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
Hello, y'all.
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:It's me.
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:It's me.
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:It's Dr.
5
: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.
165
: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
183
: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.
192
: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.
213
: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.
242
: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
246
: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.
252
: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.
256
: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
268
: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
277
: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
301
: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
307
: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
309
: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
313
: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.
320
:While many condemned his violence,
a powerful and influential group,
321
:including figures like Ralph Waldo
Emerson and Henry David Thoreau
322
: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
325
:plan a steel trap, refusing to join him.
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:But after Brown's execution,
Douglass embraced the John
327
:Brown way, as he called it.
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:He argued that moral appeals had
failed and that slave holders
329
:would only respond to fear.
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:Possibly later violence.
331
:We must reach the slave holder's conscious
through his fear of personal danger.
332
:We must make him feel that there
is death in the air about him, that
333
:there is death in the pot before him,
that there is death all around him.
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:End quote.
335
:John Brown's raid was the
emotional point of no return.
336
:It transformed a political conflict
now into a Holy War for the South.
337
:It was now a war of survival,
but for many in the north, it
338
:was now a righteous crusade.
339
:The middle ground, the age of
compromises had been burned away.
340
:By 1860, the nation stood on a precipice.
341
:The Democratic Party, that
last great national political
342
:institution finally shattered under
the weight of the slavery issue.
343
:At their convention, Southern
Delegates walked out and the
344
:party split and it nominated two
separate candidates to be president.
345
:This fracturing of politics paved the
way for one of the most consequential
346
:elections in American history.
347
:The 1860 presidential race featured
four major candidates, a clear
348
:sign of a nation breaking apart.
349
:The Republicans nominated Abraham Lincoln
of Illinois on a platform of halting
350
:slavery's expansion into the territories.
351
:Northern Democrats nominated Stephen
Douglas, still the champion and still
352
:championing popular sovereignty.
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:The Southern Democrats nominated Vice
President John c Breckenridge, who
354
:demanded federal protection for slavery.
355
:Everywhere.
356
:And the new Constitutional Union party
nominated John Bell, whose entire
357
:platform was essentially to ignore the
slavery issue and beg for national unity.
358
:The result was a sectional victory.
359
:Abraham Lincoln won the presidency with
less than 40% of the popular vote, but he
360
: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.
363
:It was a hostile takeover by a
purely sectional anti-slavery party.
364
:They saw it as the final proof that their
way of life had no future in the union.
365
:So we returned to our central
question then, was the Civil War
366
:an irrepressible conflict or the
product of a blundering generation?
367
:The Blundering generation thesis suggests
that better leadership could have forged
368
:another compromise that the war was a
tragic, avoidable failure of politics.
369
:But the events of the 1850s present
a powerful counter argument to that.
370
:The failure of the compromise of
:
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:Kansas, the Supreme Court's radical
Dred Scott decision in the emotional
372
:firestorm from John Brown's raid.
373
:Each event systematically dismantled
the potential for political compromise.
374
: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.
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:I'm Dr.
392
:G.
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:I'll see y'all in the past.