5.2 Manifest Destiny:
Change In Leadership:
President Harrison died after only four weeks in office.
Vice President John Tyler took over.
He did not agree with most of the Whig platform.
Financial reform.
He refused to charter another national bank.
Tariff Of 1842.
Tension With England:
British journalists were writing terrible things about the US, and vice-versa.
British officials gave asylum to 130 Virginia slaves who had taken over The Creole.
The Caroline (an American steamer) was burned by British troops on the Canadian front.
Disputes over the Maine boundary line.
The Aroostook War (“Small-scale lumberjack clash”) ended in border compromise.
Oregon Territory:
Massive wilderness west of the Rocky Mountains.
Disputed claims between England and the US.
“Fifty-four forty or fight!”
Thousands of Americans moved west on the Oregon Trail.
Election Of 1844:
Henry Clay (Whigs) vs James K. Polk (Democrats).
Polk was a “Dark Horse candidate”.
Polk favored westward expansion.
Clay did not take a stance on Texas.
Liberty Party (Anti Slavery) made a stand in New York.
Narrow victory for Polk.
Texas?:
Mexico still refused to acknowledge Texas independence.
England was pulling for an independent Texas.
President Tyler annexed Texas through a joint-resolution (majority vote in both houses of Congress).
President Polk:
Walker Tariff: a tariff that reduced rates.
Independent Treasury.
Settled the Oregon boundary dispute at the 49th parallel.
To The West!:
Americans wanted access to more natural resources, including land.
Desired more economic opportunities and freedom of religion.
Increased migration.
Increased settlement in the west.
Moving west was looked upon as an adventure, only for the brave.
Why West?:
Manifest Destiny: the nationwide belief that it was Americans’ fate and right to move westwards.
Prime argument for annexing western lands.
“We are better…it is our duty to spread our goals and beliefs.”
The US would continue to expand all the way to the Pacific Ocean.
Increased transportation and communication, along with economic opportunities.
5.3 Mexican-American War:
Tensions With Mexico:
Texas.
California.
The US At War:
President Polk ordered 4,000 American soldiers to wait on the banks of the Rio Grande.
He asked Congress for a declaration of war.
Mexican troops crossed the Rio Grande & attacked.
American blood shed on US soil meant war.
Did President Polk provoke?
Victory:
Zachary Taylor at the Battle Of Buena Vista in 1847.
General Winfield Scott overtook Mexico City.
The US lost roughly 13,000 men.
Momentary California Bear Flag Republic.
1848 Treaty Of Guadalupe Hidalgo ended the war.
Added new, huge territories to the west at the end of the war (Mexican Cession).
The US purchased Texas, California, and all the land in between for $15 million.
Pushback from the ‘Conscience Whigs’.
Tensions:
Led to questions about the status of slavery there.
Wilmot Proviso: a proposal that stated slavery should not exist in any territories that came from Mexico.
Conflict with Native Americans & Mexicans who already lived in the new territories.
Altered their economic systems & culture.
5.4 The Compromise Of 1850:
Mexican Cession:
Territories were gained by the US after the Mexican-American War.
Whether to allow slavery in the new territories.
Popular sovereignty: a notion in which the people who live in a state should determine whether or not they want slavery there.
Election Of 1848:
The Whig party nominated Zachary Taylor.
The Democrats nominated Lewis Cass.
Free Soil Party: a party organized by anti slavery men in the north.
Victory for Taylor.
California Gold Rush:
A few people struck it rich in California by finding gold.
“Forty-niners”.
Rough crowds began to settle in the west.
The need for a government in California.
Big Names In The Slavery Debate:
Henry Clay: The Great Compromiser.
Senator Stephen Douglas: supported Clay’s idea of compromise.
Senator John C. Calhoun: “The Great Nullifier” and defender of the south.
Daniel Webster: urged compromise, with concessions to the south in his Seventh Of March Speech of 1850.
Helped turn the tide towards compromise.
Senator William Seward: firmly against compromise.
President Taylor: vetoing any chance at compromise.
Breaking The Deadlock:
Death of President Taylor.
Vice President Millard Fillmore took over & gladly signed the compromises.
Compromise Of 1850:
Attempt to pacify both sides.
Concessions to the north:
California was a free state.
Disputed territory given to New Mexico, not Texas.
Abolition of slave trade in Washington D.C.
Concessions to the south:
New territory from Mexico was open to popular sovereignty.
Texas got $10 million from the federal government.
Stricter fugitive slave law.
5.5 Sectional Conflict & Regional Differences:
Election Of 1852:
Democrats nominated Franklin Pierce, from New Hampshire (Dark Horse candidate).
Ran on a platform of territorial expansion & support for the Compromise Of 1850.
Whigs nominated Winfield Scott.
A split Whig party led to the election of Pierce.
