Episode 13

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Published on:

1st Aug 2025

S1E13 Sectional Crisis: Compromise, “Bleeding Kansas” & Prelude to Civil War | American Yawp Chapter 13 Explained

In Episode 13 of Star-Spangled Studies, Dr. G unpacks The American Yawp Chapter 13—how the 1850s sectional crisis shattered the Union. Key topics include:

• Senate caning of Charles Sumner & breakdown of debate

• Compromise of 1850 and the Fugitive Slave Act

• Uncle Tom’s Cabin’s moral impact

• Kansas–Nebraska Act, popular sovereignty & “Bleeding Kansas”

• Rise of the Republican Party

• Dred Scott decision’s political earthquake

• John Brown’s raid at Harpers Ferry

• 1860 election: four-way split & Lincoln’s sectional victory


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Transcript
Speaker:

Hello, y'all.

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It's me.

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It's me.

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It's Dr.

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G.

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Welcome back to Star-Spangled Studies.

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The date is May 22nd, 1856.

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The place.

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The floor of the United States Senate.

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A chamber supposedly dedicated

to reason debate Massachusetts.

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Senator Charles Sumner, a staunch

abolitionist is at his desk

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signing copies of his recent

speech, the Crime Against Kansas.

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He had viciously attacked the institution

of slavery and its defenders, including

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Senator Andrew Butler of South Carolina.

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Suddenly a figure looms over him.

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It's Representative Preston

Brooks, Senator Butler's, kinsman

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Brooks' voice is low and steady.

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Quote, Mr.

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Sumner, I have read your

speech twice over carefully.

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It is a liable on South Carolina and Mr.

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Butler, who is a relative of

mine before Sumner can react,

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Brooks raises a thick gutta per.

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Came with a heavy gold head

and he brings it down with full

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force on Sumner's skull again.

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Then again, blinded by his own blood

Sumner struggles to rise his long legs

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trapped beneath his desk, which is

bolted to the floor with a mighty roar.

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He rips the desk from its iron

mooring, staggers into the aisle,

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but the beating doesn't stop.

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Brooks continues to rain down, blows

the cane shattering into splinters

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until Sumner collapses unconscious and

bleeding profusely on the Senate floor.

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Brooks would later boast of delivering

quote, about 31st rate stripes.

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End quote.

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Stunned onlookers, including other

southern congressmen who blocked anyone

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from intervening, simply watched the

savage Assault was more than a personal

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vendetta, which it was, but it was a

symbol of what the nation had become.

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It represented as one historian put it.

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The breakdown of reason discourse.

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How did the United States, a nation

founded on ideals of liberty and debate

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arrive at a point where political

differences were settled with a

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cane on the floors of the Senate?

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This brings us to one of the great

debates among historians of the Civil

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War was this conflict as New York Senator

Williams Seward famously declared.

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An irrepressible conflict between two

societies, so fundamentally different.

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That war was inevitable, or was

it as a later group of revisionist

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Historians like James C.

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Randall and Al and Avery Craven argued

a Repressible conflict, a needless

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war brought on by a blundering

generation of extremist politicians

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who failed to find compromise

that could have saved the union.

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Today we will explore the questions

by examining the decade long fuse,

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that 1850s decade that was lit by

compromise and it ended in war.

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So let's go.

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So how did we get here?

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Well, we've seen throughout this entire

course how we've got here, obviously,

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but today's story is actually gonna

gin not with violence, but in:

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with an attempt to avoid violence.

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The union that by 1850 was in peril.

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The vast territory acquired from

Mexico had thrown the nation into a

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crisis over the future of slavery.

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California, like we mentioned last

episode was flooded now with settlers

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from the Gold Rush in California.

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Now that it had the population of

necessary to do so was demanding

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admission as a state and a free

state, and once again threaten to

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shatter the delicate balance of power

between north and south in the Senate.

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Into this breach stepped the giants

of a fading political generation.

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At the center was Henry Clay of

Kentucky, the aging great compromiser,

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who rose to offer one last grand

bargain to save the nation.

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It is a work of mutual concession.

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A work in which for the sake of peace

and Concord one party abates his extreme

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demands and consideration of an abatement

of extreme demands by the other party.

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Let us discard all

resentment, all passions.

