Unit V Terms Flashcards

1
Q

Nat Turner’s Rebellion

A

Turner was a Virginian slave, was convinced he was a prophet, and became a preacher. Claiming he’s seen a vision of spirits telling him social hierarchy must be reversed, on the 21st August 1831, he and 6 other slaves killed their master and continued on to other houses (w/ 75 slaves). Killed a total of 51 white people.

Many slaves (innocent) accused of participating. South came to fear slaves and justified further brutality. Gave further cause and motivation for the abolitionist cause – fuelled it.

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2
Q

Forms of Resistance to Slavery

A

Forming families – refuge and source of dignity. Religion – focusing on story of exodus and biblical heroes. Learned to read and write. Running away (although sometimes returned). Armed rebellion.

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3
Q

Underground Railroads

A

Very lose, illegal network helping slave runaways to escape to the North. Slaves mostly escaped out of courage and strength, though.

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4
Q

Second Great Awakening

A

Clergy members sought to revive fading religious sentiment. “Camp meetings” movement began. Told the individual that salvation was in their hands – righteous living, self-control and strong moral compass. Cold help create perfect society.

Spoke to women, farmers, merchants (those affected by market revolution).

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5
Q

Charles Finney

A

Was a minister, behind/leader of the Second Great Awakening.

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6
Q

Mormonism

A

Founded by Joseph Smith in 1830. Was murdered.
Encouraged small, insular communities. Unorthodox teaching – no holy trinity, allowed polygamy. Rejected by mainstream Protestants.

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7
Q

Temperance Movement

A

Goal was to limit or ban production of alcoholic beverages. Encouraged self-control. Movement was mainly backed by women (who suffered from verbal and physical abuse by drunk husbands). Formation of the American Temperance Society.

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8
Q

Asylums and Penitentiaries

A

Mentally ill were treated as criminals (often locked up in cells). Main backers were abolitionists (many women), fought for asylums (Dorothea Dix).

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9
Q

Public Education

A

Large campaign in 1840s and 1850s for free public education. Horace Mann was the strongest advocate, served in the House and as Education Secretary in Massachusetts.

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10
Q

Utopian Communities

A

Brook Farm: community where all residents shared labour and leisure equally, started by transcendentalist George Ripley.

Shakers: believed in celibacy, gender equality, started by Mother Ann Lee.

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11
Q

Women’s Rights

A

Lucretia Mott and Elizabeth Stanton: abolitionist activists, barred from anti-slavery convention in London because they were women. Led group of women in the Seneca Falls Convention.

Seneca Falls Convention: raised issue of women’s suffrage, property rights, education, wages, child custody, legal status. Declaration of sentiments (grievances, “all men and women created equal..”)

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12
Q

Transcendentalism

A

Literary Movement: critical of materialist direction the US was taking. Encouraged separation from mainstream society and the cultivation of self.

ie. Nathaniel Hawthorne, Herman Melville.

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13
Q

Romanticism

A

Reaction against the rationalism and empirical thinking of the Enlightenment. Increased emphasis on emotion and perspective of the individual. Reverence for spiritual powers of nature.

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14
Q

Hudson River School

A

Artistic movement comprised of landscape artists. Primary theme was nature – its power and beauty.

ie. Thomas Cole and Asher Durand.

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15
Q

Abolitionism: David Walker

A

Important figure in movement. Wrote pamphlet encouraging slaves’ self-defence, to resist slavery by all means necessary.

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16
Q

Abolitionism: William Lloyd Garrison

A

American Anti-Slavery Society. White abolitionist, advocated immediate, uncompensated abolition of slavery.

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17
Q

Abolitionism: Frederick Douglass

A

Born into slavery, escaped to the North in 1838. Best selling autobiography. Speech to Rockerfeller Anti-Slavery Society (1852).

18
Q

Abolitionism: American Colonisation Society

A

Either thought African Americans should escape racism in the US or should not receive equal treatment. Wanted to make them return to Africa in an America colony.

19
Q

Manifest Destiny

A

American belied in the God-given right and duty to expand westward, spread civilisation.

20
Q

Texas Independence

A

A few Mexicans and many Americans immigrated to Texas. By the 1830s, relationships between Mexican government and American settlers deteriorated. Mexican President sent forces to enforce authority, texans rebelled in 1836 under leadership of Sam Houston. battle of the Alamo – rebels were killed, inspired further pro-independence (“Remember the Alamo!”). Next battle, won independence.

21
Q

Texas Annexation

A

Many Texans wanted to become part of the US, petitioning in 1837. Raised issue over slavery and imbalance of slave v. free states. Pres. Jackson and Van Buren avoided annexation. Independent for 9 years.

22
Q

Oregon: Immigration

A

Until 1830s, only fur trappers were in Oregon territory. Settlers looked to the fertile lands, 1840-60, around 400,000 people travelled the Oregon Trail. Migration put pressure on US and GB to find a solution to boundary dispute.

23
Q

Oregon: Boundary Dispute and Treaty

A

American settlers adopted battle cry: “54º40 or fight!”

Neither side wanted to go to war, 1846 reached agreement on the 49th parallel.

24
Q

California’s Gold Rush

A

Mexican state. Late 1840s, very few Americans. 1848, discovery of Gold created influx of Americans – thousands hurried westwards. Most did not get rich, enslaved Native Americans causing decline (85%) of their population. Influx of Chinese immigrants.

25
Q

Mexican-American War: Causes

A

Annexation of Texas – Mexico threatened war if Texas was annexed. Polk in 1844 wanted to go through with it, and wanted even more Mexican territory. When purchase was declined, Polk sent in troops.

