chapter 4: civil war and reconstruction. i. growth of slavery a.industrial revolution a.mid 1700s to...

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CHAPTER 4: CIVIL WAR AND RECONSTRUCTION

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Page 1: CHAPTER 4: CIVIL WAR AND RECONSTRUCTION. I. Growth of Slavery A.Industrial Revolution A.Mid 1700s to early 1800s B.North – Factories C.South – Cotton

CHAPTER 4: CIVIL WAR AND

RECONSTRUCTION

Page 2: CHAPTER 4: CIVIL WAR AND RECONSTRUCTION. I. Growth of Slavery A.Industrial Revolution A.Mid 1700s to early 1800s B.North – Factories C.South – Cotton

I. Growth of SlaveryA. Industrial Revolution

A. Mid 1700s to early 1800sB. North – FactoriesC. South – Cotton gin (eli whitney)

What did not Northerners think about abolishing slavery?

Page 3: CHAPTER 4: CIVIL WAR AND RECONSTRUCTION. I. Growth of Slavery A.Industrial Revolution A.Mid 1700s to early 1800s B.North – Factories C.South – Cotton

II. The cause of tensionsA. Who had gov’t power

1. SectionalismB. What was economic basis

1. Farming or factories?

Page 4: CHAPTER 4: CIVIL WAR AND RECONSTRUCTION. I. Growth of Slavery A.Industrial Revolution A.Mid 1700s to early 1800s B.North – Factories C.South – Cotton

III. COMPROMISE OF 1850• 15 and 15: California?• Gold Rush ‘49• Extend compromise line?

Page 5: CHAPTER 4: CIVIL WAR AND RECONSTRUCTION. I. Growth of Slavery A.Industrial Revolution A.Mid 1700s to early 1800s B.North – Factories C.South – Cotton

COMPROMISE OF 1850

Compromise of 1850Settles

Texas/New Mexico border

dispute

Bans slave trade in

Washington, D.C.

Admits California as a

free state

Upholds popular sovereignty in

New Mexico and Utah

Includes Fugitive Slave

Act

Page 6: CHAPTER 4: CIVIL WAR AND RECONSTRUCTION. I. Growth of Slavery A.Industrial Revolution A.Mid 1700s to early 1800s B.North – Factories C.South – Cotton

IV. FUGITIVE SLAVE ACT

Northerners now feel a part of the slave system.

Doesn’t sit well with many

Page 7: CHAPTER 4: CIVIL WAR AND RECONSTRUCTION. I. Growth of Slavery A.Industrial Revolution A.Mid 1700s to early 1800s B.North – Factories C.South – Cotton

V. KANSAS-NEBRASKA ACT

• Two territories• Supposed to be free• Popular Sovereignty• Bloody Kansas• Violence in Senate a. Sumner b. Brooks

Page 8: CHAPTER 4: CIVIL WAR AND RECONSTRUCTION. I. Growth of Slavery A.Industrial Revolution A.Mid 1700s to early 1800s B.North – Factories C.South – Cotton
Page 9: CHAPTER 4: CIVIL WAR AND RECONSTRUCTION. I. Growth of Slavery A.Industrial Revolution A.Mid 1700s to early 1800s B.North – Factories C.South – Cotton

VI. DRED SCOTT CASE

• Slave in free territory (Wisc)• Supreme Court• Slaves are property; not people• Congressional power limited

Page 10: CHAPTER 4: CIVIL WAR AND RECONSTRUCTION. I. Growth of Slavery A.Industrial Revolution A.Mid 1700s to early 1800s B.North – Factories C.South – Cotton

VII. South SecedesReasons

1. Lincoln elected 1860a. Won no Southern statesb. South: no voice in national gov’t

Page 11: CHAPTER 4: CIVIL WAR AND RECONSTRUCTION. I. Growth of Slavery A.Industrial Revolution A.Mid 1700s to early 1800s B.North – Factories C.South – Cotton

2. Economics of cottona. worldwide demandb. impact of “take care of your own first”?

Page 12: CHAPTER 4: CIVIL WAR AND RECONSTRUCTION. I. Growth of Slavery A.Industrial Revolution A.Mid 1700s to early 1800s B.North – Factories C.South – Cotton

VII. Civil War Begins

A. South Carolina 1. first state to secede 2. Fort Sumter: Charleston 3. Union holds fort 4. Confederates bombard (4/12-4/14, 1861)

Page 13: CHAPTER 4: CIVIL WAR AND RECONSTRUCTION. I. Growth of Slavery A.Industrial Revolution A.Mid 1700s to early 1800s B.North – Factories C.South – Cotton

CHARLESTON HARBOR, S. C.

