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States Rights Nullification, Succession, and the Civil War

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States Rights. Nullification, Succession, and the Civil War. Presented by Kelly Curtright Director, Social Studies Office of Standards and Curriculum Oklahoma State Department of Education. Meets Grade 8 U.S. History PASS Standards. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: States Rights

States RightsNullification, Succession,

and the Civil War

Page 2: States Rights

Presented byKelly Curtright

Director, Social StudiesOffice of Standards and

CurriculumOklahoma State Department

of Education

Page 3: States Rights

Meets Grade 8 U.S. History PASS

StandardsStandard 7: The student will examine the significance of the Jacksonian era.

3. Describe and explain the Nullification Crisis and the development of the states’ rights debates.

Page 4: States Rights

Topics in the Item Specs Document

• John C. Calhoun• Henry Clay• Andrew Jackson• Force Bill• Hartford Convention, 1814• Nullification Ordinance• Tariff of 1828• Virginia and Kentucky Resolutions,

1798

Page 5: States Rights

“The powers not delegated to the United States by the Constitution, nor prohibited by it to the States, are reserved to the States respectively, or to the people.”

- Tenth Amendment, 1791 United States Constitution

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Impact on U.S. History by State’s Rights

Debate• Tariffs• Public land policies • National banks• Native Americans within state

boundaries• Internal improvement

(infrastructure)• Extension of slavery

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A Deep Rooted History

•Regional colonial differences

•Confederal philosophy fear of strong central government

•Constitutional Convention & ratification fight

•Hamiltonians versus Jeffersonians

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With the birth of the nation the argument began over what kind of government should the colonies/states have and what kind of powers should it exercise.

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Articles of Confederation, 1781-1789 •First written U.S. Constitution

•Limited powers of central government

•No independent judiciary or executive branch

•Confederation of equal states•States retained individual

sovereignty•States executed laws•Each state had one vote in Congress

Page 10: States Rights

U.S. Constitution, 1789

• Designed to remedy weaknesses in the Articles of Confederation

• Set up a federal system of government

• National government was to be supreme

• No “bill of rights”• Dissension between federalists and

Anti-Federalists

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The Supremacy Clause

"This Constitution, and the Laws of the United States which shall be made in Pursuance thereof; and all Treaties made, or which shall be made, under the authority of the United States, shall be the supreme Law of the land; and the Judges in every State shall be bound thereby, any Thing in the Constitution or Laws of any State to the Contrary notwithstanding."

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The Alien and

Sedition Acts 1798

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President John Adams, 1797-1801

Page 14: States Rights

The Alien and Sedition Acts

marked an attempt by

Federalists to suppress

opposition at home.

Page 15: States Rights

Alien Enemies Act

•Wartime powers•Allowed for the arrest, imprisonment, & deportation of aliens

•Impacted aliens subject to enemy authority

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Sedition Act•Expanded treasonable activities

•Prohibited the publication of “any false, scandalous and malicious writing”

•Twenty five people were arrested under the Sedition law and ten of them were convicted.

Page 17: States Rights

Thomas Jefferson and James Madison

opposed the acts, and drafted the Kentucky

and Virginia Resolutions in protest.

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“That the several states . . . being sovereign and independent, have the unquestionable right to judge of its infraction; and that a nullification, by those sovereignties, . . . is the rightful remedy . . . .” - Kentucky Resolution, 1798

Page 19: States Rights

O-grab-me

Page 20: States Rights

The Hartford Convention, 1814

• New England Federalists opposed Republican anti-foreign trade policies

• During the War of 1812, New England’s economic interests suffered

• Secret meetings were held in Hartford, Connecticut

• Secession from the Union was discussed

• Echoes of the Virginia and Kentucky Resolutions

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Page 22: States Rights

Doctrine of Supremacy

•Chief Justice John Marshall•Uses the “supremacy clause” to disallow taxing the National Bank “the government of the

Union, though limited in its power, is supreme within its sphere of action.” - McCulloch v. Maryland, 1819

Page 23: States Rights

Trade and Tariffs

• A major and continuous strain on the Union, 1820 to the Civil War

• The South imports manufactured goods from Europe and the Northern states

• The Northern states viewed foreign trade as competition

• Protective tariffs were viewed as harmful to the South’s economy

Page 24: States Rights

Tariff of 1828 In 1828, the Congress passed protective tariffs to benefit trade in the Northern States, but were detrimental to the South.

Page 25: States Rights

Nullification Crisis•The Tariff of 1828 is also known as the “Tariff of Abominations”

•Southerners express their opposition

•South Carolina Exposition and Protest, penned by John C. Calhoun

Page 26: States Rights

South Carolina’sNullification Ordinance•Declared the tariffs of 1828

and 1832 “null and void within the borders of South Carolina”

•Passed by a state convention November 24, 1832

•This began the “Nullification Crisis”

Page 27: States Rights

President Jackson Responds

•Sends an navy flotilla to Charleston, November 1832

•Declares that South Carolina stands “on the brink of insurrection and treason"

•Congresses passes the “Force Bill” in 1833

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“Seduced as you have been, my fellow countrymen by the delusion theories and misrepresentation of ambitious, deluded & designing men, I call upon you in the language of truth, and with the feelings of a Father to retrace your steps.”

- President Andrew Jackson

Page 29: States Rights

Daniel Webster Massachusetts (unionist)

1830 Webster-Hayne Debate

Robert Hayne South Carolina(states rights)

Page 30: States Rights

“Liberty and

Union, now and for ever, one and

inseparable!”

Daniel Webster, 1835

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Page 32: States Rights

Compromise Tariff of 1833

• Proposed by the Great Compromiser, Senator Henry Clay of Kentucky

• Agreed to by John Calhoun• South Carolina repeals it’s

nullification of the Force Bill on the same day.

• It was to gradually cut back import taxes to the Tariff of 1816 levels (average of 20%)

• Protectionism was reinstated in 1845

Page 33: States Rights

Impact of the State’s Debate

and Nullification Crisis• South Carolina expected the other

Southern states to support her resistance• Jackson commits the federal government

to the principle of Union supremacy• The conflict helped enforce the idea of

secession leading to secession by South Carolina in December 1860

• South Carolina’s resistance showed that one state could impose its will on Congress

Page 34: States Rights

“Nullification has done its work. It has prepared the minds of men for a separation of the states - and when the question is moved again it will be distinctly union or disunion.” - James Petigru, a Unionist

from South Carolina

Page 35: States Rights

Grade 8United States

History

CRT Assessment Information

For Standard 7.3

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Standard 7.3 Content Limits

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Sample Item 1

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Sample Item 2

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Sample Item 3

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Released Item

From the Multiple-Choice

Released Items Booklet,

2004-05

Correct answer: B

Page 44: States Rights

Presentation created by: Kelly Curtright

Director, Social StudiesOffice of Standards and Curriculum

Oklahoma State Department of Education

Contact:Telephone (405) 522-3523 or

E-mail <[email protected]>