I)                   Growth of Sectional Politics
A)    Pre-1850  – before 1850, the sectional division along slavery, North and South,  meant little in national politics; slaveholders from both the Whig and  Democratic parties agreed with non-slaveholders in the Whig and  Democratic parties that it was an issue best left to the states to  determine—especially with the Missouri Compromise of 1820 still in  effect, when members of both parties agreed that there would be no  slavery north of 36 30 (the southern border of Missouri).  This  agreement went by the wayside with the acquisition of so much new land  as a result of the War with Mexico.
1)      Land Question – with the victory of the US over Mexico, most of the (now) American Southwest came into possession of the United States.  This huge acquistion of land (even larger than the Louisiana Purchase),  coupled with the desire of slaveholders in the South to expand yet  again into this new territory—coupled with a new determination on the  part of most Northerners to prevent this from happening, would lead to  increasing political conflict over this question.
2)      1850 Whig Party – the first party of Lincoln.  Whigs believed generally that the federal government should use tax  dollars to make internal improvements—things like canals and railroads.  In order to become a national party, and to capture a larger popular  base, Whigs also appealed to nativists and temperance advocates, who  advocated restricting immigration, alcohol, and suffrage rights (of  immigrants).
3)      1850  Democratic Party – opposed Whig plans for tax and spend programs, which  they believed would merely line the pockets of the rich (or take money  out of their pockets, if they were already rich planters). The  Democratic Party was made up of an amalgamation of southern planters and  urban immigrants (largely Germans and Irish), who united with the party  largely because the Whigs tended to have a lot of “nativist” in their  party.
4)      Free Soil Party – initially formed by disaffected New York Democrats. The Democratic Party in New York  state was split into two factions, the Hunkers (who were ambivalent  about or supported slavery—many NYC merchants, whose largest customers  tended to be large slave owners in the South), and the “Barnburners,”  who opposed slavery. This factionalism reached the national party in  1844, when southern Democrats were able to nominate James Polk. In that  year, a third-party candidate, James Birney of the Liberty Party, who  pulled enough anti-slavery votes in New York  to throw the state to Polk, which ensured his victory over Henry Clay.  In 1848, when Van Buren was again denied the Democratic nomination, many  former members of the Liberty Party joined with anti-slavery members of  the Whig and Democratic Party. Van Buren was the party’s candidate in  1848, and abolitionist John P. Hale in 1852. The party, or course, lost  both elections, but from the ashes of the Free Soil Party sprang the  Republican Party in 1854.
B)     Growing  Hostility to “Slave Power” – many politicians, and ordinary people, in  the north were growing weary of being dictated to by the “slavocracy” of  the South.
1)      Wilmot Proviso – named for Pennsylvania representative David Wilmot, who wanted to limit the influence of slavery in the territory to be won from Mexico,  which his “Proviso” promised to do. The Wilmot Proviso was an amendment  to the 1846 appropriation for negotiating the treaty with Mexico.  This amendment was defeated and removed in the Senate; it was the  opening salvo in the growing legislative opposition to the expansion of  slavery. In the debate over the inclusion of this proviso, Wilmot made  clear that his sole concern was that the land be reserved for free  whites, and that he cared little for the condition of slaves—as long as  they were not present in the new “free soil.”
2)      “Free  Soil” movement – the drive by white northerners to limit the  acquisition of property in the opening West to people like themselves,  and prevent competition from slaveholders from the South.
C)     Growing  sensitivity to attacks on slavery – as attacks by Northerners on the  institution of slavery intensified, Southern slaveholders grew more  defensive about their “peculiar institution,” and more adamant that any  attack on slavery was in fact an attack on “the Southern Way of Life.”
1)      Secession threats – led by John C. Calhoun (who had been threatening secession by South Carolina since the first Jackson  administration), Southern politicians began to threaten secession of  the institution of slavery was not given further protections.
D)    Compromise  of 1850 – compromise put together by Henry Clay, which consisted of  five part: statehood for California; the creation of the territories of  Utah and New Mexico, in which the slavery question would be settled by  “popular sovereignty” (voted on by the white male citizens, that is);  the dispute of the border between New Mexico and Texas; the end of slave  trading in Washington, D.C. (although the individual right to own  slaves would continue to be upheld there); and a more stringent, and  stringently enforced, fugitive slave law. John C. Calhoun led southern  opposition to this, and it was defeated as an omnibus bill as Henry Clay  had introduced it. A young senator from Illinois, Stephen A. Douglas,  decided to break apart each of the five sections of the omnibus bill,  and allow votes on each section, which eventually got the bill passed.  The bills were then signed into law by Millard Fillmore; Fillmore was  pro-compromise and had replaced his running mate, Zachary Taylor, who  had been anti-compromise, when Taylor died in office.
1)      Passing of the Giants – Taylor  was not the only politician to die while the Compromise of 1850 was  debated; John C. Calhoun, Daniel Webster, and Henry Clay all died within  a year of its passage, as well. Each had had a long, distinguished  career in the Senate, yet each also probably had outlived their time in  relation to the way that politics was developing in what promised to be a  new era.
E)    Kansas-Nebraska Act – large numbers of northern legislatures wanted a transcontinental railroad, including Stephen A. Douglas. Douglas favored a northern route, through the territory of Kansas;  to expedite this, he wanted to get statehood for the territory as soon  as possible. To appease Southern opposition, and not to upset his  Northern supporters he came up with—
1)      “Popular  sovereignty” – Douglas believed (quite wrongly) that the dilemma over  whether the Kansas Territory should be slave or free would be best  solved by letting the people in the Territory decide for themselves.  This “solution” resulted in a full-scale civil war between anti-slavery  and pro-slavery forces in the Territory.
(a)    Popular  sovereignty precedent – one of the major elements of the Compromise of  1850 called for popular sovereignty to determine the slave or free  status of the New Mexico and Utah territories that had been formed, and  which had apparently appeased Southerners while not causing conflict  over actually introducing slavery into the territories. What Douglas apparently failed to realize, however, was that the proximity of the Kansas Territory to the slave-holding state of Missouri,  and the determination of slave holder there to expand their property  rights into the new territory, would come into violent conflict with  forces just as determined to prevent the expansion of slavery into the  territory.
2)      Massachusetts Immigrant Aid Society – from the abolitionist hotbed of Massachusetts,  this society put up money to help anyone who proclaimed themselves an  enemy of slavery and slaveholders to move to and buy land in the territory of Kansas. Slaveholders in western Missouri, threatened by this action, began to move into the territory, as well.
3)      Bloody Kansas  – the two competing sides engaged in open warfare, engaging in what  today we would regard as “terrorist” tactics: burning towns,  slaughtering innocents, mutilation of corpses, etc.
(a)    Jayhawkers – term used to describe anti-slavery forces, who often raided and killed settlements of pro-slavery forces, both in Kansas and in western Missouri.
(b)   Bushwhackers  – term used to describe pro-slavery forces, who often raided and killed  at settlements of anti-slavery forces, almost exclusively in Kansas
(c)    Both  forces were filled with people who felt that they were merely  protecting their own interests, and were in fact protecting their  rights. A smattering of people we would today probably considers  psychopaths, or at least sociopaths, committed a host of atrocities,  which included the slaughter of innocents, on both sides.







 
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