Chapter 13 Summary American History

Chapter 13: A House Divided

Fruits of Manifest Destiny

What were the major factors contributing to U.S. territorial expansion in the 1840s?

Continental Expansion

            Nation's territorial expansion = slavery became central topic of politics

            1840-1860, 300,000 moved west to Oregon and Cali

            Mexico border up to Utah-didn't stop Americans from settling there

            The Mexican Frontier: New Mexico and California

            Mexico gained independence from Spain in 1821

             Nearly as big as U.S (2/3 the population)

            Isolated and sparsely populated

             California linked to US by trade

            1846, Alfred Robinson published Life in California and suggested annexation of California
The Texas Revolt

            Texas—1st part of Mexico to be settled by large number of Americans

             Tejanos: non-Indian, Spanish population in Mexico

            Spanish government agreed to let Americans colonize it to develop the region

             Idea presented by Moses Austin (Connecticut born farmer)

             Moses died-1820, son Stephan received large land grant

            Stephan resold smaller plots to Americans as 12 cents per acre

            1830, Mexico annulled land contracts and barred future emigration from US

             Americans + Mexican elites (happy about economic boom Americans brought)

            demanded greater

            autonomy within Mexico

             Mexico abolished slavery-but allowed Americans to bring their slaves

            Antonia Lopez de Santa Anna: The military leader who, in 1834, seized political power in Mexico and became a   dictator. In 1835, Texans rebelled against him, and he led his army to Texas to crush their rebellion. He captured  the missionary called the Alamo and killed all of its defenders, which inspired Texans to continue their resistance and Americans to volunteer to fight for Texas. The Texans captured Santa Anna during a surprise attack, and he bought his freedom by signing a treaty recognizing Texas's independence.

            Sent army in 1835 to impose central authority

            Texas Revolt: The 1830s rebellion of residents of the territory of Texan—many of them
American emigrants- against Mexican control of the region

             Rebels (Americans + Mexican elite) formed provisional government

            March 6, 1836—Santa Anna's army stormed the Alamo killing 187 people

            April-forces under Sam Houston former TN governor) forced Santa Anna to recognize Texas as independent

            1837—Texas Congressed called for Union with US

            President Van Buren put this off so to not add another slave state

The Election of 1844

            President John Tyler revived idea of Texas annexation in hopes of

             Rescuing his failed administration

             Securing southern support for re-nomination in 1844

             John C. Calhoun presented idea to divide Texas into several states to strengthen southern power

            Henry Clay, former president Van Buren + Whig and Democratic leaders met at Clay's plantation and agreed NOT

            to annex Texas to prevent a war with Mexico

            Clay nominated for Whig party

            James K. Polk nominated for Democratic party

            Former TN governor

            Close association to Andrew Jackson (still most popular Democratic figure)

            Called for "reannexation" of Texas (implied it was part of Louisiana Purchase)

            Called for "reoccupation" of all of Oregon

            1st "dark horse" candidate

            Polk defeated Clay by 2% margin

             If James G. Birney didn't run as Liberty Party candidate (16,000 votes) Clay would have won

            March 1845—days before Polk's inauguration, Texas declared part of United States
The Road to War

            Polk assumed presidency with clear set of goals

             Reduce the tariff (ENACTED)

             Reestablish the independent Treasury system (ENACTED)

            Settle dispute over Oregon ownership (ACCOMPLISHED IN AGREEMENT WITH BRITAIN)

            Bring California into Union

            Polk tried to purchased California-Mexico refused to negotiate

            Spring 1846—Polk planned military action

Soldiers entered region between Nueces River and Rio Grande (land claimed by both countries)

            When fighting inevitably broke out, Polk declared war claiming Mexico had spilled blood on

            American soil

The War and Its Critics

            Mexican War: Controversial war with Mexico for control of California and New Mexico,
1846-1848; the Treaty of

            Guadalupe Hidalgo fixed the border at the Rio Grande and extended the US to the Pacific Coast, annexing more
than a half-million square miles of Mexican territory     

1st conflict fought primarily on foreign soil + occupied a foreign capital o Majority of Americans supported war-idea of manifest destiny

Opposed by some in North who feared expansion would also expand slavery

            Henry David Thoreau jailed in Massachusetts for refusing to pay taxes to protest war

            o On Civil Disobedience- essay defending his actions

            o Abraham Lincoln, Whig Illinois Congressman questioned Polk's claim of "Mexicans spilling blood"

