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SECTION 2 (Yun Mu Hyun11-1) - Coggle Diagram
SECTION 2 (Yun Mu Hyun11-1)
how the compromise collapse
president Pierce
he sent
James Gadsden to buy the Northern part of Mexico and part of California
he sent
with orders to buy cuba,spain sent pierre soule to spain as minister
Ostend Manifesto
U.S. ministers in Spain, Britain, and France form U.S. policies on Cuba.
And Spain didn’t want to sell Cuba
pierce believed
island would add a large and profitable slave territory to us.
BUT
spain did not want to sell.
Ostend Manifesto
Cuba's possession was essential to the welfare of the United States.
effect
President Pierce
now known as a pro-slavery
warlike expansionist
the Kansas-Nebraska Act
Technological advances
growth of industry
commerce soon broke the success of the missouri Compromise of 1850.
the missourie compromise of 1820
Stephen A. Douglas
He introduced
legislation to organize land west of Iowa and Missouri.
But
The South will never vote for the railways.
Because the railways will shut down slavery.
expansion and slavery
they disliked slavery as
because they did not want to live near or compete with blacks.
The South did not know
opposition to the spread of slavery
The new Republican party
platform
a political solution in the struggle for an extension of slavery
whig party
moved into other parties
And they repeal of kansasNebraska Act
Fugitive slave Act
The Know Nothing party
know noting were a reaction to the ever increasing flood of immigrant into the country.
a secret society to fight against foreign political influence
meaning for naming
A party member will always say 'I don't know' when asked about party activities
Bleeding Kansas
In terms of popular sovereignty,
there was no clear definition
of when a territory could decide whether slavery should be legal or illegal
The emigrants came
to Kansas with their weapons to attend popular sovereignty events
As a result of the civil war and total anarchy in Kansas
Charles Sumner is attacked
According to Charles Sumner, the South was criticized because of its
According to Charles Sumner, the South was criticized because of its
Preston S. Brooks, representative from South Carolina, avenged Charles
Brooks resigned from the House after this incident but was soon reelected