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UNIT 5 — Period 5: 1844-1877 | |
Topic 5.1 | |
Contextualizing Period 5 | |
Learning Objective: Explain the context in which sectional conflict | |
emerged from 1844 to 1877. | |
Btween 1844 and 1877, the United States expanded its teritory to the | |
Pacific Ocean and suffered from rising sectionalism over the issue of expanding | |
slavery into this new territory. In 1861, tensions exploded into the Civil War | |
that permanently expanded the power of the federal government. After four | |
years of fighting and the death of 750,000 people, the country emerged with a | |
“new birth of freedom” as a result of the end of slavery. But racism remained. | |
‘The first half of the 19th century included many advances in the young | |
nation. Political, demographic, economic, and territorial development changed | |
the country. The right to vote expanded political participation. New technology | |
and transportation combined to support a market revolution that altered the | |
relationships between peoples in the different regions. Reforms in education | |
and other areas improved lfe. New expressions in art and literature signified | |
an emergent American culture. Yet these advancements were not shared by all, | |
and challenges, particularly over foreign affars and slavery, remained. | |
Growth in Land and Population Between 1844 and 1877, the United | |
States expanded westward, with many citizens believing it had a destiny to | |
control all the land to the Pacific Ocean. The country added land through | |
negotiations, purchase, and war. The largest acquisition came from the Mexican | |
War, through which the United States established its southern border and | |
claimed ports on the Pacific. | |
“This rapid expansion attracted new immigrants, who left Europe because | |
of famine, poverty, and political turmoil. In response to immigration, | |
particularly of people from Ireland and China, some native-born Americans | |
argued against citizenship for new residents. This resulted in the forming of | |
political organizations o restrict immigration and citizenship. | |
Political Conflicts over Slavery Expansion and sectionalism also | |
intensified differences over politics, economics, and, most seriously, slavery. | |
Slaveowners became more insistent on their right to own enslaved people and | |
argued for strong federal laws to return enslaved people who escaped bondage. | |
Abolitionists became more insistent on ending slavery. Free-Soilers argued | |
that the institution should not be allowed into the territories. Opponents of | |
260 UNITED STATES HISTORY: AP’ EDITION | |
slavery organized an “underground railroad” to help fugitives escape from | |
slavery. Congress passed a serics of compromises aftempting to settle the issue | |
of whether slavery could expand into new territorics. | |
The Civil War and Reconstruction Then, in 1860, the Republicans | |
nominated Abraham Lincoln for president. Though opposed toslavery, he also | |
opposed immediate abolition. Stil,his election frightened slaveholders. They | |
feared that, despite his pledge to allow slavery to continue where it existed, his | |
opposition to the expansion of slavery would lead to its eventual end. Eleven | |
states left the Union, and a four-year civil war ravaged the country. | |
‘The Union victory ended slavery and shifted power to the federal | |
government from the states. The 12 years aer the war, known as Reconstruction, | |
were marked by conflict. It was a period of fierce confrontations between | |
the executive and legislative branches and between the federal and state | |
governments. These confrontations reshaped how people thought about | |
federalism and the separation of powers among the branches of government. | |
Racism and Discrimination Further, the country suffered from | |
tremendous racial conflict. As the freed African Americans worked to | |
established new lives, White-dominated legislatures passed Black Codes that | |
restricted the basic rights of Black citizens. In place of slavery, a new labor | |
system known as sharecropping emerged that kept Black farmers in conditions | |
almost as subservient to White landowners as slavery had. Finally, White | |
Americans attempting to maintain racial supremacy killed thousands of Black | |
citizens. | |
‘While the Civil War preserved the Union, historians vigorously debate the | |
successes and failures of Reconstruction. In the future, the nation that survived | |
acivil war would continue to grow; expand, and industrialize. Further, it would | |
continue to struggle over achieving equal treatment for all of its people. | |
ANALYZE THE CONTEXT | |
1. Explain the historical context for the debate over slavery in the 1850s. | |
2. Explain the historical context for the varied results of Reconstruction. | |
LANDMARK EVENTS: 1844-1877 | |
oo e St | |
Il ol e | |
preetend | |
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[N e Voo et amomt | |
T o SIS W | |
TOPIC 51 CONTEXTUALIZING PERIODS 261 | |
Topic 5.2 | |
The Idea of Manifest Destiny | |
Away, away with all these cobweb issues of the rights of discovery, | |
exploration, settlement, contiguity [nearness}, etc.... [The American] | |
claim s by the right of our manifest destiny to overspread and to possess | |
the whole of the continent which Providence has given us for the | |
development of the great experiment of liberty. | |
John L. O'Sulivan, The True Tl New York Morning News, 1645 | |
Learning Objective: Explain the causes and effects of westward | |
expansion from 1844 to 1877. | |
Whie European settlers began assuming a right to territorial conquest | |
during the colonial era, writers such as John O'Sullivan promoted that idea | |
across the land in the 1840s and 1850s. Expansionists wanted the United States | |
to extend westward to the Pacific and southward into Mexico, Cuba, and | |
Central America. By the 1890s, expansionists fixed their sights on acquiring | |
islands in the Pacific and the Caribbean. | |
‘The phrase Manifest Destiny expressed the popular belief that the United | |
States had a divine mission to extend its power and civilization across the | |
breadth of North America. (For a map showing the territorial expansion of | |
the United States, see the multiple-choice questions in Topic 5.3.) Enthusiasm | |
for expansion reached a fever pitch in the 18405, It was driven by a number | |
of forces: nationalism, population increase, rapid economic development, | |
technological advances, and reform ideals. But not all Americans united behind | |
expansionism. Critics argued vehemently that at the root of the expansionist | |
drive was the ambition to spread slavery into western lands. | |
Conflicts Over Texas, Maine, and Oregon | |
US. interest in pushing its borders south into Texas (a Mexican province) | |
and west into the Oregon Territory (claimed by Britain) largely resulted from | |
American pioneers migrating into these lands during the 18205 and 1830s. | |
Texas | |
In 1823, after having won its national independence from Spain, Mexico hoped | |
to attract settlers—including Anglo settlers—to farm its sparsely populated | |
northern frontier province of Texas. Moses Austin, a Missouri banker, had | |
obtained a large land grant in Texas but died before he could recruit Ame: | |
262 UNITED STATES HISTORY: AP’ EDITION | |
settlrs for the land. His son, Stephen Austin, succeeded in bringing 300 | |
families into Texas and thereby beginning a steady migration of American | |
seitlers into the vast frontier erritory. By 1830, Americans (both White farmers | |
and enslaved Black people) outnumbered Mexicans in Texas by three to one. | |
Friction between the Americans and the Mexicans worsened in 1829 when | |
Mexico outlawed slavery and required all immigrants to convert to Roman | |
Catholicism. Many settlers refused to obey these laws. In reaction, Mexico | |
closed Texas to additional American immigrants. Land-hungry Americans | |
from the Southern states ignored the Mexican prohibition and streamed into | |
Texas by the thousands; | |
Revolt and Independence A change in Mexico’s government intensified | |
the conflict. In 1834, General Antonio Lépez de Santa Anna made himself | |
dictator of Mexico and abolished that nation's federal system of government. | |
When Santa Anna attempted to enforce Mexico’s laws in Texas, a group | |
of American settlers led by Sam Houston revolted and declared Texas an | |
independent republic in March 1836. In its new constitution, Texas made | |
slavery legal again. | |
A Mexican army led by Santa Anna captured the town of Goliad and | |
attacked the Alamo in San Antonio, killing every one of its American | |
defenders. Shortly afterward, however, at the Battle of the San Jacinto River, an | |
army under Sam Houston caught the Mexicans by surprise and captured their | |
general, Santa Anna. Under the threat of death, the Mexican leader was forced | |
10 sign a treaty that recognized independence for Texas and granted the new | |
republic all territory north of the Rio Grande. However, when the news of San | |
Jacinto reached Mexico City, the Mexican legislature rejected the treaty and | |
insisted that Texas was sill part of Mexico. | |
Annexation Denied As the first president of the Republic of Texas (or | |
Lone Star Republic), Houston applied to the U.S. government for his country to | |
be annexed, or added to, the United States as a new state. However, presidents | |
Jackson and Van Buren both put off the request for annexation primarily | |
because of political opposition among Northerners to the expansion of slavery. | |
If annexed, Texas might be divided into five new states, which could mean | |
ten additional proslavery members of the U.S. Senate. The threat of a costly | |
war with Mexico also dampened expansionist zeal. The next president, William | |
Henry Harrison, died after a month in office. His successor, John Tyler (1841- | |
1845), was a Southern Whig who was worried about the growing influence of | |
the British in Texas. He worked to annex Texas, but the US. Senate rejected his | |
treaty of annexation in 1844, | |
Boundary Dispute in Maine | |
Another diplomatic issue arose in the 1840s over the ill-defined boundary | |
between Maine and the Canadian province of New Brunswick. At this time, | |
Canada was still under British rule and many Americans regarded Britain | |
as their country’s most significant enemy—an attitude carried over from the | |
TOPIC 52 THE IDEA OF MANIFEST DESTINY 263 | |
Revolution and the War of 1812. A conflict between rival groups of lumber | |
workers on the Maine-Canadian border crupted into open fighting. Known | |
as the Aroostook War, or “battle of the maps.” the conflict was soon resolved | |
in a treaty negotiated by U.S. Secretary of State Danicl Webster and the British | |
ambassador, Lord Alexander Ashburton. In the Webster-Ashburton Treaty | |
of 1842, the disputed territory was split between Maine and British Canada. | |
‘The treaty also settled the boundary of the Minnesota territory, leaving what | |
proved to be the iron-rich Mesabi Range on the US. side of the border. | |
Boundary Dispute in Oregon | |
A far more serious British-American dispute involved Oregon, a vast territory | |
‘on the Pacific Coast that originally stretched as far north as the Alaskan border. | |
Atone time, this territory was claimed by four different nations: Spain, Russia, | |
Great Britain, and the United States. Spain gave up its claim to Oregon in a | |
treaty with the United States (the Adams-Onis Treaty of 1819). | |
Britain based ts claim to Oregon on the Hudson's Bay Company’s profitable | |
fur trade with the American Indians of the Pacific Northwest. However, by | |
1846, fewer than a thousand British settlers lived north of the Columbia River. | |
‘The United States based its claim on (1) the exploration of the Columbia | |
River by Captain Robert Gray in 1792; (2) the overland expedition to the | |
Pacific Coast by Meriwether Lewis and William Clark in 1805; and (3) the fur | |
trading post and fort in Astoria, Oregon, established by John Jacob Astor in | |
1811. Protestant missionaries and farmers from the United States settled in | |
the Willamette Valley in the 1840s. Their success in farming this fertile valley | |
caused 5,000 Americans to catch “Oregon fever” and travel 2,000 miles over the | |
Oregon Trail to settle in the area south of the Columbia River. | |
By the 1844 election, many Americans believed that taking undisputed | |
possession of all of Oregon and annexing the Republic of Texas was their | |
country’s Manifest Destiny. In addition, expansionists hoped to persuade | |
Mexico to give up its province on the West Coast—the huge land of California. | |
By 1845, Mexican California had a small Spanish-Mexican population of some | |
7,000 along with a much larger number of American Indians, but American | |
emigrants were arriving in suffcient numbers “to play the Texas game." | |
The Election of 1844 | |
‘The possibility of annexing Texas and allowing the expansion of slavery split | |
the Democratic Party in 1844. The party’s Northern wing opposed immediate | |
annexation and wanted to nominate former president Martin Van Buren | |
to run again. Southern Whigs who were proslavery and proannexation | |
rallied behind former vice president John C. Calhoun of South Carolina as a | |
candidate. | |
‘The Van Buren-Calhoun dispute deadlocked the Democratic convention. | |
After hours of wrangling, the Democrats finally nominated a dark horse | |
(lesser-known candidate). They chose James K. Polk of Tennessee, a protegé of | |
Andrew Jackson, who was firmly committed to Manifest Destiny. Polk favored | |
264 UNITED STATES HISTORY: AP’ EDITION | |
the annexation of Texas, the acquisition of California, and the “reoccupation’ | |
of Oregon Territory all the way to the border with Russian Alaska at latitude 54° | |
40" The Democratic slogan of “Fifty-Four Forty or Fight!” appealed strongly | |
to American Westerners and Southerners who were in an expansionist mood. | |
Henry Clay of Kentucky, the Whig nominee, attempted to straddle the | |
controversial issue of Texas annexation, opposing it and then supporting it. | |
“This strategy alienated a group of voters in New York State, who abandoned | |
the Whig Party to support the antislavery Liberty Party (see Topic 4. 11). Ina | |
close election, the Whigs'loss of New Yok’ electoral votes proved decisive and | |
Polk, the Democratic dark horse, was the victor. The Democrats iterpreted the | |
election as a mandate to add Texas to the Union. | |
Annexing Texas and Dividing Oregon | |
Outgoing president John Tyler took the election of Polk as a signal to push | |
the annexation of Texas through Congress. Instead of secking Senate approval | |
of a treaty that would have required a two-thirds vote, Tyler persuaded both | |
houses of Congress to pass a joint resolution for annexation. This procedure | |
required only a simple majority of each house. Tyler lef Polk with the problem | |
of dealing with Mexico's reaction to annexation. | |
On the Oregon question, Polk decided to back down from his party’s | |
bellicose campaign slogan. Instead of fighting for 54° 40°, he signed an | |
agreement with the British to divide the Oregon territory at the 49th parallel | |
(the parallel that had been established as the northern border in 1818 for | |
the Louisiana Territory). Final settlement of the issue was delayed until the | |
United States agreed to grant Vancouver Island and the right to navigate the | |
Columbia River to Britain. In June 1846, the treaty was submitted to the Senate | |
for ratification. Some Northerners viewed the treaty as a sellout to Southern | |
interests because it removed British Columbia as a source of potential free | |
states. Nevertheless, by this time war had broken out between the United States | |
and Mexico. Not wanting to fight both Britain and Mexico, Senate opponents | |
of the treaty reluctantly voted for the compromise settlement. | |
Settlement of the Western Territories | |
Following the peaceful acquisition of Oregon and the more violent acquisition | |
of California (see Topic 5.3), the migration of Americans into these lands | |
increased. The arid region between the Mississippi Valley and the Pacific Coast | |
was popularly known in the 1850s and 1860s as the Great American Desert. | |
Emigrants passed quickly over this vast area to reach the more inviting lands on | |
the West Coast. Therefore, California and Oregon were scttled several decades | |
before people attempted to farm the Great Plains. | |
Fur Traders’ Frontier | |
Fur traders known as mountain men were the carliest nonnative individuals to | |
open the Far West. In the 18205, they held yearly rendezvous in the Rockics with | |
TOPIC 52 THE IDEA OF MANIFEST DESTINY 265 | |
American Indians to trade for animal skins. James Beckwourth, Jim Bridger, | |
Kit Carson, and Jedediah Smith were among the hardy band of explorers and | |
trappers who provided much of the carly information about trails and frontier | |
conditions to later settlers | |
Overland Trails | |
After the mountain men, a much larger group of pioneers made the hazardous | |
journey west in hopes of clearing the foress and farming the fertile valleys | |
of California and Oregon. By 1860, hundreds of thousands had reached their | |
westward goal by following the Oregon, California, Santa Fe, and Mormon | |
trail. The long and arduous trek usually began in St. Joseph or Independence, | |
Missouri, or in Council Bluffs, lowa, and followed the river valleys through | |
the Great Plains. Inching along at only 15 miles a day, a wagon train needed | |
‘months to finally reach the foothills of the Rockies or face the hardships of the | |
southwestern deserts. The final life-or-death challenge was to get through the | |
‘mountain passes of the Sierras and Cascades before the first heavy snow. While | |
pioneers feared attacks by American Indians, the most common and serious | |
dangers were disease and depression from the harsh everyday conditions on | |
the trail. | |
WESTWARD EXPANSION AND PIONEER TRAILS, 1840s | |
266 UNITED STATES HISTORY: A" EDITION | |
Mining Frontier | |
‘The discovery of gold in California in 1848 set off the first of many migrations | |
to mineral-rich mountains of the West in the 1800s. Gold or silver rushes | |
occurred in Colorado, Nevada, the Black Hills of the Dakotas, and other | |
western territories. The mining boom brought tens of thousands of men and | |
some women into the western mountains. Mining camps and towns—many | |
of them short-lived—sprang up wherever a strike (discovery) was reported. | |
Largely as a result of the gold rush, Californias population soared from | |
a mere 14,000 in 1848 to 380,000 by 1860. Booms attracted miners from | |
around the world. By the 1860s, almost one-third of the miners in the West | |
were Chinese. | |
Farming Frontier | |
Most pioneer families moved west to start homesteads and begin farming. | |
Congress's Preemption Acts of the 1830s and 1840s gave squatters the right | |
o settle public lands and purchase them for low prices once the government | |
put them up for sale. In addition, the government made it easier for settlers by | |
offering parcels of land as small as 40 acres for sale. | |
However, moving west was not for the poor. At a time when a typical | |
laborer made about $1.00 per day,a family needed ateast $200 to $300 to make | |
the overland trip. The trek to California and Oregon was largely a middle-class | |
movement | |
‘The isolation of the frontier made life for pioneers especially difficult | |
during the first years, but rural communities soon developed. The institutions | |
that the people established (schools, churches, clubs, and political parties) were | |
modeled afier those that they had known in the East or, for immigrants from | |
abroad, in their native lands. | |
Urban Frontier | |
Western cities that arose as a result of railroads, mineral wealth, and farming | |
attracted a number of professionals and business owners. For example, San | |
Francisco and Denver became instant cities created by the gold and silver | |
rushes. Salt Lake City grew because it offered fresh supplies to travelers on | |
overland trails for the balance of their westward journey. | |
Foreign Commerce | |
‘The growth in manufactured goods as well as in agricultural products (both | |
Western grains and Southern cotton) caused a large growth of exports and | |
imports. Other factors also played a role in the expansion of US. trade in the | |
mid-1800s: | |
1. Shipping firms encouraged trade and travel across the Atlantic | |
by establishing a regular schedule for departures instead of the | |
18th-century policy of waiting to sail until a ship was full | |
TOPIC 52 THE IDEA OF MANIFEST DESTINY 267 | |
2. The demand for whale oil o light the homes of middle-class Americans | |
caused a whaling boom between 1830 and 1860. New England merchants | |
took the lead in this industry. | |
3. Improvements in ship design came just in time to speed gold seckers | |
on their journey to the California gold fields. The development of the | |
American clipper ship cut the six-month trip from New York around | |
the Horn of South America to San Francisco to as lttle as 89 days. | |
4. Steamships took the place of clipper ships in the mid-1850s because | |
they had greater storage capacity, could be maintained at lower cost, | |
and followed a schedule more reliably. | |
5. The United States expanded trade to Asia. New England merchants | |
conducted profitable trade with China for tea, silk, and porcelain. The | |
‘government sent Commodore Matthew C. Perry and a small fleet of | |
naval ships to Japan, which had been closed to most foreigners for over | |
two centuries. In 1854, Perry pressured Japan' government o sign the | |
Kanagawa Treaty, which allowed UsS. vessels to enter two Japanese | |
ports to take on coal. This treaty soon led to a trade agreement | |
Expansion After the Civil War | |
From 1855 until 1870, the issues of union, slavery, civil war, and postwar | |
reconstruction would overshadow the drive to acquire new territory. Even so, | |
Manifest Destiny continued to be an important force for shaping U.S. policy. In | |
1867, for example, Secretary of State William Seward succeeded in purchasing | |
Alaska at a time when the nation was just recovering from the Civil War. | |
REFLECT ON THE LEARNING OBJECTIVE | |
1. Explain the reasons for and results of westward expansion from 1844 to | |
1877. | |
KEY TERMS BY THEME | |
Beliet (NAT) farming frontier Antonio Lépez de Santa | |
Manifest Destiny urban frontier Anna | |
Westward (MIG,GEO, Expansion Politics (pOL) 52 Houston | |
ARC) John Ty Aamo | |
Great American Desert. Oregon Territory Webster-Ashburton Treaty | |
mountain men "Fifty-Four Fortyor Fight _foreian commerce | |
Far West James K. Polk exports and imports. | |
overland trails Mitory & Diplomatic Matthew C.pery | |
miing fronier Expansion (WOR) Kanagavia Treaty | |
goidrush Texas | |
silver rush S | |
268 UNITED STATES HISTORY: AP’ EDITION | |
MULTIPLE-CHOICE QUESTIONS | |
Questions 1-2 refer to the following excerpt. | |
“Where, where was the heroic determination of the Executive to vindicate | |
ourtitle to the whole of Oregon—yes, si, “THE WHOLE OR NONE: | |
Ithas been openly avowed ... that Oregon and Texas were born and cradled | |
together in the Baltimore convention; that they were the twin offspring | |
of that political conclave [meetingl; and in that avowal may be found the | |
whole explanation of the difficulties and dangers with which the question | |
is now attended. .. | |
I maint: | |
1. That this question .. . is | |
and amicable adjustment | |
2. That satisfactory evidence has not yet been afforded that no | |
compromise which the United States ought to accept can be | |
effected. | |
. one for negotiations, compromise, | |
3. That, if no other mode of amicable scitlement remains, | |
arbitration ought to be resorted to?” | |
Representative Robert C. Winthrop (Whig), speech to the | |
House of Representatives,January 3, 1846 | |
‘Winthrop's position about territory in Oregon was based primarily on | |
his desire to | |
(A) endall British power in North America | |
(B) obtain more land for settlers | |
(C) show his readiness to use military force | |
(D) oppose Southern desires to expand slavery | |
2. Which historical development llustrates the fulfillment of Winthrop’s | |
argument? | |
(A) Polk negotiated a compromise with the British over Oregon. | |
(B) Polk went to war to obtain the whole of Oregon from Great Britain. | |
(©) Polk called a meeting in Baltimore to discuss annexation of | |
Oregon. | |
(D) Polk asked foreign countries to arbitrate the Oregon dispute. | |
TOPIC 52 THE IDEA OF MANIFEST DESTINY 269 | |
SHORT-ANSWER QUESTION | |
Use complete sentences; an outline or bulleted list alone is not acceptable. | |
1. “The Manifest Destiny impulse fed off a mixture of crassness, truculence | |
{hostility), and high idealism. Without question, there were those who | |
proclaimed America’s providential mission to expand as a eulogistic | |
{honorary] cover for speculation in land and paper. But those were hardly | |
the motives of John L. O'Sullivan, the writer who coined the term . | |
For O'Sullivan and his allies, the expansionist imperative was essentially | |
democratic ... . in a supercharged moral sense, stressing America’ duties | |
to spread democratic values and institutions to a world still dominated by | |
‘monarchs and deformed superstitions”” | |
Sean Wilentz, The Rise of American Democracy, 2005 | |
“O'Sullivan and Young America provided a . . . set of aspirations that | |
could be embraced by expansionists with less lofty ambitions . .. . The | |
‘young American’ who would transport ‘democracy’ into new territories | |
was recognizably white, male, probably Protestant, and of martial | |
[confrontational] demeanor— . . . facing, as he saw it, a world beset by | |
economic backwardness, political lethargy, ignorance, superstition, | |
Catholicism, effeminacy, and racial mixing. Expansionism would defeat | |
the institutions that bred these maladies [illnesses] and offer the benefits of | |
“civilization' for those who wished to seize them.” | |
Steven Hahn, A Nation Without Borders 2016 | |
Using the excerpts, answer (), (b), and (c). | |
(@ Briefly explain ONE major difference between Wilentz's and Hahn’s | |
historical interpretations of Manifest Destiny. | |
(b) Briefly explain how ONE historical event or development in the | |
period 1830 to 1860 that is not explicitly mentioned in the excerpts | |