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Let us go to the altar of our country

and swear as the oath was taken of

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Old that we will preserve her union.

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End quote.

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Clay's plea for unity was met

with a grim prophecy, John C.

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Calhoun of South Carolina, so frail

at this point from tuberculosis that

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he had to have his speech read by a

colleague delivered a haunting warning.

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The North's relentless attacks

on slavery he argued had already

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destroyed the union's equilibrium.

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I have senators believe from

the first that the agitation of

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the subject of slavery would.

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If not prevented by some

timely and effective measure.

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End in Disunion.

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Entertaining this opinion I have on

all proper occasions endeavor to call

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the attention of both the two great

parties, but without success, the

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agitation has been permitted to proceed

until it can no longer be disguised

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or denied that the union is in danger.

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End quote, slavery in his other words.

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Breaking the union out of this crucible

of hope and despair emerged The great

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compromise of 1850 and Great is in

quotation marks and is definitely

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was not that it wasn't a single

bill, but it was a package of five

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separate laws cleverly steered through

Congress by the rising political

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star Stephen Douglas of Illinois.

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It was a classic political bargain

with something for everybody.

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To put it very plainly, California

becomes admitted as a free

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state popular sovereignty.

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The will of the people would determine

whether or not new territories when

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applying for statehood could become

free or slave states, and this was

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to be used in Utah and New Mexico.

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It set Texas's boundaries while

also settling its debt that it

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had assumed during the wars.

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The slave trade was also banned in

Washington DC but the most contentious

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part of this, this compromise

contained what historian David Potter

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has argued was the poison chalice,

the one piece of the bargain that

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the South demanded above all others.

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A new draconian fugitive slave

Act would provide and prove to

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be the very thing that made this

compromise unsustainable long term.

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This new fugitive slave law was

breathtaking in its severity.

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It denied accused fugitives the right

to a jury trial or even to testify in

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their own defense, federal commissioners

were paid more for returning a person

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to slavery than for setting them free.

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That could be a problem, as I'm

sure you can see, maybe most

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explosively, it demanded that all

citizens, including northerners.

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Were by law required to actively assist

in the capture of his alleged runaways.

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Any person found not assisting or

impeding on the capture of runaway or

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alleged runaway slaves was fined with

heavy fines and even prison sentences,

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even if you just aided in their escape.

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The South had demanded this law to secure

what it called its property rights, a key

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condition for them to remain in the union.

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Yet its enforcement had a profoundly

radicalizing effect on the north.

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It dragged the reality of slavery.

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For many northerners had been a

distant, abstract institution.

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Into their neighborhoods,

into their town squares.

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The site of federal marshals seizing

people, some of whom have lived as free

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members of their communities for years

and sending them back to the south.

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Without due process turned many moderates

into staunch opponents of the slave power.

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Northern states passed what they

called personal liberty laws to

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obstruct the Federal Act, which

in turn convinced southerners that

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the North would never honor, honor

its constitutional obligations.

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The very measured to secure

the union became the most

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powerful force driving it apart.

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Northerners were exercising what

they called state's rights to not

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enforce the Fugitive Slave Act.

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Southerners became so upset at this

that they demanded that the federal

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government enforce the Fugitive Slave

Act against the will of the Northerners.

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An irony.

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Not lost on Northerners when Southern

States said that they were defending

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their state's rights to slavery.

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If a law demanded you violate your

conscience, would you obey it?

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The Fugitive Slave Act forced that

estion upon the North, and in:

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a novel written by a minister's wife,

Harriet Beecher STO, turned that political

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question into a national moral crisis.

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She wrote the book, uncle Tom's

Cabin, and this wasn't just a

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book, it was a cultural earthquake.

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It sold over 300,000

copies in its first year.

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The novels power lay in its

ability to move the debate

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from the halls of congress.

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Into the hearts of its readers.

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It personalized the horrors of slavery.

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It focused on the emotional traumas

of family separation, the conflict

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between human law and God's law.

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This is captured perfectly in the

scene where the wife of a Senator, Mrs.

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Bird, learns of the Fugitive Slave Act.

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Her husband just voted for quote, you

ought to be ashamed, John Poor homeless.

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Houseless creatures.

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It is shameful, wicked abominable law.

