APUSH Chapter 18
Slavery After the Compromise of 1850: After 1850, how many organized territories prohibited slavery? Identify them.
2: Oregon Territory and Minnesota Territory
Republican Party
A new political party organized as a protest against the Kansas-Nebraska Act.
Compromise of 1850
A series of agreements between North and South that temporarily dampened the slavery controversy and led to a short-lived era of national good feelings.
Ostend Manifesto
A top-secret dispatch, drawn up by American diplomats in Europe, that detailed a plan for seizing Cuba from Spain.
The Free Soil party
A. Was the predecessor of the antislavery Republican Party.
California
Acquired from Mexico in 1848 and admitted as a free state in 1850 without ever having been a territory. (O)
Caleb Cushing
American diplomat who negotiated the Treaty of Wanghia with China in 1844. (J)
Matthew Perry
American naval commander who opened Japan to the West in 1854. (A)
Clayton-Bulwer Treaty
An agreement between Britain and America concerning any future Central American canal.
The Pierce administration's schemes to acquire Cuba
B. Fell apart after the leaking of the Ostend Manifesto.
The Kansas-Nebraska Act
C. Caused a tremendous northern protest and the birth of the Republican Party.
Slavery After the Compromise of 1850: Under the Compromise of 1850, which free state was partially located south of the line 36° 30' (the southern border of Missouri), which had been established by the Missouri Compromise as the border between slave and free territories?
California
Under the terms of the Compromise of 1850,
California was admitted to the Union as a free state, and slavery in Utah and New Mexico territories would be left up to popular sovereignty.
The proposed admission of California directly into the Union was dangerously controversial because
California's admission as a free state would destroy the equal balance of slave and free states in the U.S. Senate.
Nicaragua
Central American nation desired by pro-slavery expansionists in the 1850s. (F)
Central America c. 1850: In the 1850s, the territories of the future Panama Canal was part of which South American country?
Colombia
The California gold rush
D. Made the issue of slavery in the Mexican Cession areas more urgent.
During the debate over the Compromise of 1850, northern antislavery forces were particularly outraged by what they considered the "betrayal" of Senator
Daniel Webster.
Lewis Cass
Democratic presidential candidate in 1848, original proponent of the idea of "popular sovereignty." (B)
The Compromise of 1850
E. Created a short-lived national mood of optimism and reconciliation.
The Gadsden Purchase, 1853: The proposed southern transcontinental railroad was supposed to run through which two Texas cities?
El Paso and Houston
The Gadsden Purchase
F. Heightened competition between southern and northern railroad promoters over the choice of a transcontinental route.
Both southerners and northerners alike refused to accept Douglas's plan to repeal the Missouri Compromise.
False
In the Senate debate of 1850, Calhoun spoke for compromise, while Clay and Webster each defended his own section's interests.
False
In the key provisions of the Compromise of 1850, New Mexico and Utah were admitted as slave states, while California was left open to popular sovereignty.
False
The California gold rush of 1849 diverted the nation's attention from slavery.
False
The Free Soil party consisted of a small, unified band of radical abolitionists.
False
The Gadsden Purchase resulted in a general national agreement to build the trans-continental railroad along the southern route.
False
The greatest political winner in the Compromise of 1850 was the South.
False
Harriet Tubman
Famous "conductor" on the Underground Railroad who rescued more than three hundred slaves from bondage. (D)
The evasion of the slavery issue by Whigs and Democrats in 1848
G. Led to the formation of new Free-Soil antislavery party.
The Fugitive Slave Law
H. Aroused active northern resistance to legal enforcement and prompted attempts at nullification in Massachusetts.
Among the notable advocates of compromise in the controversy over slavery in 1850 were
Henry Clay and Daniel Webster.
Fire-Eaters
Hotheaded southern agitators who pushed for southern interests and favored secession from the Union.
Stephen A. Douglas's indifference to slavery and desire for a northern railroad route
I. Led to the passage of the Kansas-Nebraska Act, without regard for the consequences.
Stephen A. Douglas
Illinois politician who helped smooth over sectional conflict in 1850 but then reignited it in 1854. (E)
The Underground Railroad
J. Aroused southern demands for an effective fugitive-slave law.
Winfield Scott
Military hero of the Mexican War who became the Whigs' last presidential candidate in 1852. (G)
The Legal Status of Slavery, from the Revolution to the Civil War: In 1854, what was the status of slavery in the only state that bordered on the Kansas Territory?
Missouri was a slave state.
China
Nation whose 1844 treaty with the United States opened the door to a flood of American missionaries. (M)
Kansas and Nebraska, 1854: The proposed northern transcontinental railroad was supposed to run through which territory organized by Stephen Douglas's act of 1854?
