Chapter 18 Flashcards
Harriet Beecher Stowe’s widely read novel that dramatized the horrors of slavery. It heightened northern support for abolition and escalated the sectional conflict.
Uncle Tom’s Cabin
Antislavery tract, written by white southerner Hinton R. Helper, arguing that nonslaveholding whites actually suffered most in a slave economy.
The Impending Crisis of the South
Organization created to facilitate the migration of free laborers to Kansas in order to prevent the establishment of slavery in the territory.
New England Emigrant Aid Company
Proposed Kansas constitution, whose ratification was unfairly rigged so as to guarantee slavery in the territory. Initially ratified by proslavery forces, it was later voted down when Congress required that the entire constitution be put up for a vote.
Lecompton Constitution
Civil war in Kansas over the issue of slavery in the territory, fought intermittently until 1861, when it merged with the wider national Civil War.
Bleeding Kansas
Supreme Court decision that extended federal protection to slavery by ruling that Congress did not have the power to prohibit slavery in any territory. Also declared that slaves, as property, were not citizens of the United States.
Dred Scott v. Stanford
Financial crash brought on by gold-fueled inflation, overspeculation, and excess grain production. Raised calls in the North for higher tariffs and for free homesteads on western public lands.
panic of 1857
Lowered duties on imports in response to a high Treasury surplus and pressure from southern farmers.
Tariff of 1857
Series of debates between Abraham Lincoln and Stephen Douglas during the U.S. Senate race in Illinois. Douglas won the election, but Lincoln gained national prominence and emerged as the leading candidate for the 1860 Republican nomination.
Lincoln-Douglas debates
Raised during one of the Lincoln-Douglas debates by Abraham Lincoln, who asked whether the Court or the people should decide the future of slavery in the territories.
Freeport question
Declared that since slavery could not exist without laws to protect it, territorial legislatures, not the Supreme Court, would have the final say on the slavery question. First argued by Stephen Douglas in 1858 in response to Abraham Lincoln’s “Freeport question.”
Freeport Doctrine
Federal arsenal in Virginia seized by abolitionist John Brown in 1859. Though Brown was later captured and executed, his raid alarmed southerners, who believed that northerners shared in Brown’s extremism.
Harpers Fery
Formed by moderate Whigs and Know-Nothings in an effort to elect a compromise candidate and avert a sectional crisis.
Constitutional Union party
Failed constitutional amendments that would have given federal protection for slavery in all territories south of 36°30′ where slavery was supported by popular sovereignty. Proposed in an attempt to appease the South.
Crittenden amendments
Government established after seven southern states seceded from the Union. Later joined by four more states from the upper South.
Confederate States of America