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And I'll break it for one.

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The first time I get a chance,

and I hope I have a chance, I do

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end quote this sentiment that Mrs.

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Bird said, this higher moral

law that trumped the laws of

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the state electrified the north.

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It terrified.

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The South STOs novel reframe

slavery not as a political issue

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to be compromised over, but as a

national sin that demanded absolute

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opposition and eventually reckoning.

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In response, the South didn't

just defend its institution.

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It built an entire counter

morality movement around it.

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Southern intellectuals, like ones

we have met, George Fitzhugh,

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argued that slavery was not the

necessary evil, but a positive good.

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In fact, his 1850.

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Work, the universal law of slavery.

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Fitz Hued made the stunning claim

that southern slaves were in fact

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the happiest, and in some senses,

freest people in the world End quote.

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Why would he say something like this?

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Because unlike the northern wage slave,

in his estimation, who were exploited by

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capitalists and abandoned when sick or old

enslaved persons were cared for throughout

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their entire lives, this argument created

two irreconcilable moral universes.

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On one side, slavery was a

soul crushing sin on the other.

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It was a benevolent, paternalistic

system political skill.

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No matter how great could not, and cannot

bridge a chasm that wide, the conflict

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was becoming truly irrepressible.

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As we've seen.

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The compromise of 1850 was

a failed attempt to calm the

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waters of this national debate.

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And they would come to a head

once more a few years later, with

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the Kansas Nebraska Act of 1854.

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And this was itself a political hurricane.

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The architect of this storm was

Senator Steven Douglas, who we

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had talked about previously.

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He was known as the little

giant from Illinois.

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His great ambition was a

transcontinental railroad that would

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bind the nation together with its

eastern terminus in his home state.

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To achieve this, he needed to organize the

vast Nebraska territory, west of Missouri.

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His solution was a concept that

he called popular sovereignty.

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Quote, the great principle is the right

of every community to judge and decide for

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itself whether a thing is right or wrong.

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I deny the right of Congress

to force a slave holding state

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upon an unwilling people.

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I deny their right to force a free

state upon an unwilling people leave

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the people thereof perfectly free

to form and regulate their domestic

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institutions in their own way.

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End quote.

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To Douglass.

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This was the essence of democracy.

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But to make it happen, his Kansas

Nebraska Act explicitly had to repeal

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the Missouri compromise of 1820, which

for the previous 34 years had prohibited

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slavery in this very territory.

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He wanted organized.

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The political explosion of this was

immediate and it was catastrophic.

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It actually shattered the wig party and it

split it along sectional lines, and from

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the Ashes rose, A new political force.

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A party founded on a single potent idea

of stopping the expansion of slavery.

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This was the birth of

the Republican party.

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But the true test of popular

sovereignty came not in Washington,

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but actually on the plains of Kansas.

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The territory itself became the

test of popular sovereignty and

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what some historians call the

first shots of the Civil War.

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Pro-slavery supporters, they were

called border Ruffians, had stormed

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across the border from Missouri to stuff

ballot boxes and terrorize violently.

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Any anti-slavery settlers who

might vote for this to become.

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A free state.

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In response, abolitionist societies like

the New England Immigrant Aid Company

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funded the migration of what they

called free soilers to the territory

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to vote to make it a free state.

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The result, of course, as you

can see, was not democracy.

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It was Civil war.

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Julia Lovejoy, an abolitionist settler

who moved to Kansas with her family.

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Chronicled the horror to letter

in letters to eastern newspapers.

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Quote, our hearts, sicken at the

atrocities perpetuated daily.

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Upon the innocent and un offending

ostomy has been laid in ashes.

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Every house burned and four of

our men killed 50 ostomy families.

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Shelterless are now living in their

wagons in the woods endeavoring to

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escape these fiends in human form.

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Heaven and Elijah's

Ravens to feed on them.

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End quote, soon, Kansas would have

two rival governments, a pro-slavery,

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one in La Compton, and a free

state one in Topeka, and a gorilla

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war raged across the territory.

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This is what we know today

as bleeding Kansas, and this

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became a national spectacle.

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It was a terrifying microcosm of

the larger conflict over slavery.

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It proved that popular sovereignty,

Douglass's, democratic solution

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was a failure and not just a

failure, but a bloody failure.