            Raised concerns regarding president's power to "make war at pleasure"
Combat in Mexico

            60,000 volunteers enlisted in Polk's war

            June 1846---band of American insurrectionists (a person who takes arms against constituted authority)

            proclaimed California as free from Mexican control

            o Named Captain John C. Fremont ruler

            June 1846-General Stephen W. Kearney occupied Santa Fe without resistance

            February 1847—Taylor defeated Santa Anna's army at Battle of Buena Vista

            February 1848—Mexico and US agreed to Treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo

            o Confirmed annexation of Texas and ceded California, New Mexico, Arizona, Nevada, and Utah to US

            Region that had been united for centuries was split

            o Divided families and severed trade routes

            Mexican Cession: Treaty guaranteed to Mexican "male citizens" in the new territory "the free enjoyment of their

            liberty and property" and "all the rights of Americans

            o Designed to protect property of Mexican landowners in California

            Original residents of area went from Spaniards, to Mexicans, to Americans and had to adjust as

            immigrants would have
The Texas Borderland

            Anglos: white settlers from East

            o In search of land they expelled some Mexicans— including former allies

Tejanos

            o Confined to unskilled agricultural or urban labor

            o Some women took advantage of American laws and divorced husbands

            During Civil War, some avoided draft by claiming Mexican citizenry

            Race and Manifest Destiny

            1840s—territorial expansion came to be seen as proof of innate superiority of the
"Anglo-Saxon"

race

            John O' Sullivan in Democratic Review: "Race" was the "key" to the "history of nations"

            Annexation of all of Mexico failed in some part because its large, nonwhite Catholic population was unfit for

            citizenship in a republic

            Texas Constitution adopted after independence:

            o Protected slavery

            o Denied civil rights to Indians and blacks

            o "Spanish" Mexicans were considered "white"

            Mixed Mexican and Indian origins were "too Mexican" for democratic self-government

            o New Mexico not allowed to become sate until 1912 because white immigration lagged

            Gold-Rush California

            Most of 1840s, 5x as many Americans emigrated to Oregon than to California

            January 1848-gold discovered in the foothills of the Sierra Nevada Mountains at a sawmill owned by Swiss

            immigrant Johann A. Sutter

            Gold Rush: The massive migration of Americans into California territory in the late 1840s and 1850s in pursuit of

            gold, which was discovered there in 1848

            o Non-Indian population went from 15,000 to 360,000 in 8 years o Gold-rush migrants were mostly young men
o Women ran restaurants and boarding houses and worked as laundresses, cooks, and prostitutes

            1860, men outnumber women 3 to 1

            o Mining competition worsened racial conflicts

            White miners organized extralegal groups that expelled Mexicans, Chileans, Chinese, French, and  Indians

            o State imposed $20/mo. Tax on miners-drove many out of state

            o Gold seekers
Took Indian communities
Murdered thousands

            Sold orphans and vagrants into slavery (although slavery was illegal in California)

            Opening Japan

            Mexican war ended with US taking trade harbors in San Diego and San Francisco o 1848-1860, trade with China triples
Commodore Matthew Perry: US naval officer who negotiated the Treaty of Kanagawa in

1854. That treaty was the first step in starting a political and commercial relationship between the US and Japan

• A Dose of Arsenic

Why did the expansion of slavery become the most diverse political issue in the 1840s and the 1850s?

The entrance of slavery into the heart of American politics dissolved the strongest force for national unity-the 2-party system

The Wilmot Proviso

Wilmot Proviso: Proposal to prohibit slavery in any land acquired in the Mexican War; defeated by southern

senators, led by John C. Calhoun of South Carolina, in 1846 and 1847

• o 1846, Congressman David Wilmot of Pennsylvania proposed prohibiting slavery from all new territory acquired from Mexico

Supported by northerners, Whigs, and Democrats Opposed by southerners

o Measure passed House-even with more populous North o Measure failed Senate-even with balance between slave and free states

            Free Soil Party: Political organization formed in 1848 to oppose slavery in the territory acquired in the Mexican

            War nominated Martin Van Buren for president in 1848. By 1854 most of the party's members had joined the

            Republican Party

            o 1848 election:
Free Soil Party: Martin Van Buren-wanted to end slavery in new territory

            Democrats: Lewis Cass-slavery decision should be made by the new settlers of territory

