Early Sparks of Conflict
Compromises over Slavery
Bleeding Kansas
Dred Scott v. Sandford
Secession & Fort Sumter
100

This 1831 slave uprising in Southampton County, Virginia, was led by an enslaved preacher.

Answer: Who was Nat Turner?

100

This 1820 compromise banned slavery north of the 36°30′ line.

Answer: What was the Missouri Compromise?

100

This act allowed settlers to vote on whether slavery would be allowed in Kansas and Nebraska.

Answer: What was the Kansas–Nebraska Act?

100

Dred Scott sued for his freedom after living in this free territory before returning to Missouri.

Answer: What was the Wisconsin Territory?

100

This state became the first to secede from the Union in December 1860.

Answer: What was South Carolina?

200

After Nat Turner’s Revolt, Southern states responded by doing this to slave laws.

Answer: What is they tightened slave laws.

200

The Compromise of 1850 admitted this state to the Union as a free state.


Answer: What was California?

200

The Kansas–Nebraska Act repealed this earlier compromise that restricted slavery in the territories.

Answer: What was the Missouri Compromise?

200

The Supreme Court ruled that enslaved people were considered this, not citizens.

Answer: What was property?

200

The southern states that seceded formed this new nation and elected Jefferson Davis as president.

Answer: What was the Confederate States of America?

300

The tariff tariff introduced in this year angered the South so much it was nicknamed the “Tariff of Abominations.”

Answer: When was 1828?

300

This controversial law was strengthened by the Compromise of 1850 and required escaped slaves to be returned.

Answer: What was the Fugitive Slave Act?

300

Violent clashes between pro-slavery and anti-slavery settlers in Kansas became known by this name.

Answer: What was Bleeding Kansas?

300

According to the Court’s decision, Congress did not have the power to ban slavery in these areas.


Answer: What were federal territories?

300

This U.S. fort in South Carolina became the site of the first shots of the Civil War.

Answer: What was Fort Sumter?

400

In 1832, South Carolina claimed it had the right to declare federal tariffs null and void in this crisis.

Answer: What was the Nullification Crisis?

400

As part of the Compromise of 1850, this activity was banned—but slavery itself remained legal—in Washington, D.C.


Answer: What was the buying and selling of slaves?

400

This Massachusetts senator was brutally beaten with a cane after giving a speech called “The Crime Against Kansas.”

Answer: Who was Charles Sumner?

400

This Supreme Court ruling declared the Missouri Compromise unconstitutional.

Answer: What was the Dred Scott decision?

400

President Lincoln announced he would send these supplies to Fort Sumter, escalating the crisis.

Answer: What were provisions (supplies)?

500

This 1833 law gave President Andrew Jackson authority to use the military to enforce tariff collection.

Answer: What was the Force Bill?

500

The Compromise of 1850 temporarily eased tensions but ultimately failed to resolve this central issue.

Answer: What was slavery and its expansion into the territories?

500

The violence and political fallout from Kansas helped lead to the creation of this political party opposed to slavery’s expansion.

Answer: What was the Republican Party?

500

These two constitutional amendments eventually overturned the Dred Scott decision.

Answer: What were the 13th and 14th Amendments?

500

The Civil War officially began at this time on April 12, 1861.

Answer: What was 4:00 a.m.?

M
e
n
u