to
Texas that relied on cotton production for
economy
12. The Middle Passage
Long journey of transporting slaves across the Atlantic Ocean
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fCHvD2DyWeY
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Vo-JejTp7O4
Assignment: What was your reaction to the clip?
The main idea of the clip was_______________________________________
______________________________________________________________.
After seeing this, I
felt_____________________________________________
___________________________________________________________
___________________________________________________________
_______
______________________________________________________________.
I felt this way because (for example),
_________________________________
______________________________________________________________
13. Response- on notebook paper, hand
in
Based on viewing the clip and looking through
the images book “From Slave Ship to Freedom
Road” answer the following questions in at
least one full paragraph:
1. What shocked you the most after viewing?
2. What do you think would be the most difficult
part of the slave journey?
3. Why do you think this continued to occur?
14. Nat Turner’s Rebellion
Most violent slave revolt in history
Nat Turner- slave who led a group of slaves
to kill 60 white people, 100 slaves killed
Turner put on trial and executed
Stricter slave codes in place as result
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4Oad2tY-RPc
17. What was it?
The Underground Railroad, a
large network of people who
helped fugitive slaves escape
to the North and to Canada.
18. Who Helped?
Not run by any single organization
or person.
Made up of many individuals --
many whites but mainly black --
who knew only of the local efforts to
aid fugitives and not of the overall
operation.
19. What did it do?
Moved hundreds of slaves northward
each year
South lost 100,000 slaves between
1810 and 1850.
24. Think pair share- Primary Source
Turn to the last page in your yellow packet –
Primary Source- “The Underground Railroad”
Read silently- highlight the “pros” of being a
conductor in one color and the “cons” in
another
Answer #1-3- then discuss with your neighbor
25. The Language of Quilts
Monkey Wrench Quilt Pattern
If people displayed a quilt sewn in the Monkey
Wrench pattern, it was a signal. It told them it
was time to gather the tools they needed for
their journey. These tools might be real tools.
They might also be tools like courage and
awareness
Drunkard’s Path Pattern
The Drunkard’s Path quilt would remind them
to travel in a zigzag pattern as they traveled to
confuse those who might be following them.
This patterned quilt may also have represented
the placement of “stations” of the Underground
Railroad in a certain area.
26. Today’s Big Question:
What were the major differences
between the northern and
southern states before the Civil
War? How will these difference
help and hurt the states when
the war breaks out?
27. Divisive Politics of Slavery
Debate over slavery
Some states wanted popular sovereignty
(power for people to decide if they wanted
slavery permitted or not)
Some states wanted to keep slavery
New states wanted to decide for themselves
30. Differences Between the North and the South
North South
Industrial
Railroads
Factories
Many Immigrants
Capital**
31. Differences Between the North and the South
North South
Industrial
Railroads
Factories
Many Immigrants
Capital**
Rural
Agricultural based
Little industry
Few Railroads
Few Immigrants
34. Exit ticket- on notebook paper!
What regional differences still exist today
between the North and South, or other regions
of the U.S.? How can this cause conflict?
Modern day examples??
36. Divisive Politics of Slavery
Debate over slavery
Some states wanted popular sovereignty
(power for people to decide if they wanted
slavery permitted or not)
Some states wanted to keep slavery
New states wanted to decide for themselves
39. Event North’s Reaction South’s Reaction
The Wilmot
Proviso
California
asks to be
admitted as a
state
(they want to
be free of
slavery)
40. Event North’s Reaction South’s Reaction
The Wilmot
Proviso
Favored the bill, would
ban slavery in new
land
Angry! Said that
people had the right
to slavery since
slaves were
“property”
Never becomes law!!!
California
asks to be
admitted as a
state
(they want to
be free of
slavery)
41. Event North’s Reaction South’s Reaction
The Wilmot
Proviso
Favored the bill, would
ban slavery in new
land
Angry! Said that
people had the right
to slavery since
slaves were
“property”
Never becomes law!!!
California
asks to be
admitted as a
state
(they want to
be free of
slavery)
Happy! President Taylor
backed it
Angry Again! Said
California should be a
slave state Missouri
Line
42. EXIT TICKET
• What do you think was the most important difference
between the North and South before the war? How may this
difference help or hurt them in the war later?
• Written response!!
43. Compromise of 1850
• California will be a Free State (no slavery
allowed!)
• Fugitive Slave Act is Passed
• Popular Sovereignty in the new territories
44. Compromise of 1850
• California will be a Free State (no slavery
allowed!) (1 point for the North)
• Fugitive Slave Act is Passed (1 point for the
South)
• Popular Sovereignty in the new territories
(each side gets one point)
The Score is Tied!