could be used to support Wilentz’s interpretation. | |
(©) Briefly explain how ONE historical event or development in the | |
period 1830 to 1860 that is not explicitly mentioned in the excerpts | |
could be used to support Hahn's interpretation. | |
270 UNITED STATES HISTORY: AP’ EDITION | |
Topic 5.3 | |
Manifest Destiny and | |
the Mexican-American War | |
The Southern rebellion was largely the outgrowth of the Mexican war. | |
Ulysses . Grant, Persanal Memoirs of General U Grant, 1685 | |
Learning Objective: Explain the causes and effects of the Mexican- | |
American War. | |
The . annesation o Tesas quickly L to diplomatc trouble with Mexico. | |
‘The Mexicans’anger over the annexation and the newly elected President Polk's | |
desire to expand the nation to the Pacific Ocean combined to bring both sides | |
to the edge of war. | |
Conflict with Mexico | |
Upon taking office in 1845, President Polk dispatched John Slidell s his special | |
envoy to the government in Mexico City. Polk wanted Slidell to (1) persuade | |
Mexico to sell the California and New Mexico territories to the United States | |
and (2) settle the disputed Mexico-Texas border. Slidell’ mission failed on both | |
counts. The Mexican government refused to sell California and insisted that | |
Texas's southern border was on the Nueces River. Polk and Slidell asserted that | |
the border lay farther to the south, along the Rio Grande. | |
Immediate Causes of the War | |
While Slidell waited for Mexicos response to the US. offer, Polk ordered | |
General Zachary Taylor to move his army toward the Rio Grande, across | |
territory claimed by Mexico. On April 24, 1846, a Mexican army crossed the | |
Rio Grande and captured an American army patrol, killing 1. Polk used the | |
incident to justify sending his prepared war message to Congress. Northern | |
Whigs opposed going to war over the incident and doubted PolK’s claim that | |
American blood had been shed on American soil. Whig protests were in vain. | |
A large majority in both houses approved the war resolution. | |
Military Campaigns | |
Most of the war was fought in Mexican territory by small armies of Americans. | |
Leadinga force that never exceeded 1,500, General Stephen Kearney succeeded | |
in taking the New Mexico territory and southern California. Backed by only | |
TOPIC 5.3 MANIFEST DESTINY AND THE MEXICAN-AMERICAN WAR 271 | |
several dozen soldicrs, a few navy officers, and American civilians who had | |
recently settled in northern California, John C. Frémont quickly overthrew | |
Mexican rule in the region in June 1846. He proclaimed California to be an | |
independent republic. Because the new republics flag included a California | |
grizzly bear, it became known as the Bear Flag Republic. | |
Meanwhile, Zachary Taylor’s force of 6,000 men drove the Mexican army. | |
from Texas, crossed the Rio Grande into northern Mexico, and won a major | |
victory at Buena Vista (February 1847). President Polk then selected General | |
Winfield Scott to invade central Mexico. The army of 14,000 under Scotts | |
‘command succeeded in taking the coastal city of Vera Cruz and then captured | |
Mexico City in September 1847, | |
Consequences of the War | |
For Mexico, the war was a military disaster from the start, but the Mexican | |
‘government was unwilling to sue for peace and concede the loss ofits northern | |
lands. Finally, afer the fall of Mexico City, the government had little choice but | |
to agree to U.S. terms. | |
‘Treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo (1848) ‘The treaty negotiated by diplomat | |
Nicholas Trist with Mexico consisted of terms favorable to the United States: | |
« Mexico recognized the Rio Grande as the southern border of Texas. | |
+ The United States took possession of the former Mexican provinces | |
of California and New Mexico—the Mexican Cession. For these | |
territories, the United States paid $15 million and assumed | |
responsibility for any claims of American citizens against Mexico. | |
In the Senate, some Whigs opposed the treaty because they saw the war as | |
an immoral effort to expand slavery. A few Southern Democrats disliked the | |
treaty for opposite reasons. As expansionists, they wanted the United States | |
to take all of Mexico. Since this land was south of the line established in the | |
Missouri Compromise dividing slave and free territory, it was a region where | |
slavery could expand into. Nevertheless, the treaty was finally ratified in the | |
Senate. | |
Wilmot Proviso The issue of slavery made the USS. entry into a war with | |
Mexico controversial from start to finish. In 1846, Pennsylvania Congressman | |
David Wilmot proposed that an appropriations bill be amended to forbid | |
slavery in any territory acquired from Mexico. This prohibition appealed to | |
‘many voters and lawmakers who wanted to preserve the land for White settlers | |
and protect them from having to compete with enslaved labor. The Wilmot | |
Proviso, as it was called, passed the House, where the populous Northern states | |
had greater power, twice. Both times, it was defeated in the Senate, where | |
Southern states had greater influence. | |
Prelude to Civil War? By increasing tensions between the North and the | |
South, did the war to acquire territories from Mexico lead inevitably to the | |
American Civil War? Without question, the acquisition of vast western lands | |
272 UNITED STATES HISTORY: AP’ EDITION | |
did renew the sectional debate over the extension of slavery. Many Northerners | |
viewed the war with Mexico as part of a Southern plot to extend the “slave | |
power” Southerners realized they could not count on Northerners to accept the | |
expansion of slavery. The Wilmot Proviso was the first round in an escalating | |
political conflict that led ultimately, though not inevitably; o civil war. | |
HISTORICAL PERSPECTIVES: WHY WAS MANIFEST DESTINY | |
SIGNIFICANT?. | |
Traditional historians stressed the accomplishments of westward expansion | |
in bringing civilization and democratic institutions to a wilderness area. The | |
heroic efforts of mountain men and pioneering families to overcome a hostile | |
environment have long been celebrated by historians and the popular media. | |
Attitudes about Race As a result of the civil rights movement of the 1950s | |
and 1960s and the continuing diversification of American society, historians | |
became more sensitive than their predecessors to racist language and beliefs. | |
‘They recognized the racial undercurrents in the political specches of the | |
1840s that argued for expansion into American Indian, Mexican, and Central | |
American territories. | |
Some historians argue that racist motives prompted the decision to | |
withdraw US. troops from Mexico instead of occupying it. They point out that | |
Americans who opposed the idea of keeping Mexico had asserted that it was | |
undesirable to incorporate large non-Anglo populations into the republic. | |
Diverse Contributions Recent historians have broadened their research | |
into westward movement. Rather than concentrating on the achievements of | |
Anglo pioneers, they have focused more on these topics: (1) the impact on | |
American Indians whose lands were taken, (2) the influence of Mexican culture | |
on US. culture, (3) the contributions of African American and Asian American | |
pioneers, and (4) the role of women in the development of western family and | |
community life | |
‘The Impact on Mexico Some Mexican historians point out that the Treaty | |
of Guadalupe Hidalgo took half of Mexico’ territory. They argue that the war of | |
1846 gave rise to a number of long-standing economic and political problems | |
that have impeded Mexico's development as a modern nation | |
Economics over Race Some historians argue that the war with Mexico, | |
especially the taking of California, was motivated by imperialism rather than | |
by racism. They argue that the United States had commercial ambitions in the | |
Pacific and wanted California as a base for trade with China and Japan. US. | |
policy makers were afraid that California would fall into the hands of Great | |
Britain or another European power if the United States did not move in first. | |
Support an Argument Explain two perspectives on either causes or effects of the | |
belief in Manifest Destiny important during the 19th century. | |
TOPIC 5.3 MANIFEST DESTINY AND THE MEXICAN-AMERICAN WAR 273 | |
REFLECT ON THE LEARNING OBJECTIVE | |
1. Explain the reasons for and results of the Mexican War. | |
KEY TERMS BY THEME | |
Miltary & Diplomatic o Grande Winfield Scott | |
Expansion (WOR) Zachary Taylor Treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo | |
Mexican-American War Stephen Kearney Mexican Cession | |
California John C. Frémont Wilmot Proviso | |
Nueces River Bear Flag Aepublic mountain men | |
MULTIPLE-CHOICE QUESTIONS | |
Questions 1-3 refer to the map below. | |
LAND AQUISITIONS BY THE UNITED STATES, 17761853 | |
it | |
s | |
e { e | |
RIAN | |
1. Why was the period of expansion between 1842 and 1853 so significant | |
10 the development of the United States? | |
(A) The United States established borders that still exist today. | |
(B) ‘The United States purchased its largest single territory in one act. | |
(C) ‘The United States obtained territory along the Gulf of Mexico. | |
(D) The United States expanded westward for the first time. | |
274 UNITED STATES HISTORY: AP’ EDITION | |
2. The acquisitions of land in the West before 1845 were similar to land | |
acquisitions after 1845 because they both were motivated by the | |
controversial desire to | |
(A) expand the institution of slavery | |
(B) build factories near mineral resources | |
(C) keep foreign influences out of the country | |
(D) take advantage of wars among European countries | |
3. Which territory did the United States gain most directly by going to | |
war? | |
(A) Louisiana Purchase | |
(B) Texas Annexation | |
(C) Oregon Country | |
(D) Mexican Cession | |
SHORT-ANSWER QUESTIONS | |
Use complete sentences; an outline or bulleted list alone is not acceptable. | |
1. Answer (), (b), and (). | |
(@) Briefly explain ONE specific reason for American expansionism | |
between 1840 and 1855. | |
(b) Briefly explain ONE specific criti | |
between 1840 and 1855. | |
() Briefly describe how ONE group of people were profoundly | |
impacted by America’s expansionism between 1800 and 1860. | |
2. Answer (a), (b), and (c). | |
(@) Briefly explain ONE historical event or development in the 1840s | |
that contributed to causing the Mexican War. | |
(b) Briefly explain ONE historical event or development in the 18405 | |
that contributed to the United States victory in the Mexican War. | |
(c) Briefly explain ONE specific consequence of the Mexican War for | |
the United States. | |
m of American expansionism | |
TOPIC 5.3 MANIFEST DESTINY AND THE MEXICAN-AMERICAN WAR 275 | |
Topic 5.4 | |
The Compromise of 1850 | |
I owe a paramount allegiance to the whole Union— | |
a subordinate one to my own State. | |
Senator Henry Clay, Kentucky, July 22, 1850 | |
Learning Objective: Explain the similarities and differences in how | |
regional attitudes affected federal policy in the period ater the | |
Mexican-American War. | |
IMasifest Destiny and expansion itensified th debate about th spread of | |
slavery. Abolitionists and White people eager to settle Western lands without | |
the competition of slave labor opposed expansion. Slaveowners and people | |
who felt they benefited from slavery wanted the continued growth of slavery. | |
At the same time, most Americans still hoped for compromise that could keep | |
the Union together. | |
Southern Expansion | |
Many Southerners resented the Missouri Compromise because it barred | |
slavery from the Louisiana Purchase lands. They were also dissatisfied with the | |
territorial gains from the Mexican War because they were not large enough. In | |
‘general, they were eager to find new land for cultivation using enslaved labor. | |
Manifest Destiny to the South | |
In the early 1850s, many slaveowners hoped to acquire new territories, | |
especially in areas of Latin America where they thought plantations worked by | |
enslaved people were economically feasible. The most tempting, eagerly sought | |
possibility in the eyes of Southern expansionists was the acquisition of Cuba. | |
Ostend Manifesto President Polk offered to purchase Cuba from Spain for | |
$100 million, but Spain refused to sell the last major remnant ofits once glorious | |
empire in the Americas. Several Southern adventurers led small expeditions to | |
Cuba in an effort to take the island by force. These forays, however, were easily | |
defeated, and those who participated were executed by Spanish firing squads. | |
Elected to the presidency in 1852, Franklin Pierce adopted pro-Southern | |
policies and dispaiched three American diplomats to Ostend, Belgium, where | |
they secretly negotiated to buy Cuba from Spain. The agreement that the | |
diplomats drew up, called the Ostend Manifesto, was leaked to the press in | |
the United States. Antislavery members of Congress reacted angrily and forced | |
President Pierce to drop the scheme. | |
276 UNITED STATES HISTORY: AP’ EDITION | |
Walker Expedition Expansionists continued to scek new empires with | |
or withou the federal governments support. Southern adventurer William | |
Walker had tried unsuccessfully to take Baja California, the long peninsula | |
stretching south of San Diego, from Mexico in 1853. Then, leading a force | |
mostly of Southerners, he seized power in Nicaragua in 1855. Walker's regime | |
even gained temporary recognition from the United States in 1856. However, | |
his grandiose scheme to develop a proslavery Central American empire | |
collapsed when a coalition of Central American countries invaded his country | |
and defeated him. Walker was executed by Honduran authorities in 1860. | |
Clayton-Bulwer Treaty (1850) Another American ambition was to build | |
a canal through Central America. A canal would provide a shortcut to allow | |
ships traveling from the Northern Atlantic to the Northern Pacific to avoid | |
sailing around South America. Great Britain had the same ambition. To prevent | |
each other from seizing this opportunity on its own, Great Britain and the | |
United States agreed to the Clayton-Bulwer Treaty of 1850. It provided that | |
neither nation would attempt to take exclusive control of any future canal route | |
in Central America. This treaty continued in force until the end of the century. | |
Anew treaty signed in 1901 (the Hay-Pauncefote Treaty) gave the United States | |
a free hand to build a canal without British participation. | |
Gadsden Purchase Although he failed to acquire Cuba, President Pierce | |
succeeded in purchasing a small strip of land from Mexico in 1853 for $10 | |
million (see map in Topic 5.2). Though the land was semidesert, it lay on the | |
best route for a railroad through the region. Known as the Gadsden Purchase, | |
it forms the southern sections of present-day New Mexico and Arizona | |
Conflict Over Status of Territories | |
‘The issue of slavery in the territories gained in the Mexican War became the | |
focus of sectional differences in the late 1840s. The Wilmot Proviso, which | |
excluded slavery from the new territories, would have upset the Compromise | |
of 1820 and the delicate balance of 15 free and 15 slave states. However, the | |
provisos defeat only increased sectional feelings. | |
Three Conflicting Positions on Slavery Expansion | |
Most people held one of three positions on whether to allow slavery in the | |
Western territories. No single policy would appeal to them all, but many people | |
hoped for a compromise that would allow each group to get something of what | |
it wanted. | |
Free-Soil Movement Northern Democrats and Whigs supported the | |
Wilmot Proviso and the position that all African Americans—slave and | |
free—should be excluded from the Mexican Cession (territory ceded to the | |
US. by Mexico in 1848). While abolitionists advocated eliminating slavery | |
everywhere, many Northerners who opposed the westward expansion of | |
slavery did not oppose slavery in the South. They sought to keep the West a | |
land of opportunity for Whites only: This meant keeping out both enslaved and | |
TOPIC 5.4 THE COMPROMISE OF 1850 277 | |
free African Americans. In 1848, Northerners who opposed allowing slavery | |
in the territories organized the Free-Soil Party, which adopted the slogan “free: | |
soil, free labor, and free men” In addition to its chicf objective—preventing the | |
extension of slavery—the new party advocated free homesteads (public land | |
grants to small farmers) and internal improvements such as roads and harbors. | |
Southern Positions Southern plantation owners, whose wealth and social | |
status made therm politcally powerful, viewed attempts o rstrict the expansion | |
of slavery as violations of their constitutional right to take their property | |
wherever they wished. They saw the Free-Soilers—and the abolitionists—as | |
intent on the destruction of slavery. Some Southerners held more moderate | |
views. They would agree to extend the Missouri Compromise line westward to | |
the Pacific Ocean and permit territories north of that line to be free of slavery. | |
Popular Sovereignty A Democratic senator from Michigan, Lewis Cass, | |
proposed a compromise solution that soon won considerable support from | |
moderates across the country. Instead of Congress determining whether to | |
allow slavery in a new western territory or state, Cass suggested that the matter | |
be determined by a vote of the people who settled a territory. Cass’s approach | |
to the problem was known as squatter sovereignty, or popular sovereignty. | |
The Election of 1848 | |
‘The expansion of slavery into the territories was a vital issue in the presidential | |
race of 1848. Three parties represented different positions on the issue: | |
+ The Democrats nominated Senator Cass and adopted a platform pledged | |
to popular sovereignty. | |
+ The Whigs nominated Mexican War hero General Zachary Taylor, | |
who had never been involved in politics and took no position on | |
slavery in the territories. | |
+ A third party, the Free-Soil Party; opposed expansion. It nominated | |
former president Martin Van Buren. The party consisted of Conscience | |
‘Whigs (who opposed slavery) and antislavery Democrats. Members | |
of this latter group were ridiculed as “barnburners” because their | |
defection threatened to destroy the Democratic Party. | |
Taylor narrowly defeated Cass, in part because of the vote given the Free- | |
Soil Party in key Northern states such as New York and Pennsylvania, | |
Compromises to Preserve the Union | |
‘The Gold Rush of 1849 and the influx of about 100,000 settlers into California | |
created the need for law and order in the West. In 1849, Californians drafted | |
a constitution for their new state—a constitution that banned slavery. Even | |
though President Taylor was a Southern slaveholder himself, he supported the | |
immediate admission of both California and New Mexico as free states. (At this | |
time, however, the Mexican population of the New Mexico territory had litle | |
interest in applying for statehood.) | |
278 UNITED STATES HISTORY: AP’ EDITION | |
‘Taylor’s plan sparked talk of secession among the “fre-caters” (radicals) in | |
the South. Some Southern extremists even met in Nashville in 1850 to discuss | |
secession. By this time, however, the astute Kentucky senator Henry Clay had | |
proposed yet another compromise for solving the political crisi | |
« Admit California to the Union as a free state. | |
« Divide the remainder of the Mexican Cession into two territories— | |
Utah and New Mexico—and allow the settlers in these territories to | |
decide the slavery issue by majority vote, o popular sovereignty. | |
+ Give the land in dispute between Texas and the New Mexico territory | |
to the new territories in return for the federal government assuming | |
‘Texas's public debt of $10 million. | |
+ Ban the slave trade in the District of Columbia but permit Whites to | |
own enslaved people there as before. | |
+ Adopt a new Fugitive Slave Law and enforce it rigorously. | |
In the ensuing Senate debate over the compromise proposal, the three | |
congressional giants of the age—Henry Clay of Kentucky, Daniel Webster of | |
Massachusetts, and John C. Calhoun of South Carolina—delivered their last | |
great speeches. (Webster and Calhoun, who were both born in 1782, died in | |
1850; Clay died two years later) Webster argued for compromise in order | |
10 save the Union, and in so doing alienated the Massachusetts abolitionists | |
who formed the base of his support. Calhoun argued against compromise and | |
insisted that the South be given equal rights in the acquired territory. | |
Northern opposition to compromise came from younger antislavery | |
lawmakers, such as Senator William H. Seward of New York, who argued that a | |
higher law than the Constitution existed. Opponents managed to prevail until | |
the sudden death in 1850 of President Taylor, who had also opposed Clay’s | |
plan. Succeeding him was a strong supporter of compromise, Vice President | |
Millard Fillmore. Stephen A. Douglas, a young Democratic senator from | |
linois, engineered different coalitions to pass each part of the compromise | |
separately. President Fillmore readily signed the blls into law. | |
Passage The passage of the Compromise of 1850 bought time for the | |
Union. Because California was admitted as a free state, the compromise added | |
tothe Northis political power. The political debate deepened the commitment of | |
‘many Northerners to saving the Union from secession. Parts of the compromise: | |
became sources of controversy, especially the new Fugitive Slave Law and the | |
provision for popular sovereignty. | |
REFLECT ON THE LEARNING OBJECTIVE | |
1. Explain how the different views of the individual regions influenced the | |
federal government in the years after the Mexican-American War. | |
TOPIC 5.4 THE COMPROMISE OF 1850 279 | |
KEY TERMS BY THEME | |
Expansion Politcs (POL) Gadsden Purchase. Compromising (POL) | |
Ostend Manifesto (1352) Battle forthe Toritories Lewis Coss | |
Wilitary & Diplomatic (wic, poL) popular soverignty | |
Expansion (WOR) ree-soll movement Zachary Taylor | |
Walker Expediton Frce-Soil Party Henry Clay | |
Clayton-Bulwer Treaty “bamburners” Compromise of 1850 | |
MULTIPLE-CHOICE QUESTIONS | |
Questions 1-3 refer to the following excerpts. | |
“It being desirable for the peace, concord, and harmony of the Union | |
of these States, to settle and adjust amicably all existing questions of | |
controversy between them arising out of the institution of slavery upon a | |
fair, equitable, and just basis.” | |
Henry Clay, Resolution on the Compromise of 1850 | |
“We are told now .. . that the Union is threatened with subversion and | |
destruction.... Ifthe Union is to be dissolved for any existing causes,it will | |
be dissolved because slavery is interdicted [interfered with] or not allowed | |
to be introduced into the ceded Territories; because slavery is threatened | |
to be abolished in the District of Columbia, and because fugitive slaves are | |
not returned ... to their masters. ... | |
Lam for staying within the Union and fighting for my rights” | |
Henry Clay, Speech on the Compromise Resolution, 1850 | |
1 | |
“To which politician or politicians was Clay directing the last line of the | |
second excerpt? | |
(A) Southerners who were threatening to secede | |
(B) Senators such as Daniel Webster who rejected any compromise | |
(©) Advocates of popular sovereignty | |
(D) The president, Zachary Taylor | |
2. The provision of the Compromise of 1850 that appealed most to | |
advocates for slavery was the one regarding | |
(A) the conditions under which California would become a state | |
(B) the assumption of Texas's public debt by the federal government | |
(©) the status of slave trade in Washington, D.C. | |
(D) the features of a new Fugitive Slave Law | |
280 UNITED STATES HISTORY: AP EDITION | |
3. Clay’s position on slavery in “ceded territories” was opposed by people | |
who were mostly concerned that they could take enslaved people into | |
(A) islands in the Caribbean that might be acquired, such as Cuba | |
(B) the lands acquired in the Louisiana Purchase and from Mexico | |
(C) Texas, where slavery had been banned under Mexico | |
(D) Maine, which had been part of Massachussets | |
SHORT-ANSWER QUESTION | |
Use complete sentences; an outline or bulleted list alone is not acceptable. | |
‘Source: NathrilCurir, 1848 Librory o Conress | |
Using the cartoon, answer (a), (b), and (c). The figure on the right side | |
of the cartoon is saying, “That’s you Dad! more ‘Free Soil! We'll rat em | |
out yet. Longlife to Davy Wilmot” | |
(@) Briefly explain ONE historical perspective expressed by the artist | |
concerning slavery in the territories in the period 1840 to 1854. | |
(b) Briefly explain ONE development in the period 1840 to 1854 that | |
supported the perspective expressed by the artist. | |
(c) Briefly explain ONE development in the period 1840 to 1854 that | |
challenged the perspective expressed by the artist. | |
TOPIC 5.4 THE COMPROMISE OF 1850 281 | |
Topic 5.5 | |
Sectional Conflict: | |
Regional Differences | |
1 did not write it. God wrote it. | merely did his dictation. | |
Harriet Beecher Stowe, describing her book Uncie Tom's Cabin, 1879 | |
Learning Objective 1: Explain the effects of immigration from various | |
parts of the world on American culture from 1844 to 1877. | |
Learning Objective 2: Explain how regional differences related to | |
slavery caused tension in the years leading up to the Civil War. | |
Aiong the isues that divided people politcally in the mid-1800s were | |
immigration, particularly by Roman Catholics, and how to promote and | |
respond to industrial growth. However, the dominant issue increasingly | |
became the possible expansion of slavery into the territories. | |
Immigration Controversy | |
As immigration increased, especially from Ireland and Germany, opposition | |
arose on many fronts. Some Americans disliked the ethnicity or religious faiths | |
of the immigrants, while others feared them as low-wage workers who might | |
take their jobs. | |
Irish | |
During this period, half of all the immigrants—almost 2 million—came from | |
Ireland. These Irish immigrants were mostly tenant farmers driven from | |
their homeland by crop failures and a devastating famine in the 1840s. They | |
came with limited interest in farming, few skills, and little money. They faced | |