            (popular sovereignty")
Whig Party: Zachary Taylor (Mexican War hero and Louisiana sugar planter) -WON

            o Former president and son of a former president abandoned their parties to run on a
Free Soil platform

            Showed that antislavery sentiment had spread far beyond abolitionists
The Free Soil Appeal

            Many Northerners resented southern domination of the federal government

            o Preventing the creation of new slave states appealed to those who favored policies such as the

            protective tariff and government aid to internal improvements

            o Ability to move to new western territories = economic betterment-only alternative to permanent

economic dependence for American workers

            o If plantations got new territory, Northern migration would be blocked

            o Free Soil Platform of 1848 called for

            Barring slavery from west

            Federal government to provide free homesteads to settlers in new territories

            View of Southern leaders

            o Barring slavery violated their equal rights as members of the Union

            o Slavery must expand or it would die out

• o Admission of new free states would overturn political balance-South would become minority

Crisis and Compromise

            1848 remembered as the "springtime of nations" —time of democratic uprisings against monarchies of Europe

            and demands by ethnic minorities for national independence

            o Great Britain-Chartist movement (massive demonstrations of democratic reforms)

            o France-replaced monarchy with republic

            o Hungary-proclaimed independence from Austria

            o Italy and Germany (divided into several states)-patriots demanded national unification

            Compromise of 1850: Complex compromise devised by Senator Henry Clay that admitted California as a free state, included a stronger fugitive slave law, and delayed the determination of the slave status of the New Mexico and Utah territories

            o Slave trade, not slavery itself, would be abolished in nation's capital

            o Stringent Fugitive Slave Law-slaves must be returned to Southern owners

            o Slavery status left to local white inhabitant's decisions in remaining territories from
Mexico

            o US would pay off Texas' massive debt that it accumulated while independent

The Great Debate

            Debate on Compromise of 1850

            o Daniel Webster, MA-willing to abandon Wilmot Proviso and adopted new fugitive slave law if it kept sectional peace

            o John C. Calhoun, SC-rejected compromise (North must yield or Union would die)

            o William H. Seward, NY-rejected compromise [Law of morality (against slavery) was above Constitution]

            o President Zachary Taylor-insisted all Congress needed to do was admit California to

            Union

            Died suddenly 7/9/1850
Millard Freeman, NY-New president

            Supported Clay's compromise

Secured adoption of Compromise of 1850

The Fugitive Slave Issue

            Fugitive Slave Act: 1850 law that gave the federal government authority in cases involving runaway slaves; aroused considerable opposition in North

            o Allowed federal commissioners to determine alleged fugitive slave's fate without trial by jury

            o Prohibited local authorities from interfering with capture

            o Required citizens to assist in capture when called upon

            o South usually supported state's rights, but this law contradicted that (allowed federal government to

            override local authority)

            This is how important slavery was to the south

            Law reinvigorated the Underground Railroad-fugitives with abolitionist allies violently resisted recapture

            o 1851, slave named Jerry rescued from jail in Syracuse, NY

            o 1851, owner attempting recapture was killed in Christiana, PN

            o 1855 and 1856, Sydney Howard Gay, recorded over 200 fugitive slaves dispatched to New York and Canada by train from Philadelphia

            Refugees seeking liberty in foreign land (Canada) challenged the image of the US as an asylum for freedom

Douglas and Popular Sovereignty

            Compromise of 1850 (temporarily) restored sectional peace and party unity

            o 1852 presidential election-Democrat Franklin Peirce won over Whig Winfield Scott on platform that

            recognized the Compromise as a final settlement of slavery controversy

            Stephen A. Douglas introduced bill to provide territorial governments for Kansas and

            Nebraska

            o Hoped a transcontinental railroad through Kansas and Nebraska to aid western development

            South opposed this idea (organization of new free territories)— it could disrupt sectional balance

            o Popular Sovereignty: Program that allowed settlers in a disputed territory to decide the slavery issue for

            themselves most closely associated with Senator Stephen A. Douglas of Illinois

            Principle applied in hopes of satisfying South

            Believed this offered a middle ground between extremes of North and South

The Kansas-Nebraska Act

            Kansas-Nebraska Act: 1854 law sponsored by Illinois senator Stephen A. Douglas to allow settlers in newly

            organized territories north of the Missouri border to decide the slavery issue for themselves; fury over the

            resulting appeal of the Missouri Compromise on 1820 led to the violence in Kansas and to the formation of the