26
Q

Mexican-American War: Results

A

After battle/attack by Mexicans, US accused them of being on US soil and killing US citizens, therefore American tolerance had dissolved. Treaty of Guadalupe-Hidalgo in 1848 ended the war. Rio Grande is the Mexican Border. California and other Northern territories sold to US, Texas is annexed.

27
Q

Wilmo Proviso

A

Cause: Acquisition of Mexican territory, 1846.
Proposed that all territory gained from Mexico shall not have slavery or indentured servitude. Preserve free white labour (never actually passed).
Why? No southerner would ever agree to it (Calhoun said it would destroy the union). Did not search to abolish slavery (was for the Free-Soilers).

Result: Southerners became very defensive of slavery, claiming it was in the Bible and above moral criticism. Claimed 5th Amendment gave them the right to bring slaves to any state. Raised question of state sovereignty.

28
Q

Compromise of 1850

A

Cause:
Failure of Wilmot Proviso. California wanted to be admitted as a free state (which interfered with the Missouri Compromise).
Fugitive State Law of 1793, and the North’s failure to uphold it.
3/5 Compromise in the Constitution, end of slave trade in 1808 (international, not national).

Results:
Fugitive Slave Act more heavily enforced.
Slave trade abolished in district of Columbia.
New Mexico and Utah organised in popular sovereignty.
Texan boundary set as present limit.
California admitted as a free state.
Everyone rushing to new territories to influence the results (slave vs. free).

29
Q

Kansas-Nebraska Act

A

Causes:
Missouri Compromise dismissed, Kansas and Nebraska applying for statehood.
Compromise of 1850.
As issue is debated, Senator Sumner verbally attacks Butler (South Carolina’s Senator), gets beaten over the head with a cane.
South/North see each other as savages, believe compromise is impossible.

Purpose: to determine whether Kansas and Nebraska would be free or slave states.

Results:
Kansas and Nebraska as popular sovereignty. Everyone rushing to Kansas to sway results: “Bleeding Kansas”.
Even less effort by North to uphold the Compromise of 1850.

30
Q

Election of 1852

A

Democratic candidate Franklin Pierce vs. Whig Candidate General Winfield Scott. Whig’s lost, dissolved the party. Pierce was a strong supporter for the Compromise of 1850.

31
Q

Emergence of Republican Party

A

Response to K-N Act, antislavery whigs and democrats, Free soilers and other reformers formed the new party, primarily focused on keeping slavery out of the territories.
Believed slavery was cancer to the republic, won huge victories in 1854 election, captured majority of the Northern House seats.

32
Q

Bleeding Kansas

A

Conflict between Free-soilers/Abolitionists and proslavery southerners sent to defend land for slavery. Proslavery people invaded poles in 1855 to secure legalisation of slavery, Free soilers created secret government in response.

33
Q

Election of 1856

A

Extreme polarisation. Democrats stayed away from nominees with views on territory that would draw controversy, nominated James Buchanan, won due to southern support.

Republicans nominated Frémont, won majority of Free states, Know-Nothings fell apart after this election.

34
Q

Dred Scott

A

Cause: State sovereignty, 5th Amendment. Dred Scott sued for freedom, had lived in free states w/ master, so argued he should be free.

Purpose/Question: Was he a US citizen and entitled to sue in a federal court? Did living in a free state make him free? Did Congress have power to prohibit or promote slavery?

Result: North was outraged, passed personal liberty acts in direct violation of federal law (Fugitive Slave Act). North believed the decision disregarded state’s rights, threatened white labour. South believed it was only right, all blacks are entitled to and designed for nothing but slavery.

35
Q

Election of 1860

A

Partisan fury. Democratic Convention of 1860 resulted in split of the party between North and South. John Brown’s raid, increasing distrust and suspicion of conspiracies. All previous compromises lead to this election.
Would determine the future of the country. South would secede if Lincoln won. North said it is time to stop being ruled by the minority (the South), should not accept threats.

Lincoln wins. South Carolina immediately secedes.

36
Q

Secession

A

Winter of 1860-61, Senator of Kentucky proposed the two sections divide the territories between them at Missouri Compromise Line. Lincoln ruled it out, so effort failed.

S.C passed ordinance of secession, union dissolved. Most secessionists were slave holders. First states to secede were in the Deep South. Deeply divided sentiment in the Upper South.

37
Q

Fort Sumter

A

April 1861, Charleston Harbour, Lincoln was sending supplies to the fort, Montgomery government chose to attack the fort. After two days of heavy bombing, federal garrison surrendered. Beginning of the Civil War.

38
Q

Uncle Tom’s Cabin

A

Harriet Beecher Stowe
Conveyed agonies faced by slave families, the evil effects on slaveholders and complicity of northerners. Hugely popular, white southerners felt very threatened by it.

39
Q

John Brown’s Raid

A

1859, Brown raised religious, in an anti-slavery family, believed in “eye for an eye” justice.

October 1859, led a band of 18 whites and free blacks in an attack on federal arsenal in Virginia, hoping to trigger a slave rebellion. Failed. Had received financial backing from abolitionists, Southern outrage intensified.

40
Q

Political Parties

A

Whigs: southern “cotton” whigs who drifted to Dem. Party, northern whigs drifted to new parties.

American Party: nativist party based on opposition to immigration, pro temperance, absorbed into Republican Party after 1856.

Free-Soil Party: not abolitionist but anti-expansion of slavery in territories. Lost support in 1852 when candidate refuted the 1850 Compromise.

Republican Party: Free labour, opposed to extension of slavery, middle ground. By 1860, decidedly opposed to slavery.

41
Q

Democrats vs. Republicans

A

Repub.: opposed slavery, favoured homestead act, protective tariffs and transportation improvements.

Dem.: Northern Dems. opposed Congressional interference with slavery. Southern Dems. appealed to racism, argued that society would collapse without the inferiority of slaves.