discrimination because of their Roman Catholic religion. The Irish worked | |
hard, often competing with African Americans for domestic work and low- | |
skl jobs that required physical strength and endurance. Most stayed where | |
they landed, so strong Irish communities developed in Northern cities such as | |
Boston, New York, and Philadelphia. In Irish neighborhoods, people continued | |
the customs they brought with them. For example, perhaps one-third spoke | |
Irish. Several newspapers included an Irish-language section and churches | |
held services for Irish speakers. | |
282 UNITED STATES HISTORY: AP’ EDITION | |
“The Irish did bring two valuable skill. Since their country was dominated | |
by the British, most Irish spoke English well and understood electoral politics. | |
Using these skills, many entered local politics. They often organized their fellow | |
immigrants and joined the Democratic Party, which was traditionally anti- | |
British and pro-worker. Initially excluded from New York City’s Democratic | |
organization, Tammany Hall, the Irish had secured jobs and influence by the | |
1850s. By the 1880s they controlled Tammany Hall, | |
Germans | |
Both economic hardships and the failure of democratic revolutions in 1848 | |
caused more than 1 million Germans to seck refuge in the United States in the | |
late 1840s and the 1850s. Most German immigrants had some modest means | |
as well as considerable skills as farmers and artisans. Moving westward in | |
search of cheap, fertle farmland, they established homesteads throughout the | |
Old Northwest and generally prospered. At fist their political influence was | |
limited. As they became more active in public life, many strongly supported | |
public education and staunchly opposed slavery. | |
Like the Irish, they often formed close-knit communities in cities where | |
the German language was commonly spoken. Germans in rural areas often | |
formed their own Roman Catholic or Lutheran churches | |
Nativist Opposition to Immigration | |
Many native-born Americans were alarmed by the influx of immigrants, | |
fearing that the newcomers would take their jobs and dilute the culture of the | |
Anglo majority. These ethnic tensions were closely tied to religion. Most of the | |
native-born opponents of immigration were Protestants and most of the Irish | |
and many of the German immigrants were Roman Catholics. In the 1840s, | |
hostility to these immigrants, known as nativism, led to sporadic rioting in the | |
big cities | |
Nativists formed a secretive antiforeign society, the Supreme Order of | |
the Star-Spangled Banner, which evolved into a political organization, the | |
American Party. Because party members often responded “I know nothing” | |
to political questions, the American Party was commonly called the Know- | |
Nothing Party. The policies they supported included increasing the time | |
required for immigrants to attain citizenship from five years to twenty-one | |
‘years and allowing only native-born citizens to hold public office. | |
For a short period in the early 18505, as the Whig Party disintegrated, the | |
Know-Nothing Party gained strength, particularly in the New England and the | |
Mid-Atlantic states. In the 1856 presidential election the party unsuccessfully | |
ran former president Millard Fillmore. | |
By the late 18505, antiforeign feeling faded in importance as the North and | |
the South grew increasingly divided over slavery. However, nativism would | |
periodically return when enough native-born citizens felt threatened by a | |
sudden increase in immigration. | |
TOPIC S5 SECTIONAL CONFLICT: REGIONAL DIFFERENCES 283 | |
Ethnic Conflict in the Southwest | |
‘Though not immigrants, American Indians and Mexican Americans who | |
had become part of the United States because of the Mexican-American War | |
also faced religious discrimination. Many were Roman Catholics or practiced | |
traditional American Indian beliefs. | |
1820 1840 1860 | |
Northeast 4,360,000 | 6,761,000 | 10,594,000 | |
North Central 859,000 | 3,352,000 | 8,097,000 | |
South 4419000 | 6951000 | 11133,000 | |
West = —| w000 | |
Al States 9,618,000 | 17,120,000 | 31,513,000 | |
Source: 'S, Bureas ot Cansus istoica Sttt of h United st Coloril T 10 570 | |
The Expanding Economy | |
‘Theera of territorial expansion coincided with a period of remarkable economic | |
growth from the 1840s to 1857. | |
Industrial Technology | |
Before 1840, factory production had been concentrated mainly in the textile | |
mills of New England. Afier 1840, industrialization spread rapidly to the other | |
states of the Northeast. New factories produced shoes, sewing machines, ready- | |
to-wear clothing, firearms, precision tools, and iron products for railroads and | |
other new technologies. The invention of the sewing machine by Elias Howe | |
took much of the production of clothing out of homes and into factories. An | |
electric telegraph demonstrated in 1844 by its inventor, Samuel F. B. Morse, | |
went hand in hand with the growth of railroads in enormously speeding up | |
communication and transportation across the country. | |
Railroads | |
“The canal-building era of the 1820s and 1830s was replaced in the next two | |
decades with the expansion of rail lines, especially across the Northeast and | |
Midwest. The railroads soon emerged as America largest industry. As such, | |
they required immense amounts of capital and labor and gave rise to complex | |
business organizations. Local merchants and farmers would often buy stocks in | |
the new railroad companies in order to connect their area to the outside world. | |
Local and state governments also helped the railroads grow by granting special | |
Ioans and tax breaks. Then, in 1850, the US. government made its first land | |
grant to railroads. It gave 2.6 million acres of federal land to build the Illinois | |
Central Railroad from Lake Michigan to the Gulf of Mexico. | |
Cheap and rapid transportation particularly promoted Western agriculture. | |
Farmers in Illinois and lowa were now more closely linked by rail to the | |
284 UNITED STATES HISTORY: AP’ EDITION | |
Northeast than by the rivers to the South. The railroads united the commercial | |
interests of the Northeast and Midwest and would also give the North strategic | |
advantages in the Civil War. | |
Panic of 1857 | |
In 1857 a financial panic caused a sharp decrease in prices for Midwestern | |
agricultural products and a sharp increase in unemployment in Northern | |
cities. However, cotton prices remained high and the South was less affected. | |
As a result, some Southerners believed that their plantation cconomy was | |
superior to the Northern economy and that continued union with the Northern | |
economy was not needed. | |
Agitation Over Slavery | |
For a brief period—between the Compromise of 1850 and the passage of the | |
Kansas-Nebraska Act in 1854—political tensions relaxed slightly. However, | |
the enforcement of the Fugitive Slave Act and the publication of a best-selling | |
antislavery novel kept the slavery question before the public | |
Fugitive Slave Law | |
‘The passage of a strict Fugitive Slave Law in 1850 persuaded many Southerners | |
10 accept that California would be a free state. However, many Northerners | |
biterly resented the law. Asa result it drove a wedge between North and South. | |
Enforcement The law's purpose was to help owners track down runaway | |
(fugitive) enslaved people who had escaped to a Northern state, capture them, | |
and return them to their Southern owners. The law removed fugitive slave | |
cases from state courts and made them the exclusive jurisdiction of the federal | |
government. It also authorized special U.S. commissioners to issuc warrants to | |
arrest fugitives. A captured person who claimed to be free and not someone | |
who had just escaped slavery was denied the right of trial by jury. State and | |
local law enforcement offcials were required to help enforce the federal . | |
Opposition Anyone who attempted to hide a runaway or obstruct | |
enforcement of the law was subject to heavy penalties. However, Black and | |
White activists in the North bitterly resisted the law: Through court cases, | |
protests, and sometimes force, they tried to protect African Americans from | |
being returned—or taken for the first time—into slavery. | |
Underground Railroad | |
‘The Underground Railroad was a loose network of activists who helped | |
enslaved people escape o freedom in the North o Canada. Most of the | |
“conductors” and those operating the *tations” were free African Americans | |
and people who had escaped slavery themselves with the assistance of White | |
abolitionists. The most famous conductor was Harriet Tubman, a woman who | |
had escaped slavery. She made at least 19 trips into the South to help some 300 | |
people escape. | |
TOPIC S5 SECTIONAL CONFLICT: REGIONAL DIFFERENCES 285 | |
Free Black citizens in the North and abolitionists also organized vigilance | |
comittees to protect fugitive slaves from the slave catchers. During the Civi | |
‘War, African American leaders such as Frederick Douglass, Harriet Tubman, | |
and Sojourner Truth worked for emancipation and supported Black soldicrs. | |
Books on Slavery—Pro and Con | |
Popular books as well as unpopular laws stirred the people of all regions. | |
Uncle Tom’s Cabin The most influential book of its day was a novel about | |
the conflict between an enslaved man, Tom, and the brutal White slave owner, | |
Simon Legree. The publication of Uncle Tor’s Cabin in 1852 by the Northern | |
writer Harriet Beecher Stowe moved a generation of Northerners and many | |
Europeans to regard all slave owners as cruel and inhuman. Southerners | |
condemned the “untruths” in the novel and looked upon it as one more proof | |
of the Northis incurable prejudice against the Southern way of life. Later, when | |
President Lincoln met Stowe, he is reported to have said, “So you're the little | |
‘woman who wrote the book that made this great war” | |
In response to Stowe's book, Mary Eastment wrote the pro-slavery novel | |
Aunt Philliss Cabin. She portrayed a world of kind slaveowners and happily | |
enslaved people. | |
Impending Crisis of the South Appearing in 1857, Hinton R. Helper's | |
nonfiction book, Impending Crisis of the South, attacked slavery from another | |
angle. The author, a native of North Carolina, used statistics to demonstrate | |
o fellow Southerners that slavery weakened the Southis economy. Southern | |
states quickly banned the book, but it was widely distributed in the North by | |
antislavery and Free-Soil leaders. | |
'COMPARING THE FREE AND SLAVE STATES IN THE 18505 | |
Category FreeStates | Slave States. | |
Population 18,484,922 9612979 | |
Patents for New Inventions 1929 268 | |
Value of Church Buildings 67778477 | 521,674,581 | |
Newspapers and Periodicals 1790 740 | |
Capital $230,100,840 | $109,078,940 | |
Value of Exports $167,520,098 | 107,480,688 6% | |
‘Source Finton . Helpr imperding 1l of h Soth, 1857 Dat o various yers betwesn 1850 60 185, | |
Southern Reaction Respondingto the Northern literature that condemned | |
slavery, proslavery Southern Whites counterattacked, arguing that slavery | |
was good for both the master and the enslaved. They pointed out that slavery | |
was sanctioned by the Bible and grounded in philosophy and history. Slavery | |
was also permitted by the ULS. Constitution. Southern authors contrasted the | |
286 UNITED STATES HISTORY: AP’ EDITION | |
conditions of Northern wage workers—“wage slaves” forced to work long hours | |
in factories and mines—with the familial bonds that developed on plantations | |
between slaves and masters. George Fitzhugh, the best-known proslavery | |
author, questioned the principle of equal rights for “unequal men” and attacked | |
the wage system as worse than slavery. Among his works were Sociology for the | |
South (1854) and Cannibals All! (1857). | |
Effect of Law and Literature | |
‘The Fugitive Slave Law and the books on slavery increasingly polarized the | |
nation. Many Northerners who had opposed the expansion of slavery only for | |
cconomic reasons and had scorned abolition became more concerned about | |
slavery as a moral issue. At the same time, a growing number of Southerners, | |
particularly wealthy ones, became more convinced that Northerners would | |
abolish slavery and the way of life based upon it as soon as they could. | |
REFLECT ON THE LEARNING OBJECTIVE | |
1. Explain how sectional variations related to slavery increased hostilities | |
in the years leading up to the Civil War. | |
KEY TERMS BY THEME | |
Expanding Economy Urban Growth (MIG) Haret Tubman | |
() irish Literature (ARC) | |
industril technology Roman Catholic Uncle Tom's Cabin | |
s Howe Germans Harriot Bescher Stowe | |
‘Samuel F. 8. Morse Changing Politics (PCE) Hinton R. Helper | |
raioads, Tammany Hall Impending Crisi o the | |
Panic of 1857 ) South | |
Confliet (NAT) Fugitve Save Law George Fitzhugh | |
natvism Sociologyfor the South | |
Underground Railroad | |
MULTIPLE-CHOICE QUESTIONS | |
Questions 1-2 refer to the following excerpt. | |
“The gentleman . . . has been anxious to proclaim the death of native | |
Americanism. Sir, it is a principle that can never die. . | |
Native Americanism seeks to defend every institution that exists under | |
that glorious Constitution | |
But we have been told that we belong to a party of one idea’ .. Our great | |
object is to attain to unity of national character; and, as necessary to that | |
end, we embrace every measure and policy decidedly American. ... We go | |
for every thing American in contradistinction to every thing foreign. That | |
. may be called one idea’; but it i a glorious idea. | |
TOPIC S5 SECTIONAL CONFLICT: REGIONAL DIFFERENCES 287 | |
No alien has a right to naturalization . . . . To prevent this universal | |
admission to citizenship, we frame naturalization laws, and prescribe | |
forms that operate as a check upon the interference of foreigners in our | |
institutions. ... . | |
We are now struggling for national character and national identity | |
We stand now on the very verge of overthrow by the impetuous force of | |
invading foreigners.” | |
Rep. Lewis C. Levin, Speech in Congress, December 18, 1845 | |
1. Which of the following groups would have most likely supported Levin's | |
concern “to attain unity of national character’? | |
(A) Reformers who opposed the mistreatment of Native Americans | |
(B) Southerners who viewed abolition as a threat to a long-standing | |
institution | |
(©) Protestants who viewed Roman Catholicism as a foreign faith | |
(D) Men who opposed giving women the rights of citizenship, such as. | |
suffrage | |
2. How successful were Levin and his supporters in the mid-19th century? | |
(A) They slowed down the growth of sectional division over slavery. | |
(B) They helped pass a Fugitive Slave Law that appealed to Southerners. | |
() ‘They supported government funding of railroads to unite the | |
country. | |
(D) They formed a secretive society that evolved into a political party. | |
SHORT-ANSWER QUESTION | |
Use complete sentences; an outline or bulleted list alone is not acceptable. | |
1. Answer (a), (b), and (c). | |
() Briefly explain ONE specific social or political response to | |
immigration in the 1850s. | |
(b) Briefly explain ONE specific social or political response to the | |
conflict over slavery in the 1850s. | |
(© Briefly explain ONE specific example of how a piece of lterature | |
influenced social or political change in the 1850s. | |
288 UNITED STATES HISTORY: AP’ EDITION | |
Topic 5.6 | |
Failure of Compromise | |
The real issue in this controversy—the one pressing upon every | |
mind—is the sentiment on the part of one class that looks | |
upon the institution of slavery as a wrong, and of another class | |
that does not look upon it as a wrong. | |
Abraham Lincoln during a debate with Stephen Douglas in Alon, llnois, 1855 | |
Learning Objective: Explain the political causes of the Civil War. | |
By 1861, pliicans attempted many compromisestoprevent war Historians | |
agree on the sequence of major events from 1848 o 1861 that led to the outbreak | |
of the Civil War between the Union and the Confederacy. Facts alone, however, | |
do not automatically assemble themselves into a convincing interpretation of | |
why war occurred when it did. Three large issues, all related to slavery, divided | |
the North and the South: (1) attitudes about the morality of slavery, (2) views | |
about the constitutional rights of states, particularly the right to protect slavery, | |
and (3) differences over economic policies between the free-labor industrial | |
North and the slave-labor agricultural South. Some historians argue that | |
solving these ssues was possible but blundering politicians and extremism | |
resulted in an unnecessary war. Others argue that the war was inevitable. | |
National Parties in Crisis | |
‘The potency of the slavery controversy increased political instabiliy. The two | |
major parties—the Democrats and the Whigs—grew weak and divided over | |
how to resolve the sectional differences over slavery. One effort to settle the | |
issue, the application of popular sovereignty in the territory of Kansas, resulted | |
in disaster. | |
The Election of 1852 | |
Signs of trouble for the Whig Party appeared in the 1852 election for president. | |
‘The Whigs nominated another military hero of the Mexican War, General | |
Winfield Scott. Attempting to ignore the slavery issue, the Whigs concentrated | |
on the party’s traditional platform: improving roads and harbors. But Scott | |
quickly discovered that sectional issues could not be held in check. The | |
antislavery and Southern factions of the party fell to quarreling, and the party | |
was on the verge of splitting apart. | |
TOPIC 56 FAILURE OF COMPROMISE 289 | |
‘The Democrats nominated a compromise candidate, Franklin Pierce | |
of New Hampshire, who they hoped would be a safe choice, one acceptable | |
to people in all regions. A Northerner, Pierce was acceptable to Southern | |
Democrats because he supported the Fugitive Slave Law. In the Electoral | |
College, Pierce and the Democrats won all but four states, suggesting the days | |
of the Whig Party were numbered. | |
The Kansas-Nebraska Act (1854) | |
‘The Democrats, firmly in control of both the White House and Congress, found | |
they could not avoid the issue of slavery in the territorics. Senator Stephen A. | |
Douglas of Illinois proposed building a transcontinental railroad through the | |
center of the country, with a major terminus in Chicago, to promote Western | |
settlement (and increase the value of his own real estate in Chicago) | |
Southerners preferred a more southerly route. To win their support, | |
Douglas introduced a bill o divide the Nebraska Territory into two pars, the | |
Kansas and Nebraska territories, and allow settlers in each territory to decide | |
whether to allow slavery. Since these territories were located north of the 36°30" | |
line, Douglas’ bill gave Southerners an opportunity to expand slavery into | |
lands that had been closed to it by the Missouri Compromise of 1820. Many | |
Northern Democrats condemned the bill as a surrender to “slave power” Stil, | |
after three months of bitter debate, both houses of Congress passed Douglas | |
bill as the Kansas-Nebraska Act of 1854, and President Pierce signed it into | |
law. | |
Extremists and Violence | |
‘The Kansas-Nebraska Act, in effect, repealed the Missouri Compromise that | |
had lessened regional tensions for more than three decades. Afier 1854, the | |
conflicts between antislavery and proslavery forces exploded, both in Kansas | |
and on the floor of the United States Senate | |
“Bleeding Kansas” | |
Stephen Douglas, the Kansas-Nebraska Act sponsor, expected the slavery issue | |
in the territory to be settled peacefully by the antislavery farmers from the | |
Midwest who migrated to Kansas and constituted a majority. Slaveholders from | |
neighboring Missour also set up homesteads in Kansas as a means of winning | |
control for the South. Northern abolitionists and Free-Soilers responded by | |
organizing the New England Emigrant Aid Company (1855), which paid for | |
the transportation of antislavery settlers to Kansas. Fighting broke out between | |
the proslavery and the antislavery groups, and the territory became known as | |
“bleeding Kansas” | |
Proslavery Missourians, called “border ruffians” by their enemies, crossed | |
the border to create a proslavery legislature in Lecompton, Kansas. Antislavery | |
settlers refused to recognize this government and created their own legislature | |
in Topeka. In 1856, proslavery forces attacked the free-soil town of Lawrence, | |
290 UNITED STATES HISTORY: AP’ EDITION | |
Killing two and destroying homes and businesses. Two days later, John Brown, | |
a stern abolitionist, retaliated. He and his sons attacked a proslavery farm | |
settlement at Pottawatomie Creek, killing five. | |
THE UNITED STATES AFTER THE KANSAS-NEBRASKA ACT OF 1854 | |
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In Washington, the Pierce administration did nothing to keep order in | |
the Kansas territory and failed to support honest elections there. As Kansas | |
became bloodier, the Democratic Party became more divided between its | |
Northern and Southern factions. The plan to let territories decide on slavery | |
for themselves had resulted in chaos and bloodshed. | |
Caning of Senator Sumner The violence in Kansas spilled over into the | |
halls of the US. Congress. In 1856, Massachusets senator Charles Sumner | |
attacked the Democratic administration in a vitriolic speech, “The Crime | |
Against Kansas” His remarks included personal chargesagainst South Carolina | |
senator Andrew Butler. Butler’s nephew, Congressman Preston Brooks, | |
defended his unclés honor by walking into the Senate chamber and beating | |
Sumner over the head repeatedly with a cane. Sumner never fully recovered | |
from the attack. The action by Brooks outraged the North, and the House voted | |
to censure him while Southerners applauded the deed. The Sumner-Brooks | |
incident was another sign of growing passions on both sides. | |
TOPIC 56 FAILURE OF CoMPROMISE 291 | |
Birth of the Republican Party | |
‘Theincreasingtensions over slavery divided Northernand Southern Democrats, | |
and completely broke apart the Whig Party. Ex-Whigs scattered. Those who | |
were frightened about immigration joined the Know-Nothing Party. With | |
the support of new members, the Know-Nothings won a few local and state | |
elections in the mid-1850s. However, as the expansion of slavery became the | |
paramount political issue, the significance of immigration declined, and along | |
with it the Know-Nothing Party. | |
Ex-Whigs who supported the expansion of slavery usually joined the | |
Democratic Party. The South became the core of the party, although Democrats | |
were still strong in the North. | |
Former Whigs who opposed slavery expansion formed the core of a new | |
party. The Republican Party was founded in Wisconsin in 1854 as a reaction | |
to the passage of the Kansas-Nebraska Act. Composed of Free-Soilers and | |
antislavery Whigs and Democrats, its purpose was to oppose the spread of | |
slavery in the territories—not to end slavery itself. Its first platform called | |
for the repeal of both the Kansas-Nebraska Act and the Fugitive Slave Law. | |
As violence increased in Kansas, more and more people, including some | |
abolitionists, joined the Republican Party, and it became the second largest | |
party in the country. But it was strictly a Northern, or sectional, party. Its | |
success alienated and threatened the South. | |
The Election of 1856 | |
The Republicans’ first test of strength came in the presidential election of | |
1856. Their nominee was a California senator, the explorer and “Pathfinder,” | |
John C. Frémont. The Republican platform called for no expansion of slavery, | |
free homesteads, and a probusiness protective tariff. The Know-Nothingsalso | |
competed strongly in this clection, with their candidate, former President | |
Millard Fillmore, winning 20 percent of the popular votc. | |
As the one major national party; the Democrats expected to win. They | |
nominated James Buchanan of Pennsylvania, rejecting President Pierce and | |
Stephen Douglas because they were too closely identified with the controversial | |
Kansas-Nebraska Act. As expected, the Democrats won a majority of the | |
popular and electoral vote. The Republicans made a strong showing for a | |
sectional party. In the Electoral College, Frémont carried 11 of the 16 free | |
states. Some predicted that the antislavery Republicans could win the White | |
House without a single vote from the South. | |
‘The election of 1856 foreshadowed the emergence of a powerful political | |
party that would win all butfour presidential elections between 1860 and 1932, | |
Constitutional Issues | |
Both the Democrats’ position of popular sovereignty and the Republicans’ | |
stand against the expansion of slavery received serious blows during the | |
Buchanan administration (1857-1861). Republicans attacked Buchanan as a | |
weak president. | |
292 UNITED STATES HISTORY: AP’ EDITION | |
Lecompton Constitution | |
One of Buchanan's frst challenges as president in 1857 was to decide whether | |
1o accept or reject a proslavery state constitution for Kansas submitted by | |
the Southern legislature at Lecompton. Buchanan knew that the Lecompton | |
Constitution, as it was called, did not have majority support. Even so, he asked | |
Congress to accept the document and admit Kansas as a slave state. Congress | |
did not do so because many Democrats, including Stephen Douglas, joined | |
with the Republicans in rejecting the constitution. The next year, 1858, the | |
proslavery document was overwhelmingly rejected by Kansas settlers, most of | |
whom were antislavery Republicans. | |
Dred Scott v. Sandford (1857) | |
Congressional folly and presidential ineptitude contributed to the sectional | |
crisis of the 1850s. Then the Supreme Court worsened the crisis when it | |
infuriated many Northerners with a controversial proslavery decision in the | |
case of an enslaved man named Dred Scott. Scott had been held in slavery in | |
Missouri and then taken to the free territory of Wisconsin, where he lived for | |
two years before returning to Missouri. Arguing that hs residence on free soil | |
made hima free citizen, Scott sued for his freedom in Missouri in 1846. The case | |
worked its way through the court system. It finally reached the Supreme Court, | |