Just another temporary fix
45. Compromise of 1850
Terms of the Compromise
•Compromise has provisions to make North and South happy:
- California to be a free state
- more effective fugitive slave law
- popular sovereignty—residents of territory vote to
decide slavery
- government to pay Texas $10 million for its claim to
eastern NM
- slave trade banned in D.C. but slavery permitted
•Clay gives speech begging North and South to compromise,
save Union
46. The Debaters
Calhoun and Webster Respond
•Clay’s speech starts one of greatest debates in U.S. history
•John C. Calhoun presents Southern case for slavery in territories
•In famous speech, Daniel Webster calls for national unity
The Compromise is Adopted
•Senate rejects compromise; Clay leaves Washington
•Stephen A. Douglas reintroduces resolutions individually
•President Millard Filmore gives support; South decides to negotiate
- Compromise of 1859 voted into law
47. What did they want?
Use pp. 307- 309 with a partner!
Clay Calhoun Webster
48. Fugitive Slave Act
Made a crime to help runaway slaves-
allowed people to arrest slaves in free areas
If people helped/hid a slave, they could face
jail time and fines up to $1,000
People could earn money helping find
escaped slaves
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wtLoat_5TgQ
49.
50. Reactions to Fugitive Slave Act
Thousands of African Americans fled north to
Canada in fear
Upset northerners (who were mostly against
slavery)
51. Abolitionists
Harriet Tubman and the Underground Railroad
• Underground Railroad—secret network of people who help slaves
escape
• Harriet Tubman escapes from slavery, becomes conductor on 19
trips
• Fugitives go on foot at night, often no food, avoiding armed patrols
• Some fugitives stayed in North; others go on to Canada
Uncle Tom’s Cabin
• Abolitionist Harriet Beecher Stowe’s Uncle Tom’s Cabin stirs
protest
• Uncle Tom’s Cabin shows slavery as moral problem, not just
political
52. Uncle Tom’s Cabin
Book written by Harriet Beecher Stowe
(northerner)
Story about a slave facing horrible conditions
by his slave master and family
South outraged- thought it over-exaggerated
slaves’ lives
Most popular book of the day- over 2 million
copies sold
53.
54. Tension in Kansas
The Kansas-Nebraska Act
• Douglas’s bill repeals Missouri Compromise; bitter debate ensues
• 1854 Kansas-Nebraska Act allows popular sovereignty on slavery
The Race for Kansas
• Northern, Southern settlers pour into Kansas Territory
• Most settlers sent by antislavery emigrant aid societies
• In 1855, Kansas holds election for territorial legislature
• Proslavery “border ruffians” vote illegally, win fraudulent majority
• Proslavery government in Lecompton; antislavery rival in Topeka
62. President Buchanan
Very indecisive
Presidency plagued by slavery-related
controversies
The first, March 6, 1857 (The Dred Scott
Decision)
63. Dred Scott
Dred Scott – an African-American slave.
Taken by his master, an officer in the U.S. Army, from the
slave state of Missouri to the free state of Illinois and then to
the free territory of Wisconsin.
He lived on free soil for a long time.
Army ordered his master to go back to Missouri, he took Scott
with him back to that slave state, where his master died.
In 1846, Scott was helped by Abolitionist (anti-slavery)
lawyers to sue for his freedom in court, claiming he should be
free since he had lived on free soil for a long time.
The case went all the way to the United States Supreme Court.
64. The Dred Scott Decision
The Chief Justice of the Supreme Court, Roger B.
Taney, was a former slave owner from Maryland.
In March of 1857, Scott lost his case
The Supreme Court declared no slave or descendant
of a slave could be a U.S. citizen, or ever had been a
U.S. citizen.
As a non-citizen, the court stated, Scott had no rights
and could not sue in a Federal Court and must
remain a slave.
65. Results of the Dred Scott Decision
At that time there were nearly 4 million slaves in
America
The court's ruling affected the status of every
enslaved and free African-American in the United
States.
North cited the controversial Supreme Court
decision as evidence that Southerners wanted to
extend slavery throughout the nation
Southerners approved the Dred Scott decision
believing Congress had no right to prohibit slavery
in the territories.
66. Overall, the Dred
Scott decision had the
effect of angering
more people
More differences of
opinion between
North and South
69. South secedes from the rest of the US
Secede- to separate, break away
South wanted to keep slavery, thought no
compromise could be reached
South Carolina first decided to break apart
from US
Mississippi, Florida, Alabama, Georgia,
Louisiana, Texas, formed their own “country”
called Confederate States of America
(Confederacy)