Beginning of the end for the Whig party.
Increased Migration:
Immigrants from Europe & Asia, especially Ireland and Germany.
Commonly settled in ethnic communities, in order to preserve a sense of culture.
Nativist Movement:
Anti-Catholic, Anti-Immigration.
Wanted to limit immigrants’ political power, economic impact, & cultural influence.
Know-Nothing party.
In The North:
Continued to expand the manufacturing industry.
Relied on free labor, not slave labor.
Free Soil Movement: a movement that opposed slavery not on moral grounds, but on the idea that it would undermine free labor.
The Underground Railroad:
Runaway slaves escaping north through the help of the Underground Railroad.
Escapees led north by ‘conductors’ through a series of safehouse ‘stations’.
Harriet Tubman.
Led to demands for a stricter fugitive slave law; after this was passed, the Underground Railroad increased their efforts.
Pushback Against Slavery:
Minority of very vocal abolitionists combined with black voices to call for an end to slavery.
Presented moral arguments.
Helped slaves escape.
Even used violence to achieve their goals.
Defenders Of Slavery:
Based arguments on racial doctrines & the Bible.
Viewed slavery as a social good.
Believed slavery and states’ rights were protected by the Constitution.
Expansion In The West:
Need for land through which people could travel easily.
Build a railroad all the way to the west.
James Gadsden appointed minister to Mexico.
Gadsden Purchase Of 1853: purchased a narrow section of land from Mexico for $10 million because it was the most viable land for the railroad.
5.6 Failure Of Compromise:
Kansas-Nebraska Act Of 1854:
Senator Stephen A. Douglas suggested that the Territory Of Nebraska be split into two territories, Kansas and Nebraska.
Slavery status there would be decided by popular sovereignty.
Contradicted Missouri Compromise.
Few slaves in these territories, but on voting day, thousands of slave supporters traveled to Kansas to vote in a pro-slavery legislature.
Bleeding Kansas:
John Brown massacred five pro-slavery men, leading to Civil War in Kansas.
1857: applied for statehood on a popular sovereignty basis.
Lecompton Constitution: voters could choose “with slavery” or “without slavery”, but either way, slave masters already in Kansas would be protected.
No statehood.
Two senators in a brawl over Kansas: Charles Sumner (Massachusetts) attacked by Preston S. Brooks (South Carolina).
1856 Election:
Democrats chose James Buchanan.
The New Republican Party chose John C. Fremont.
The Know-Nothing party chose Millard Fillmore (ex-president).
Also endorsed by the dying Whig party.
Easy victory for Buchanan.
Dred Scott vs Sandford (1857):
Slave Dred Scott had lived in (free) Illinois with his master & sued for his freedom.
Ruled that he was not a citizen and so he could not sue.
Ruled slaves were property and so could be taken into any territory.
Ruled the Missouri Compromise was unconstitutional and that Congress had no ability to ban slavery from any state.
Panic Of 1857:
Overspeculation in land and railroads.
Influx of gold from California inflated currency.
Too much grain being grown.
Hit the north the hardest.
Attempts to pass homestead acts, selling land for cheap.
Tariff Of 1857: reduced duties.
Literary Incendiaries:
Uncle Tom’s Cabin by Harriet Beecher Stowe, 1852.
The Impending Crisis Of The South by Hinton R. Helper, 1857.
Political Changes:
The Second Party System ended when slavery and nativism limited loyalty to the two major political parties.
Fostered the creation of sectional parties.
Republican party in the north.
Emergence Of Lincoln:
Running as the Republican candidate for the Illinois Senate seat against Stephen Douglas.
Lincoln-Douglas debates (fall 1858).
Freeport Doctrine: the people had the right to determine slavery, not the Supreme Court.
Douglas won the Illinois senate seat, but Lincoln was in the running for presidency.
Harper’s Ferry:
John Brown created a plan to invade the south, arm the slaves, and start a revolt.
Seized the federal arsenal at Harper’s Ferry in West Virginia, 1859.
Slaves did not revolt.
Brown was captured, put on trial, and executed.
Murderer or martyr?
5.7 Election Of 1860 & Secession:
The Democrats:
First convention ended with no nomination.
Second convention ended with the nomination of Douglas (Illinois).
Southern Democrats hosted their own convention and nominated John C. Breckenridge (Kentucky).
The Constitutional Union Party:
Thrown together quickly out of fear for the future of the union.
Mostly a mixture of former Whig & Know-Nothing members.
Nominated John Bell (Tennessee).
The Republicans:
Appealed to many groups.
Nominated Abraham Lincoln.
Victory For Lincoln:
Got zero electoral votes from the south.
The south saw it as an excuse to leave.
Led to the ultimate secession of most southern states, triggering the civil war.
Secession:
Crittenden Amendments: amendments designed to appease the south.
