Friday Nov. 13 Flashcards

1
Q

Things for quiz (Monday)

A

Mexican War

Second Great Awakening

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2
Q

Options

A

Gradual v. immediate emancipation
-gradual
immediate emancipation
shock, change in society; people don’t like drastic change.
(Ex. Obamacare, women suffrage)
polarized society; one group wants slavery- other doesn’t
This is how the civil war is brought upon.
moral issue= dealt with immediately

Compensation?
-constitutional private property that americans hold onto

Colonization?
-slaves are free, how is society going to function
-people though blacks and white could not live together.
-set up foundation;
American colonization society (1817)
-black and whites cannot live together
lead to founding Liberia 
which they moved to 
North of free; but how free?; 

Extreme v. moderate
-extreme views quiet anyone who is moderate
America is becoming divided.

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3
Q

Background of Abolition

A

The slave trade and abolition movements

  • international movement; neighbor does it, you should too
  • Britain abolishes slave trade
  • eventually slavery in general
  • France as well after French revolution
  • colonies in the Caribbean making lots of money; allowed it -(Ex. Ethics vs. money)
  • ship surgeons handbooks with print culture IMPORTANT
  • Ex (disease make people blind; crew can’t see- slaves went through)
  • adopt abolition

The Second Great Awakening
-Revivals
-Charles Finney (1830-1831 moves west) (God doesn’t choose you; you choose God) direct pushback of the enlightenment
-He overturned using the message and humans if you have relationship with God you need to show a Godly representation and overturn evil.
-Once society did this, God would return (post millennium)
- godly world didn’t have war, prostitution, slavery, profanity
(Example of people being motivated not based on money)
Rise of social movement

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4
Q

People in Abolitionist movement (Example of equal rights)

A

Benjamin Lundy- The Genius of Universal Emancipation

  • did not believe in slavery
  • goes to baltimore
  • moderate approach, unify,

William Lloyd Garrison- The Liberator

  • Boston
  • not a moderate approach.
  • why slavery should be abolished
  • doesn’t want to be part of a country who encourages it
  • anarchists/radical

Frederick Douglas- The North Star

  • reflecting slaves in south that follow the north star to get to the north.
  • autobiography to endure plantation life
  • thinking about equality, american identity

Seneca Falls Convention (women’s rights 1848)

  • Elizabeth Cady Stanton
  • support abolition movement
  • fight for equality of races, why don’t we do that for gender?
  • New York
  • Decide what rights women need/want
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5
Q

Protections to Slavery

A

States Rights

  • fed gov’t should stay out of it
  • people wanted it=do it

Property Rights
-compensated= were emancipated, would they be payed back?

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6
Q

Vulnerable Aspects of Slavery

A

Slavery in District of Columbia
-could make it a fed issue
-not a state
-slavery was legal
-petition congress to abolish slavery
-Gag Rule( 1836) = have to acknowledge of petition, but they ignored them.
-violated 1st amendment (freedom of speech)
-Fugitive slave law (slave escape, found in free do we return them? YES they are required because they are private property
-Northern states enacted laws:Personal liberty law= against fugitive slave law
-slave catcher could be charged as a kidnapper.
-or not enforce fugitive slave law
How powerful should the fed gov’t be?

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7
Q

Review

A

How did westward expansion impact the issue of slavery and other large themes such as “American Identity”?

  • making money/ethics
  • the environment (nature is seen as products)
  • better life
  • cotton gin
  • sectionalism (America should be unified; agree what America means or what America means to them)

How did the idea of environmental determinism impact the U.S. in the first half of the 1800s?

  • North Vs. South
  • South-agriculture,
  • North had mills (factories on rivers water power, wage workers)
  • Split
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