Republic Party

            o Kansas and Nebraska were directly in path of westward expansion

            o Slavery prohibited in Kansas and Nebraska under terms of Missouri Compromise

            Douglas's bill would repeal Missouri Compromise

            Antislavery Congressmen issued the Appeal of the Independent Democrats-convinced

            northerners that southern leaders were planning on bringing slavery to west

            o Became law in 1854

            Democratic Party-unity shattered

            Whig Party-unable to develop unified response, collapsed

            South: became solidly Democratic

            North: Whigs augmented by disgruntled Democrats formed new Republic Party

            Dedicated to preventing further expansion of slavery

The Rise of the Republican Party

What combination of issues and events fueled the creation of the Republican Party in the 1850s?

The Northern Economy

            Rise of Republican Party reflected underlying economic and social changes

            o Completion of Market Revolution

            o Mass immigration from Europe

            1843-1857—explosive economic growth

            o Completion of railroad network

            4 great trunk railroads linked eastern cities with western farming and commercial centers

            Economic integration of Northwest and Northeast created groundwork for political unification in the Republican Party

            o Majority of Northern workforce no longer labored in agriculture

            Industrial manufacturing in 2 major areas

            1. Along Atlantic Coast-Boston to Philadelphia to Baltimore

            2. On and near Great Lakes + inland cities Buffalo, Cleveland, Pittsburgh, and Chicago

            Coal mining and iron manufacturing grew rapidly (driven by railroad expansion)

The Rise and Fall of the Know-Nothings

            Know-Nothing Party: Nativists, anti-Catholic third party organized in 1854 in reaction to large-scale German and Irish immigration, the party's only presidential candidate was Millard Fillmore in 1856

            o Hostile towards immigrants, especially Catholics

            o Dedicated to Preserving political office for native-born Americans

            Resisting "aggressions" of Catholic Church that undermined public school system

            o Took 1854 elections in MA-governor, all state's Congressmen, + state legislature

            o Opposed Kansas-Nebraska Act-"Anti-Nebraska" coalitions of voters emergedSlavery

            Sale of liquor

The Free Labor Ideology

            Republican Party—a coalition of anti slavery, Democrats, northern Whigs, Free Soilers, and Know-Nothings opposed to the further expansion of slavery

            o Glorified North as home of progress, opportunity, and freedom
Slavery v. free labor

            o North offered each laborer the opportunity to move up to status of land-owning farmer or independent craftsman

            Thus, achieving economic independence essential to freedom

            o Slavery gave rise to social order consisting of degraded slaves poor whites with no hopes of advancement, and idle aristocrats

            o If slavery was to move west, northern free laborers would be barred and chances of social advancement would be diminished

            Republicans insisted that slavery just be kept out of territories so free labor could flourish

            Republicans were not abolitionists

            o Wanted to stop expansion of slavery, not end it where it existed

"Bleeding Kansas" and the Election of 1856

            "Bleeding Kansas": Violence between pro- and antislavery settlers in the Kansas
Territory, 1856

            o 1854 and 1855, hundreds of pro slavery Missourians crossed Kansas border and cast fraudulent ballots

            President Franklin Pierce recognized legitimacy of pro slavery legislature

            Settlers from free states established rival government

            o Civil War broke out in Kansas

            May 1856, proslavery mob burned free-soil buildings and pillaged private homes

            SC representative Preston Brooks beat antislavery senator Charles Sumner of MA
unconscious

            1856 election:

            o Republican Party: Chose John C. Fremont as candidate

            Drafted platform opposing slavery expansion

            o Democrats: Chose James Buchanan as candidate (was British minister and had no ties to KansasNebraska Act

            Drafted platform on principle of popular sovereignty

            o Know-Nothing Party: Chose ex-resident Millard Fillmore as candidate

            1856 election made it clear that section lines were back

            o One major party destroyed, another weakened, a new one had risen and devoted to
North
The Emergence of Lincoln

What enabled Lincoln to emerge from the divisive party politics of the 1850s?

