Based on his First Inaugural Address, Lincoln proves that has no intention of removing slavery "in the States where it exists", meaning he will avoid interfering with the States.
Lincoln avoids the removal in order to protect the property, peace, and personal security of the Southern States because they are "endangered". However, Lincoln also does not object amendments made to the Constitution, but in a way that will not interfere with the "domestic institutions" of the States. His promises protect the rights that Southerners-and other United States citizens-have already obtained. Removing rights from Southerners, is claimed to be unlawful.
The message is directed to both participants in the heated argument on slavery: the North with the West, and the South. Abraham Lincoln addresses the protection of the South from the effects of the Emancipation Proclamation and near-future laws, but destroys the striving enslavement in the West and South; the two locations in the country fight against slavery to shield the stable economy, and the South protects theirs (or try to).
Tuesday, February 21, 2012
Tuesday, February 7, 2012
Heading Toward the Civil War and Reconstruction (1845-1877)
James Polk, a "war hawk" as a young man and a Democrat expansionist, was pitted against the Whig leader Henry Clay in the election of 1844. James was an expansionist because he wanted to expand the Northwestern border deep in Canadian territory. Polk won the election, thus making President Tyler to propose the annexation of Texas because he thought James Polk would mandate for annexation with his victory. Polk negotiated the American-Canadian border with reasoning. Great Britain signed the Oregon Treaty in 1846 to allow the United States to acquire Oregon, Washington, without the need for conflict/war. Polk tried buying the Southwest territory from Mexico, but failed to do so. Polk provoked the attack on American troops by Mexico, and Mexico was already provoked by the annexation of Texas. Congress granted the ability to James Polk to wage war in 1846: the Mexican-American War. Whigs members questioned the declaration of war, and if Mexico fired first.
Many Americans did not support the war because they feared that the new intact states of the West would become slave states. Some opponents thought that James Polk supported slaveholders because he declared war to gain the states, and some Americans believed that some slave owners had control over the government. These rich Southerners were defined as Slave Power by abolitionists; a symbol.
The gag rule of 1836, which forbids members of the legislative or decision-making body to raise topics or to consider discussions, raised suspicions of Slave Power. The Wilmot Proviso, a bill that prohibited the expansion of slavery to the new states that were to be gained, was not passed, and thus raised further suspicion. The decline of the bill caused the Free-Soil Party to be formed. The Free-Soil Party was a party that focused on the issues discussed in the Wilmot Proviso, and looked forward to fulfill what the bill meant to accomplish. Southerners were still insistent that the extension of slavery in the South should not be restricted.
The Mexican-American War had the United States winning because troops were taking over Texas, sent to California, and then tasked to invade Mexico City. The Treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo (1848) gave up the Southwest that belonged to Mexico, such as Arizona, New Mexico, California, Nevada, and Utah. The new territory increased the wealth of the United States, but slavery was still a problem. The Democrats supported the South, and displayed that slavery would be allowed to be extended. Popular sovereignty would solve the issue on the decision of slavery status on the new states. Popular sovereignty meant that the territories would decide by vote, whether to refuse or allow slavery. The Whigs did not oppose slavery, so the party was divided into sections that favored or declined slavery. The Antislavery Whigs joined the Free-Soil Party. The Whigs won the presidential election of 1848 by running Zachary Taylor. The powerful Whigs leaders, Daniel Webster and Henry Clay, died before the election of 1852, marking the descent of the Whigs party. The Republican party was to rise.
Many Americans did not support the war because they feared that the new intact states of the West would become slave states. Some opponents thought that James Polk supported slaveholders because he declared war to gain the states, and some Americans believed that some slave owners had control over the government. These rich Southerners were defined as Slave Power by abolitionists; a symbol.
The gag rule of 1836, which forbids members of the legislative or decision-making body to raise topics or to consider discussions, raised suspicions of Slave Power. The Wilmot Proviso, a bill that prohibited the expansion of slavery to the new states that were to be gained, was not passed, and thus raised further suspicion. The decline of the bill caused the Free-Soil Party to be formed. The Free-Soil Party was a party that focused on the issues discussed in the Wilmot Proviso, and looked forward to fulfill what the bill meant to accomplish. Southerners were still insistent that the extension of slavery in the South should not be restricted.
The Mexican-American War had the United States winning because troops were taking over Texas, sent to California, and then tasked to invade Mexico City. The Treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo (1848) gave up the Southwest that belonged to Mexico, such as Arizona, New Mexico, California, Nevada, and Utah. The new territory increased the wealth of the United States, but slavery was still a problem. The Democrats supported the South, and displayed that slavery would be allowed to be extended. Popular sovereignty would solve the issue on the decision of slavery status on the new states. Popular sovereignty meant that the territories would decide by vote, whether to refuse or allow slavery. The Whigs did not oppose slavery, so the party was divided into sections that favored or declined slavery. The Antislavery Whigs joined the Free-Soil Party. The Whigs won the presidential election of 1848 by running Zachary Taylor. The powerful Whigs leaders, Daniel Webster and Henry Clay, died before the election of 1852, marking the descent of the Whigs party. The Republican party was to rise.
Thursday, January 12, 2012
Eric Foner Chapter 12 Review
- Explore why Americans had an impulse to improve American society in the first half of the nineteenth century.