Slave states could be protected under the 36-30 line.
Future slave states could decide for themselves.
Refused by President Lincoln.
South Carolina, Alabama, Mississippi, Florida, Georgia, Louisiana, and Texas seceded and formed the Confederate States Of America in February 1861.
5.8 Military Conflict In The Civil War:
The Beginning:
President Lincoln sent supplies to Fort Sumter.
The south responded by firing the first shots of the civil war.
The South:
Led by President Jefferson Davis.
Fought on home turf, to protect their way of life.
Talented officers & a skilled army.
Lack of factories led to shortages.
Army at first consisted of volunteers, but quickly had to turn to drafting.
Transportation & infrastructure soon began to crumble.
Roles for women.
The North:
Led by President Lincoln.
Much stronger economy.
Control of the sea.
Greater population.
Lack of strong officers/generals.
Army manned at first by volunteers, then by conscription.
New York draft riots.
Foreign Relations:
1861: Trent Affair.
The Alabama.
Battle Of Bull Run (First Manassas):
First major clash of the two armies, July 21st, 1861.
Confederate general “Stonewall Jackson”.
Confederate reinforcements arrived.
Union troops fled, ending in southern victory.
Gave the southern troops overconfidence.
Peninsula Campaign:
General George McClellan marched towards the confederate capital of Richmond, Virginia.
Driven back by Confederate General Robert E. Lee.
Signified that this would not be a quick war.
The North’s Military Plan:
Blockade southern coasts.
Liberate the slaves.
Seize control of the Mississippi River.
Send troops through Georgia and the Carolinas, cutting part of the south off.
Capture the capital.
Force the south into submission.
Blockade The Seas:
England recognized the blockade.
Blockade-running.
Antietam:
Second Battle Of Bull Run, September 17th, 1862.
Extremely bloody, with a total of 22,000 casualties.
Halted Lee’s advancement.
Triggered the launch of the Emancipation Proclamation.
Getting To Gettysburg (July 1-3, 1863):
General A. E. Burnside now in charge of the Union army.
Rash attack at Fredericksburg, Virginia (December 13th, 1862).
Joseph Hooker now in charge.
Badly beaten by Stonewall Jackson.
General George G. Meade now in charge.
Met & defeated Lee at Gettysburg, Pennsylvania.
President Lincoln’s Gettysburg Address.
The War In The West:
General Ulysses S. Grant.
Victories at Fort Henry & Fort Donelson (February 1862).
Confederates dragging out the war at Shiloh (April 6-7, 1862).
Vicksburg victory the day after Gettysburg.
Sherman’s march.
Ending The War:
Wilderness Campaign: Grant moving towards Richmond, taking heavy losses.
Attempted negotiation between north & south, but neither side was willing to make concessions.
Lee’s troops cornered at Appomattox Courthouse (April 1865), where Lee surrendered.
President Lincoln’s Death:
April 14th, 1865: President Lincoln was shot by John Wilkes Booth at Ford’s Theater in Washington D.C.
He died the following morning.
The north grieved.
5.9 Government Policies During The Civil War:
Limiting Liberties:
Federal monetary advancements to the military without congressional approval.
Writ of Habeas Corpus suspended.
Supervised voting in the border states.
Economic Issues In The North:
Morrill Tariff Act: an act that increased taxes.
Greenbacks: green paper money that was produced.
Sale of bonds.
National Banking System: a system that established a standard currency.
Economic boom during the war, thanks to new factories and machinery.
Profiteers.
New opportunities for women.
Economic Issues In The South:
Sale of bonds.
Increase in taxes.
Printed out tons of money, worth little.
The Big Issues:
Began the war in order to preserve the Union.
Prevent the Confederacy from gaining support in Europe.
Emancipation Proclamation Of 1863:
Freed the slaves in states that were still in rebellion.
Inspired many slaves to free themselves, where possible.
Slave refugees fleeing north.
Removed any chance of negotiation between the north and south.
Received mixed reactions.
Committed the Union to fighting on a moral basis.
Inspired former slaves to join the Union army.
Anti-War:
Congressional Committee On The Conduct Of War (1861): a committee of radical Republicans who desired to limit presidential power, but wanted President Lincoln to emancipate all slaves.
Danger of northern Democrats.
Copperheads: people who made every effort to obstruct the war, President Lincoln, & emancipation.
Election Of 1864:
President Lincoln vs General McClellan.
In order to gain more support, Republicans joined with the War Democrats and called themselves the Union Party.
President Lincoln & running mate Andrew Johnson.
Nasty campaign against President Lincoln.
The difficulty of soldiers voting.
President Lincoln’s reelection meant the beginning of the end for the south.
The Civil War In Hindsight:
Loss of 600,000 men; 1 million wounded.
$15 billion.
The preservation of democracy.