Unit 1- Slavery and the Nation Divided
Differences Between the North and the South
North South
Differences Between the North and the South
North South
Urban
Industrial
Railroads
Factories
Many Immigrants
No Slavery
Differences Between the North and the South
North South
Urban
Industrial
Railroads
Factories
Many Immigrants
No Slavery
Rural
Agricultural based
“King Cotton”
Little industry
Few Railroads
Few Immigrants
Slavery
- Southerners feared the loss of
slavery would mean loss of culture
I. SLAVERY IN THE TERRITORIES
 The issue of whether
slavery in California and
the West would be legal
led to heated debates in
Congress
 Gold rush led to
application for statehood
for California (1849)
CALIFORNIA BECAME A
STATE IN 1850
II. COMPROMISE OF 1850
 Southerners
threatened secession,
the formal withdraw
from the Union, over
the issue
 Henry Clay worked a
Compromise
 For the North:
California would be
admitted as free state,
sale of slaves banned in
Washington D.C. CONGRESSIONAL DEBATE
 For the South: A more
effective fugitive slave
law
 Residents of New
Mexico & Utah would
vote themselves-
”popular
sovereignty”
III. FUGITIVE SLAVE LAW (ACT)
 Runaway slaves were not
entitled to a trial by jury
 Anyone helping a slave
escape was jailed for 6
months and fined $1,000
 Northerners were upset
and often helped hide
fugitive slaves; some
states passed personal
liberty laws that
guaranteed slaves a fair
trial
IV. UNDERGROUND RAILROAD
 Network of white and
African-American
abolitionists that risked
their safety to help slaves
escape
 “Conductors” hid
fugitives and directed
them to the next
“station”
V. Harriet Tubman
 Famous “Conductor” that
escaped slavery and vowed
to help others do the same
 She made 19 trips back to
South and freed over 300
slaves (Including her own
parents)

Unit 1 notes 2

  • 1.
    Unit 1- Slaveryand the Nation Divided
  • 3.
    Differences Between theNorth and the South North South
  • 4.
    Differences Between theNorth and the South North South Urban Industrial Railroads Factories Many Immigrants No Slavery
  • 5.
    Differences Between theNorth and the South North South Urban Industrial Railroads Factories Many Immigrants No Slavery Rural Agricultural based “King Cotton” Little industry Few Railroads Few Immigrants Slavery - Southerners feared the loss of slavery would mean loss of culture
  • 6.
    I. SLAVERY INTHE TERRITORIES  The issue of whether slavery in California and the West would be legal led to heated debates in Congress  Gold rush led to application for statehood for California (1849) CALIFORNIA BECAME A STATE IN 1850
  • 7.
    II. COMPROMISE OF1850  Southerners threatened secession, the formal withdraw from the Union, over the issue  Henry Clay worked a Compromise  For the North: California would be admitted as free state, sale of slaves banned in Washington D.C. CONGRESSIONAL DEBATE
  • 8.
     For theSouth: A more effective fugitive slave law  Residents of New Mexico & Utah would vote themselves- ”popular sovereignty”
  • 10.
    III. FUGITIVE SLAVELAW (ACT)  Runaway slaves were not entitled to a trial by jury  Anyone helping a slave escape was jailed for 6 months and fined $1,000  Northerners were upset and often helped hide fugitive slaves; some states passed personal liberty laws that guaranteed slaves a fair trial
  • 11.
    IV. UNDERGROUND RAILROAD Network of white and African-American abolitionists that risked their safety to help slaves escape  “Conductors” hid fugitives and directed them to the next “station”
  • 13.
    V. Harriet Tubman Famous “Conductor” that escaped slavery and vowed to help others do the same  She made 19 trips back to South and freed over 300 slaves (Including her own parents)