54
1793: Invention of the cotton gin.
1808: US abolished the slave trade. The value of slaves increased to $2,000 by 1850. Despite only 25% of South owning slaves the existence of slaves reminded poor whites that there was a class below them in society. Slavery permeated all aspects of Southern life, therefore, an attack on slavery was seen as an attack on the South.
1819: 11 'free' states, 11 'slave' states. The senate was even but the North had begun to dominate the House with its rapidly growing population.
1820: Missouri Compromise. Missouri, a slave state, would join the union with Maine, a free state, to maintain the balance. No slavery was to be subsequently allowed North of the 36'30' parallel. The issue was not resolved, merely delegated to a later date.
1833: Britain abolished slavery throughout its empire.
Late 1840s: Growing tension due to: California and New Mexico in 1848, The Wilmot Proviso 1846, which excluded slavery from any territory acquired from Mexico, was passed in the House but defeated in the Senate. The Calhoun Doctrine 1847, argued that territories were the common property of all states, that any US citizen was free to settle in the US with its property (slaves), that the states were sovereign, they had the right to secede if the North ignored Southern interests and threatened slavery, then the South was justified in leaving the Union.
1850: Compromise. California to join the Union as a free state, the end of slavery in Washington D.C, in Utah and New Mexico 'popular sovereignty' would decide whether the state would be slave or free, and a more stringent Fugitive slave law. David Potter argues it was "an armistice rather than a compromise"
1852: Publication of 'Uncle Tom's Cabin'
1854: Kansas-Nebraska Act. Addition of two new states, their status to be decided by poplar sovereignty, undermined the Missouri Compromise. This re-ignited sectional tensions and fed Northern fears of a 'slave power' base.
1856: Brooks, a Southern representative, beat unconscious the abolitionist senator Sumner, on the senate floor. The start of the violence.
'Bleeding Kansas' a minor civil war over whether to be free or slave, eventually in 1858 after a referendum the pro-slavery group was defeated.
1857: Dred Scott Case. Rise of the Republican Party. The Republican Party became a fully sectional party and led to a further identification with North or South rather than with the Union, Abraham Lincoln was influential in the Douglas-Lincoln debates in splitting the democratic party.
1860: Lincoln wins the presidential election,
1861: The confederacy was formed.
April: Fort Sumter,
Lincoln said those things about inequality of blacks and whites because that's what the government of Illinois believed. He tailored his opinions to the whims of his constituents. He was a political genius and he was trying to win election to the US Senate. That's why I think it's impossible to know what his real opinions were.
KayBeeEee1983 7 months ago in playlist Civil War
1830-1860 may have been the greatest generation of white people in the NORTH, but Southern whites during those years were the WORST generation of white people in US history. They were utterly white supremacist (they considered non-whites to be sub-human), they were bad Americans and undemocratic. South Carolina tried to nullify federal laws that they didn't like.
KayBeeEee1983 7 months ago in playlist Civil War
What is the name of this documentary?
mediumaevum 8 months ago