Road to The Civil War

  • Sectionalism

    Each region believed that their own section, or region, of the country, is more important than the whole nation
  • Underground Railroad

    Network of people who helped slaves escape to the northern US and Canada
  • Free Soilers Party

    • Opposed the extension of slavery into the Western territories
  • Compromise of 1850

    With the acquisition of the Mexican territory, the extension of slavery once again becomes an issue
  • Fugitive Slave Law

    Required that Northern states return escaped slaves to their slave-owners in the South
  • Uncle Tom’s Cabin

    Harriet Beecher Stowe
    - Fictional book that showed the horrors and evil side of slavery to the public
    - Motivated abolitionists
  • Kansas Nebraska Act

    Allowed free and previously unorganized territories of Kansas and Nebraska to vote on the issue of slavery - popular sovereignty
  • Debate from the Kansas Nebraska Act

    • Charles Sumner opposed the Kansas Nebraska Act – gave a 2-day speech attacking senators who wrote the act
    • Tension grew
  • Birth of the Republican Party

    • Group of Democrats, Whigs, and Free Soilers formed the Republican Party
    • Opposed the extension of slavery into new territories
  • Know Nothing Party

    • Practiced Nativism – opposed immigration in order to protect native U.S. citizens
  • Dred Scott v. Sanford

    • Supreme Court ruled he could not sue because he was a slave and not a citizen
    • Struck down the Missouri Compromise
    • Can not declare slaves free from their owners without due process of law
  • Lincoln Douglas Debates

    • Public debates
    • Lincoln opposed slavery
    • Douglas believed slavery could not be implemented without laws to govern it
  • Freeport Doctrine

    If a territory does not pass slave laws, no slavery can exist
  • John Brown’s Raid

    • John Brown was an abolitionist – hated slavery
    • Attacked federal arsenal at Harper’s Ferry
    • Attempted to seize weapons to arm slaves for an uprising
  • Election of 1860

    • Lincoln wins the election with no southern electoral votes
    • Pledges to stop the spread of slavery but to not interfere in the south
  • Secession

    As a result of Lincoln’s victory in the Election of 1860, southern states begin to secede from the union.