Page 14: CHAPTER 4: CIVIL WAR AND RECONSTRUCTION. I. Growth of Slavery A.Industrial Revolution A.Mid 1700s to early 1800s B.North – Factories C.South – Cotton

FORT SUMTER, SOUTH CAROLINA

Page 15: CHAPTER 4: CIVIL WAR AND RECONSTRUCTION. I. Growth of Slavery A.Industrial Revolution A.Mid 1700s to early 1800s B.North – Factories C.South – Cotton

Dividing the Nation

Page 16: CHAPTER 4: CIVIL WAR AND RECONSTRUCTION. I. Growth of Slavery A.Industrial Revolution A.Mid 1700s to early 1800s B.North – Factories C.South – Cotton

South Seceeds and the Civil War Begins

Long-Term Causes Immediate Cause

Event

Page 17: CHAPTER 4: CIVIL WAR AND RECONSTRUCTION. I. Growth of Slavery A.Industrial Revolution A.Mid 1700s to early 1800s B.North – Factories C.South – Cotton

SECTION 1 ESSENTIAL QUESTIONS1. Why was the fight over farming or factories

as the basis of the economy truly stupid?

2. It can be said that there is nothing more American than solving the slavery issue by popular sovereignty. Explain.

3. What was the ultimate reason the southern states seceeded (separated) from the North?

Page 18: CHAPTER 4: CIVIL WAR AND RECONSTRUCTION. I. Growth of Slavery A.Industrial Revolution A.Mid 1700s to early 1800s B.North – Factories C.South – Cotton

SECTIONS 2 & 3

The Civil War

Page 19: CHAPTER 4: CIVIL WAR AND RECONSTRUCTION. I. Growth of Slavery A.Industrial Revolution A.Mid 1700s to early 1800s B.North – Factories C.South – Cotton

Lincoln’s view on slavery“If I could save the Union without freeing any slave, I would do it; and if I could save it by freeing all the slaves, I would do it; and if I could do it by freeing some and leaving others alone, I would also do that.”

—Abraham Lincoln, August 22, 1862,quoted in Carl Sandburg, Abraham Lincoln

From this, what is Lincoln’s obvious goal for the Civil War?

Page 20: CHAPTER 4: CIVIL WAR AND RECONSTRUCTION. I. Growth of Slavery A.Industrial Revolution A.Mid 1700s to early 1800s B.North – Factories C.South – Cotton

I. Battle of ANTIETAM (Summer, 1862)

A. South invades North– Want British help

• Emancipation Proclamation

Page 21: CHAPTER 4: CIVIL WAR AND RECONSTRUCTION. I. Growth of Slavery A.Industrial Revolution A.Mid 1700s to early 1800s B.North – Factories C.South – Cotton
Page 22: CHAPTER 4: CIVIL WAR AND RECONSTRUCTION. I. Growth of Slavery A.Industrial Revolution A.Mid 1700s to early 1800s B.North – Factories C.South – Cotton

II. Emancipation ProclamationA. Issued Sept. 1862: Rejoin w/ no penaltyB. Effective Jan. 1, ‘63: CSA slaves freeC. Politically drivenD. Effects (2):

Page 23: CHAPTER 4: CIVIL WAR AND RECONSTRUCTION. I. Growth of Slavery A.Industrial Revolution A.Mid 1700s to early 1800s B.North – Factories C.South – Cotton

III. General U.S. GrantA. Alcoholic before warB. If I die, I die attitudeC. General of the westD. Shiloh: did what was necessary 1. “All I do is win, win, win”E. Promoted 2 top general