which rendered its decision in March 1857, only two days after Buchanan was | |
sworn in as president. | |
Presiding over the Court was Chief Justice Roger Taney, a Southern | |
Democrat. A majority of the Court decided against Scott and gave these | |
reasons: | |
« Dred Scott had no right to sue in a federal court because the Framers of | |
the Constitution did not intend African Americans to be US. citizens. | |
« Congress did not have the power to deprive any person of property | |
without due process of law: If slaves were a form of property, then | |
Congress could not exclude slavery from any federal territory. | |
« The Missouri Compromise was unconstitutional because it excluded | |
slavery from Wisconsin and other Northern territories. | |
‘The Court’s ruling delighted Southern Democrats and infuriated Northern | |
Republicans. In effcct, the Court declared all parts of the Western territories | |
open to slavery. Republicans denounced the decision as “the greatest crime | |
in the annals of the republic” The timing of the decision, after Buchanan's | |
inauguration, led Northerners to suspect the Democratic president and | |
majority on the Supreme Court, including Taney: had planned the decision so | |
that it would settle the slavery question. This increased Northern suspicions | |
of a conspiracy and induced thousands of Democrats to vote Republican. | |
Northern Democrats such as Senator Douglas were left with the impossible task | |
of supporting popular sovereignty without rejecting the Dred Scot decision. | |
Douglas’s hopes for compromise and the presidency were in jeopardy. | |
TOPIC 56 FAILURE OF COMPROMISE 293 | |
Lincoln-Douglas Debates | |
In 1858, the focus of the nation was on Stephen Douglas’s campaign for | |
reelection as senator from Tlinois. Challenging him was a successful trial | |
lawyer and former member of the Illinois legislature, Abraham Lincoln, as the | |
Republican candidate. Lincoln had served one term in Congress in the 18405 | |
as a Whig. Nationally, he was an unknown compared to Douglas (the Little | |
Giant), who was the champion of popular sovereignty and possibly the best | |
hope for holding the nation together if elected president in 1860. | |
Lincoln was not an abolitionist. As a moderate who was against the | |
expansion of slavery, he spoke effectively of slavery as a moral issue. (“If | |
slavery is not wrong, nothing is wrong”) Accepting the Illinois Republicans’ | |
nomination, he delivered his celebrated “house-divided” speech that won him | |
fame. “I believe this government,” said Lincoln, “cannot endure, permanently | |
half slave and half free,” a statement that made Southerners view Lincoln as a | |
radical. In seven campaign debates in different Illinois towns, Lincoln shared | |
the platform with his famous opponent, Douglas. The Republican challenger | |
attacked Douglas’s indifference to slavery as a moral issue. | |
In a debate in Freeport, Illinois, Lincoln challenged Douglas to reconcile | |
popular sovereignty with the Dred Scott decision. In what became known as | |
the Freeport Doctrine, Douglas responded that slavery could not exist in a | |
community if the local citizens did not pass laws (slave codes) maintaining | |
it. His views angered Southern Democrats because, from their point of view, | |
Douglas did not go far enough in supporting the implications of the Dred Scott | |
decision. | |
Douglas won his campaign for reelection to the U.S. Senate. In the long run, | |
however, he lost ground in his own party by alienating Southern Democrats. | |
Lincoln, on the other hand, emerged from the debates as national figure and | |
a leading contender for the Republican nomination for president in 1860. | |
REFLECT ON THE LEARNING OBJECTIVE | |
1. Explain the political causes for the Civil War. | |
KEY TERMS BY THEME | |
Battle forthe Teritories Kansas-Nebraska Act Stavery (POL, ARC) | |
(MIG, POL) Politics in Crisis (POL) Dred Scott v. Sandford | |
New England Emigrant Ald — rankin pierce Roger Taney | |
Company Know:Nothing Party Lincoln-Douglas debates | |
bloeding Kansas' Repulian Party Abraham Lincoln | |
Pottawatomie Creek [ house-divided speech | |
Lecompton Consttuion et e £ Freeport Doctrine | |
Compromising (POL) James Buchanan Violent Responses (POL) | |
Stephen A. Douglas Sumner-Brooks incident | |
294 UNITED STATES HISTORY: AP’ EDITION | |
MULTIPLE-CHOICE QUESTIONS | |
Questions 1-2 refer to the following excerpt. | |
“Mr. President . .. 1 proposed on Tuesday last, that the Senate should | |
proceed to the consideration of the bill to organize the Territories of | |
Nebraska and Kansas . . | |
Now I ask the friends and the opponents of this measure to look at it as | |
it i. Is not the question involved the simple one, whether the people of | |
the Territories shall be allowed to do as they please upon the question of | |
slavery, subject only to the limitations of the Constitution? .. | |
If the principle s right, let it be avowed and maintained. If i is wrong, let | |
it be repudiated. Let all this quibbling about the Missouri Compromise, | |
about the territory acquired from France, about the act of 1820, be cast | |
behind you; for the simple question is, will you allow the people to legislate | |
for themselves upon the subject of slavery? Why should you not?” | |
Stephen A. Douglas, Defense of the Kansas Nebraska Bill, 1854 | |
1. Which of the following ideas best describes what Douglas is proposing | |
in this excerpt? | |
(A) ‘The theme of The Impending Crisis of the South | |
(B) The concept of popular sovereignty | |
(©) The right of a state to secede | |
(D) ‘The distinction betsween a territory and a state. | |
2. Opponents of Douglas’s views in this excerpt were mainly concerned | |
that | |
(A) the Supreme Court had ruled popular sovereignty unconstitutional | |
(B) Congress was repealing a law that had held the Union together for | |
more than 30 years | |
(©) the president would not fully support implementation of a new law | |
(D) European powers would object to the possibility of slavery's | |
expansion | |
TOPIC 56 FAILURE OF COMPROMISE 295 | |
SHORT-ANSWER QUESTION | |
Use complete sentences; an outline or bulleted list alone is not acceptable. | |
Question 1 is based on the following excerpts. | |
1. “The country had been founded in compromise, and to compromise it was | |
dedicated. . .. But this conception of compromise was in trouble, and the | |
word would ... become an epithet. | |
‘The underlying issue was the Norths increasing power. And that power | |
endangered slavery. Secessionists worried if slavery did not expand into | |
the territories, the black population would stay where it was, bottled up | |
and likely to explode. Fear motivated them. That is to say, racial anxiety | |
was as pervasive as economic anxiety when it came to secession, though it | |
was hard to separate the two, for they were threaded together with the rope | |
that bound secessionists and many Southerners to their land, their way of | |
life, their mint juleps, and their pride of race. | |
Lincolnis clection was thus not so much the cause of secession as its | |
excuses institutional restraints (read: the federal government) had insulted | |
Southerners, imperiled their way oflife, and held them in thrall to Northern | |
financiers who had forced planters to buy goods in a protected market. | |
Brenda Wineapple, Ecstatic Nation, 2013 | |
“During the 1850s, however, the forces that had worked to hold the nation | |
together in the past fell victim to new and much more divisive pressures | |
that were working to splt the nation apart. Driving the sectional tensions | |
of the 18505 was a battle over national policy toward the western territories | |
which were clamoring to become states of the Union—and over the place | |
of slavery within them. Should slavery be permitted in the new states? And | |
who should decide whether to permit it or not? . .. Positions on slavery | |
continued to harden in both the North and South until ultimately each | |
region came to consider the other its enemy” | |
Alan Brinkiey: American History, 2003 | |
Using the excerpts, answer (a), (b), and (c). | |
(@) Briefly explain ONE major difference between Wineapple's and | |
Brinkley’s historical interpretations of Manifest Destiny. | |
(b) Briefly explain how ONE historical event or development in the | |
period 1848 to 1861 that is not explicitly mentioned in the excerpts | |
could be used to support Wineapple's interpretation. | |
(©) Briefly explain how ONE historical event or development in the | |
period 1848 to 1861 that is not explicitly mentioned in the excerpts | |
could be used to support Brinkley's interpretation. | |
296 UNITED STATES HISTORY: AP’ EDITION | |
Topic 5.7 | |
Election of 1860 and Secession | |
I, John Brown, am now quite certain that the crimes of this | |
quilty land will never be purged away but with blood. | |
John Brown, December 1859 | |
Learning Objective: Describe the effects of Lincoln's election. | |
I Northern states outside of Hinois where Douglas and the Democrats | |
defeated Lincoln, the Republicans did well in the congressional elections of | |
1858. This greatly alarmed many Southerners. They worried not only about | |
the antislavery plank in the Republicans' program but also about that party’s | |
economic program, which favored Northern industrialists at the expense of | |
the South. The higher tariffs pledged by the Republicans would help Northern | |
businesses but hurt the South, which depended on exporting cotton. The | |
events leading up to Lincoln's election and the secession of eleven Southern | |
states from the Union set the stage for war. | |
The Road to Secession | |
Southern fears grew that a Republican victory in 1860 would spell disaster | |
for their economy and threaten their “constitutional right;”as affirmed by the | |
Supreme Court, to own enslaved people as property. Adding to their fears were | |
Northern radicals supporting John Brown, the man who had massacred five | |
farmers in Kansas in 1856. | |
John Brown’s Raid at Harpers Ferry | |
John Brown confirmed the Southis worst fears of radical abolitionism when he | |
tried to start an uprising of enslaved people in Virginia. In October 1859, he led | |
a small band of followers, including his four sons and some formerly enslaved | |
people, to attack the federal arsenal at Harpers Ferry. His impractical plan was | |
to use guns from the arsenal to arm Virginia’s enslaved African Americans, | |
whom he expected to rise up in revolt. Federal troops under the command of | |
Robert E. Lee captured Brown and his band after a two-day siege. Brown and | |
six of his followers were tried for treason by the state of Virginia. At the trial, | |
Brown spoke with simple eloquence of his humanitarian motives in wanting to | |
free enslaved people. However, he was convicted and hanged. | |
Brown's raid divided Northerners. Moderates condemned his use of | |
violence, while abolitionists hailed him as a martyr. Southern whites saw the | |
raid, and Northern support o it,as final proof of the North’s true intentions— | |
to use slave revolts to destroy the South, | |
TOPIC 5.7 ELECTION OF 1860 AND SECESSION 297 | |
The Election of 1860 | |
After John Brown's raid, more and more Americans feared that their country was | |
moving to disintegration. The presidential clection of 1860 would test the Union. | |
Breakup of the Democratic Party As 1860 began, the Democratic Party | |
represented the last hope for compromise. The Democrats held their national | |
convention in Charleston, South Carolina. Stephen Douglas was the party's | |
leading candidate and the most capable of winning the presidency. Blocking | |
his nomination were angry Southerners and supporters of President Buchanan. | |
After deadlocking at Charleston, the Democrats held a second convention | |
in Baltimore. Many delegates from the slave states walked out, enabling the | |
remaining delegates to nominate Douglas on a platform of popular sovereignty | |
and enforcement of the Fugitive Slave Law. Southern Democrats then held | |
their own convention in Baltimore and nominated Vice President John C. | |
Breckinridge of Kentucky as their candidate. The Southern Democratic | |
platform called for the unrestricted extension of slavery in the territories and | |
annexation of Cuba, a Spanish colony that til practiced slavery. | |
Republican Nomination of Lincoln When the Republicans met in | |
Chicago, they enjoyed hopes of an easy win over the divided Democrats. They | |
drafted a platform that appealed to the economic self-interest of Northerners | |
and Westerners. They called for the exclusion of slavery from the territorics, | |
a protective tariff for industry, free land for homesteaders, and internal | |
mprovements to encourage Western settlement, including a railroad to the | |
Pacific. To win moderates on slavery, they rejected the well-known New York | |
Senator William Seward, a strong opponent of slavery. They turned to a litle- | |
known linois lawyer Abraham Lincoln, a strong debater. They believed that | |
Lincoln could carry the Midwestern states of Illinois, Indiana, and Ohio. One | |
cloud darkened the Republicans’otherwise bright future. In the South, radicals | |
warned that if the country elected Lincoln, their states would leave the Union. | |
A Fourth Political Party Fearing a Republican victory, a group of former | |
Whigs, Know-Nothings, and moderate Democrats formed a new party: the | |
Constitutional Union Party. For president, they nominated John Bell of | |
Tennessee and pledged enforcement of the laws and the Constitution and, | |
above all, preservation of the Union. | |
Election Results While Douglas campaigned across the country, Lincoln | |
remained at home in Springfield, Tlinois, meeting with Republican leaders and | |
givingstatements o the press. The election results were predictable. Lincoln carried | |
every fiee state of the North, which represented a solid majority of 59 percent of | |
the electoral votes. Breckinridge, the Southern Democrat, carried the Deep South, | |
leaving Douglas and Bell with just a few electoral votes in the border states. | |
However, Lincoln won only 39.8 percent of the popular vote, so he would | |
be a minority president. The new political reality was that the populous free | |
states had enough electoral votes to elect a president without any electoral votes | |
from the South. Southern fears that the North would dominate the federal | |
government—and could soon threaten slavery—appeared to be coming true. | |
298 UNITED STATES HISTORY: AP’ EDITION | |
Secession of the Deep South | |
In 1860, Republicans controlled neither the Senate nor the Supreme Court. | |
Even so, the election of Lincoln was all that Southern secessionists needed to | |
call for immediate disunion. In December 1860, a special convention in South | |
Carolina voted unanimously to secede, saying they needed to protect slavery. | |
Within six weeks, state conventions in Georgia, Florida, Alabama, Mississippi, | |
Louisiana, and Texas did the same. In several states, particularly Georgia and | |
Alabama, many people were uncertain about or opposed to secession. However, | |
large slaveowners, arguing that states had a right to defend slavery, prevaled. | |
In February 1861, representatives of the seven states of the Deep South et | |
in Montgomery, Alabama, and created the Confederate States of America. The | |
constitution of this Southern country was like the US. Constitution, except | |
that the Confederacy placed limits on the governments power to impose tariffs | |
and restrict slavery. Elected president and vice president were Jefferson Davis | |
of Mississippi and Alexander Stephens of Georgia. | |
THE ELECTION OF 1860 | |
e Uperrm, A | |
Electoral votes ~ Popular votes. | |
[ Lincoin (Rep) 180 1,866,000 | |
[ Dougias (No. Dem) 2 1,475,000 | |
[ Brockinrdge (S0.Dem) 72 848,000 | |
[ Bell (Const. Union) B 591,000 | |
Crittenden Compromise A lame-duck president (a leader completing a | |
term after someone else has been elected to his or her office), Buchanan had five | |
‘months in office before Lincoln succeeded him. Buchanan was a conservative | |
who did nothing to prevent the secession. Congress was more active. In a last- | |
ditch effort to appease the South, Senator John Crittenden of Kentucky proposed | |
a constitutional amendment that would guarantee the right to hold slaves in | |
TOPIC 57 ELECTION OF 1860 AND SECESSION 299 | |
all territories south of the old Missouri Compromise line, 36°30". Lincoln, | |
however, said that he could not accept this compromise because it violated the | |
Republican position against extension of slavery into the territorics | |
Southern Whites who voted for secession believed they were acting in | |
the tradition of the Revolution of 1776. They argued that they had a right to | |
national independence and to dissolve a consitutional compact that no longer | |
protected them from the “tyranny” of Northern rule. Many also thought that | |
Lincoln, like Buchanan, might permit secession without a fight. Those who | |
thought this had badly miscalculated. | |
A Nation Divided | |
When Lincoln took office as the president in March 1861, people wondered if | |
he would challenge the secession militarily. In his inaugural address, Lincoln | |
assured Southerners that he would not interfere with slavery where it existed. | |
Atthe same time, he warned, no state had the right to break up the Union. He | |
appealed for restraint: “In your hands, my dissatisfied fellow-countrymen, and | |
not in mine, is the momentous issue of civil war. The government will not assail | |
you. You can have no conflict without being yourselves the aggressors. | |
Fort Sumter | |
Despite the president’s message of conciliation, the danger of a war was acute. | |
Critical was the status of federal forts in states that had seceded. Fort Sumter, | |
in the harbor of Charleston, South Carolina, was cut off by Southern control of | |
the harbor. Rather than either giving up Fort Sumier or attempting to defend it, | |
Lincoln announced that he was sending provisions of food to the small federal | |
garrison. He thus gave South Carolina the choice of cither permitting the fort | |
10 hold out or opening fire. Carolinas guns thundered and thus, on April 12, | |
1861, the war began. The attack on Fort Sumter and ts capture after two days of | |
pounding united most Northerners behind a patriotic fight to save the Union. | |
Secession of the Upper South | |
Before South Carolina attacked Fort Sumter, only seven states of the Deep South | |
had seceded. After it was clear that Lincoln would use troops to defend the | |
Union, four states of the Upper South—Virginia, North Carolina, Tennessee, | |
and Arkansas—seceded and joined the Confederacy. As in the earlier states, | |
the decision to secede was controversial. The Confederates then moved their | |
capital to Richmond, Virginia. The people of western Virginia remained loyal | |
to the Union, becoming a separate state in 1863, | |
Keeping the Border States in the Union | |
Four other slaveholding states remained in the Union. The decisions of | |
Delaware, Maryland, Missouri, and Kentucky nof o join the Confederacy were | |
partly a result of pro-Union sentiment in those states and partly the result of | |
shrewd federal policies. In Maryland, pro-secessionists attacked Union troops | |
and threatened the railroad to Washington. The Union army resorted to martial | |
300 UNITED STATES HISTORY: AP’ EDITION | |
law to keep the state under federal control. In Missour, US. troops prevented | |
the pro-South clements from gaining control, although guerrilla forces for | |
the Confederacy were active during the war. In Kentucky, the state legislature | |
voted to remain neutral. Lincoln initialy respected its neutrality and waited for | |
the South to violate it before moving in federal troops. | |
Keeping the border states in the Union was a military and political goal for | |
Lincoln. Their loss would increase the Confederate population by 50 percent | |
and weaken the Northis strategic position. Partly to avoid alienating Unionists | |
in the border states, Lincoln rejected initial calls for the emancipation of slaves. | |
% HISTORICAL PERSPECTIVES: WHAT CAUSED THE CIVIL WAR? | |
Was slavery the primary cause of the Civil War? In the decades after the war, | |
Northern historians argued emphatically that the Souths attachment to slavery | |
wasthe principal,if not the only,cause. They blamed the war on a conspiracy of | |
slave owners—a small minority of Southerners—who wanted only to expand | |
slavery at the expense of White and Black Americans alike. | |
Southern historians, on the other hand, viewed the conflict between the | |
two sections, North and South, as dispute over the nature of the Constitution. | |
‘They argued that Northern politicians violated the original compact of the | |
states by attacking their property rights (the ownership of enslaved people). | |
Therefore, the Southern states had to secede to defend their constitutional | |
rights and escape tyranny of the Northern majority. | |
By the early 20th century, passions had cooled on both sides, and scholars | |
of the Progressive era (1900-1917) thought economic interests were the | |
foundation of all political conflict. The Civil War, then, was a clash between | |
two opposing cconomic systems: the industrial North versus the agricultural | |
South. They downplayed the divisive issue of slavery. | |
American disillusionment with World War I led historians to question | |
whether the Civil War was necessary o inevitable. Previously, people had | |
assumed that the Civil War was an “irrepressible conflict” In the 19205 | |
and 19305, historians challenged that assumption, arguing that blundering | |
politicians and fanaticism on both sides, such as radical abolitionists in the | |
North and secessionists in the South, were chiefly responsible for the war. The | |
leaders admired from this perspective were politicians of the 1850s who worked | |
for compromise, such as Henry Clay and Stephen Douglas. They criticized | |
Lincoln for his passionate “house-divided” speech. | |
In the 19505 and 1960s, the civil rights movement provided the backdrop for | |
rethinking the causes of the Civil War. Historians who were affected by African | |
Americans’ struggles for civil rights returned to the view that slavery was the | |
chief cause of disunion afier all. Arthur Schlesinge, Jr, a leading historian | |
of the 1950, argued: “A society closed in the defense of evil institutions thus | |
creates moral differences far too profound to be solved by compromise. In this | |
view, slavery was an inherently evil institution and the root of a conflict that | |
was indeed “irrepressible?” | |
TOPIC 57 ELECTION OF 1860 AND SECESSION 301 | |
REFLECT ON THE LEARNING OBJECTIVE | |
1. Explain the consequences of Lincoln’s election. | |
KEY TERMS BY THEME | |
Violent Responses Consitutionsl Union Party The Break (NAT, POL) | |
(PoL) John Bell border states | |
John Brown secession The Fighting | |
Harpers Ferry Compromising (POL) (POL, GEO, CUL) | |
Politicsn Crisis (POL) Critenden Compromise Fort Sumter | |
John C. Breckenridge. | |
MULTIPLE-CHOICE QUESTIONS | |
Questions 1-2 refer to the following excerpt. | |
“Apprehension seems to exist among the people of the Southern States that | |
by the accession of a Republican administration their property and their | |
peace and personal security are endangered. There has never been any | |
reasonable cause for such apprehension. | |
In your hands, my dissatisfied fellow countrymen, and not in mine, is the | |
‘momentous issue of civil war. The Government will not assail you. You | |
can have no conflict without being yourself the aggressors. You have no | |
oath registered in heaven to destroy the Government, while I shall have the | |
most solemn one to ‘preserve, protect, and defend it | |
Abraham Lincoln, Fist Inaugural Address, March 4, 1861 | |
1. Which of the following actions by the Confederates was the first sign of | |
their rejection of Lincoln's words in the excerpt above? | |
(4) The secession of seven states in the Deep South | |
(B) The decision to locate the Confederate capital in Virginia | |
(©) ‘The adoption of a new constitution by the Confederacy | |
(D) The attack on Fort Sumter by South Carolina | |
2. The position of Lincoln and the Republicans on which of the following | |
issues caused the greatest fear among Southern defenders of slavery? | |
(A) The extension of slavery into the territories | |
(B) The Fugitive Slave Act | |
(C) The slave trade in Washington, D.C. | |
(D) The Dred Scott decision | |
302 UNITED STATES HISTORY: AP’ EDITION | |
SHORT-ANSWER QUESTION | |
Use complete sentences; an outline or bulleted list alone is not acceptable. | |
1. “[In the Civil War) great issues were at stake, issues about which | |
Americans were willing to fight and die, issues whose resolution | |
profoundly transformed and redefined the United States. The Civil War | |
was a total war in three senses: It mobilized the total human and material | |
resources of both sides; it ended not in a negotiated peace but in total | |
Victory by one side and unconditional surrender by the other; it destroyed | |
the economy and social system of the loser and established those of the | |
winner as the norm for the future. . | |
‘The North went to war to preserve the Unions it ended by creating a nation.” | |
James M. McPherson, historian, A War That Never Goes | |
Away!” American Heritage, March 1990 | |
“Should we consecrate a war that killed and maimed over a million | |
Americans? Or should we question . . . whether this was really a war of | |
necessity that justified its appalling costs? . .. | |
Very few Northerners went to war seeking or anticipating the destruction | |
of slavery. They fought for the Union, and the Emancipation Proclamation | |
was a means to that end: a desperate measure to undermine the South and | |
save a democratic nation that Lincoln called ‘the last, best hope of earth. | |
From the distance of 150 years, Lincoln's transcendent vision at Gettysburg | |
of a ‘new birth of freedom’ seems premature. . . . Rather than simply | |
consecrate the dead with words, he said, it s for ‘us the living'to rededicate | |
ourselves to the unfinished work of the Civil War?” | |
Tony Horwitz,journalist and writer, “150 Years of | |
Misunderstanding the Civil War?” The Atlantic June 2013 | |
Using the excerpts, answer (a), (b), and (¢). | |
(@) Briefly explain ONE major difference between McPherson’s and | |
Horwitz's historical interpretations of the Civil War. | |
