democracy in crisis

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Democracy in Crisis

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Democracy in Crisis. I believe this government cannot endure, permanently half slave and half free . I do not expect the Union to be dissolved -- I do not expect the house to fall -- but I do expect it will cease to be divided. It will become all one thing or all the other. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Democracy in Crisis

Democracy in Crisis

Page 2: Democracy in Crisis

I believe this government cannot endure, permanently half slave and half free. I do not expect the Union to be dissolved -- I do not expect the house to fall -- but I do expect it will cease to be divided. It will become all one thing or all the other.

Abraham Lincoln, 1858

Page 3: Democracy in Crisis

An elite within an elite

– 3 out of 4 white families owned no slaves– in 1850, majority of slaveowning families had 5 or

fewer– less than 40,000 families possessed 20 or more– and only 2,000 families owned 100 or more

Page 4: Democracy in Crisis

• Planters had:– Best land– Most money– Most political connections, representation, and

influence

Page 5: Democracy in Crisis

• Most whites lived in rugged, hilly land– Subsistence farmers– Outside of market revolution– Ex: western NC, piney woods of Georgia

Page 6: Democracy in Crisis

Why did poor whites go along with slavery?

Page 7: Democracy in Crisis

– Racial solidarity– Democratic participation– Resistance to outside

criticism– “masters of small worlds”

Page 8: Democracy in Crisis

Slavery:

• Limited urbanization, industrialization, immigration

• Made $$$ for planters, Northern merchants and industrialists

• Supplied 3/4 of world’s cotton• Fueled industrialization in North, England,

Europe

Page 9: Democracy in Crisis

Ideology of the South

• Paternalism• Looked to Bible for support• Saw northern industrial society as ugly,

unequal, crass

Page 10: Democracy in Crisis

Slave Life

• Unofficial marriages• Families broken up• Sexual violence• Embrace of Christianity

Page 11: Democracy in Crisis

Slave Revolts• Lead to harsher laws• Slave revolts lead to strict laws• Attack on New Orleans (1811)• Denmark Vesey (1822)• Nat Turner (1831)

Page 12: Democracy in Crisis

Ominous Tides

• Slavery on the rise in America (1820s-1850s)• Receding elsewhere• British Empire bans slavery in 1830s• So does Mexico

Page 13: Democracy in Crisis

Abolitionism Emerges in the North

• William Lloyd Garrison starts The Liberator newspaper just before Turner rebellion

Page 14: Democracy in Crisis

• Mixed race and gender movement• Hated by almost everyone

Page 15: Democracy in Crisis

Remember the Alamo!

• White settlers bring slaves into Texas• Texas = part of Mexico• Texans gain independence to preserve slavery (1836)

Page 16: Democracy in Crisis

Polk the Imperialist

• Democrats win 1844 election on pro-expansion platform

• Pres. James K. Polk wants to buy California from Mexico

Page 17: Democracy in Crisis

The Mexican War (1846-1848)

• Questionable evidence used to launch war on Mexico

• US Army occupies Mexico City• Young Rep. Abraham Lincoln opposes

Page 18: Democracy in Crisis

The Result

• US gains half-million square acres of land• = 1/3 of Mexico• Vindicates “Anglo Saxon” superiority• Indians and others lose rights in conquered

territory