            James Buchanan-staunch believer in Union

            o Committed himself to pacifying inflamed sectional emotions

o Failed miserably

The Dred Scott Decision

            Dred Scott v. Sanford: 1857 US Supreme Court decision in which Chief Justice Roger B.
Taney ruled that Congress

            could not prohibit slavery in the territories, on the grounds that such a prohibition would violate the Sth

            Amendment rights of slaveholders, and that no black person could be a citizen of the US

            o 1830s Scott has accompanied his owner, Dr. John Emerson of Missouri, to

            Illinois-slavery been prohibited by the Northwest Ordinance of 1787

            Wisconsin-slavery prohibited by Missouri Compromise

            o Scott sued for his freedom-residence in free states made him free

            o Supreme Court ruling:

            Only whites could be citizens of the US

            Regarding Wisconsin residency-Congress had no power under Constitution to bar slavery from territory in the first place

            Missouri Compromise (repealed by the Kansas-Nebraska Act) + any measure interfering

            with southern rights to bring slaves into western territories = unconstitutional

            In effect, declared the Republican platform of restricting slavery's expansion unconstitutional

            In effect, also undermined Douglas' doctrine of popular sovereignty

            o If Congress lacked power to prohibit slavery in territory, how could a territorial

            Does the legislature created by Congress do so?

            o President Buchanan-slavery existed in all territories by virtue of the Constitution

            1858, his administration attempted to admit Kansas as a slave state under Lecompton

            Constitution

            Drafted by pro-southern convention

            Not submitted for popular vote

            o Violated popular sovereignty

            Douglas formed alliance with Republicans to block attempt

            Southern Democrats convinced they could not trust their party's most popular northern leader (Douglas)

Lincoln and Slavery

            Douglas faced competition in reelection to Illinois Senate by Lincoln

            o Lincoln served 4 terms as a Whig in state legislature

            o Lincoln served 1 term in Congress in 1847-1849

            Lincoln gave voice to central values of emerging Republican Party and northerners

            o Combined morals of abolitionists with respect for order and the Constitution of more
conservative

            northerners

            o Expansion of slavery would extinguish "love of liberty" and America's special mission to be a symbol of

            democracy for the entire world

o Blacks were equal in their "natural right" to the fruits of their labor

The Lincoln-Douglas Campaign

            Lincoln: "A house divided against itself cannot stand" o Americans must choose between slavery and free

            Lincoln-Douglas Debates: Series of senatorial campaign debates in 1858 focusing on the issue of slavery in the territories; held in Illinois between Republican Abraham Lincoln, who made a national reputation for himself, and incumbent Democratic senator Stephen A. Douglas, who managed to hold on to his seat

            o Clashing definitions of freedom

            Lincoln-freedom = opposition to slavery

            Believed that "inalienable rights" were to all men, not just those of European decent

            However, he still opposed giving Illinois blacks right to vote or serve on juries and

            believed colonization was the best solution to slavery and racial issues

            Douglas-essence of freedom lay in the local-government and individual self-determination

            Argued that popular sovereignty was not incompatible with Dred Scot decision

            o Although territorial legislatures could no longer exclude slavery directly, all they

            needed to do was refrain from giving the institution legal protection

            o Illinois sharply divided

            Southern Illinois, settled from South, voted Democratic

            Northern Minois, voted Republican

            o Douglas won by a thin margin

John Brown at Harpers Ferry

            Harpers Ferry, Virginia: Site of abolitionist John Brown's failed raid on the federal arsenal, October 16-17, 1859;

            Brown became a martyr (person killed for their beliefs) to his cause after his capture and execution

            o During Civil War in Kansas, Brown traveled to territory

            o He and his followers murdered 5 proslavery settlers on Pottawatomie Creek

            o Next 2 years, raveled through North and Canada-raised money and followers for war against slavery

            o October 16, 1859, he and 21 men seized Harpers Ferry, VA

            o Surrounded by General Robert E. Lee

            o Placed on trial for treason against state of Virginia

            o Governor Henry A. Wise ordered him executed turning him into martyr of the North

            o Raid and execution further widened sectional lines

The Rise of Southern Nationalism

            Secessionists: Southerners who viewed their region's prospects as more favorable outside the Union than with it

            o To remain in the Union meant to accept "bondage" to the North

            o An independent South could become the foundation of a slave empire

Bring in Caribbean, Cuba, other West Indian islands, Mexico and parts of Central America

            o Spoke of southward expansion

            o 1854, Pierre Soule of Louisiana (American ambassador for Spain) persuaded ministers to Britain and France to join him in signing the Ostend Manifesto

            Called on US to purchase or seize Cuba (slavery still legal) from Spain

            o William Walker led series of "filibustering" expeditions in Central America

            Filibusters: act in obstructive manner to legislature, usually by talking at length to stall

