day 66: renewing the sectional struggle

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Day 66: Renewing the Sectional Struggle Baltimore Polytechnic Institute December 3, 2013 A/A.P. U.S. History Mr. Green

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Day 66: Renewing the Sectional Struggle. Baltimore Polytechnic Institute December 3 , 2013 A/A.P. U.S. History Mr. Green. Renewing the Sectional Struggle. Objectives: Indicate how the Whig party’s disintegration over slavery signaled the end of nonsectional political parties. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Day  66:  Renewing the Sectional Struggle

Day 66: Renewing the Sectional StruggleBaltimore Polytechnic Institute

December 3, 2013A/A.P. U.S. History

Mr. Green

Page 2: Day  66:  Renewing the Sectional Struggle

Objectives: Indicate how the Whig party’s disintegration over slavery signaled the end of nonsectional political parties.Describe how the Pierce administration, as well as private American adventurers, pursued numerous overseas and expansionist ventures primarily designed to expand slavery.Describe Americans’ first ventures into China and Japan in the 1850s and their diplomatic, economic, cultural, and religious consequences.Describe the nature and purpose of Douglas’s Kansas-Nebraska Act, and explain why it fiercely rekindled the slavery controversy that the Compromise of 1850 had been designed to settle.

AP FocusNot content with the land gained from Mexico, southerners look to Central America and the Caribbean for possible slave states. Central America is also seen as an ideal location for a canal connecting the Pacific and Atlantic Oceans, a project a future generation will undertake.The Kansas-Nebraska Act, orchestrated by Senator Stephen A. Douglas for political as well as personal reasons, further polarizes the nation. Northerners conclude that, with popular sovereignty, there will be no limitations placed on the expansion of slavery.

Renewing the Sectional Struggle

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CHAPTER THEMESIn the 1850s, American

expansionism in the West and the Caribbean was extremely controversial because it was tied to the slavery question.

Commercial interests guided American foreign policy in Asia and contributed to sectional tension within the United States, as regions tried to secure the terminus to a transcontinental railroad.

Chapter Focus

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Election Charts 1848, 1852,1856, 1860 are for next week

Decades Chart 1850’s-due next weekID check on Thursday that you can use your

wordsMultiple Choice test on Unit 4 on FridayEssay section on MondayIDs officially due on Monday

Announcements

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Identify the components of the Compromise of 1850. Page 424

How will this impact future slavery questions?

Evaluate the effectiveness of the Compromise of 1850.

Drill

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October 1849-Southerners decided to meet the next year to discuss secession in Nashville, TN

Henry Clay wanted the North and South to make concessions-a more feasible fugitive-slave law

John C. Calhoun-championed the South. The agitation of slavery would end in disunion. Rejected Clay’s concessions. Leave the South alone

Daniel Webster-God passed the Wilmot Proviso. 7th of March Speech

How? Through climate, topography and geographyBankers and commercial centers were happy-Why?

Twilight of the Senatorial Giants

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Radical freshman senator William Seward wanted no compromise

End slavery in the territoriesInvoked the “higher law” than the

ConstitutionPresident Taylor seemed bent on not signing

any compromiseHe died suddenly and Millard Fillmore signed

the compromise

Deadlock and Danger on Capitol Hill

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Election of 1852DemocratsFranklin PierceNew HampshireWeak/IndecisiveServed in Mexican WarEndorsed: Compromise

of 1850, Fugitive Slave Law

254 Electoral Votes

WhigsWinfield ScottAblest general of his

generationPraised Compromise of

1850, Fugitive Slave Law

Split on slavery42 Electoral VotesMarked the end of the

Whigs

Defeat and Doom for the Whigs

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Central America a concern after the gold rush and Mexican War

The dream of a continuous Atlantic to Pacific transportation route aroused debate

Britain seized San Juan del Norte (Nicaragua’s Mosquito Coast) Caused a treaty between the U.S. and New Granada(Columbia)

U.S. the right of transit across the Isthmus by maintaining the “perfect neutrality” of the route for free trade

Transcontinental Railroad completed in 1855 though the Panamanian jungle

Clayton-Bulwer Treaty-U.S. and Britain would not seek exclusive control over a future Isthmain waterway

Expansionist Stirrings South of the Border

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Central America

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Southern slavocrats wanted to push slavery south into Central America by acquiring land.

William Walker-tried to take Baja California Took Nicaragua and installed himself as President

U.S. withdrew recognition and he was executed in 1860 by a Honduran firing squad

Cuba another enticing slavery acquisitionPolk offered $100 million to Spain

1850-1851 feeble takeovers ended in disasterSpain took American Steamer Black Warrior in 1854Ostend Manifesto-$120 million for Cuba. If not, and the

continued Spanish ownership endangered American interests, the U.S. would be right in forcefully taking the land

On to Central America

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Caleb Cushing sent by President Tyler in early 1844

Signed the Treaty of Wanghia-1st formal diplomatic treaty between the U.S. and China

Matthew C. Perry sent by President FillmoreUsed grace and fear to finalize the Treaty of Kanagawa on March 31, 1854

The Allure of Asia

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Transportation to newly acquired lands imperative to keep them in the union

All sorts of solutions….even camelsRailroads the only solutionWhere to build this railroad??? The South? The

North?Best routes south of the Mexican BorderSecretary of War Jefferson Davis arranged James

Gadsden, a railroad man to negotiate with Santa Anna

Purchased a small area for $10 million

Pacific Railroad Promoters/Gadsden Purchase

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Proposed Southern RR line

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Kansas and Nebraska, 1854

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Stephen Douglass envisioned a line of settlements across the continent

He also owned Chicago real estate and railroad stock.

Proposed the Nebraska Territory be sliced into 2-Kansas and Nebraska

Utilized popular sovereignty to decide slaveryFlew in face of Missouri Compromise

Douglas’s Kansas-Nebraska Scheme

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