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The North and the South were no longer

willing to vote on the future of

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slavery they were willing to kill for

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after the political process

failed so spectacularly in Kansas.

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Many hope the nation's highest legal

authority, the Supreme Court could

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resolve this crisis in some manner.

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In 1857, it was given that chance the

case of an enslaved man named Dred

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Scott provided such an opportunity.

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Scott had been taken by his enslave

into the free state of Illinois and then

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the free Wisconsin territory, and he

sued for his freedom, arguing that his

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residents on free soil made him free.

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Chief Justice Roger b Taney, or

Tawney, as it's pronounced, was a

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southerner, and he saw a chance not

just to rule on Scott's case, but to

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settle the slavery question forever.

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The decision he wrote would become one

of the most reviled in American history.

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The court's ruling was a

sweeping three-part bombshell.

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First, it declared that black

people, whether enslaved or

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free, were not and could never

be citizens of the United States.

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He wrote that they were quote beings of

an inferior order and altogether unfit

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to associate with the white race and

so far inferior that they had no right.

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Which a white man was bound to respect.

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End quote.

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Second, the court ruled that the Missouri

compromise of:

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Congress, he argued, had no authority to

ban slavery from any federal territory.

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Third, he argued that enslaved people were

property and the Fifth Amendment protected

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a slave holder's right to that property.

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Anywhere in these United States the impact

of this court decision, the highest court

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in the land was seismic for the South.

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It was a total victory, a judicial

confirmation of their most extreme

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constitutional arguments for the

newly formed Republican party.

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It was a disaster.

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The court had just declared their entire

platform, the prevention of slavery's

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expansion to be unconstitutional.

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More than that, the Dred Scott decision

destroyed what little faith the North

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had left in the federal government.

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To many, it looked like a coordinated

conspiracy by a slave power that

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now controlled the presidency, the

Congress, and the Supreme Court, the

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highest court in the land had not

acted as a neutral arbiter of the law.

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It acted as a partisan

weapon for the south.

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With the political and legal avenues

for compromise, seemingly exhausted the

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path to a violent resolution only group.

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The Supreme Court decision in the

Dred Scott Case did lead to violence.

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It radicalized a man named John Brown.

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John Brown was a man forged in

the fires of bleeding Kansas.

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He was a religious zealot who

believed he was God's chosen

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instrument to destroy slavery.

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In October of 1859, John Brown and a

small band of 21 followers, including

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both black and white adherence,

launched a daring raid on the federal

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arsenal at Harper's Ferry, Virginia.

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His plan was audacious and desperate.

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Seize the arsenal's, 100,000 rifles,

arm local slaves, and spark a massive

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rebellion that would sweep through the

south, ending slavery in a tide of blood.

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The raid was an ultimate failure.

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Local slaves did not rise up.

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And within 36 hours, Brown's forces

were cornered in an engine house by

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the US Marines, under the command

of a man named Colonel Robert E.

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Lee.

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John Brown's true impact came

not in battle, but in his

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trial and later martyrdom.

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His final speech of the court

was a masterpiece of defiant

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eloquence that transformed him

from a failed revolutionary.

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Into a prophetic figure quote,

I deny everything but what I

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have all along admitted of a

design on my part to free slaves.

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I believe that to have interfered as

I have done in behalf of his despised

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poor was not wrong, but right.

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Now if it is deemed necessary that

I should forfeit my life for the

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furtherance of the ends of justice

and mingle my blood further with the

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blood of my children and with the blood

of millions in the slave countries

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whose rights are disgraced by wicked,

cruel, and unjust enactments, I submit.

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So let it be done.

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The nation was utterly.

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Polarized by his actions and his

words In the South, the raid was a

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confirmation of their deepest fears.

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They saw Brown as a terrorist.

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The living embodiment of the

violent northern abolitionist

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fanaticism sent to murder them

in their beds while they slept.

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The Richmond inquired declared that the

raid had advanced the cause of Disunion

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more than any other vent end quote.

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In the north, the

reaction was more complex.

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While many condemned his violence,

a powerful and influential group,

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including figures like Ralph Waldo

Emerson and Henry David Thoreau

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hailed him as a saint in a martyr.

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No one captured the shift

better than Frederick Douglas.

