Issues of Slavery
One Way (Middle) Passage - was a journey of 500 miles across the Atlantic to America. As many as 200 black men, women, and children were packed below decks, squeezed onto platforms built in tiers spaced so close that sitting upright was impossible. Maroons - were a group of runaway slaves that formed their own communities.Nat Turner - he was convinced that God had selected him to punish white people through "terror and devastation". Then one night in 1831 Turner and six confederates murdered Turner's master and family. Recruiting some 70 slaves. They killed 57 white men, women, and children. The revolt lasted only 48 hrs.Kansas-Nebraska Act/Bleeding Kansas - was opened or signed in 1854. The remaining portion of Louisiana Purchase to slavery under t
By 1840 the South produced more than 60 percent of the world supply, and cotton accounted for almost two-thirds of all American exports. California, he proposed, should be admitted as a free state, which represented the clear wishes of most settlers there. Omnibus Bill (re: Slavery expanding West) - required that the components of the compromise be approved as a package. Calhoun/Nullification Crisis/State's Rights - he argued that the Union was a compact between sovereign states. he doctrine of popular sovereignty, conflict between the two selections focused on control of Kansas, directly west of the slave state of Missouri. The rest of the Mexican cession would be organized as two territories, New Mexico and Utah, under the doctrine of popular sovereignty. John Brown - In 1857 John Brown and 21 followers including 5 free Blacks had a plant to attack the slavery in the south. He also created interchangeable parts. Dred Scott Decision (1857) - it was a clear implication that the decision was that popular sovereignty was also unconstitutional. Gabriel Prosser - in 1800 he recruited perhaps a couple hundred slaves in a plan to march on Richmond and capture the govenor. Underground RailRoad - was lead by Harriet Tubman. Denmark Vesey - in 1822 he was a daring and resourceful free black carpenter in Charleston, he secretly organized a plan to seize control of the city and raise the standard of black liberty.
Common topics in this essay:
Nat Turner,
Beecher Stowe,
Eli Whitney,
Atlantic America,
John Brown,
Denmark Vesey,
Gabriel Prosser,
Louisiana Purchase,
Omnibus Bill,
Walker's Appeal,
popular sovereignty,
john brown,
underground railroad,
women children,
doctrine popular,
doctrine popular sovereignty,
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