Topic 11
Territorial Expansion
and
Rising Sectional Tensions
A. Economic Development
1. The North
The Industrial
Revolution takes root and industry blooms: putting out system; shops;
factories
By 1860, NY alone was
producing more industrial goods that all the southern states combined.
Key point:
Only about one southerner in four owned slaves.
And of those who did,
only about 10,000, out of a white population of 5 million, were large planters
who owned 50 or more slaves.
But the planters were
the people who controlled the South politically before the Civil War
governors, members of Congress, state legislators etc. came from this class.
B. Forces at Work in the 1840s
Abolitionists: the strongest opponents of slavery
§
William Lloyd
Garrison and The Liberator
§
Frederick
Douglas and North Star
Underground Railroad One of the things that grew out of the
Abolitionist movement.
§
This was an
informal, secret system of helping runaway slaves escape from their owners in
the South to the northern
§
Name seems to
have originated about in early 1830s when a slave owner lost sight of the slave
he was pursuing. Must have disappeared into an underground road.
§
Runaway slaves
usually traveled at night from point to point getting help from other blacks,
especially northern free blacks. Sometimes even shipped in boxes like freight.
§
Probably best
known conductor was an escaped slave named Harriet Tubman. Is thought that
she made 19 trips back into the South and helped hundred of slaves escape to
freedom.
§
This informal
network of secret routes manned by people trying to help slaves escape to
freedom eventually extended from
§
Perhaps 75,000
slaves escaped from slavery to freedom via the various routes of the
Underground Railroad before the outbreak of the Civil War.
Free-Soilers:
would leave slavery alone where it existed (for the time being) but were
determined to keep slavery out of the new territories of the West.
Earlier southerners had
felt slavery was a necessary evil.
As cotton and slavery
moved west and as northerners (both Abolitionists and Free-Soilers) increased
their attacks, began arguing that slavery was a positive good:
§
Good for the
slaves heathenism in
§
Good for both
races as it enabled them to live together in the same society
§
Good for the
nation slave labor produced cotton and cotton was the nations most important
export.
In addition,
southerners were determined that slavery must have a legal right to exist in
the West. If only free states admitted to the Union, slave states would become
a permanent minority and slavery would be eliminated everywhere.
Remember the bottom
line for the South
the South must have at least an equal voice in the
Senate which meant admitting more slave states in the West in the future.
C. The
1. Facts in Brief
1821
1824 Mexican
government opens
Large numbers of
southerners moved into east
1836 Revolution
breaks out in
April 21 - Battle of
San Jacinto Santa Annas army defeated and Santa Anna signs treaty
recognizing independence of
Jackson and Van Buren
refused to do this.
Upshur-Calhoun Treaty
April 1844
Electoral vote: 170-105
D. The Presidency of James K. Polk
Complicated by the
boundary claims made by Americans
California/New Mexico
question Polk wanted all this territory for the
American claims for
damages About $2 million.
General Zachary Taylor sent
to the mouth of the
John Slidell sent to
Polk increases the
pressure:
While he was making his
way to
Met with Polk on
Friday, May 8 and they agreed that the
Polk wanted the war to
be short as he did not want to build up the reputations of the leading generals
who were all Whigs.
The Army of the North
Zachery Taylor
The Army of the West
Stephen Kearney
The Army of Occupation
Winfield Scott