(b) Briefly explain how ONE historical event or development from the | |
period 1861 to 1865 not directly mentioned in the excerpts supports | |
McPherson’s interpretation. | |
(©) Briefly explain how ONE historical event or development from the | |
period 1861 to 1865 not directly mentioned in the excerpts supports | |
Horwitz's interpretation. | |
TOPIC 57 ELECTION OF 1860 AND SECESSION 303 | |
Topic 5.8 | |
Military Conflict in the Civil War | |
Itis enough to make the whole world start to see the awful amount | |
of death and destruction that now stalks abroad. | see no signs of a | |
remission till one or both the armies are destroyed. | |
General Willom T Sherman, June 1664 | |
Learning Objective: Explain the various factors that contributed to the. | |
Union victory in the Civil War. | |
The Civit War between the Union and the Confederacy (1861-1865) was the | |
costliest American war in terms of the loss of human life, esulting in the deaths | |
of 750,000 people. Most important, the Civil War freed 4 million enslaved | |
African Americans, giving the nation what President Lincoln called a “new | |
birth of freedom.” The war also transformed American society by accelerating | |
industrialization and modernization in the North and destroying much of the | |
South. These changes were so fundamental and profound that some historians | |
refer to the Civil War as the Second American Revolution. | |
War | |
Less than 100 years after fighting a war to establish their republic, the Union | |
and the Confederacy each entered the Civil War with strengths and weaknesses. | |
Military Differences The Confederacy started with the advantage of | |
having to fight only a defensive war to win, while the Union had to conquer | |
an area as large as Western Europe. The Confederacy had to move troops and | |
supplies shorter distances than the Union. It had a long, indented coastline that | |
was difficult to blockade, experienced military leaders, and high troop morale. | |
‘The Unionis population of 22 million against the Confederate’s of 5.5 | |
million free Whites would work to ts favor in a war of atrition. Its population | |
advantage was aided by 800,000 immigrants, and emancipation brought | |
180,000 African Americans into the Union army. The Union could also count | |
on a loyal US. Navy, which ultimately gave it command of the rivers and | |
territorial waters. | |
Economic Differences The Union dominated the nation's economy, | |
controlling most of the banking and capital of the country; 85 percent of the | |
factories, 70 percent of the railroads, and 65 percent of the farmland. The skills | |
of Northern clerks and bookkeepers proved valuable in the logistical support | |
of military operations. Confederates hoped that European demand for its | |
304 UNITED STATES HISTORY: AP’ EDITION | |
cotton wuld bring recognition and financial aid. Like other rebel movements | |
in history, the Confederates counted on outside help to be successful. | |
Political Differences The two sides had distinct goals. The Confederates | |
were struggling for independence, while the Union was fighting to preserve | |
the Union. But states’righs proved a liabilty for the Confederate government; | |
to win the war, they needed a strong central government with strong public | |
support. They had neither, while the Union had an established central | |
government. The ultimate hope of the Confederates was that the people of | |
the Union would turn against Lincoln and the Republicans and quit the war | |
because it was too costly. | |
‘The Confederate States of America The Confederate constitution was | |
modeled after the US. Constitution, but it denied the Confederate congress | |
the powers to levy a protective tariff and to appropriate funds for internal | |
improvements. However, it did prohibit the foreign slave trade. President | |
Jefferson Davis tried to increase his executive powers during the war, but | |
Southern governors resisted his attempts, some holding back troops and | |
resources to protect their own states. At one point, Vice President Alexander | |
H. Stephens, in defense of states' rights, even urged the secession of Georgia in | |
response to the “despotic” actions of the Confederate government. | |
The Confederacy was chronically short of money. It tried loans, income | |
taxes, and even impressment of private property, but these revenues paid only a | |
part of war costs. The government issued more than $1 billion in paper money, | |
causing severe inflation. By war’s end, a Confederate dollar was worth less | |
than two cents. The Confederate congress nationalized railroads to promote | |
industrial growth, but it was not enough. In a war of atrition, the Confederacy | |
faced the challenge of makingis resourceslast until the Union stopped fighting. | |
First Years of a Long War: 1861-1862 | |
People at first expected the war to last no more than weeks. Lincoln called the | |
first volunteers for a period of only 90 days. “On to Richmond!” was the cry, | |
but it would take four years of fighting before Union troops marched into the | |
Confederate capital. | |
Union Strategy General-in-Chief Winfield Scott, veteran of the 1812 and | |
Mexican wars, devised a three-part strategy for winning a long war: | |
« Use the US. Navy to blockade Southern ports (called the Anaconda | |
Plan), cutting off essential supplies from reaching the Confederacy | |
« Take control of the Mississippi River, dividing the Confederacy in two | |
+ Raise and train an army 500,000 strong to conquer Richmond | |
‘The first two parts of the strategy proved casier to achieve than the third, | |
but ultimately all three were important in achieving Northern victory. | |
Afierthe Union's defeat at Bull Run, federal armies experienced a succession | |
of crushing defeats as they attempled various campaigns in Virginia. | |
TOPIC 58 MILITARY CONFLICT IN THE CIVIL WAR 305 | |
First Battle of Bull Run In the first major battle of the war (July 1861), | |
30,000 federal troops marched from Washington, D.C, to attack Confederate | |
forces near Bull Run Creek at Manassas Junction, Virginia. As the Union forces | |
seemed close to victory, Confederate reinforcements under General Thomas | |
(tonewall) Jackson counterattacked and sent the inexperienced Union troops | |
in disorderly flight back to Washington. The battle ended the illusion of a short | |
war and also promoted the myth that the rebels were invincible in battle. | |
Peninsula Campaign General George B. McClellan, the new commander | |
of the Union army in the East,insisted that his troops be given a long period of | |
training before going into batle. Finally, afier many delays that tested Lincoln's | |
patience, McClellan's army invaded Virginia in March 1862. The Union army | |
was stopped by brilliant tactical moves by Confederate general Robert E. Lee, | |
the commander of the South's eastern forces. After five months, McClellan was | |
forced to retreat and was ordered back to the Potomac, where he was replaced | |
by General John Pope. | |
THE CIVIL WAR: THE UNION VS. THE CONFEDERACY | |
[ coetrrer [ i e | |
Fe woorvose e | |
Second Battle of Bull Run Lee struck quickly against Popes army in | |
Northern Virginia. He drew Pope into a trap, struck the enemy’ flank, and | |
sent the Union army back to Bull Run. Pope withdrew to defend Washington. | |
306 UNITED STATES HISTORY: AP’ EDITION | |
Antietam Following his victory at Bull Run, Lee led his army across the | |
Potomac into Maryland. He hoped that a Confederate victory in a Union state | |
would convince Britain to give recognition and support to the Confederacy. | |
By this time (September 1862), Lincoln had restored McClellan to command. | |
McClellan had the advantage of knowing Lee's plan because a copy of it had been | |
dropped accidentally by a Confederate officer. The Union army intercepted the | |
Confederates at Antietam Creek in the Maryland town of Sharpsburg. Here | |
the bloodiest single day of combat in the entire war took place, with more than | |
22,000 soldiers killed or wounded. | |
Unable to break through Union lines, Lees army retreated to Virginia. | |
Disappointed with McClellan for failing to pursue Lees army, Lincoln removed | |
him for the final time as the Union commander. | |
‘While essentially a draw on the battlefield, Antietam was among the most | |
significant battles of the war. Because the Confederates did not win, they | |
failed to get what they so urgently needed—recognition and aid from Great | |
Britain and France. Because the Union did not lose, Lincoln found enough | |
encouragement in a Union victory. As explained in Topic 5.9, Lincoln used the | |
partial triumph to announce a direct assault on the institution of slavery. | |
Fredericksburg ReplacingMcClellanwith theaggressive General Ambrose | |
Burnside, Lincoln discovered that a strategy of reckless attack could have cven | |
worse consequences than McClellan's strategy of caution. In December 1862, a | |
Union army under Burnside attacked Lees army at Fredericksburg, Virginia, | |
and suffered immense losses: 12,000 dead or wounded compared to 5,000 | |
Confederate casualties. Both Union and Confederate generals were slow to | |
learn that improved weaponry took the romance out of heroic charges against | |
entrenched positions. By the end of 1862, the awful magnitude of the war was | |
all too clear—with no prospect of victory for cither side. | |
‘The second year of war, 1862, was a disastrous one for the Union except for | |
two engagements, one at sea and the other on the rivers of the West | |
Monitor vs. Merrimac The Union's hopes for winning the war depended | |
upon its ability to maximize its economic advantages by an effective blockade | |
of Confederate ports (the Anaconda Plan). During McClellans Peninsula | |
campaign, the Unions blockade strategy was jeopardized by an unusual | |
Confederate ship, the Merrimac, that attacked and sank several Union ships | |
near Hampton Roads, Virginia. Unlike the standard wooden ships of the | |
day, the Merrimac was covered with metal plates. The “ironclad” seemed | |
unstoppable. However, on March 9, 1862, the Union’s own ironclad, the | |
Monitor, engaged the Merrimac in a five-hour duel. The battle ended in a draw, | |
but the Monitor prevented the Confederates’ new weapon from breaking the | |
US. naval blockade. The two ships marked a turning point in naval warfare, as | |
ironclad ships replaced wooden ones. | |
Grant in the West The battle of the ironclads occurred at about the same. | |
timeas a bloodier encounter was taking place in western Tennessce. The Union's | |
campaign for control of the Mississippi River was partly under the command | |
TOPIC 58 MILITARY CONFLICT IN THE CIVIL WA 307 | |
of a West Point graduate, Ulysses S. Grant, who had joined up for the war after | |
an unsuccessful civilian career. Striking south from Iilinois in early 1862, Grant | |
used a combination of gunboats and army maneuvers to capture Fort Henry | |
and Fort Donelson on the Cumberland River (a branch of the Mississippi). | |
‘These stunning victories, in which 14,000 Confederate soldiers were taken | |
prisoner, opened up the state of Mississippi o Union attack. | |
A flew weeks later, a Confederate army under Albert Johnston surprised | |
Grant at Shiloh, Tennessee, but the Union army forced the Confederates to | |
retreat afte terrible losses on both sides (more than 23,000 dead and wounded). | |
Grant’s drive down the Mississippi was complemented in April 1862 by the | |
capture of New Orleans by the Union navy under David Farragut. | |
Foreign Affairs and Diplomacy | |
‘The Confederacy’s hopes for independence hinged as much on s diplomats as | |
on soldiers. Confederate leaders expected that cotton would prove to be “king” | |
and induce Britain or France, or both, to give aid to their war effort. Besides | |
cotton for their textile mills, wealthy British industrialists and aristocrats | |
looked forward to ending the American democratic experiment. From the | |
Union's point of view, it was critically important to prevent the Confederacy | |
from gaining the foreign support and recognition that it desperately needed. | |
Trent Affair Britain came close to siding with the Confederacy in late | |
1861 over an incident at sea. Confederate diplomats James Mason and John | |
Slidell were traveling to England on a British steamer, the Trent, on a mission | |
to gain recognition for their government. A Union warship stopped the British | |
ship, removed Mason and Slidell, and brought them to the United States as | |
prisoners of war. Britain threatened war over the incident unless the diplomats | |
were released. Despite intense criticism, Lincoln gave in to British demands. | |
Mason and Slidell were set free, but they failed to obtain full recognition of the | |
Confederacy from either Britain o France. | |
Confederate Raiders The British did allow the Confederates to purchase | |
warships from British shipyards. These commerce-raiders did serious harm | |
to US. merchant ships. One of them, the Alabama, captured more than 60 | |
Vessels before being sunk off the coast of France by a Union warship. Afier the | |
war, Great Britain eventually agreed to pay the United States $15.5 million for | |
‘damages caused by Confederate attacks in ships built in Britain. | |
Failure of Cotton Diplomacy In the end, the Confederacy’s hopes for | |
European intervention were disappoined. * not have the | |
power, as Europe quickly found ways of obtaining cotton from other sources. | |
Shipments of cotton began arriving from Egypt and India for the British textile | |
industry. Also, other materials could be used for textiles, and the woolen and | |
linen industries took advantage of this opportunity. | |
Two other factors went into Britains decision not to recognize the | |
Confederacy. First, General Les setback at Antietam played a role. Without | |
a decisive Confederate victory, the British government would not risk | |
308 UNITED STATES HISTORY: AP’ EDITION | |
recognition. Second, Lincoln's Emancipation Proclamation (January 1863) | |
made the end of slavery an objective of the Union, which appealed strongly to | |
Britain's working class. While conservative leaders of Britain were sympathetic | |
to the Confederacy, they could not defy the pro-Northern, antislavery feclings | |
of the British majority. | |
The Union Triumphs, 1863-1865 | |
By carly 1863, the fortunes of war were turning against the Confederacy. | |
Although General Lee started the year with a victory at Chancellorsville, | |
Virginia, the Confederate economy was in bad shape as planters lost control of | |
their slave labor, and an increasing number of starving soldicrs were deserting | |
the Confederate army. | |
Turning Point | |
‘The decisive turning point in the war came in the first week of July when the | |
Confederacy suffered two crushing defeats in the West and the East. | |
Vicksburg In the West, by the spring of 1863, Union forces controlled | |
New Orleans as well as most of the Mississippi River and surrounding valle | |
‘The Union objective of securing complete control of the Mississippi River | |
was close when General Grant began his siege of the heavily fortified city | |
of Vicksburg, Mississippi. Union artillery bombarded Vicksburg for seven | |
weeks before the Confederates finally surrendered the city (and nearly | |
29,000 soldiers) on July 4. Federal warships now controlled the full length of | |
the Mississippi, which cut off Texas, Louisiana, and Arkansas from the rest | |
of the Confederacy. | |
Gettysburg Meanwhile, in the East, Lee again took the offensive by | |
leading an army into Maryland and Pennsylvania. If he could either destroy the | |
Union army or capture a major Northern city; Lee hoped to force the Union to | |
call for peace—or to gain foreign intervention for the Confederacy. On July 1, | |
1863, the Confederate army surprised Union units at Gettysburg in southern | |
Pennsylvania. What followed was the most crucial battle of the war and the | |
bloodiest, with more than 50,000 casualties. Lee’s assault on Union lines on | |
the second and third days, including a famous but unsuccessful charge led by | |
George Pickett, proved futile and destroyed part of the Confederate army. Lee's | |
forces retreated to Virginia, never to regain the offensive. | |
Grant in Command | |
In Grant, Lincoln finally found a general who would fight and could win. In | |
early 1864, he brought Grant east to Virginia and made him commander of | |
all Union armies. Grant settled on a strategy of war by attrition. He aimed to | |
wear down the Confederacy’s armies and destroy their lines of supply. Fighting | |
for months, Grant’s Army of the Potomac suffered heavier casualties than | |
Lee’s forces in the battles of the Wilderness, Spotsylvania, and Cold Harbor. | |
But Grant succeeded in reducing Lee’s army in each battle and forcing it into | |
TOPIC5:8 MILITARY CONFLICT IN THE CIVIL WAR 309 | |
a defensive line around Richmond. Rather than a small-scale war “between | |
gentlemen’ over control of territory, the war had become more like a modern | |
“total” war in which victory depended on undercutting civilian support for the | |
opponent’s military. | |
Sherman's March The chief instrument of Grants aggressive tactics for | |
subduing the South was the veteran general William Tecumseh Sherman. | |
Leading a force of 100,000 men, Sherman set out from Chattanooga, | |
Tennessee, on a campaign of deliberate destruction that went across the state | |
of Georgia and then swept north into South Carolina. Sherman was a pioneer | |
of the tactics of total war. Marching through Georgia, his troops destroyed | |
everything, burning cotton fields, barns, and houses—everything the enemy | |
might use to survive. Sherman took Atlanta in September 1864 in time to help | |
incolns reelection. He marched into Savannah in December and completed | |
his campaign in February 1865 by setting fre to Columbia, the capital of South | |
Carolina and cradle of secession. Sherman’s march had its intended effect: to | |
break the spirit of the Confederacy and destroy its will to fight. | |
The End of the War | |
‘The effects of the Union blockade, combined with Sherman’s march of | |
destruction, spread hunger through much of the South in the winter of 1864~ | |
1865. In Virginia, Grant continued to outflank Lee’ lines until they collapsed | |
around Petersburg, resulting in the fall o Richmond on April 3, 1865. Everyone | |
knew the end was near. | |
Surrenderat Appomattox The Confederate government tried to negotiate | |
for peace. However, Lincoln would accept nothing short of restoration of the | |
Union, and Jefferson Davis still demanded nothing less than independence. | |
Lee retreated from Richmond with an army of fewer than 30,000 men. He tried | |
to escape to the mountains, only to be cut off and forced to surrender to Grant | |
at Appomattox Court House, Virginia, on April 9, 1865. The Union general | |
treated his longtime enemy with respect and allowed Lee’s men to return to | |
their homes with their horses. | |
till to be seen were the long-term effects of the war. What would be the | |
impact of the many changes led by Lincoln and his government on the policies, | |
laws, and society of the United States? What would the nearly 4 million African | |
Americans freed from slavery do as free people? What would happen to | |
American democracy? | |
REFLECT ON THE LEARNING OBJECTIVE | |
1. Explain several reasons for the Union victory in the Civil War. | |
310 UNITED STATES HISTORY: AP’ EDITION | |
KEY TERMS BY THEME | |
The Break (NAT, POL) Fredericksburg | |
Confederate States of America Monitor vs. erimac | |
Jefferson Davis Ulysses 5. Grant | |
‘exander H.Stephens. Shion | |
Second American Revoluton David Farragut | |
The Fighting (POL, GEO) Vicksburg | |
BullRun Getyshurg | |
‘Thomas (Stonewal) Jackson ‘Sherman's March | |
Winfed Scott Wiliam Tecumseh Sherman | |
Anaconda Plan Appomattox Court House | |
George B. McClellan War Diplomacy (WOR) | |
Robert . Lee Trent Afir | |
Antetam Aabama | |
MULTIPLE-CHOICE QUESTIONS | |
Questions 1-3 refer to the following excerpt. | |
“We drift fast toward war with England, but I think we shall not reach | |
that point. The shopkeepers who own England want to do s all harm | |
they can and to give all possible aid and comfort to our slave-breeding | |
and woman-flogging adversary, for England has degenerated into a trader; | |
‘manufacturer, and banker, and has lost all the instincts and sympathies | |
that her name still suggests | |
She cannot ally herself with slavery, as she inclines to do, without closing, | |
a profitable market, exposing her commerce to [Yankee] privateers, and | |
diminishing the supply of [Northern] breadstuffs on which her operatives | |
depend for life. On the other side, however, is the consideration that by | |
allowing piratical Alabamas to be built, armed, and manned in her ports to | |
prey on our commerce, she is making a great deal of money | |
George Templeton Strong, New York lawyer, Diary; 1863 | |
1. A major part of the Confederate strategy for winning independence was | |
based on | |
(4) building a modern navy to break the Union blockade | |
(B) developing factories to manufacture weapons | |
(C) encircling the Union capital, Washington, D.C. | |
(D) winning recognition and support from Great Britain | |
TOPIC 58 MILITARY CONFLICT INTHE CIVIL AR 311 | |
2. Which of the following describes a reason not mentioned by Strong in this | |
excerpt that discouraged Britain from recognizing the Confederacy? | |
(A) Concern about retaliation by British leaders in Canada | |
(B) Desire for closer ties with Mexico by British investors | |
(©) Respect for the Monroe Doctrine by the British public | |
(D) Opposition to slavery among the British working class | |
3. The Union was most disturbed because they believed that Britain was | |
supporting the Confederates by doing which of the following? | |
(A) Allowing British shipyards to build warships for the Confederacy | |
(B) Transporting Confederate diplomats on British ships | |
(C) Lending money to Confederate states | |
(D) Supplying food to the Confederate army | |
SHORT-ANSWER QUESTION | |
Question 1 is based on the following cartoon. | |
Source: . i, 1861, Ly ofCongrss | |
Using the cartoon, answer (a), (b), and (c). | |
(a) Briefly explain ONE perspective expressed by the author of this | |
political cartoon. | |
(b) Briefly explain ONE historical event or development in the period | |
1861 to 1865 that resulted from the Union strategy to win the war. | |
(©) Briefly explain ONE specific part of the Confederate strategy to | |
counteract the Union strategy illustrated here. | |
312 UNITED STATES HISTORY: AP’ EDITION | |
Topic 5.9 | |
Government Policies During | |
the Civil War | |
The dogmas of the quiet past are inadequate to the stormy present. The | |
occasion is piled high with difficulty, and we must rise—with the occasion. | |
Abraham Lincoln, Annual Message to Congress, December 1862 | |
Learning Objective: Explain how Lincoln's leadership during the Civi | |
Wer impacted American ideals over the course of the war. | |
More than any previous president, Lincoln acted in unprecedented ways, | |
drawing upon his powers as both chief executive and commander in chief, | |
often without the authorization or approval of Congress. For example, right | |
after the Fort Sumter crisis he (1) called for 75,000 volunteers to put down | |
the “insurrection’ in the Confederacy, (2) authorized spending for a war, and | |
(3) suspended the privilege of the writ of habeas corpus. Since Congress was | |
not in session, the president acted completely on his own authority, explai | |
that it was “indispensable to the public safety.” | |
The End of Slavery | |
Though Lincoln in the 1850s spoke out against slavery as “an unqualified evil,” | |
as president he hesitated to take action against slavery. Lincolns concerns | |
included (1)a wish to keep the support of the border states, 2) the constitutional | |
protections of slavery, (3) the racial prejudice of many Northerners, and | |
(4) the fear that premature action could be overturned in the next election. | |
All these concerns made the timing and method of ending slavery difficult. | |
Enslaved individuals were freed during the war as a result of military events, | |
governmental policy, and their own actions. | |
Confiscation Acts | |
Early in the war (May 1861), several enslaved people escaped to the Union lines. | |
General Benjamin Butler refused to return them to their Confederate owners, | |
arguing that their labor could be used to help the Confederates. Therefore, they | |
were “contraband,” and he was not required to return them. Building on this | |
example, Congress passed two laws known as the Confiscation Acts: | |
TOPIC 5.9 GOVERNMENT POLICIES DURING THE CIVIL WAR 313 | |
« The law passed in August 1861 gave the Union army the power o seize | |
enemy property, including enslaved people, used to wage war against | |
the United States. The law also empowered the president to use those | |
freed in the Union army in any capacity, including battle. | |
+ The law passed in July 1862 freed persons enslaved by any individual in | |
rebellion against the United States. | |
Because of these laws, thousands of “contrabands” were using their feet to | |
escape slavery by going into Union camps. As they did, they added pressure on | |
the Union to abolish slavery. At the same time, they deprived the Confederacy | |
of badly needed laborers to grow food to avoid starvation. | |
Emancipation Proclamation | |
By July 1862, Lincoln had decided to use his powers as commander in chief | |
1o free all enslaved persons in the states then at war. He justified his policy as | |
a “military necessity” However, he worried that such a move would alicnate | |
conservative Northerners who were pro-Union and pro-slavery. Furthermore, | |
the action might look desperate if it came when the army was losing battles, | |
50 he delayed announcement of the policy: At the same time, he encouraged | |
the border states to plan for emancipation that provided compensation to the | |
owners. No one proposed providing compensation to the freedpeople. | |
Afier the Confederates retreated at the Batle of Antietam on September 22, | |
1862, Lincoln issued a warning that slaves in states still in rebellion on January | |
1,1863, would be “then, thenceforward, and forever free” On the first day of | |
the new year, 1863, he issued his Emancipation Proclamation, which stated: | |
1do order and declare that all persons held as slaves within said designated | |
