Sectionalism and Economics
Abolition
Compromises & Political Decisions
Key Figures & Documents
Causes & Consequences
100

This economic system relied heavily on cash crops like cotton in the Southern states.

Agriculture

100

This famous conductor of the Underground Railroad made over 13 trips to free hundreds of enslaved people.

Harriet Tubman

100

What is the Missouri Compromise?

This 1820 compromise admitted Maine as a free state and Missouri as a slave state to maintain balance. Additionally, it set the 36/30 parallel as the boundary of slavery in future states.

100

Name any former slave that became an Abolitionist.

Frederick Douglass, Dred Scott, Harriet Tubman, Nat Turner, Solomon Northup, etc.

100

Who was the first Republican president?

Abraham Lincoln

200

What laborers did the North primarily rely upon?

Immigrants (mostly Irish)

200

Which enslaved man led a violent rebellion in Virginia in 1831?

Nat Turner

200

What is the Compromise of 1850?

California was admitted as a free state under the condition that the Fugitive Slave Act was passed, and New Mexico would operate under popular sovereignty.

200
To whom did John Brown deliver his address regarding his actions at Harper's Ferry?

The Virginia Court at his trial.

200

What was the primary reason the Democratic Party lost the 1860 election?

They were divided between Northern and Southern Democrats.

300

What is sectionalism?

This term describes when people favor the interests of one region over the interests of the country as a whole.

300

This abolitionist wrote a fictional novel, Uncle Tom's Cabin, that made many Northerners sympathetic to the Abolitionist cause.

Harriet Beecher Stowe

300

What is the Kansas-Nebraska Act?

This 1854 act allowed Kansas and Nebraska territories to use popular sovereignty to decide on slavery in response to the North getting the Transcontinental Railroad.

300

Frederick Douglass delivered this famous speech in 1852 with this title, criticizing American hypocrisy on slavery.

"What to the Slave is the Fourth of July?"

300

Lincoln won the 1860 election with approximately this percentage of the popular vote.

40%

400

How much faster did the cotton gin make cotton production?

About 50 times faster.

400

This abolitionist attempted to start a slave revolt at Harpers Ferry and was later hanged, becoming a martyr for the North.

John Brown

400

What is the Dred Scott Decision?

The Supreme Court ruled in this 1857 case that African-Americans were not U.S. citizens and slavery could not be banned by the National Government.

400

What did John Brown use to justify his actions at Harper's Ferry?

The Bible (New Testament)

400

What policy that Lincoln campaigned for caused the South to fear his election to office? (Be specific)

Although Lincoln said he wouldn't abolish slavery in states where it already existed, he would prevent its further spread into the West.

500

Describe how the North and South's economies were dependent on each other.

The South produced cotton but needed the North's industry to process it.

500

Describe the difference between direct and indirect abolitionism and give one example of each.

Direct abolitionism involved physically freeing enslaved people (e.g., Underground Railroad), while indirect abolitionism spread information through speeches, newspapers, and books (e.g., Uncle Tom's Cabin)?

500

What was controversial about Bleeding Kansas?

The act allowed popular sovereignty, which led to pro-slavery Missourians illegally voting in Kansas.

500

What differences were there between Frederick Douglass' and John Brown's approaches to abolition?

Douglass used speeches and writing to persuade (indirect), while Brown attempted violent rebellion at Harpers Ferry (direct)

500

Which Northern Democrat advocated for the Transcontinental Railroad to begin in Chicago? Additionally, he famously debated Lincoln to win a seat in the Illinois senate.

Stephen A. Douglas