PERIOD 5: 1844-1877

Chapter 18; “Renewing the Sectional Struggle”(Chapter 19, 11th Edition)

(1848-1854)

The over-arching theme of chapter 19 “Renewing the Sectional Struggle” is that the nation again fell into sectional dispute over slavery and states’ rights.

Learning Objectives – After reading this chapter you should be able to:

  1. …explain how the issue of slavery in the territories acquired from Mexico disrupted American politics from 1848 to 1850.
  2. …point out the major terms of the Compromise of 1850 and indicate how this agreement attempted to deal with the issue of slavery.
  3. …indicate how the Whig party disintegrated and disappeared because of its divisions over slavery.
  4. …describe how the Pierce administration engaged in various pro-southern overseas and expansionist ventures.
  5. …describe Douglas's Kansas-Nebraska Act and explain why it stirred the sectional controversy to new heights.

Identify the Historical Significance of the following –

  1. Lewis Cass
  2. Stephen A. Douglas
  3. Franklin Peirce
  4. Zachary Taylor
  5. John C. Calhoun
  6. Winfield Scott
  7. Martin Van Buren
  8. Daniel Webster
  9. Matthew C. Perry
  10. Harriet Tubman
  11. William H. Seward
  12. James Gadsden
  13. Henry Clay
  14. Millard Fillmore

Define & State the historical significance of the following –

  1. popular sovereignty

Describe & State the historical significance of the following –

  1. Free Soil Party
  2. Fugitive Slave Law
  3. “conscience” Whig
  4. “personal liberty laws”
  5. Underground Railroad
  6. Compromise of 1850
  7. “fire eaters”
  8. Clayton Bulwer Treaty
  9. Seventh of March Speech
  10. Ostend Manifesto
  11. “higher law”
  12. Kansas-Nebraska Act

To build your social science vocabulary, familiarize yourself with the following terms.

self-determination - in politics, the right of a people to assert its own national identity or form of government without outside influence

homestead - a family home or farm with buildings and land sufficient for survival

vigilante - concerning groups that claim to punish crime and maintain order without legal authority to do so

sanctuary - a place of refuge or protection; where people are safe from punishment by the law

fugitive - a person who flees from danger or prosecution

topography - the precise surface features and details of a place---for example, rivers, bridges, hills-in relation to one another

mundane - belonging to this world, as opposed to the spiritual world

statecraft - the art of government leadership

isthmian - concerning a narrow strip of land connecting two larger bodies of land

filibustering - referring to adventurers who conduct a private war against a foreign country

consulate - the office of a foreign - official, usually not the ambassador, appointed to look after his or her country's interests or citizens in a particular place

cloak-and-dagger - concerning the activities of spies or undercover agents, especiallyinvolving elaborate deceptions

leak - to accidentally or deliberately disclose information supposed to be kept secret

booster - one who promotes a person or enterprise, especially in a highly enthusiastic way

truce - a temporary suspension of warfare by agreement of the hostile parties