What were the causes of the Civil War Was the Civil War preventable Give an argument why or why not WARMUP Lincoln and the start of the Civil War He was what Beethoven was in music Dante in poetry Raphael in painting the Christ in the philosophy of life ID: 770703
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What were the causes of the Civil War?Was the Civil War preventable? Give an argument why or why not. WARM-UP
Lincoln and the start of the Civil War
«He was what Beethoven was in music, Dante in poetry, Raphael in painting, the Christ in the philosophy of life… » Leo Tolstoy
Born February 12th, 1809In a log cabin near Hodgenville, KentuckySon of Thomas and Nancy Hanks LincolnMoved to Indiana at age 7Mother dies in 1818 from milk sicknessFather remarries to Sarah Bush Johnston The Early Years
Lincoln loved to readPreferred reading to working in the fieldsLed to difficult relationship with his fatherBorrowed books from neighbors
The Lincolns moved again in 1830Illinois Lived in New Salem, Illinois until 1837Worked odd jobs – store clerk, surveying, and postmasterImpressed residents with his characterEarned nickname “Honest Abe”
Henry Clay was Kentucky's most prominent nineteenth-century politician. He was Abraham Lincoln's political idol.
Lincoln and His FamilyMet Mary Todd in Springfield, IL in 1839Married her in 1842Next eleven years 4 childrenRobert, Edward, William (Willie), and Thomas (Tad)
The Lincoln Family
Abraham Lincoln's wife, Mary Todd Lincoln, was from Lexington, Kentucky. She was one of the best-educated women of her era, and her support, encouragement, and vast political knowledge helped Lincoln become our nation's sixteenth president.
Lincoln reportedly wept when his brother-in-law, Ben Hardin Helm, was killed while fighting for the Confederacy. Lincoln's family, like the nation, was divided during the Civil War.
Mary Todd Lincoln
Lincoln in Politics
1832 – Lincoln unsuccessful in run for Illinois legislature1834, 1836, 1838, 1840 – won these races for Illinois legislatureMember of the Whig party (remained a Whig until 1856)Studied law in spare time, became lawyer in 1836 Serving the State of Illinois
“The probability that we may fall in the struggle ought not to deter us from the support of a cause we believe to be just; it shall not deter me.”Speech on the Sub-Treasury, IL House of Representatives 12-26-1839
1846 – Lincoln elected to the House of RepresentativesOpposed the Mexican WarOpposed slaveryAfter his term was over, he returned to Illinois to practice lawCongress
Washington Cont’d Made unsuccessful attempt for seat in the Senate in 1854 1856 – received support for Republican Vice-Presidential nomination Opposed the Dred Scott decision
The Rise of Abraham Lincoln
1858 – Lincoln challenges Stephen Douglas (Compromise of 1850) for Illinois US Senate seatDebated SlaveryLincoln-Douglas Debates
Issues and IdeasStephen Douglas“The Little Giant”5’ 1” tallFreeport Doctrine – slavery decided by popular sovereignty Slavery was not morally wrong Abraham Lincoln Little known lawyer Abolitionist 6’ 4” tall Slavery was morally wrong
Issues of the Debates 1. Expansion of slavery 2. Popular sovereignty 3. Dred Scott decision 4. Freeport Doctrine 5. African-American Citizenship
“A house divided against itself cannot stand. I believe this government cannot endure permanently half-slave and half-free. I do not expect the Union to be dissolved – I do not expect the house to fall – but I do expect it will cease to be divided. It will become all the one thing or all the other.”House Divided Speech in Springfield, IL 3-4-1858
Lincoln is thrust into the national spotlight as a abolitionist leaderLeading RepublicanImportance
4 Major Candidates (including Lincoln)Election of 1860 John Breckinridge (KY) – Southern Democrat Stephen Douglas (IL) – Northern Democrat Sen. John Bell (TN) – Constitutional Unionists (Whigs)
Abraham Lincoln, IL—turned out had strongest hand: was former anti-slavery Whig in a party full of thesehad reputation as a moderate had opposed Know Nothings had reputation for integrity and honesty embodied ideology of upward mobility came from crucial state ELECTION OF 1860—REPUBLICANS
Nominate Abraham Lincoln (R – Illinois)Republicans
ELECTION OF 1860Unique in American history because came down to two separate races: Lincoln vs. Douglas in the North and Breckinridge vs. Bell in the South in 10 southern states, Lincoln did not even have a ticket and in 5 remaining slave states received 4% of popular vote Lincoln won by carrying northern states plus OR and CA—purely sectional victory with less than 40% of popular vote
Results of 1860 Election
Lincoln Presidential Advertisements
Photograph showing March 4, 1861 inauguration of Abraham Lincoln in front of U.S. Capitol, which was undergoing construction
Southern Response
The South Secedes
Leave the UnionSouthern State Legislatures vote to pass “Articles of Secession”7 states secede before Lincoln’s Inauguration12/20/1860 – SC 1/9/1861 – MS 1/10/1861 – FL 1/11/1861 – AL 1/19/1861 – GA 1/26/1861 – LA 2/1/1861 – TX 3/4/1861 – Lincoln is Inaugurated What is secession?
On December 20, 1860, South Carolina became the first state to secede. They were followed by Mississippi, Florida, Alabama, Georgia, Louisiana, and Texas. The eleven states that had seceded formed the Confederate States of America. They named Jefferson Davis as president. They wrote a new Constitution which made slavery legal. Confederate States of America
The Confederate States of America (CSA or Confederacy)
Government similar to the UnionConstitution nearly identical, except:State SovereigntySlavery as a right of whitesPresident limited to one six year termPresident had “Line-Item” veto CSA Organization
Army of N. Virginia Battle Flag. Became the symbol of Confederacy and included all states in it as stars. Question: What does this flag represent to you?
The President and VP Jefferson Davis Alexander Stephens
Jefferson Davis, the President of the Confederacy, was also born in Kentucky. Before the Civil War, he was a planter, soldier, politician, and U.S. Secretary of War. He died in 1889.
Advantages NorthFactoriesPopulationRailroads (70%) Telegraph Money Navy South Great Leaders (Robert E. Lee, “Stonewall” Jackson) Home Field Advantage Southerner’s believed in the cause Defensive War Indian Tribes Did not have to win, only tie Cotton and Tobacco
Increased SectionalismTariffs State’s Rights Preservation of the Union Westward Movement Slavery Election of 1860 Causes of the Civil War
Was the Civil War about slavery? Why or why not?How did the election of 1860 lead to the separation of the South from the North?Wrap-up