Important People
Years
Vocabulary
States
Acts
100

a Connecticut minister and crusader against the use of alcohol; wanted to protect society against "rum-selling, tippling folk, infidels, and ruff-scruff"

Lyman Beecher


100

Lincoln elected president; South Carolina secedes

1860

100

Abolitionists

members of the growing band of reformers who worked to abolish, or end, slavery; William Lloyd Garrison and Fredrick Douglass were these



100

slave state after the Missouri Compromise

Missouri


100

began in the early 1800s; a wave of religious fervor that stirred the nation



Second Great Awakening


200

wrote the most successful best-seller of the mid-1800s, Uncle Tom's Cabin; wrote about the injustice of slavery

Harriet Beecher Stowe

200

Southern states form the Confederate States of America; Confederate forces attack Fort Sumter; the Civil War begins

1861

200

the network of escape routes from the South to the North

Underground Railroad


200

free state after the Missouri Compromise



Maine

200

the plan that preserved the balance between slave and free states in the Senate; proposed by Henry Clay in 1820

Missouri Compromise


300

formed in 1816 by a group of white Virginians, worked to free enslaved workers gradually by buying them from slaveholders and sending them abroad to start new lives

American Colonization Society


300

Roger B. Taney ruled against the Dred Scott case and was chief justice during what year

1857

300

an exaggerated loyalty to a particular region of the country

Sectionalism

300

People who traveled in armed groups called Border Ruffians which were from the state of 

Missouri

300

contained the five main points of Clay's original plan; First, California would be admitted as a free state. Second, the New Mexico Territory would have no restrictions on slavery. Third, the New Mexico-Texas border dispute would be settled in favor of New Mexico. Fourth, the slave trade, but not slavery itself, would be abolished in the District of Columbia. Finally, Clay pushed for a stronger fugitive slave law.

Compromise of 1850


400

an abolitionist who stimulated the growth of the antislavery movement; in 1831 he founded a newspaper called The Liberator



William Lloyd Garrison


400

Abraham Lincoln won the Presidential Election of 

1860

400

allowing the people to decide, usually by vote



Popular Sovereignty


400

the belief that the states had more power than the central government

States' Rights


400

took place in 1850; required all citizens to help catch runaways, punished them for helping them escape.

Fugitive Slave Act


500

two sisters from South Carolina who lectured and wrote against slavery

Sarah and Angelina Grimké


500

Republican Party was antislavery Whigs and Democrats joined forces with Free-Soilers to form this party in

1854

500

a person who dies for a great cause



Martyr

500

a new nation and government formed by the secession of 7 southern states (including South Carolina)

Confederate States of America


500

passed in May 1854 that allowed the residents to decide the legalization of slavery

Kansas-Nebraska Act