States and parts of States are, and henceforward shall be, free; and that | |
the Executive Government of the United States, including the military and | |
naval authorities thereof, shall recognize and maintain the freedom of said | |
persons. | |
Consequences Since the presidents proclamation applied only to the | |
Confederatestates outside Union control, it freed onlyabout I percentofenslaved | |
people. Slavery in the border states also continued. Stil, the proclamation was | |
important because it enlarged the purpose of the war by adding weight to the | |
Confiscation Acts. Now Union armies were openly fighting against slavery, | |
not merely against secession. By the end of the war, hundreds of thousands of | |
enslaved people had become free by escaping to Union lines. | |
African Americans in the War | |
An even greater blow to the Confederacy was that the Union army soon had | |
thousands of dedicated new recruits. Almost 200,000 African Americans, most | |
of whom had recently escaped slavery, served in the Union army and navy. | |
Segregated into all-Black units, such as the Massachusetts 54th Regiment, | |
they won the respect of White Union soldiers for their bravery under fire. More | |
than 37,000 African American soldiers died in this “Army of Freedom.” | |
314 UNITED STATES HISTORY: AP’ EDITION | |
Effects of the War on Civilian Life | |
Both during the warand in the years that followed, American society underwent | |
decp and sometimes wrenching changes. | |
Political Change | |
The clectoral process continued during the war with surprisingly few | |
restrictions. Secession of the Southern sates left Republican majorities in both | |
houses of Congress. Northerners were split into several factions: | |
+ Radical Republicans demanded immediate abolition of savery. | |
« Free-Soil Republicans focused on economic opportunities for Whites. | |
« Most Democrats supported the war but eritcized Lincoln's conduct of it | |
+ Some Democrats, called Peace Democrats or Copperheads, opposed | |
the war and wanted 2 negotiated peace. | |
Civil Liberties Like many wartime leaders, Lincoln focused more on | |
prosecuting the war than on protecting constitutional rights. Early in the war, | |
he suspended the writ of habeas corpus in states with strong pro-Confederate | |
sentiment. Suspension of this constitutional right meant that persons could be | |
arrested without being informed of the charges against them. During the war, | |
an estimated 13,000 people were arrested on suspicion of aiding the enemy. | |
Without a right to habeas corpus, many of them were held without trial, | |
Democrats accused Lincoln of tyranny, but most historians have been | |
less critical. In the border states, people had difficulty distinguishing between | |
combatants and noncombatants. Furthermore, the Constitution allows only | |
Congress, not the president, to suspend the writ of habeas corpus “when in | |
cases of rebellion or invasion the public safety may require it” After the war, | |
the Supreme Court ruled in Ex Parte Milligan (1866) that the government had | |
improperly subjected civilians to military trials. The Court declared that such | |
procedures could be used only when regular civilian courts were unavailable. | |
‘The Draft When the war began in 1861, those who fought were volunteers. | |
As the need for replacements increased, both the Union and the Confederacy | |
resorted o laws for conscripting, or drafting, men into service. The Union's | |
March 1863 Conscription Act made all men aged 20 to 45 liable for military | |
service. However, a drafiee could avoid service by finding a substitute to serve or | |
payinga $300 exemption fee. The law provoked fierce opposition among poorer | |
Iaborers, most of whom were Irish or German immigrants. They feared that | |
when they returned to civilian lfe their jobs would be taken by freed African | |
Americans. In July 1863, protests against the draft in New York City quickly | |
turned into a riot against the city’s Black residents. About 117 people were killed | |
before federal troops and a temporary suspension of the draft restored order. | |
The Election of 1864 The Democrats' nominee for president was the | |
popular General George McClellan, whose platform calling for peace had wide | |
appeal among millions of war-weary voters. The Republicans renamed their | |
TOPIC 5.9 GOVERNMENT POLICIES DURING THE CIVIL WAR 316 | |
party the Unionist Party as a way of attracting the votes of “War Democrats” | |
(those who disagreed with the Democratic platform). A brief “ditch Lincoln” | |
movement fizzled out, and the Republican (Unionist) convention again chose | |
Lincoln as ts presidential candidate and aloyal War Democrat from Tennessee, | |
Senator Andrew Johnson, s his running mate. The Lincoln-Johnson ticket won | |
212 electoral votes to the Democrats' 21. The popular vote was much closer as | |
McClellan took 45 percent of the total votes cast. | |
Political Dominance of the North The suspension of habeas corpus and | |
the operation of the draft were only temporary. More important were the long- | |
term effects of the power of the federal government and the balance of power | |
betwween the North and the South. With the military triumph of the Union | |
came a clearer definition of the nature of the federal union. OId arguments for | |
nullification and secession receded. After the Civil War, few people doubted | |
the supremacy of the federal government. | |
‘The abolition of slavery—in addition to its importance to freed African | |
Americans—gave new meaning to the concept of American democracy. In his | |
famous Gettysburg Address, November 19, 1863, Lincoln rallied Americans | |
10 the idea that their nation was “dedicated to the proposition that all men are | |
created equal” Lincoln was probably alluding to the Emancipation Proclamation | |
when he spoke of the war bringing “a new birth of freedom” His words— | |
and even more, the abolition of slavery—advanced the cause of demoeratic | |
government in the United States and inspired democracy around the world. | |
Economic Change | |
The costs of the war in both money and men were staggering and called for | |
extraordinary measures by the government. | |
Financing the War The Union financed the war by borrowing $2.6 billion | |
through the sale of government bonds. To gain added funds, Congress raised | |
tariffs, added excise taxes, and instituted the first income tax. The US. Treasury | |
also issued $430 million in a paper currency, greenbacks, not backed by gold, | |
which contributed to creeping inflation. Prices in the North rose by about | |
80 percent during the war. To manage the added revenue Congress created | |
a national banking system in 1863, the frst since Andrew Jackson vetoed the | |
recharter of the Bank of the United States in the 1830s. | |
MPLOYED BY THE FEDERAL GOVERNMENT | |
Post Office Defense Other Total | |
14,290 598 3150 16,038 | |
2139 403 4480 26274 | |
30269 945 5457 36672 | |
3669 1183 13741 51020 | |
56421 16,297 27302 100020 | |
S Bureaof the s, Hitorial Statistics of e United State,Coona Times 11970 | |
316 UNITED STATES HISTORY: AP EDITION | |
Modernizing Northern Society Economic historians differ on the | |
question of whether,in the short run, the war promoted or retarded the growth | |
of the Northern economy. Workers' wages did not keep pace with inflation, but | |
the war accelerated many aspects of a modern industrial economy. By placing | |
a premium on mass production and complex organization, the war sped up | |
the consolidation of the Northis manufacturing businesses. War profiteers | |
took advantage of the need for military supplies to sell shoddy goods at high | |
prices—a problem that decreased after the federal government took control | |
of the contract process away from the states. Fortunes made during the war | |
produced a concentration of capital in the hands of a new class of millionaires | |
who would finance the Norths industriaization in the postwar years. | |
Republican politics also stimulated the economic growth of the North and | |
the West. With a wartime majority in Congress, the Republicans passed the | |
probusiness Whig program that was designed to stimulate the industrial and | |
commercial growth of the United States: | |
« The Morrill Tariff Act (1861) raised tariff rates to increase revenue and | |
protect American manufacturers. Its passage initiated a Republican | |
program of high protective tariffs to help industrialists. | |
« The Homestead Act (1862) promoted scttlement of the Great Plains by | |
offering parcels of 160 acres of public land free to any person ot family | |
that farmed that land for at least five years. Like the headright system | |
in colonial Virginia and the sale of land in the Northwest Territory, this | |
act helped many White settlers, but very few African Americans. | |
« The Morrill Land Grant Act (1862) encouraged states to use the sale of | |
federal land grants to found and maintain agricultural and technical | |
colleges. These schools not only educated farmers, engineers, and | |
scientists, but they also became centers of rescarch and innovation. | |
+ The Pacific Railway Act (1862) authorized the building of a | |
transcontinental railroad over a northern route in order to link the | |
economies of California and the Western territories with the Eastern states. | |
While four years of nearly total war, the tragic human loss of 750,000 lives | |
and an estimated $15 billion in war costs and property losses had enormous | |
effects on the nation, far greater changes were set in motion. The Civil War | |
destroyed slavery and devastated the Southern economy. It also acted as a | |
catalyst to transform America into a complex modern industrial society of | |
capital, technology; national organizations, and large corporations, | |
Assassination of Lincoln | |
Only a month before Lees surrender, Lincoln delivered one of his greatest | |
speeches, the second inaugural address. He urged that the defeated South be | |
treated benevolently, “with malice toward none; with charity for all” | |
On April 14, John Wilkes Booth, an embittered actor and Confederate | |
sympathizer, shot and killed the president while he was attendinga performance | |
TOPIC 5.9 GOVERNMENT POLICIES DURING THE CIVIL AR 317 | |
at Fords Theater in Washington. On the same night, a co-conspirator attacked | |
and wounded Secretary of State William Seward. These shocking events aroused | |
the fury of Northerners when the Confederates most needed a sympathetic | |
hearing, The loss of Lincolns leadership was widely mourned, but the extent of | |
the loss was not fully appreciated until the two sections of a reunited country | |
had to cope with the problems of Reconstruction. | |
REFLECT ON THE LEARNING OBJECTIVE | |
1. Explain how Lincolns governance during the Civil War influenced | |
American principles during the war. | |
KEY TERMS BY THEME | |
Economic Growth (WXT) Free Land (MIG) Wartime Politics (POL) | |
greenbacks Homestead Act (1862) Copperheads | |
Moril Tarif Act War and the Law (POL) Social Impact (NAT, SOC) | |
Moril Land Grant Act habeas corpus. Gettysburg Address. | |
federal land grants Confiscation Acts Massachusetts 54th | |
Pacific Railway Act Emancipation Proclamation Regiment | |
ExParte Milligan | |
MULTIPLE-CHOICE QUESTIONS | |
Questions 1-3 refer to the map below. | |
UNITED STATES, JULY 1861 | |
318 UNITED STATES HISTORY: AP EDITION | |
1. In July of 1861, President Lincoln was particularly concerned about how | |
his policies on slavery would affect which areas? | |
(A) The states in violet because they were slave states that remained in | |
the Union | |
(B) The states in orange because they were home to most of his political | |
supporters | |
(C) The states in red because he thought he could persuade them to | |
rejoin the Union | |
(D) ‘The region in yellow because it consisted of territories that had not | |
yet become states | |
2. Which of the following statements best describes the states in orange? | |
(A) Most people lived in large cities. | |
(B) Most people advocated abolition of slavery. | |
(©) They lacked good river transportation. | |
(D) They included most of the country’s population. | |
3. Which of the following statements best describes the states in red? | |
(A) They were economically self-sufficient. | |
(B) ‘They were well connected by railroads. | |
(C) ‘They were fighting a defensive war. | |
(D) They had a strong navy. | |
SHORT-ANSWER QUESTION | |
Use complete sentences; an outline or bulleted list alone is not acceptable. | |
1. Answer (), (b), and () | |
(@) Briefly explain ONE specific action of President Abraham Lincoln | |
during the Civil War that supports the view that he was one of the | |
‘most democratic presidents. | |
(b) Briefly explain ONE specific action of President Abraham Lincoln | |
during the Civil War that supports the view that he was one of the | |
‘most autocratic presidents. | |
(© Briefly explain how ONE president who came before Lincoln was | |
both democratic and autocratic. | |
TOPIC 5.9 GOVERNMENT POLICIES DURING THE CIVIL WAR 319 | |
Topic 5.10 | |
Reconstruction | |
“The whole fabric of Southern society must be changed, and | |
never can it be done if this opportunity is lost, Without this, this | |
government can never be, as it never has been, a true republic.” | |
Thacdeus Stevens, September 6, 1865 | |
Learning Objective: Explain the effects of government policy during | |
Reconstruction on society from 1865 to 1877, | |
The sitencing of the cannons of war left th victorious Uited States ith | |
immense challenges. How would the South rebuild its shattered society and | |
cconomy after four years of war? What would be the place in that society of | |
4million freed Black Americans? How responsible was the federal government | |
forhelping former slaves adjust o freedom? Should the states of the Confederacy | |
be treated as though they had never left the Union—Lincoln's position—or as | |
conquered territory under military occupation? Under what conditions would | |
those states be fully accepted as equal partners in the Union? Finally, who had | |
the authority to decide these questions,the president or Congress? | |
Postwar Conditions | |
Slavery gradually crumbled as African Americans escaped to Union-controlled | |
territory. The last people to hear they were free lived in Texas. The date they | |
heard the news, June 19th, became a day for celcbration known as Juneteenth. | |
Most freedpeople began their fiee lives with no money, no land, and no | |
formal education. Near the end of the war, some freedpeople in South Carolina | |
and Georgia received “40 acres and amule” under an order from Union General | |
William Sherman. However,this order was soon cancelled by President Andrew | |
Johnson. The land they had was taken away from them. | |
‘The South was devastated by the war. It had lost about one-third of its | |
horses, cattle, and hogs. Roads, bridges, railroad tracks, and fencing had been | |
destroyed. Though people had not died from mass starvation as often happens | |
in war, chronic food shortages, particularly for African Americans, left many | |
in poor health and susceptible to epidemic diseases. | |
‘The regional, political, and cconomic conflicts that existed before and | |
during the Civil War continued afier the war. Northern Republicans wanted | |
to continue the economic progress begun during the war. Southern aristocrats | |
still wanted low-cost labor to work their plantations. The freedmen and | |
320 UNITED STATES HISTORY: AP EDITION | |
freedwomen hoped for independence and equal rights. However, traditional | |
beliefs limited the actions of the federal government. Concepts of limited | |
government and states’ rights discouraged national leaders from taking bold | |
action. Little economic help was given to White or Black Southerners, as most | |
Americans believed that people had an opportunity and a responsibility to care | |
for themselves. The physical rebuilding of the South was left up to the states | |
and individuals, while the federal government concentrated on political issues. | |
Reconstruction Plans of Lincoln and Johnson | |
‘Throughout his presidency, Abraham Lincoln held firmly to the belief that | |
the Southern states could not constitutionally leave the Union and therefore | |
never did leave. He viewed the Confederates as only a disloyal minority. After | |
Lincolns assassination, Andrew Johnson atiempted to carry out Lincolns plan | |
for the political Reconstruction of the 11 former states of the Confederacy. | |
Lincoln’s Policies | |
Lincoln believed the Southern states could regain their full place in the Union | |
by meeting a minimum test of political loyalty. | |
Proclamation of Amnesty and Reconstruction (1863) As carlyas December | |
1863, Lincoln set up a process for political reconstruction of the state governments | |
in the South so that Unionists were in charge rather than secessionists. The | |
president’ Proclamation of Amnesty and Reconstruction was simple: | |
+ Full presidential pardons would be granted to most Confederates who | |
(1) took an oath of allegiance to the Union and the U.S. Constitution, | |
and (2) accepted the emancipation of slaves. | |
+ Astate government could be reestablished and accepted as legitimate | |
by the US. president as soon as at least 10 percent of the voters in that | |
state took the loyalty oath, | |
In practice, Lincoln meant that each Southern state would be required | |
to rewrite ts state constitution to abolish slavery. Lincoln's seemingly lenient | |
policy was designed both to shorten the war and to give added weight to his | |
Emancipation Proclamation. | |
Wade-Davis Bill (1864) Many Republicans in Congress objected to | |
Lincoln's 10-percent plan, arguing that it would allow supposedly reconstructed | |
state governments to be dominated by disloyal secessionists. In 1864, Congress | |
passed the Wade-Davis Bill, which required 50 percent of the voters of a state | |
10 take a loyalty oath and permitted only non-Confederates to vote for a new | |
state constitution. Lincoln pocket-vetoed the bill after Congress adjourned. | |
Congress was ready to reasser its powers, as Congresses usually do after a war. | |
Freedmen's Bureau In March 1865, Congress created an important | |
new agency: the Bureau of Refugees, Freedmen, and Abandoned Lands, or | |
Freedmen’s Bureau. The bureau acted as a welfare agency, providing food, | |
shelter, and medical aid for both Black and White Americans left destitute by | |
ToPIC 510 RECONSTRUCTION 321 | |
the war. At first, the Freedmens Bureau had authority to resettle freedpeople on | |
confiscated farmlands in the South. Its cfforts at rescttlement, however, were | |
later frustrated when President Johnson pardoned Confederate owners of the | |
confiscated lands, and courts restored most of the lands to their original owners. | |
‘The bureaus greatest success was in education. Under the able leadership of | |
General Olliver O. Howard, it established nearly 3,000 schools for freedpeople, | |
including several colleges. Before federal funding was stopped in 1870, the | |
bureau’s schools taught an estimated 200,000 African Americans how o read. | |
Johnson and Reconstruction | |
Andrew Johnson’ origins were as humble as Lincoln's. A self-taught tailor, he | |
rose in Tennessee politics by championing poor Whites in conflict with rich | |
planters. Johnson was the only senator from a Confederate state who remained | |
loyal to the Union. He was appointed Tennessee’s governor whenit was occupied | |
by Union troops. Johnson was a Southern Democrat, but Republicans picked | |
him to encourage pro-Union Democrats to vote for Lincoln. Johnson ended | |
up being the wrong man for the job. As a White supremacist, he was bound to | |
clash with Republicans in Congress who believed that the war was fought not | |
just to preserve the Union but also to liberate African Americans from slavery. | |
Johnson's Reconstruction Policy At first, many Republicans in Congress | |
welcomed Johnsons presidency because of his animasity toward the Southern | |
aristocrats who had led the Confederacy. In May 1865, Johnson issued his | |
own Reconstruction plan. In addition to Lincolns terms, it provided for the | |
disenfranchisement (loss of the right to vote and hold office) of (1) all former | |
leaders and officeholders of the Confederacy and (2) Confederates with more | |
than $20,000 in taxable property. However, the president could grant individual | |
pardons to “disloyal” Southerners. This was an escape clause for the wealthy | |
planters, and Johnson made use of it. As a result of his pardons, many former | |
Confederate leaders were back in office by the fall of 1865. | |
Johnson's Vetoes One sign of the battle between Congress and the | |
presidents was his use of the veto. The three presidents before Johnson vetoed | |
a total of 23 bills. In his one term, he vetoed 29 bills. Johnson alienated even | |
moderate Republicans in carly 1866 with vetoes of two bills. One increased the | |
services and protection of the Freedmen's Bureau. The other was a civil rights | |
bill that nullified the Black Codes and guaranteed full citizenship and equal | |
rights to African Americans. The vetoes marked the end of the first round | |
of Reconstruction. During this round, Presidents Lincoln and Johnson had | |
restored the 11 former Confederate states to the Union, ex-Confederates had | |
returned to high offices, and Southern states began passing Black Codes to | |
restrict the rights of former slaves. | |
Congressional Reconstruction | |
By the spring of 1866, the angry response of many members of Congress to | |
Johnson's policies led to the second round of Reconstruction. This one was | |
322 UNITED STATES HISTORY: AP’ EDITION | |
dominated by Congress and featured policies that were harsher on Southern | |
Whites and more protective of freed African Americans, | |
Radical Republicans | |
Republicans had long been divided between (1) moderates, who were chiefly | |
concerned with economic gains for the White middle class, and (2) radicals, | |
who championed civil rights for Black citizens. Although most Republicans | |
were moderates, several became more radical in 1866, partly out of fear that a | |
reunified Democratic Party might again become dominant. After all, now that | |
the federal census counted all people equally (no longer applying the old three- | |
fifths rule for enslaved persons), the South would have more representatives in | |
Congress than before the war and more strength in the Electoral College. | |
‘The leading Radical Republican in the Senate was Charles Sumner of | |
Massachusetts. In the House, Thaddeus Stevens of Pennsylvania hoped to | |
revolutionize Southern society through a period of military rule in which | |
African Americans could exercise their civil rights, attend schools operated | |
by the federal government, and take ownership of lands confiscated from | |
the planters. Many Radical Republicans endorsed several liberal causes: | |
women's suffrage, rights for labor unions, and civil rights for Northern African | |
Americans. Although their program was never fully implemented, the Radical | |
Republicans struggled to extend equal rights to all Americans. | |
‘Thirteenth Amendment Laws, but not the US. Constitution, banned | |
slavery. To free all enslaved people in the border states, the country needed to | |
ratify an amendment. Even the abolitionists gave Lincoln credit for playing an | |
active role in the political struggle to secure enough votes in Congress to pass | |
the 13th Amendment. By December 1865 (months after Lincoln’s death), this | |
amendment abolishing slavery was ratified by the required number of states. | |
I language was clear: “Neither slavery nor involuntary servitude, except as a | |
punishment for crime whereof the party shall have been duly convicted, shall | |
exist within the United States, or any place subject to their jurisdiction” | |
After the adoption of the 13th Amendment in 1865, 4 million people | |
(3.5 million in the Confederate states and 500,000 in the border states) were | |
“freedmen” and “freedwomen For these people and their descendants, | |
economic hardship and political oppression would continue for generations. | |
Even so, the end of slavery represented a momentous step. Suddenly; formerly | |
enslaved people who had no rights could claim protection by the US. | |
Constitution and had open-ended possibilities of freedom. | |
Civil Rights Act of 1866 Among the first actions in Congressional | |
Reconstruction were votes to override, with some modifications, Johnson's | |
vetoes of both the Freedmens Bureau Act and the first Civil Rights Act. The | |
Civil Rights Act pronounced that all African Americans were US. citizens | |
(thereby nullifying the decision in the Dred Scott case) and attempted to | |
provide a legal shield against the operation of the Southern states’ Black Codes. | |
Fearing that the law could be repealed if the Democrats ever won control of | |
TOPIC 510 RECONSTRUCTION 323 | |
Congress, Republicans looked for a more permanent solution in the form of a | |
constitutional amendment. | |
Fourteenth Amendment In June 1866, Congress passed and sent to the | |
states an amendment, ratified in 1868, that had immediate and even greater | |
long-term significance | |
« It declared that all persons born or naturalized in the United States were | |
zens. | |
+ Tt obligated the states to respect the rights of LS. citizens and provide | |
them with “equal protection of the laws” and “due process of law” | |
For the first time, the Constitution required states as well as the federal | |
‘government to uphold the rights of citizens. The amendment's key clauses about | |
citizenship and rights produced mixed results in 19th-century courtrooms. | |
However, in the 1950s and later, the Supreme Court used the power of the federal | |
government to protect individuals from encroachment of their constitutional | |
rights by state and local governments, making “equal protection of the laws” | |
and the “due process” clause the keystone of civil rights for minorities, women, | |
children, disabled persons, and those accused of crimes. | |
Other parts of the 14th Amendment applied specifically to Congress's plan | |
of Reconstruction. These clauses: | |
« disqualified former Confederate political leaders from holding either | |
state or federal offices | |
« repudiated the debts of the defeated governments of the Confederacy | |
« penalized a state if it kept any eligible person from voting by reducing | |
that state’s proportional representation in Congress and the Electoral | |
