Slavery
Sectionalism
States Rights
Key people
Past Units
100

This 1857 Supreme Court decision ruled that African Americans, whether free or enslaved, could not be considered citizens and that Congress had no power to prohibit slavery in the territories.

What is Dred Scott vs Sandford?

100

Different parts of the country developing unique and separate cultures (as the North, South, and West). This can lead to conflict. 

What is Sectionalism?

100

The rights and powers held by individual US states rather than by the federal government. 

What is States Rights?

100

16th president of the United States

Who is Abraham Lincoln?

100

A belief that ultimate power resides in the people.

What is Popular Sovereignty?

200

A series of violent conflicts in the Kansas territory between anti-slavery and pro-slavery factions over the status of slavery

What is Bleeding Kansas?

200

This region favored a high tariffs (taxes applied to imports)

What is the North?

200

Which state the first to leave the union?

What is South Carolina?

200

Led a raid on the federal arsenal at Harpers Ferry, hoping to induce a slave rebellion

Who is John Brown?

200
The term used to refer to breaking away from the union.

What is secession?

300

1858 Senate Debate, a series of debates between 2 candidates over the issue of slavery happening in Illinois. 

What is the Lincoln-Douglas Debates?

300

How was the North impacted by slavery in the the decades before The Civil War?

What is they bought Southern cotton for their textiles mills?

300

This 1854 act allowed settlers in new territories like Kansas and Nebraska to decide for themselves whether to permit slavery, embodying the idea of states' rights but leading to violent conflict.

What is the Kansas-Nebraska Act?

300

Senator from Illinois who ran for president against Abraham Lincoln. Wrote the Kansas-Nebraska Act and the Freeport Doctrine. 

Who is Stephen Douglas?

300

This 1787 agreement counted each enslaved person as three-fifths of a person for purposes of representation and taxation, benefiting Southern states in the House of Representatives.

What is the 3/5th compromise?

400

This law required that Northern States forcibly return escaped slaves to their owners.

What is the Fugitive Slave Law?

400

This 1820 agreement allowed Missouri to enter the Union as a slave state while admitting Maine as a free state and drew a line across the Louisiana Territory, north of which slavery was banned. 

What is the Missouri Compromise?

400

This 1832-1833 confrontation between South Carolina and the federal government centered around South Carolina's attempt to nullify federal tariffs, arguing that states had the right to reject federal laws.

What is the Nullification Crisis?

400

Wrote the book that changed the hearts of millions, called Uncle Toms Cabin.

Who is Harriet Beecher Stowe?

400

This 1787 agreement combined elements of the Virginia Plan and the New Jersey Plan, creating a bicameral legislature with proportional representation in the House and equal representation in the Senate.

What is the Great Compromise?

500

A political party formed in 1848 to oppose the extension of slavery into the U.S. territories

What is the Free Soil Party?

500

This 1850 series of laws aimed to settle tensions between free and slave states by admitting California as a free state, allowing popular sovereignty in some territories, and strengthening the Fugitive Slave Act.

What is the Compromise of 1850? 

500

The constitutional controversy that led directly to the start of The Civil War concerned the right of states to...

What is secede from the Union?

500

Who was the president of the Confederate States of America? 

Who is Jefferson Davis?

500

Founded in 1632 by Cecilius Calvert, also known as Lord Baltimore, as a refuge for Catholics facing persecution in England.

What is Maryland?