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Douglas, the former slave, had met with

Brown before the raid and called the

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plan a steel trap, refusing to join him.

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But after Brown's execution,

Douglass embraced the John

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Brown way, as he called it.

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He argued that moral appeals had

failed and that slave holders

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would only respond to fear.

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Possibly later violence.

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We must reach the slave holder's conscious

through his fear of personal danger.

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We must make him feel that there

is death in the air about him, that

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there is death in the pot before him,

that there is death all around him.

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End quote.

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John Brown's raid was the

emotional point of no return.

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It transformed a political conflict

now into a Holy War for the South.

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It was now a war of survival,

but for many in the north, it

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was now a righteous crusade.

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The middle ground, the age of

compromises had been burned away.

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By 1860, the nation stood on a precipice.

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The Democratic Party, that

last great national political

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institution finally shattered under

the weight of the slavery issue.

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At their convention, Southern

Delegates walked out and the

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party split and it nominated two

separate candidates to be president.

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This fracturing of politics paved the

way for one of the most consequential

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elections in American history.

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The 1860 presidential race featured

four major candidates, a clear

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sign of a nation breaking apart.

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The Republicans nominated Abraham Lincoln

of Illinois on a platform of halting

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slavery's expansion into the territories.

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Northern Democrats nominated Stephen

Douglas, still the champion and still

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championing popular sovereignty.

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The Southern Democrats nominated Vice

President John c Breckenridge, who

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demanded federal protection for slavery.

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Everywhere.

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And the new Constitutional Union party

nominated John Bell, whose entire

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platform was essentially to ignore the

slavery issue and beg for national unity.

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The result was a sectional victory.

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Abraham Lincoln won the presidency with

less than 40% of the popular vote, but he

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swept nearly every free state, giving him

a clear majority in the electoral college.

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To the south.

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His election was not a

legitimate democratic outcome.

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It was a hostile takeover by a

purely sectional anti-slavery party.

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They saw it as the final proof that their

way of life had no future in the union.

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So we returned to our central

question then, was the Civil War

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an irrepressible conflict or the

product of a blundering generation?

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The Blundering generation thesis suggests

that better leadership could have forged

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another compromise that the war was a

tragic, avoidable failure of politics.

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But the events of the 1850s present

a powerful counter argument to that.

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The failure of the compromise of

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Kansas, the Supreme Court's radical

Dred Scott decision in the emotional

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firestorm from John Brown's raid.

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Each event systematically dismantled

the potential for political compromise.

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Each event revealed a chasm between North

and South that was not merely political,

375

:

but deeply moral and social and economic.

376

:

As historian Eric Foner has argued,

the conflict was ultimately about

377

:

two fundamentally incompatible

social systems and their competing

378

:

vision for the nation's future.

379

:

One, based on free labor.

380

:

And won on slave labor by 1860.

381

:

The conflict certainly seemed

irrepressible in December, just weeks

382

:

after Lincoln's election, South Carolina

seceded from the Union declaring that the

383

:

federal government had become its enemy.

384

:

The house was now finally divided.

385

:

After Lincoln's was president-elect

of a fractured republic.

386

:

He had won the election, but he

had lost half of the country.

387

:

The time for debate, for

Compromise for Politics was over.

388

:

The crisis had reached its peak.

389

:

In our next episode, we'll cross the line

from a crisis to conflict as we witnessed

390

:

the first shots of the American Civil War.

391

:

I'm Dr.

392

:

G.

393

:

I'll see y'all in the past.

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About the Podcast

Star-Spangled Studies
Star-Spangled Studies is a college-level U.S. history podcast created by professional historian Dr. G—built for students, teachers, and curious listeners alike. Season 1 covers the era from 1865 to the present, using The American Yawp, a free and open educational resource (OER) textbook, as its guide. Each episode unpacks key events, movements, and ideas that shaped the modern United States—through rich narrative, scholarly insight, and accessible storytelling.

Whether you're enrolled in a course or exploring history on your own, you’ll get clear, engaging episodes that follow the chapters of The American Yawp. Bring your curiosity, download the textbook, and join Dr. G for a star-spangled journey through American history.

Free. Accessible. Thought-provoking.
This is your front-row seat to the story of the United States.
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