- Explain the significance of the abolitionist movement to the idea of American freedom.
- Analyze the pros and cons of the colonization movement and why many blacks were opposed to it.
- Why was this a period of institution building?
- How did the abolitionist movement and the women's movement influence each other?
Saturday, January 7, 2012
Eric Foner Chapter 11 Review
- Explain how important slavery was to the national economy and the emergence of the United States as a great power?
Slaves worked in cotton plantations, and cotton became greater than sugar when it came to crops. The more slaves there were, the more cotton there was, and the more cotton was bought by other countries. This would increase the United States' economy and make it succeed into a great power worldwide.
- Describe slave culture, explaining the similarities and differences among various regions.
Most slaves came from Africa, and it is the place where their religion, and most notably music, emerged. The medicine they provided to their people came naturally, and was known only amongst each of the slaves.
- Why did many white southerners support slavery even when they did not actually own any slaves?
Even though white southerners did not own any slaves, they heavily relied on them because their goal was freedom and the strengthening of their economy. Without the slaves, they were nothing!
- What meanings of freedom were most important to the slaves?
The slaves that were now freed were restricted from nearly everything and everything. They hoped for the right to vote, to own property, or a right that would truly present their freedom in the country.
- What forms of slave resistance were practiced in the American South?
Slave resistance was a form of rebellion. Slaves would tend to deplete or destroy the property of their owners such as plantation products. Slaves were able to rebel physically, if not, violently. Nat Turner’s Rebellion is notable for the slaves killing their masters or oppressors. The overpowering of the Amistad's crew was another rebellion.
Eric Foner Chapter 10 Review
- How did John Quincy Adams envision the United States becoming the “freest and mightiest nation in the world”?
- How did democrats and Whigs differ in their understanding of American freedom and its relationship to governmental power?
- What were the main arguments for and against Indian removal?
- How did the Missouri Compromise and the nullification crisis demonstrate increasing sectional differences in antebellum America?
Eric Foner Chapter 9 Review
- What were the major social effects of the market revolution?
- How did ideas of American freedom change in this period?
- What revolutionary changed did American slavery undergo in this period?
- What role did immigration play in the market revolution?
- The Second Great Awakening both took advantage of the market revolution and criticized its excesses. Explain this statement.
Princeton Review Chapter 10
The shift in presidential elections began in 1824 when John Quincy Adams progressed to his presidency. The congressional caucuses chose the party's nominee that would lead to the next president during the election of 1824. However, when the Democratic-Republican caucus chose the nominee William H. Crawford, John Quincy Adams, Henry Clay, Andrew Jackson, and many other nominees challenged the nomination, and resulted in the demise of the caucus system because it was accused of being "undemocratic". John Quincy Adams was given victory but then it was removed when the Speaker of the House of Clay did not support him due to his "corrupt bargain", as quoted by the opponents of the caucus system and the Speaker's choice.
After Adam's presidency, Andrew Jackson assembled a network with people to assure that he would receive wide population for his campaign. The Democratic party we have today results in the rallying of political organizations, newspaper publishers, and community leaders. The war between Jackson and Adams soon flared when Jackson accused Adams of being a "corrupt career politician" while Adams shot back by releasing the Coffin Handbill, which accused Jackson of murdering his men that were enlisted during the Indian Wars. During the Jacksonian democracy, the benefits to the government were coming from the universal white manhood suffrage, which is the extension of voting rights to all white males, even if they did not own property or had their limits.
Jackson's policy has not received more criticism by modern scholars than his treatment to the Cherokees by passing the Indian Removal Act through Congress in 1830. The Indians were still treated the same and no treaties were made, especially in the aftermath of the French and Indian War.
President Andrew Jackson was focused on nullification, which is the right of individual states to disobey federal laws that are found unconstitutional. The judicial review is a review of legislative and executive actions. Americans began rebelling against the Tariff of 1828, but Jackson believed in the states' rights and decided to send troops to thwart the rebels. Jackson vetoed the Second Bank of the United States, and eventually caused the Panic of 1837.
After Adam's presidency, Andrew Jackson assembled a network with people to assure that he would receive wide population for his campaign. The Democratic party we have today results in the rallying of political organizations, newspaper publishers, and community leaders. The war between Jackson and Adams soon flared when Jackson accused Adams of being a "corrupt career politician" while Adams shot back by releasing the Coffin Handbill, which accused Jackson of murdering his men that were enlisted during the Indian Wars. During the Jacksonian democracy, the benefits to the government were coming from the universal white manhood suffrage, which is the extension of voting rights to all white males, even if they did not own property or had their limits.
Jackson's policy has not received more criticism by modern scholars than his treatment to the Cherokees by passing the Indian Removal Act through Congress in 1830. The Indians were still treated the same and no treaties were made, especially in the aftermath of the French and Indian War.
President Andrew Jackson was focused on nullification, which is the right of individual states to disobey federal laws that are found unconstitutional. The judicial review is a review of legislative and executive actions. Americans began rebelling against the Tariff of 1828, but Jackson believed in the states' rights and decided to send troops to thwart the rebels. Jackson vetoed the Second Bank of the United States, and eventually caused the Panic of 1837.
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