Split the country into slave and free states by drawing a line at the 36'30 parallel
Missouri Compromise
Network of safe houses and Abolitionist that assisted runaway slaves
Underground Railroad
First state to secede from the Union
South Carolina
Cotton Gin
He was the first Republican president who led the Union during the Civil War
Abraham Lincoln
Three-Fifths Compromise
Dredd Scott Decision
Bleeding Kansas
Made long distance communication possible
Telegraph
This president believed in Manifest Destiny and acquired the southwestern part of the U.S.
James K Polk
The idea that settlers would vote on the issue of slavery and majority vote would win
Popular Sovereignty
Free Soilers and Abolitionists combined their efforts to oppose slavery by forming this political party
Republican Party
Novel about slavery that most southerners wrote off as lies and embellishments
Uncle Tom's Cabin
Period when society moved from agriculture and handmade goods to mass produced manufactured goods
Industrial Revolution
President who signed the Kansas-Nebraska Act, who did nothing to stop Bleeding Kansas; son died before he took office
Franklin Pierce
Compromise of 1850
Compromise of 1850 also banned the slave trade in this city
Washington, D.C.
The last straw that sent the South into secession
The Election of Abraham Lincoln (1860)
Term describing population shift from southern rural areas to northern cities
President who sent his troops to South Carolina to enforce a tariff, dealt with the "Nullification Crisis"
Andrew Jackson
Great Compromise
Expansion of Slavery
Slave law that was mostly ignored by the North; sparked the need for the Underground Railroad
Fugitive Slave Act
First of its kind, enabled long distance travel; was the initial reason for the Kansas-Nebraska Act
Transcontinental Railroad
President who signed the Compromise of 1850, rhymes with Dillard Spillmore
Millard Fillmore