College | |
Report of the Joint Committee In June 1866, a joint commitice of the | |
Houseand the Senate ssued a report declaring that the reorganized Confederate | |
tates were not entitled to representation in Congress. Therefore, those elected | |
from the South as senators and representatives should not be permitted to take | |
their seats. The report further asserted that Congress, not the president, had | |
the authority to determine the conditions for allowing reconstructed states to | |
rejoin the Union. By this report, Congress officially rejected the presidential | |
plan of Reconstruction and promised to substitute its own plan, part of which | |
‘was embodied in the 14th Amendment | |
‘The Election of 1866 Unable to work with Congress, Johnson took to | |
the road in the fall of 1866 to attack his opponents. His specches appealed | |
to the racial prejudices of White citizens by arguing that equal righs for | |
Black Americans would result in an “Afficanized” society. Republicans | |
counterattacked by accusing Johnson of being a drunkard and a traitor. They | |
appealed to anti-Southern prejudices by “waving the bloody shir’—inflaming | |
the anger of Northern voters by reminding them of the hardships of war. | |
324 UNITED STATES HISTORY: AP’ EDITION | |
Republican propaganda emphasized that Southerners were Democrats and, by | |
ajump in logic, branded the Democrats a party of rebellion and treason. | |
Election results gave the Republicans an overwhelming victory. After 1866, | |
Johnson's political adversaries—both moderate and Radical Republicans—had | |
more than a two-thirds majority in both the House and the Senate. | |
Reconstruction Actsof 1867 Over Johnson's vetoes, Congress passed three | |
Reconstruction Acts in 1867 that placed the South under military occupation. | |
‘The acts divided the former Confederate states into five military districts, | |
cach under the control of the Union army. In addition, the acts increased the | |
requirements for gaining readmission to the Union: an ex-Confederate state | |
had to ratify the 14th Amendment and place guarantees i its constitution to | |
grant the franchise (right to vote) to all adult males, regardless of race. | |
Impeachment of Andrew Johnson | |
Also in 1867, Congress passed the Tenure of Office Act over Johnson’s veto. | |
“This law prohibited the president from removing a federal official or military | |
commander without Senate approval. The purpose of the law was strictly | |
political. Congress wanted to protect the Radical Republicans in Johnson's | |
cabinet, such as Secretary of War Edwin Stanton, who was in charge of the | |
military governments in the South. | |
Johnson challenged the constitutionality of the new law by dismissing | |
Stanton. The House responded by impeaching Johnson. He was charged with | |
11 “high crimes and misdemeanors,” thus becoming the first president to be | |
impeached. In 1868, after a three-month Senate trial, Johnson's foes fell one | |
vote short of the two-thirds vote needed to remove him from office. | |
Reforms After Grant’s Election | |
The impeachment and trial of Andrew Johnson occurred in 1868, a presidential | |
election year. At their convention, the Democrats nominated another candidate, | |
Horatio Seymour, so that Johnsons presidency would have ended soon in any | |
case, with or without a conviction in Congress. | |
‘The Election of 1868 At their presidential convention, the Republicans | |
turned toa war hero, General Ulysses S. Grant, even though he had no political | |
experience. Despite Grants popularity in the North, he managed to win | |
only 300,000 more popular votes than his Democratic opponent. The votes | |
of 500,000 Black men gave the Republican ticket its margin of victory. Even | |
the most moderate Republicans began to realize that the voting rights of the | |
freedmen needed federal protection if their party hoped to keep control of the | |
White House in future elections. | |
Fifteenth Amendment Republican majorities in Congress acted | |
quickly in 1869 to secure the vote for African Americans. Adding one more | |
Reconstruction amendment to those already adopted (the 13th Amendment | |
in 1865 and the 14th Amendment in 1868), Congress passed the 15th | |
Amendment, which prohibited any state from denying or abridging a citizen's | |
TOPIC 510 RECONSTRUCTION 325 | |
right to vote “on account of race, color, o previous condition of servitude” It | |
‘was ratified in 1870. While it banned open racial discrimination in voting laws, | |
it did not prevent states from passing other restrictions on voting rights that | |
disproportionately affected African Americans. | |
Civil Rights Act of 1875 The last civil rights reform passed by Congress | |
during Reconstruction was the Civil Rights Act of 1875. This guaranteed | |
equal accommodations in public places (hotels, railroads, and theaters) and | |
prohibited courts from excluding African Americans from juries. The law was | |
poorly enforced, as moderate and conservative Republicans tired of trying to | |
reform an unwilling South and feared losing White votes in the North. By 1877, | |
Reconstruction was abandoned by Congress. | |
Reconstruction in the South | |
During the second round of Reconstruction by Congress, the Republican Party | |
in the South dominated the governments of the former Confederate states. | |
Beginning in 1867, each Republican-controlled government was under the | |
‘military protection of the Army until Congress was satisfied that a state had | |
‘met its Reconstruction requirements. Then the troops were withdrawn. The | |
period of Republican rule in a Southern state lasted from as lttle as one year | |
(Tennessee) to as much as nine years (Florida), depending on how long it took | |
conservative Democrats to regain control. | |
CCONGRESSIONAL RECONSTRUCTION 1865-1877 | |
Th dao i heyear when a stte | |
e resamitad o e Union. | |
T dae in paretheses i the | |
year whan s stte rocstabihod | |
onceraie govemment | |
aTLANTIC | |
ocEAN | |
326 UNITED STATES HISTORY: AP’ EDITION | |
Composition of the Reconstruction Governments | |
In every Republican state government in the South except South Carolina, | |
Whites were in the majority in both houses of the legislature. In South Carolina, | |
freedmen controlled the lower house in 1873. Republican legislators included | |
native-born White Southerners, freedmen, and recently arrived Northerners | |
“Scalawags” and “Carpetbaggers” Democratic_opponents derisively | |
clled Southern Republicans “scalawags” and Northern - newcomers | |
“carpetbaggers” (after cheap luggage made from carpet fabric). Southern | |
Whites who supported the Republican governments were usually former | |
Whigs who were interested in economic development for their states and peace | |
between the sections. Northerners went south afier the war for various reasons. | |
Some were investors interested in setting up new businesses, while others were | |
‘ministers and teachers with humanitarian goals. Some went simply to plunder. | |
African American Legislators Most African Americans who held elective | |
office in the reconstructed state governments were educated property holders | |
who took moderate positions on most issues. During the Reconstruction era, | |
Republicans in the South sent two African Americans, Blanche K. Bruce and | |
Hiram Revels, 1o the Senate and more than a dozen African Americans o the | |
House of Representatives. Revels was elected in 1870 to take the Mississippi | |
Senate seat once held by Jefferson Davis. Seeing African Americans and former | |
slaves in positions of power caused bitter resentment among ex-Confederates. | |
African Americans Adjusting to Freedom | |
Undoubtedly; the Southerners who had the greatest adjustment to make during | |
the Reconstruction era were the freedmen and freedwomen. Having been so | |
recently emancipated from slavery, they were faced with the challenges of | |
securing their economic survival as well as their political rights as citizens. | |
Building Black Communities Freedom meant many things to African | |
Americans: reuniting families, learning to read and write, or migrating to | |
cities where “freedom was freer”” Most of all, formerly enslaved people viewed | |
emancipation as an opportunity for achieving independence from White | |
control. This drive for autonomy was most evident in the founding of hundreds | |
of independent African American churches after the war. By the hundreds | |
of thousands, Black members left White-dominated churches for the Negro | |
Baptist and African Methodist Episcopal churches. During Reconstruction, | |
Black ministers emerged as leaders in the African American community. | |
‘The desire for education induced large numbers of African Americans to | |
use their scarce resources to establish independent schools for their children | |
and to pay educated African Americans to become their teachers. Black | |
colleges such as Howard, Atlanta, Fisk, and Morehouse were established during | |
Reconstruction to prepare African American ministers and teachers. | |
Another aspect of African Americans' search for independence and self- | |
sufficiency was the decision of many freedpeople to migrate away from the | |
South and establish new Black communities in frontier states such as Kansas | |
ToPIC 510 RECONSTRUCTION 327 | |
PERCENT) | |
‘OF SCHOOL-AGE CHILDREN ENROLLED, 1850 TO 1 | |
0 | |
Year White ‘African American | |
1850 56 2 | |
1860 60 2 | |
1870 54 10 | |
1880 02 34 | |
The North During Reconstruction | |
‘The Norths economy in the postwar years continued to be driven by the | |
Industrial Revolution and the probusiness policies of the Republicans. As | |
the South struggled to reorganize its labor system, Northerners focused on | |
railroads, steel, labor problems, and money. | |
Greed and Corruption | |
During the Grant administration, as the material interests of the age took | |
center stage, the idealism of Lincoln's generation and the Radical Republicans’ | |
crusade for civil rights were pushed aside. | |
Rise of the Spoilsmen In the early 1870s, Republican Party leadership | |
passed from reformers (Thaddeus Stevens, Charles Sumner, and Benjamin | |
Wade) to political manipulators such as senators Roscoe Conkling of New | |
York and James Blaine of Maine. These politicians were masters of the game | |
of patronage—giving jobs and government favors (spoils) to their supporters. | |
Corruption in Business and Government The postwar years were | |
notorious for the corrupt schemes devised by business bosses and political | |
bosses to enrich themselves at the public’s expense. For example, in 1869, Wall | |
Street financiers Jay Gould and James Fisk obtained the help of President | |
Grant's brother-in-law in a scheme to corner the gold market. The Treasury | |
Department broke the scheme, but not before Gould had made a huge profit. | |
In the Crédit Mobilier affair, insiders gave stock to influential members | |
of Congress to avoid investigation of the profits they were making—as high | |
as 348 percent—from government subsidics for building the transcontinental | |
railroad. In the case of the Whiskey Ring, federal revenue agents conspired | |
with the liguor industry to defraud the government of millions in taxes. While | |
Grant himself did not personally profit from the corruption, his loyalty to | |
dishonest men around him badly tarnished his presidency. | |
Local politics in the Grant years were equally scandalous. In New York | |
City, William Tweed, the boss of the local Democratic Party, masterminded | |
dozens of schemes for helping himself and his cronies steal $200 million from | |
New York's taxpayers before The New York Times and the cartoonist Thomas | |
Nast exposed “Boss” Tweed and brought about his arrest and imprisonment | |
in 1871 | |
328 UNITED STATES HISTORY: AP’ EDITION | |
The Election of 1872 | |
‘The scandals of the Grant administration drove reform-minded Republicans to | |
break with the party in 1872 and select Horace Greeley, editor of the New York | |
Tribune, as their presidential candidate. The Liberal Republicans advocated | |
civil-service reform, an end to railroad subsidies, withdrawal of troops from | |
the South, reduced tariffs, and freer trade. Surprisingly, the Democrats also | |
nominated Greeley. The regular Republicans countered by merely “waving the | |
bloody shirt” again—and it worked. Grant was reelected in a landslide. | |
The Panic of 1873 | |
Grants second term began with an economic disaster that rendered thousands | |
of Northern laborers both jobless and homeless. Overspeculation by financiers | |
and overbuilding by industry and railroads led to widespread business | |
failures and depression. Debtors on the farms and in the cities argued about | |
what should be done. Grant finally adopted the ideas of Eastern bankers and | |
creditors, setting a new trend for the Republican Party: Black Southerners were | |
the biggest losers, s preoccupation with the financial crisis diverted the North's | |
attention away from what was happening in the South. | |
Women's Changing Roles | |
Every part of American society away from the battlefild was touched by the war. | |
“The impact of the war on the roles and opportunities of women was significant, | |
‘The absence of millions of men from the fields and factories added to the | |
responsibilities of women i all regions. They stepped into the vacuum created | |
by the war, operating farms and plantations and taking factory jobs customarily | |
held by men. In addition, women played a citical role as military nurses and as | |
volunteers in soldiers'aid societies. When the war ended and the war veterans | |
returned home, most urban women vacated their jobs in government and | |
industry, while rural women gladly accepted male assistance on the farm. | |
Women's Suffrage | |
The responsibiliies undertaken by women during the war also boosted | |
demands for equal voting rights for women. Some members of the women's | |
suffrage movement who had worked tirelessly for the abolition of slavery | |
opposed the passage of the 14th and 15th Amendments. While they supported | |
extending the franchise to African Americans, they objected to the fact that | |
these amendments specifically limited it to men. Ironically, this was the first | |
time sex was mentioned in the Constitution, in an amendment meant to extend | |
rights but that ended up discriminating against half the nation's citizens. | |
In 1869, Wyoming Territory became the first territory or state to grant | |
women ful suffrage rights. The suffragists' goal would not be achieved until | |
women's efforts in another war—World War I finally convinced enough male | |
conservatives to adopt the 19th Amendment, with wording that echoed that of | |
the 15th Amendment. | |
TOPIC 510 RECONSTRUCTION 329 | |
REFLECT ON THE LEARNING OBJECTIVE | |
1. Explain the consequences of government policy during Reconstruction | |
on society from 1865 to 1877. | |
KEY TERMS BY THEME | |
Equalty (NAT, POL) patrona Radical Republicans | |
13th Amendment Thomas Nast Charles Sumner | |
il Bighis Actof 1866 Horace Greeley Thaddeus Stephens. | |
14th Amendment Libera Republicans Benjamin Wade | |
equal protection ofthe Panic of 1873 Reconstruction Acts | |
Taws. Roconstruction Tenure of Ofce Act | |
due process offaw, (POL, SOC, ARC) Edwin Stanton | |
15th Amendment Reconstruction impeachment | |
(Ciil Rghts Act o 1875 proclamaion of Amnesty scalaviags | |
Corruption (WXT, POL) and Reconsiruction carpetbaggers | |
Jay Gould Wade-Davis Bl Blanche K. Bruce | |
Crédit Mobil Andrew Johnson Hiram Revels | |
Willam Tweed Freedmens Bureou Social Impact (NAT, S0C) | |
Poliics (POL) congressional women'ssuffage | |
e Reconstruction | |
MULTIPLE-CHOICE QUESTIONS | |
Questions 1-2 refer to the following excerpt. | |
“All persons born or naturalized in the United States .. . are citizens. | |
No State shall make or enforce any law which shall abridge the privileges | |
or immunities of citizens . . nor shall any State deprive any person of lie, | |
liberty, or property, without due process; nor deny ... equal protection of | |
the laws. | |
Representatives shall be apportioned among the several States ... counting, | |
the whole number of persons in each State, excluding Indians not taxed. | |
But when the right to vote at any election . .. thereof, is denied to any of | |
the male inhabitants ... being twenty-one years of age, and citizens . . or | |
in any way abridged, except for . . . crime, .. . the basis of representation | |
therein shall be reduced. .. | |
No person shall . .. hold any office . . . who, having previously taken an | |
oath ... shall have engaged in insurrection or rebellion against the same | |
... But Congress may by a vote of two-thirds of cach House, remove such | |
disability” | |
14th Amendment, Constitution of the United States,July 9, 1868 | |
330 UNITED STATES HISTORY: AP’ EDITION | |
1. In proclaiming that all persons born in the United States were citizens, | |
the 14th Amendment directly repudiated which of the following? | |
(4) Compromise of 1850 | |
(B) Dred Scott decision | |
(C) Johnson's Reconstruct | |
(D) Wade-Davis Bill | |
n plan | |
2. Which of the following provisions would be the basis of one of the most | |
contentious judicial issues of the late 19th and early 20th centuries? | |
(A) “nor deny ... equal protection of the laws” | |
(B) “Representatives shall be apportioned” | |
() “the basis of representation therein shall be reduced” | |
(D) “shall have engaged in insurrection or rebellion” | |
SHORT-ANSWER QUESTIONS | |
Use complete sentences; an outline or bulleted list alone is not acceptable. | |
1. Answer (), (b), and () | |
(@) Briefly explain how federal government actions taken during | |
Reconstruction were similar to federal government actions taken | |
during the Civil War. | |
(b) Briefly explain how federal government actions taken during | |
Reconstruction were different from federal government actions | |
taken during the Civil War. | |
(©) Briefly explain ONE factor that accounts for the difference in | |
federal government actions during the two periods. | |
2. Answer (a), (b), and (c). | |
(a) Briefly explain ONE specific part or aspect of Pre: | |
plan for Reconstruction. | |
(b) Briefly explain ONE specific part or aspect of Pres | |
approach to Reconstruction. | |
() Briefly explain ONE specific example of the efforts of formerly | |
enslaved African Americans to use their freedom during the period | |
of Reconstruction. | |
lent Lincoln's | |
ident Johnson’s | |
ToPIC 510 RECONSTRUCTION 331 | |
Topic 5.1 | |
Failure of Reconstruction | |
Though slavery was abolished, the wrongs of my people were not | |
ended. Though they were not slaves, they were not yet quite free, | |
Frederick Douglass, 1882 | |
Learning Objective: Explain how and why Reconstruction resulted in | |
continuity and change in regional and national understandings of what | |
it meant to be American. | |
Views of Reconstruction have varied greatly. Many historians have seen it | |
as a missed opportunity to promote racial equality. However, some have | |
pointed out that the institutions and amendments from the Reconstruction era | |
provided the foundation for the civil rights movement that emerged nearly a | |
century after the Civil War ended. | |
Lincoln's Last Speech | |
In his last public address (April 11, 1865), Lincoln encouraged Northerners to | |
accept Louisiana as a reconstructed state. (Lovisiana had already drawn up a | |
new constitution that abolished slavery in the state and provided for African | |
Americans’ education.) The president also addressed the question—highly | |
controversial at the time—of whether freedmen should be granted the right | |
to vote. Lincoln said: “I myself prefer that it were now conferred on the very | |
intelligent, and on those who serve our cause as soldiers” Three days later, | |
Lincoln's evolving plans for Reconstruction were ended with his assassination. | |
His last speech suggested that, had he lived, he probably would have moved | |
closer to the position taken by the progressive, or Radical, Republicans. In | |
any event, hope for lasting reform was dealt a devastating blow by the sudden | |
removal of Lincoln’ skillful leadership. | |
Evaluating the Republican Record | |
As mentioned in Topic 5.10, Congress and presidents fought over specific | |
amendments, laws, and actions. In evaluating Reconstruction, it s particularly | |
useful to look at the controversial record of the Republicans during their brief | |
control of Southern state politics. Did they abuse their power for selfish ends | |
(corruption and plunder), or did they govern responsibly in the public interest? | |
‘They did some of each. | |
332 UNITED STATES HISTORY: AP’ EDITION | |
Accomplishments On the positive side, Republican legislators liberalized | |
state constitutions in the South by providing for universal male suffrage, | |
property rights for women, debt relicf, and modern penal codes. They promoted | |
the building of railroads, roads, bridges, and other internal improvements. | |
‘They established such institutions as hospitals, asylums, and homes for the | |
disabled. The reformers provided for state-supported public-school systems, | |
which benefited Whites and African Americans alike. They paid for all of this | |
by overhauling the tax system and selling bonds. | |
Failures Long after Reconstruction ended, many Southerners and some | |
Northern historians continued to depict Republican rule as utterly wasteful | |
and corrupt. Some instances of graft and wasteful spending did occur, as | |
Republican politicians took advantage of their power to take kickbacks and | |
bribes from contractors who did business with the state. However, corruption | |
occurred throughout the country, in Northern states and cities as well. No | |
geographic section, political party, or ethnic group was immune to the decline | |
in ethics in government during the postwar era. | |
The End of Reconstruction | |
The way Reconstruction ended shows how it failed to fulfil the nations needs. | |
During Grant’s second term, it was apparent that Reconstruction had entered a | |
third phase, which would be its final one. With Radical Republicanism on the | |
wane, Southern conservatives—known as redeemers—took control of one state | |
government after another. This process was completed by 1877. The redeemers | |
had different backgrounds, but they agreed on their political program: states’ | |
rights, reduced taxes and spending on social programs, and White supremacy. | |
White Supremacy and the Ku Klux Klan | |
During the period that Republicans controlled state governments in the South, | |
some Whites organized secret societies to intimidate African Americans and | |
White reformers. The most prominent of these was the Ku Klux Klan, founded | |
in 1867 by a former Confederate general, Nathaniel Bedford Forrest. The | |
“invisible empire” burned Black-owned buildings and flogged and murdered | |
several thousand freedmen to keep them from exercising their voting rights. To | |
give federal authorities the power to stop Ku Klux Klan violence and to protect | |
the civil rights of citizens, Congress passed the Force Acts of 1870 and 1871. | |
Southern Governments Just eight months after Johnson took office | |
in 1865, all 11 of the ex-Confederate states qualified under the presidents | |
Reconstruction plan to become part of the Union. The Southern states drew up | |
constitutions that repudiated secession, negated the debts of the Confederate | |
government, and ratified the 13th Amendment abolishing slavery. On the | |
other hand, none of the new constitutions extended voting rights to Blacks | |
citizens. Furthermore, to the dismay of Republicans, former leaders of the | |
Confederacy won seats in Congress. For example, Alexander Stephens, the | |
former Confederate vice president, was elected US. senator from Georgia. | |
TOPIC 511 FAILURE OF RECONSTRUCTION 333 | |
Black Codes The Republicans became further disillusioned with Johnson | |
as Southern state legislatures adopted Black Codes that restricted the rights | |
and movements of African Americans: | |
+ They could not rent land or nor borrow money to buy land. | |
« They could not testity against Whites in court. | |
« They had to sign work agreements or they could be arrested for | |
vagrancy. Under this contract-labor system, African Americans worked | |
cotton fields under White supervision for deferred wages. | |
‘The costs of being convicted of any crime could be disastrous for an | |
African American. The 13th Amendment had abolished slavery “except as a | |
punishment for crime.” Hence, a person convicted of a minor or even made-up | |
offense could be rented from the government by a landowner or business and | |
used as essentially slave labor. | |
Sharecropping The Southis agricultural cconomy was in turmoil after the | |
wa, in part because landowners had lost their compulsory labor force. At first, | |
White landowners attempted to force freed African Americans into signing | |
contracts to work the fields. These contracts set terms that bound the signer | |
to almost permanent and unrestricted labor. African Americans' insistence on | |
autonomy; however, combined with changes in the postwar economy; led White | |
landowners to adopt a system based on tenancy and sharecropping. Under | |
sharecropping, the landlord provided the sced and needed farm supplies in | |
return for a share (usually half) of the harvest. | |
While sharecropping gave poor people of all races in the rural South the | |
opportunity to work a piece of land for themselves, sharecroppers usually | |
remained dependent on the landowners or in deb to local merchants. By 1880, | |
1o more than 5 percent of Southern African Americans owned their own land. | |
Sharecropping had evolved into a new form of servitude. | |
The Amnesty Act of 1872 | |
Seven years after Lees surrender at Appomattox, many Northerners were ready | |
to put the war behind them. In 1872 Congress passed a general Amnesty Act | |
that removed thelast restrictions on ex-Confederates, except for the top leaders. | |
‘The chief political consequence of the act was to allow Southern conservatives | |
10 vote for Democrats and thus to retake control of state governments. | |
The Election of 1876 | |
By 1876, federal troops had been withdrawn from all Southern states except— | |
South Carolina, Florida, and Louisiana. The Democrats had returned to | |
power in all of the other former Confederate states. This was important in the | |
presidential election. | |