            By early 1860s, 7 states of Deep South demanded the Democratic platform pledge protect slavery in all

            territories not yet admitted to Union as states

            o Northern Democrats could not accept this

            o "Fire Eaters": Southern Democratic Nationalists hoped to split Democratic party and the country and form an independent southern Confederacy

The Election of 1860

            Democratic Convention met in April 1860

            o Douglas supporters had majority but not 2/3 necessary for presidential nomination

            o Convention readopted platform of popular sovereignty

            7 deep south states walked out

            o Northern Democrats: nominated Douglas

            Popular sovereignty

            o Southern Democrats: nominated John C. Breckinridge of Kentucky

            Slavery must be protected in western territories

            o Democratic Party, the last great bond of national unity, shattered

            Republican Convention gathered in Chicago

            o Chose Lincoln as their candidate

            o Denied validity of Dred Scott decision

            o Reaffirmed opposition of slavery's expansion

            o Added economic planks designed to appeal to a broad array of northern voters

            Free homesteads in West

            Protective tariff

            Government aid in building a transcontinental railroad

            In effect, 2 political campaigns took place in 1860

            o North-Lincoln and Douglas were combatants

            o South-Douglas, Breckinridge, and John Bell of TN

            John Bell's Party: hastily organized Constitutional Union Party, a haven for Unionist former Whigs

            -adopted platform with a single pledge: to preserve the Constitution as it is (with slavery) and

            the Union as it was (without sectional discord)

            Lincoln won election

The Impending Crisis

What were the final steps on the road to secession?

The Secession Movement

            Southern response to Lincoln's victory

            o Feared the beginning of a long Republican rule

            o Slaveowners feared Republican efforts to extend their party into the South

            Appeal to non-slaveholders-don't accept permanent minority status

            o Deep South political leaders stuck to region's independence

• 7 states seceded from the Union

            o 1st, South Carolina-highest population of slaves and long history of political radicalism

            12/20/1860—legislature unanimously voted to leave Union

            Declaration of the Immediate Causes of Secession-slavery issue was center of this crisis
st and longest complaint: free states inference with fugitive slave return

The Secession Crisis

            President Buchanan denied states right to secede but also denied federal government's right to use force against

            1t|

            Senator John J. Crittenden's of Kentucky (slave state) offered most widely supported compromise with a series of

            unamendable constitutional amendments

            o Guaranteed future of slavery in states it already existed

            o Extend the Missouri Compromise to the Pacific Ocean, dividing between slavery and free soil all territories

            the South saw these as too little, too late. North saw these as the only way to prevent Civil War

            Lincoln opposed plan-they beat them south fair and square and they now the administration is being told they

            will be broken up because they will not surrender to those, they just beat

            o If they surrender, government and the US is over

            Before Lincoln assumed office on March 4, 1861, the 7-seceding states:

            o Formed the Confederate States of America

            o Chose Jefferson Davis of Mississippi as their president

            o Adopted a constitution with some changes

            President would serve a single 6-year term

            Cabinet members (as in Britain) could sit in Congress

            Explicitly guaranteed slave property both in states and any new territory they acquired

And the War Came

• In Lincoln's inaugural address he rejected right of secession but denied any intentions of interfering with slavery in the states

            o Did not mention retaking forts, arsenals, and customs houses the Confederacy had seized

            o He DID promise to "hold" remaining federal property in the seceding states

            1st month of Lincoln's presidency he

            o Avoided any action that might drive more states from the Union

            o Encouraged southern Unionists to assert themselves within the Confederacy

            o Sought to quite chatter in North for forceful action against secession

            o That if war broke out, that it would be the South who fired the first shot, not the Union

            Fort Sumter: First battle of the Civil War, in which the federal fort in Charleston (SC) Harbor was captured by the Confederates on April 14, 1861, after two days of shelling

            o Lincoln notified SC's governor that he planned to replenish the garrison's food supply (troops stationed in a fort or town to defend it)

            o Davis viewed troops presence as offensive

            o Davis ordered batteries to fire on fort

            o April 14, commander surrendered

            o April 15, Lincoln proclaimed insurrection (violent uprising against government) existed in South

            Called for 75,000 troops to suppress uprising

            Civil War has begun

o Within weeks, Virginia, North Carolina, Tennessee, and Arkansas joined Confederacy

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