Chapter 14
Of the candidates in the 1860 presidential election, the only one who tried to run a national campaign was
Douglas
In the first six months of 1857, Buchanan dealt with
Dred Scott, the Lecompton Constitution, and an economic panic.
Leading advocates of popular sovereignty included
Stephen A. Douglas.
The Free-Soil party was a coalition made up of
Van Burenite Democrats, Conscience Whigs, and members of the Liberty party.
The Dred Scott decision of the U.S. Supreme Court involved
a slave suing for his freedom because his master had taken him into free territory.
An important factor contributing to the Compromise of 1850 was
all of these
The Kansas-Nebraska Act
all of these
Although barely more than 300 slaves were returned to bondage during the first six years of the Fugitive Slave Act, it nonetheless widened and deepened the anti-slavery sentiment in the North.
true
Harriet Beecher Stowe's novel Uncle Tom's Cabin became a huge success, due in part to its depiction of the horrors of the Fugitive Slave Act and the interstate slave trade.
true
In the Pottawatomie Massacre, John Brown led a raid against pro-slavery settlers in Kansas.
true
In the election of 1860, Lincoln received only 39 percent of the popular vote.
true
Mining towns in California were extremely dangerous and violent.
true
Popular sovereignty left the fate of slavery up to the people in each territory.
true
Reaction to the Kansas-Nebraska Act directly contributed to the formation of a brand-new political party, the Republican party.
true
The "Great Compromiser" was Henry Clay.
true
The Dred Scott case was significant because it was the first time the Supreme Court declared an act of Congress unconstitutional.
true
The Fugitive Slave Act was the most controversial element of the Compromise of 1850.
true
As a southern man with Union principles, Zachary Taylor
wanted immediate admission of California and New Mexico as free states.
Four years after Congressman David Wilmot proposed it, the Wilmot Proviso became law as part of the Compromise of 1850.
false
In 1850, Daniel Webster called on "a higher law than the Constitution" to demand the abolition of slavery.
false
In 1859, John Brown led a pro-slavery raid at Harpers Ferry.
false
Stephen A. Douglas delivered "The Crime against Kansas" speech in the Senate.
false
The Republican party was committed to upholding the extension of slavery into the territories of the United States.
false
Fugitive slave Anthony Burns caused a sensation when
federal marshals captured him in Boston.
The Crittenden Compromise sought to
guarantee slavery where it already existed.
The Compromise of 1850 did not include
maintaining the balance between free states and slave states.
The Wilmot Proviso called for
prohibiting slavery in land gained from Mexico.
In proposing the Kansas-Nebraska Act, Stephen A. Douglas was initially most concerned about
railroads
The greatest mass migration in American history was
the California gold rush.
The new Free-Soil party came out of the anti-slavery crusade, but the new party's formation ultimately hurt their cause during the election of 1848 because
the Democratic party did not have a candidate.