Nebraska Territory
William Seward
New york senator who argued that the expansion of slavery was forbidden by a "higher law." (L)
Southerners seeking to expand the territory of slavery were especially interested in acquiring
Nicaragua and Cuba.
Central America c. 1850: In Central America, British influence extended along the Atlantic coasts of which two nations?
Nicaragua and Honduras
Daniel Webster
Northern spokesman whose support for the Compromise of 1850 earned him the hatred of abolitionists. (N)
Whigs
Political party that fell apart and disappeared after losing the election of 1852.
Cuba
Rich Spanish colony coveted by American pro-slavery expansionists in the 1850s. (I)
Higher Law
Senator William Seward's doctrine that slavery should be excluded from the territories as a contrary to a divine moral law standing above even the Constitution.
The Gadsden Purchase
Southwestern territory acquired by the Pierce administration to facilitate a southern transcontinental railroad.
Mason-Dixon Line
The boundary line between slave and free states in the East, originally the southern border of Pennsylvania.
Popular Sovereignty
The doctrine that the issue of slavery should be decided by the residents of a territory themselves, not by the federal government.
Underground Railroad
The informal network that conducted runaway slaves from the South to Canada.
Democratic Party
The political party that was deeply divided by Douglas' Kansas-Nebraska Act.
Fugitive Slave Act
The provision of the Compromise of 1850 that comforted southern slave-catchers and aroused the wrath of northern abolitionists.
Tokugawa Shogunate
The ruling warrior dynasty of Japan with whom Matthew Perry negotiated the Treaty of Kanagawa of 1854. (K)
Missouri Compromise
The sectional agreement of 1820, repealed by the Kansas-Nebraska Act.
Free Soil Party
Third-party entry in the election of 1848 that opposed slavery expansion and prepared the way for the Republican party.
Democratic politicians and others attempted to avoid the issue of slavery in the territories by saying it should be left to "popular sovereignty."
True
Douglas's Kansas-Nebraska Act was intended to organize western territories so that a transcontinental railroad could be built along a northern route.
True
Southerners demanded a more effective fugitive-slave law to stop the "Underground Railroad" from running escaped slaves to Canada.
True
The Kansas-Nebraska Act wrecked the Compromise of 1850 and created deep divisions within the Democratic Party.
True
The Pierce administration's expansionist efforts in Central America, Cuba, and the Gadsden Purchase were basically designed to serve southern proslavery interests.
True
The Republican Party was initially organized as a northern protest against Douglas's Kansas-Nebraska Act.
True
The Whig Party disappeared because its northern and southern wings were too deeply split over the Fugitive Slave Law and other sectional issues.
True
The provision of the Compromise of 1850 that aroused the fiercest northern opposition was the Fugitive Slave Law.
True
The Legal Status of Slavery, from the Revolution to the Civil War: Under the Kansas-Nebraska Act, how far north could slavery have extended had it been implemented in Nebraska territory?
Up to the northern border of the United States, the 49th parallel.
Slavery After the Compromise of 1850: Under the Compromise of 1850, which territory located north of 36 30' could have adopted slavery if it had chosen to do so?
Utah Territory
Franklin Pierce
Weak Democratic president whose pro-southern cabinet pushed aggressive expansionists schemes. (C)
Zachary Taylor
Whig president who nearly destroyed the Compromise of 1850 before he died in office. (H)
Texas and the Disputed Area Before the Compromise of 1850: A large territory claimed by Texas was taken from it in the Compromise of 1850, and parts of it were later incorporated into five other states. Which were they?
Wyoming, Kansas, Colorado, Oklahoma, and New Mexico
One of the primary effects of the Fugitive Slave Law passed as part of the Compromise of 1850 was
a sharp rise in northern antislavery feeling.
The existence of the "underground railroad" added to southern demands for
a stricter federal Fugitive Slave Law.
In the election of 1848, the response of the Whig and Democratic parties to the rising controversy over slavery was
an attempt to ignore the issue.
Northerners especially resented Douglas's Kansas-Nebraska Act because
it repealed the Missouri Compromise prohibiting slavery in northern territories.
The primary goal of Commodore Matthew Perry's treaty with Japan in 1854 was
opening Japan to American trade.
The greatest winner in the Compromise of 1850 was
the North.
The final battle to gain passage of the Compromise of 1850 was substantially aided by
the death of President Taylor and the succession of President Fillmore.
The conflict over slavery after the election of 1852 led shortly to
the death of the Whig party.
"Popular sovereignty" was the idea that
the people of a territory should determine for themselves whether or not to permit slavery.
Quick formation of an effective government in California was essential because of
the very large and unruly population drawn into the state by the discovery of gold.
