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The Impending Crisis

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Saved by Mr. Hengsterman
on December 1, 2013 at 11:11:38 pm
 

 

The Impending Crisis of the Union
1854 to 1860

 

 

Context: In March 1857, the Supreme Court rules that Dred Scott is not a citizen because of his race. The decision goes even further, stating Congress has no authority to exclude slavery from any part of the nation or its territories. The Missouri  Compromise is therefore ruled unconstitutional

 

 

"A Hell of a Storm"   The Impending Crisis of the Union, 1855-59
For years South Carolina had talked about secession (1830’s Tariff issue). Talk of

secession had become a perpetual threat…. The tide begins to shift  because of a  clash of interests (between 1820-1854)  abolition of slavery vs. territorial expansion - Remember the  word is  COMPROMISE

 

 

1854 

Kansas Nebraska Act 

1854

Ostend Manifesto

1855-56 

Bleeding Kansas – a warm-up for the Civil War (John Brown Part I) 

1857 

Dred Scott – the worst Supreme Court case ever!!!

 

Video #2 The Dred Scott Case

1858 

Lincoln -Douglass Debates 

1859 

The Harpers Ferry Raid ((John Brown Part II) 

 

 

Slavery’s Big VictoryIn the 1857 Dred Scott case. The Supreme Court sowed the seeds of war

A slave, Dred Scott sued for his freedom on the ground that his master, an Army surgeon, had taken him into Illinois and then the Wisconsin Territory, where slavery had been barred by Congress in the Missouri Compromise. The Court, whose majority decision was read by Chief Justice Roger B. Taney, ruled that the Missouri Compromise was unconstitutional because it violated the property rights protected by the Fifth Amendment, since it denied slave owners the right to take their property wherever they wanted to. In effect, this decision opened all the West to slavery, infuriated the North, and pushed the nation more precipitously toward civil war.

Tragic Prelude

 

 

 John Brown: Domestic Terrorist or National Hero?

 

 

 

 

 

“Now, if it is deemed necessary that I should forfeit my life for the furtherance of the ends of justice, and mingle my bloodfurther with the blood of my children and with the blood of millions in this slave country whose rights are disregarded by wicked, cruel, and unjust enactments, I say, let it be done.”   John Brown

 

 

 

His legacy is as unsettling today as it was 150 years ago, when he was hanged at the gallows for treason. While John Brown's anti-slavery crusade is seen as a moral cause, his violent tactics--which culminated in a failed raid on Harpers Ferry in which no slaves were freed but many people died--is decidedly less celebrated. In history books, Brown is often portrayed as a mentally unstable religious fanatic, but on the anniversary of his execution, columnists are painting a different picture. They argue that Brown proves it possible to be both a domestic terrorist and national hero. Why John Brown's legacy is more relevant and complex than previously imagined:

 

 

A National Hero  In The New York Times, David S. Reynolds says few American heroes are purely righteous, including Andrew Jackson and Abraham Lincoln. "It's important for Americans to recognize our national heroes, even those who have been despised by history." Reynolds wants Brown to be officially pardoned. And, "unlike nearly all other Americans of his era, John Brown did not have a shred of racism," Reynolds writes. "He had long lived among African-Americans, trying to help them make a living, and he wanted blacks to be quickly integrated into American society. When Brown was told he could have a clergyman to accompany him to the gallows, he refused, saying he would be more honored to go with a slave woman and her children."

 

When Terrorism Causes War  In The New York Times, Tony Horowitz says that "in 1859, John Brown sought not only to free slaves in Virginia but to terrorize the South and incite a broad conflict. In this he triumphed: panicked whites soon mobilized, militarized and marched double-quick toward secession. Brown’s raid didn’t cause the Civil War, but it was certainly a catalyst." Brown, he writes, may have lessons for today's war against terrorism. "It may be too early to say if 9/11 bred a similar overreaction. But last night President Obama vowed to increase our efforts in Afghanistan — one of two wars that, eight years on, have killed nearly twice as many Americans as the hijacked planes."

 

Ghandi Wasn't That Popular Either  At The Guardian, Rebecca Solnit reminds her readers that changing the world can be a lonely task. And those we consider to be "fanatics" today, we may consider "heroes" tomorrow. "Though it's popular to think the world gets changed by delightful people, a lot of the saints and agents of change are obsessive, intransigent, unreasonable, and demanding, of themselves and of us," she writes. "That's what it generally takes to change the world."

 

Fanaticism Is Wrong. Period.  The Guardian's Julian Baggini says John Brown may have been an example of a fanatic with a good cause, but his tactics were wrong nonetheless. "The rightness of the cause does not in any way negate the wrongness of the fanaticism. We should condemn the blind dedication even of those whose objectives we share."

 

John Brown, Dismissed at Our Own Peril  Historian David Blight of The History News Network says writing off Brown as just a fanatic keeps us "comfortable with our prejudices and our desires" about the history of race in America. He says Brown should unsettle us. "John Brown should confound and trouble us. Martyrs are made by history; people choose their martyrs just as we choose to define good and evil.  And we will be forever making and unmaking John Brown as Americans face not only their own racial past, but the ever changing reputation of violence in the present."

 

A Seminal American Figure  At The Hartford Courant, William Hosley says Brown is a pivotal figure in American history, regardless of how we feel about him. "Aside from Abraham Lincoln, no individual and few events led so decidedly to the Civil War. Brown transformed a stalemate on race, law and American values in a way that made Southern succession, civil war and the election of Lincoln inevitable."

 

John Brown supplemental reading omits (Complete a Google search to find articles)
Freedom's Martyr David S. Reynolds, The New York Times; 
The 9/11 of 1859 Tony Horowitz, The New York Times;
Fanaticism Is Wrong Julian Baggini, The Guardian ; 
Confronting John Brown David Blight, The History News Network

 

 

 

 

DBQ Wiki Activity: Manifest Destiny, Slavery, and the Breakdown of the Union

 

QUESTION: “Assess how Manifest Destiny in combination with the slavery issue contributed to secession and Civil War”

 

 

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