Page 24: CHAPTER 4: CIVIL WAR AND RECONSTRUCTION. I. Growth of Slavery A.Industrial Revolution A.Mid 1700s to early 1800s B.North – Factories C.South – Cotton

IV. GRANT & TOTAL WAR

• War dragging• Break will of South• Everything fair game• Wm. Tecumseh Sherman

Page 25: CHAPTER 4: CIVIL WAR AND RECONSTRUCTION. I. Growth of Slavery A.Industrial Revolution A.Mid 1700s to early 1800s B.North – Factories C.South – Cotton
Page 27: CHAPTER 4: CIVIL WAR AND RECONSTRUCTION. I. Growth of Slavery A.Industrial Revolution A.Mid 1700s to early 1800s B.North – Factories C.South – Cotton

SECTION 2 & 3 ESSENTIAL QUESTIONS

1. Give a specific supporting fact for this statement: Lincoln did not make the Emancipation Proclamation so slaves could be free.

2. What was the theory behind the success of Total War?

Page 28: CHAPTER 4: CIVIL WAR AND RECONSTRUCTION. I. Growth of Slavery A.Industrial Revolution A.Mid 1700s to early 1800s B.North – Factories C.South – Cotton

SECTION 4

Reconstruction

Page 29: CHAPTER 4: CIVIL WAR AND RECONSTRUCTION. I. Growth of Slavery A.Industrial Revolution A.Mid 1700s to early 1800s B.North – Factories C.South – Cotton

• A. Rebuilding of the South economically and politically.

• 1. Physical rebuilding was secondary• 2. Politics: Republicans (North) vs Dems (South)

I. What was Reconstruction?

Page 30: CHAPTER 4: CIVIL WAR AND RECONSTRUCTION. I. Growth of Slavery A.Industrial Revolution A.Mid 1700s to early 1800s B.North – Factories C.South – Cotton

II. Andrew Johnson’s Plan

• 1. Pardon all except:• a. officers and officials• b. rich planter elite ($20,000+)• c. Why not RPE?• 2. State Conventions• a. Revoke secession• b. ratify 13th Amendment• 3. Former CSA officials earn 2nd chance• a. CSA VP in Senate!• b. Alarmed Republicans

Page 31: CHAPTER 4: CIVIL WAR AND RECONSTRUCTION. I. Growth of Slavery A.Industrial Revolution A.Mid 1700s to early 1800s B.North – Factories C.South – Cotton

III. Radical Reconstruction

Southern states must:

Ratify (approve) 13th, 14th,15th Amendments– 13th: slavery illegal– 14th: Born in USA, you’re a citizen– 15th: Can’t be denied the vote based on color

– Write new state constitutions– Accept military rule until above is met

No former CSA officials ever allowed to vote or hold office again.

Page 32: CHAPTER 4: CIVIL WAR AND RECONSTRUCTION. I. Growth of Slavery A.Industrial Revolution A.Mid 1700s to early 1800s B.North – Factories C.South – Cotton

IMPEACHING JOHNSON• Congressional smack down for vetoes• High Crimes & Misdemeanors• 1 short• Powerless

Page 33: CHAPTER 4: CIVIL WAR AND RECONSTRUCTION. I. Growth of Slavery A.Industrial Revolution A.Mid 1700s to early 1800s B.North – Factories C.South – Cotton

South Limits Blacks Politically

• Gerrymandering• Poll tax• Literacy Test

Page 34: CHAPTER 4: CIVIL WAR AND RECONSTRUCTION. I. Growth of Slavery A.Industrial Revolution A.Mid 1700s to early 1800s B.North – Factories C.South – Cotton

South is “Redeemed”A. Amnesty Act of 1872 1. voting back to CSA officials 2. Could hold office again 3. return of old leaders 4. Dems regain control

Page 35: CHAPTER 4: CIVIL WAR AND RECONSTRUCTION. I. Growth of Slavery A.Industrial Revolution A.Mid 1700s to early 1800s B.North – Factories C.South – Cotton

RECONSTRUCTION ENDS

• Unclaimed Electoral Votes: 1876• Hayes’ deal• Union troops pull out– Return of racial oppression