At their convention, the Republicans looked for someone untouched by | |
the corruption of the Grant administration. They nominated the governor of | |
Ohio, Rutherford B. Hayes. The Democrats chose New York's reform governor, | |
334 UNITED STATES HISTORY: AP’ EDITION | |
Samuel J. Tilden, who had fought the corrupt Tweed Ring. In the popular | |
votes, the Democrats won a clear majority and expected to put Tilden in the | |
White House. However, in three Southern states, the returns were contested. | |
o win the election, Tilden needed only one electoral vote from the contested | |
returns of South Carolina, Florida, and Louisiana | |
A special electoral commission was created to determine who was entitled | |
to the disputed votes of the three states. In a straight party vote of 87, the | |
commission gave allthe votes to Hayes, the Republican. Outraged Democrats | |
threatened to filibuster the results and send the election to the House of | |
Representatives, which they controlled. | |
The Compromise of 1877 | |
Leaders of the two parties worked out an informal deal. The Democrats would | |
allow Hayes to become president. In return, he would (1) immediately end | |
federal support for the Republicans in the South, and (2) support the building of | |
a Southern transcontinental railroad. Shortly after his inauguration, President | |
Hayes fulflled his part in the Compromise of 1877 and promptly withdrew the | |
last of the federal troops protecting African Americans and other Republicans. | |
‘The end of a federal military presence in the South was not the only thing | |
that brought Reconstruction to an end. In a series of decisions in the 18805 | |
and 1890s, the Supreme Court struck down a number of Reconstruction laws | |
that protected Black citizens from discrimination. Even though some Southern | |
leaders called for a “New South” based on industrial development, most | |
Southerners, regardless of race, remained poor farmers. The region fell further | |
behind the rest of the nation in prosperity. | |
By 1877 the nation was more interested in its recent Centennial | |
celebration and was again looking westward and for industrial growth. Tired | |
of Reconstruction, the majority left it to the historians to decide the suceess or | |
failure of Reconstruction. | |
HISTORICAL PERSPECTIVE: | |
1D RECONSTRUCTION FAIL? | |
Historical opinions on Reconstruction have changed dramatically over the past | |
century. Scholars have disagreed over how well it worked and who deserves | |
praise or blame for what happened. | |
Blame for Too Much Equality Generations of both Northern and | |
Southern historians, starting with William Dunning in the carly 1900s, | |
portrayed Reconsiruction as a failure. Dunning and others charged that | |
illterate African Americans and corrupt Northern carpetbaggers abused the | |
rights of Southern Whites and stole vast sums from the state governments. These: | |
historians blamed the Radical Republicans for bringing on these conditions by | |
their desire to punish the South and to give formerly enslaved people too many | |
rights. The Dunning school of historical thought provided a rationale for the | |
racial segregation in the early 20th century. It was given popular expression | |
ina 1915 movie, D. W. Griffths The Birth of a Nation, which pictured the Ku | |
TOPIC 511 FAILURE OF RECONSTRUCTION 335 | |
Klux Klansmen as heroes coming to the rescuc of Southern Whites oppressed | |
by vindictive Northern radicals and African Americans. | |
Praise for Accomplishments African American historians such as W. E. B. | |
Du Bois and John Hope Franklin countered Dunning by highlighting the | |
positive achievements of the Reconstruction governments and Black leaders. | |
Their view was supported and expanded upon in 1965 with the publication | |
of Kenneth Stampp's Era of Reconstruction. Other historians of the 1960s and | |
19705 also stressed the significance of the civil righs legislation passed by the | |
Radical Republicans and pointed out the humanitarian work of Northern | |
reformers. | |
Blame for Too Little Equality By the 1980s, some historians criticized | |
Congress's approach to Reconstruction, not for being too radical, but for | |
being not radical enough. They argued that Congress failed to provide land | |
for African Americans, which would have enabled them to achieve economic | |
independence. Furthermore, these historians argued, the military occupation | |
of the South should have lasted longer to protect the freedmen's political rights | |
Eric Foner's comprehensive Reconstruction: America’s Unfinished Revolution | |
(1988) acknowledged the limitations of Reconstruction in achieving lasting | |
reforms but also pointed out that, in the post-Civil War years, the freedmen | |
and freedwomen established many of the institutions in the African American | |
‘community upon which later progress depended: churches, schools, universites, | |
and businesses. According to Foner, it took a “second Reconstruction” after | |
‘World War II (the civl rights movement of the 1950s and 1960s) to achieve the | |
promise of the “first Reconstruction” | |
‘Support an Argument Explain two perspectives on the failures of Reconstruction. | |
REFLECT ON THE LEARNING OBJECTIVE | |
1. Explain how Reconstruction caused both continuity and change in the | |
regional and national views of what it meant to be Americ | |
KEY TERMS BY THEME | |
Politics (POL) Reconstruction | |
redeamers (POL, S0, ARC) | |
Rutherford B, Hayes Ku Kiux Klan | |
‘Samuel 1 Tilden Force Acts | |
Election of 1676 Black Codes. | |
‘Compromise of 1877 sharecropping | |
Amnesty Actof 1872 | |
336 UNITED STATES HISTORY: AP’ EDITION | |
MULTIPLE-CHOICE QUESTIONS | |
Questions 1-3 refer to the map below: | |
PRESIDENTIAL ELECTION RESULTS, 1876 | |
I Hayes (Ropublican) | |
B Tiden (Democratic) | |
itories not | |
eligile to vote | |
1. Which of the following was most important in enabling the Democratic | |
Party to regain political power in the South? | |
(A) The limits on education for the freedpeople | |
(B) The restrictions on the voting rights of the freedmen | |
() ‘The effects of the Panic of 1873 | |
(D) The impact of the development of sharecropping | |
2. The victor in the 1876 presidential election was decided based on the | |
recommendation of | |
(4) a special electoral commission | |
(B) a meeting of state governors | |
(©) the Senate | |
(D) the Supreme Court | |
3. Democrats agreed to accept Rutherford B. Hayes as president in 1876 | |
because he agreed to | |
(4) support a nationwide Black Code | |
(B) remove federal troops from the South | |
promote Southern industrial development | |
(D) support civil service reform | |
TOPIC 511 FAILURE OF RECONSTRUCTION 337 | |
SHORT-ANSWER QUESTION | |
Use complete sentences; an outline or bulleted list alone is not acceptable. | |
1. “Alone among the societies that abolished slavery in the nincteenth | |
century, the United States, for a moment, offered the freedmen a measure | |
of political control over their own destinics. However brief its sway, | |
Reconstruction allowed scope for a remarkable political and social | |
‘mobilization of the black community. It opened doors of opportunity that | |
could never be completely closed. Reconstruction transformed the lives | |
of Southern blacks in ways unmeasurable by statistics and unreachable | |
by law. It raised their expectations and aspirations, redefined their status | |
in relation to the larger society, and allowed space for the creation of | |
institutions that enabled them to survive the repression that followed. | |
And it established constitutional principles of civil and political equality | |
that, while flagrantly violated after Redemption, planted the seeds of | |
future struggle” | |
Eric Foner, “The New View of Reconstruction; | |
American Heritage, 1953 | |
“Reconstruction, which was far from radical, constituted the most | |
democratic decades of the nineteenth century, South or North, so much | |
so that it amounted to the first progressive era in the nations history. Just | |
ten years after Supreme Court Chief Justice Roger B. Taney endorsed the | |
expansion of slavery into the western territories and announced that black | |
Americans,evenifiree born, could ot becitizens ofthe republic,blacks were | |
fighting for the franchise in northen states; battling to integrate streetcars | |
in Charleston, New Orleans, and San Francisco; funding integrated public | |
schools;and voting and standing for office in the erstwhile Confederacy. | |
Black veterans, activists, ministers, assemblymen, registrars, poll workers, | |
editors, and a handful of dedicated white allies risked their lives in this | |
cause, nearly brought down a racist president, but ultimately lost their fight | |
because of white violence”” | |
Douglas R. Egerton, The Wars of Reconstruction, 2014 | |
Using the excerpts, answer (a), (b), and (c). | |
(@) Briefly explain ONE major difference between Foner's and Egerton’s | |
historical interpretations of the success or failure of Reconstruction. | |
(b) Briefly explain how ONE historical event or development in the | |
period 1863 t0 1877 that is not explicitly mentioned in the excerpts | |
could be used to support Foner’s interpretation. | |
() Briefly explain how ONE historical event or development in the | |
period 1863 10 1877 that is not explicitly mentioned in the excerpts | |
could be used to support Egerton’s interpretation. | |
338 UNITED STATES HISTORY: AP’ EDITION | |
Topic 512 | |
Comparison in Period 5 | |
Learning Objective: Compare the relative significance of the effects of | |
the Civil War on American values. | |
The reasoning process of comparison s based on describing similaites and | |
differences between specific historical developments. It helps highlight the | |
many factors that show the effects of the Civil War on American values. | |
Forexample, consider the role of Manifest Destiny ininfluencing Americans | |
and how they viewed slavery. Use historical reasoning to understand how | |
expansion affected those who wanted new land and the expansion of slavery | |
as opposed to those who wanted to abolish slavery or to reserve western lands | |
for White settlers as the nation extended its borders. For some on each side, | |
this was a question supported by historical evidence from many areas including | |
economic, cultural (religious), and regional interests. | |
‘The development of distinct views on slavery and the Civil War continued | |
through Reconstruction. Presidents Lincoln and Johnson proposed quick | |
reunification and forgiveness of the former Confederates. In contrast, Radical | |
Republicans wanted to control the rebels and protect the rights of those formerly | |
enslaved. What was the general reaction of the majority of Americans? Overall, | |
the country supported equal rights as reflected in the 13th, 14th, and 15th | |
Amendments, yet many people supported or at least accepted Black Codes and | |
the idea of White supremacy. Reasoned comparison of the evidence is needed | |
to understand American values during this period. | |
QUESTIONS ABOUT COMPARISON | |
Use the questions below to make a historically defensible claim. | |
1. Explain the extent to which people in the North and South held | |
different views on Manifest Destiny. For example, compare how | |
Northerners viewed expansion as new lands for immigrants and the | |
‘market revolution while Southerners saw it as a way to spread slavery. | |
2. Explain the extent of the impact on the country of paralle efforts by | |
Northerners and Southerners to compromise over the issue of slavery | |
in the 1840s and 1850s. For example, compare the acceptance by | |
Northerners and Southerners of banning slave trading in Washington, | |
D.C, but allowing ownership of enslaved people to continue. | |
TOPIC 512 COMPARISON IN PERIOD5 339 | |
THINK AS A HISTORIAN: SUPPORT, MODIFY, AND REFUTE CLAIMS | |
An important part of the skill of argumentation s being able to respond to a | |
claim or argument that a source makes. You can usually respond in three ways: | |
« Support a claim: This means you provide reasons, quotations, facts, | |
statistics, visuals, or other evidence to back up the claim. This evidence | |
should be logical, relevant, and from a reliable source. | |
+ Modify a claim: When you modify a claim, you provide evidence that | |
part of it is true and part of it i false. Or perhaps part is relevant and part | |
s not relevant, or part is accurate and part is exaggerated. | |
+ Refute a claim: This means you provide evidence that the claim is not | |
true. For instance, you might provide different statistics from a more | |
reliable source, or an eyewitness account that contradicts the claim. | |
Consider how one argument might be supported, modified, or refuted. | |
Argument: Abraham Lincoln's performance in the Lincoln-Douglas debates | |
made it a certainty that he would become president | |
+ Statement 1: After the debates, Lincoln lost the election to Douglas. | |
+ Statement 2: Lincoln’ ideas and performance made him well-known. | |
+ Statement 3: Although Lincoln won the Republican nomination in 1860, | |
he had to run against candidates from three other parties. | |
Which statement supports the argument, which modifies it, and which | |
refutes it? Take a few moments to decide before reading further. | |
Statement 1 refutes the argument by pointing out that Lincoln lost the | |
election. Statement 2 supports the argument. If the debates had interested | |
local voters only, then Lincoln would not have become well known nationally. | |
Statement 3 qualifies the argument. People often assume that there have always | |
been two parties in UsS. politics, but there have at times been more than that. | |
Read the argument and statements. Then answer the questions. | |
Argument: Lincoln's handling of the crisis at Fort Sumter showed his | |
willingness to plunge the country into civil war. | |
+ Statement 1: Lincoln said, “The government will not assail you. You can | |
have no conflct without being yourselves the aggressors.” | |
+ Statement 2: Lincoln chose to resupply the fort even though it was | |
unfinished and already obsolete. | |
+ Statement 3: Lincoln did not abandon the fort, but he did not send troops | |
toit either. He merely sent supplies to the soldiers already there. | |
1. Which statement supports the claim? Explain your answer. | |
2. Which statement modifies the claim? Explain your answer. | |
3. Which statement refutes the claim? Explain your answer. | |
340 UNITED STATES HISTORY: AP’ EDITION | |
> | |
UNIT 5 — Period 5 Review: | |
1844-1877 | |
"@ WRITE AS A HISTORIAN: DEVELOP A THESIS | |
“The thesis statement must 1) assert a historically defensible claim, 2) lay out | |
aline of reasoning, and 3) directly address the topic and focus of the task. | |
Historically Defensible Claim A thesis, or claim, is a nonfactual | |
statement asserted to be true. It is a statement about which people can | |
disagree because it requires an explanation or evaluation. A historically | |
defensible claim is one that can be supported with sound historical evidence. | |
For example, a writer could claim that building railroads contributed to the | |
Civil War. This is a defensible claim because it could point to how railroads | |
connected the Northeast and Midwest more than they did the South. Others | |
could disagree, noting that the South needed fewer railroads because it | |
was linked to the Northeast through the cotton industry and the Midwest | |
through trade on the Mississippi River. | |
Line of Reasoning A thesis or claim also conveysa line of reasoning for the | |
argument that will be used o explain the relationships among pieces ofevidence. | |
In the thesis on railroads, for example, the line of reasoning uses comparisor: | |
the similarities and differences in regional ties. Other lines of reasoning include | |
causation and continuity/change. Each line of reasoning needs to be embedded | |
in strong thesis statement. | |
Topic and Focus of Task A strong thesis or claim directly addresses | |
the topic and focus of the fask. It must be limited to the time and geography | |
stated in the long essay question. Questions often ask the writer to “evaluate | |
the extent” to which something happened. Which historical events or trends | |
were the most important,significant, influential, long-lasting, or in other ways | |
largest in scope? What evidence supports your evaluation? | |
Appli Read the following long essay question and a thesis statement | |
developed to address it. Evaluate the thesis statement on how wellt 1) expresses | |
a historically defensible claim, 2) embeds a line of reasoning, and 3) addresses | |
the topic and task, including evaluating extent, and stays within the limitations of | |
the question. Revise the thesis statement as appropriate so that it meets all three | |
standards. | |
Long Essay Question: Evaluate the extent of the importance of the efforts of the. | |
Confederate states in gaining international support during the Civil War. | |
Thesis Statement: Between 1861 and 1865, Confederate failure to gain international | |
support was a primary reason the Union won the Civil Wr. | |
For current free-response question samples, visit: https://apcentral.collegeboard org/ | |
courses/ap-united-states- istory/exam | |
UNIT 5 — PERIOD 5 REVIEW: 18441677 341 | |
LONG ESSAY QUESTIONS | |
Directions: The suggested writing time for each question s 40 minutes. In your | |
response you should do the following: | |
+ Respond to the prompt with a historically defensible thesis or claim that | |
establishes a line of reasoning. | |
+ Describe a broader historical context relevant to the prompt | |
+ Support an argument in response to the prompt using specific and | |
relevant examples of evidence. | |
« Use historical reasoning (e.g., comparison, causation, continuity or | |
change) to frame or structure an argument that addresses the prompt. | |
+ Use evidence to corroborate, qualify; or modify an argument that | |
addresses the prompt | |
Evaluate the extent to which the idea of Manifest Destiny fostered the | |
territorial expansion in the period from 1844 to 1877. | |
Evaluate the extent to which the United States changed how it handled its | |
border disputes in the period from 1844 to 1877. | |
Evaluate the extent to which the reaction to immigration changed in the | |
period from 1844 to 1877. | |
4. Evaluate the extent to which the arguments about slavery presented by | |
Abraham Lincoln in his debates with Stephen A. Douglas had an effect | |
on national politics in the period from 1858 to 1861. | |
5. Evaluate the extent to which the actions of Abraham Lincoln had an | |
effect on the decision of states to secede in the period 1860 to 1865. | |
6. Evaluate the extent to which the efforts of the Confederate states to gain | |
international support during the Civil War had an effect on the conduct | |
of the war. | |
7. Evaluate the extent to which the Reconstruction plans of President | |
Andrew Johnson and the Radical Republicans differed. | |
8. Evaluate the extent to which efforts to protect equal rights for all citizens | |
had an effect during the period of Reconstruction. | |
342 UNITED STATES HISTORY: AP EDITION | |
DOCUMENT-BASED QUESTION | |
Directions: Question 11is based on the accompanying documents. The documents. | |
have been edited for the purpose of this exercise. You are advised to spend 15 minutes | |
planning and 45 minutes writing your answer. In your response you should do the | |
following: | |
« Respond to the prompt with a historically defensible thesis or claim that | |
establishes a line of reasoning. | |
« Describe a broader historical context relevant to the prompt. | |
« Support an argument in response to the prompt using at least six | |
documents. | |
« Use at least one additional piece of specific historical evidence (beyond | |
that found in the documents) relevant to an argument about the | |
prompt. | |
« For at least three documents, explain how or why the documents p | |
of view, purpose, historical situation, and/or audience is relevant to an | |
argument. | |
+ Use evidence to corroborate, qualify; or modify an argument that | |
addresses the prompt. | |
1. Evaluate the extent to which the territorial expansion of Manifest Destiny | |
caused the United States to become more unified in the period of the 18305 | |
and 18405, | |
Document 1 | |
Source: William Ellery Channing, abolitionist and pacifist, statement opposing | |
the annexation of Texas, 1837 | |
“Texas is the first step to Mexico. The moment we plant authority on Texas, the | |
boundaries of these two countries will become nominal, will be litle more than | |
lines on the sand. | |
A country has no right to adopt a policy, however gainful, which, as it may | |
foresee, will determine it to a career of war. A nation, like an individual, is bound | |
to seck, even by sacrifices, a position which will fvor peace, justice, and the exer- | |
cise of beneficent influence on the world. A nation provoking war by cupidity; by | |
encroachment, and above all, by efforts to propagate the curse of slavery, i alike | |
false to tself, to God, and to the human race. | |
UNIT 5 — PERIOD 5 REVIEW: 18441677 343 | |
Document 2 | |
Source: President James Polk, Inaugural Address, 1845 | |
None can fail o see the danger to our safety and future peace if Texas remains an | |
independent state, or becomes an ally or dependency of some foreign nation more | |
‘powerful than herself. s there one among our citizens who would not prefer per- | |
petual peace with Texas to occasional wars, which often occur betsveen bordering | |
independent nations? Is there one who would not prefer free intercourse with her, | |
1o high duties on all our products and manufactures which enter her ports or cross | |
her frontiers? I there one who would not prefer an unrestricted communication | |
with her citizens, o the frontier obstructions which must occur if she remains out | |
of the Union? | |
Document 3 | |
Source: Anonymous, “California and the National Interest” American Review (a | |
Whig journal), 1846 | |
“The natural progress of events will undoubtedly give us that province [Californial | |
just as it gave us Texas. Already American emigrants thither are to be numbered | |
by thousands, and we may, at almost any moment, look for a declaration, which | |
shall dissolve the slight bonds that now link the province to Mexico, and prepare | |
the way for its ultimate annexation to the United States. . | |
Here, then, lies the Pacific coast, adjoining our western border . . . which | |
embrace the southern sections of the United States and stretching northward to | |
the southern boundary of Oregon. | |
California, to become the seat of wealth and power for which nature has | |
‘marked it, must pass into the hands of another race. And who can conjecture what | |
would now have been its condition, had its first colonists been of the stock which | |
peopled the Atlantic coast? | |
Document 4 | |
Source: John L. O'Sullivan, editor, Democratic Review, 1846 | |
California will probably, next fall away from [Mexico). ... The Anglo-Saxon foot | |
is already on its borders. Already the advance guard of the irresistible army of | |
Anglo-Saxon emigration has begun to pour down upon it, armed with the plough | |
and the rifle, and marking its trail with schools and colleges, courts and repre- | |
sentative halls, mills and meeting-houses. A population will soon be in actual | |
occupation of California, over which it be idle for Mexico to dream of dominion. | |
‘They will necessarily become independent. All this without ... responsibilty of | |
our people—in the natural flow of events | |
344 UNITED STATES HISTORY: AP’ EDITION | |
Document 5 | |
Source: Editorial, “New Territory versus No Territory” United States Magazine | |
‘and Democratic Review, October 1847 | |
“This occupation of territory by the people is the great movement of the age, and | |
until every acre of the North American continent is occupied by citizens of the | |
United States, the foundation of the future empire will not have been laid | |
When these new states come into the Union, they are controlled by the Con- | |
stitution only; and as that instrument permits slavery in all the states that are | |
parties o it, how can Congress prevent it? | |
When through the results of war, territory comes into the possession of the | |
Union, it s equally a violation of the Constitution for Congress to undertake to | |
say that there shall be no slavery then. The people of the United States were nearly | |
unanimous for the admission of Texas into the Union; but probably not an insig; | |
nificant fraction require its annexation “for the purpose” of extending slavery. | |
Document 6 | |
Source: Senator Thomas Corwin, Speech, 1847 | |
‘What s the terrtory, Mr. President, which you propose to wrest from Mexico? | |
ir, look at this pretense of want of room. | |
“There is one topic connected with this subject which I remble when I approach, | |
and yet | cannot forbear to notice . It meets you in every step you take; it threatens | |
You which way soever you go in prosecution of this war. I allude to the question of | |
Slavery ... the North and the South are brought together into a collsion on a point | |
where neither will yield. Who can foresce or foretell the result ... why should we | |
participate this fearful struggle, by continuing a war the result of which must be | |
to force us at once upon a civil conflct? ... Let us wash Mexican blood from our | |
hands, and.....swear to preserve honorable peace with all the world. | |
Document 7 | |
Source: Senator Charles Sumner, Massachusetts Legislature, 1847 | |
Resolved, That the present war with Mexico hasits primary origin in the uncon- | |
sttutional annexation to the United States of the foreign state of Texas while the | |
same was stil at war with Mexicos that it was unconstitutionally commenced by | |
the order of the President . .. —by a powerful nation against a weak neighbor— | |
unnecessarily and without just cause, at immense cost of a portion of her territory, | |
from which slavery has already been excluded, with the triple object of extending | |
slavery, of strengthening “Slave Power” and of obtaining the control of the Free | |
States, under the Constitution of the United States. | |
Resolved, That our attention is directed anew to the wrong and “enormity” | |
of slavery, and to the tyranny and usurpation of the *Slave Power, as displayed in | |
the history of our country, particularly in the annexation of Texas and the present | |
war with Mexico. | |
UNIT 5 — PERIOD 5 REVIEW: 18441677 345 | |