chapter 18, sections 1,2

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Chapter 18, Sections 1,2. The Debate over Slavery and the War in Kansas.

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Chapter 18, Sections 1,2. The Debate over Slavery and the War in Kansas. The Wilmot Proviso. Neither slavery nor involuntary servitude shall ever exist in any part of the territories. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Chapter 18, Sections 1,2

Chapter 18, Sections 1,2.

The Debate over Slavery and the War in Kansas.

Page 2: Chapter 18, Sections 1,2

The Wilmot Proviso

• Neither slavery nor involuntary servitude shall ever exist in any part of the territories.

Page 3: Chapter 18, Sections 1,2

California and Slavery

• CA was antislavery due to its having been owned by Mexico, and also because its miners did not want to compete against slave labor.

Page 4: Chapter 18, Sections 1,2

Henry Clay

• Came up with a compromise that would allow California to be admitted as a free state, and created a new harsher fugitive slave law.

Page 5: Chapter 18, Sections 1,2

Fugitive Slave Act (1850) Commissioners were paid twice as much to call a fugitive a slave rather than free

him.

Page 6: Chapter 18, Sections 1,2

Harriet Beecher Stowe

• Wrote Uncle Tom’s Cabin.

Page 7: Chapter 18, Sections 1,2

Stephen Douglas

• Proposed the Kansas-Nebraska Act so he could get his Chicago Railroad. Also had a series of debates with Abe Lincoln.

Page 8: Chapter 18, Sections 1,2

The Kansas and Nebraska Act

• The Northerners believed that popular sovereignty in Kansas and Nebraska violated the Missouri Compromise.

Page 9: Chapter 18, Sections 1,2

• Kansas was up-for-grabs until a proslavery legislature was voted in. Then it bled.

Page 10: Chapter 18, Sections 1,2

The first Kansas legislature made it a

crime to speak against slavery.

Page 11: Chapter 18, Sections 1,2

Henry Ward Beecher

• Abolitionist Reverend who raised money from his congregation for rifles for antislavery Kansans.

Page 12: Chapter 18, Sections 1,2

“Sack of Lawrence”.

• When an anti-slavery legislature started up, a pro-slavery posse went after its members. They fled… and one man died.

Page 13: Chapter 18, Sections 1,2

John Brown

• Abolitionist responsible for the Pottawatomie Massacre, and the arsenal raid at Harper’s Ferry. Wanted to arm the slaves.

Page 14: Chapter 18, Sections 1,2

Charles Sumner

• Made a speech criticizing the actions of proslavery Kansans- and got beat unconscious for it.

Page 15: Chapter 18, Sections 1,2

Preston Brooks was congratulated by Southerners for beating Sumner unconscious.

They sent him replacement canes.