CW R Intro Reading Guide

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    Humphrey United States History Name:

    Unit 3: Civil War and Reconstruction

    Causes of the Civil War Reading Guide

    Section 1: Life in Chains- The Origins of Slavery

    A. How did many Southern whitesjustify the institution of slavery?

    They said that slavery was an institution that uplifted blacks by rescuing them from a savage life in

    African

    B. What is one reason slavery not take hold in the North?

    It was not profitable to work slaves on the small family farms typical of the New England and Middle

    Atlantic colonies.

    C. Use at least 3 specific referencesfrom this section to describe the slave experience in the

    1800s:

    1. Being a slave was a terrifying and dehumanizing experience.

    2. In most southern states, it was illegal to teach a slave to read or write.

    3. Southern legal codes, moreover, defined slaves as chattel property, a term that equated human

    beings with horses, tools, and furniture.

    Section 2: Slave Insurrections before the Civil War

    A. What caused the Haitian Revolt in 1791?

    Slaves demanded the same rights and liberties won by Frenchmen during the French Revolution.

    B. Summarize the rebellion of Denmark Vessey in 1-2 sentences:

    Denmark Vessey was a slave who had purchased his freedom. He organized a scheme that involved

    hundreds of armed slaves and free black followers. It had such a large number of participants that

    word leaked out about the plan and authorities foiled the plan.

    C. Identify at least 3 significant resultsof these slave insurrections. In other words, how did they

    impact American life in the lead up to the Civil War?

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    1. The Haitian Revolt encouraged more slave revolts.

    2. Made teaching slaves to read and write illegal.

    3. More repressive slave codes.

    Section 3: North v. South- States Rights

    A. What is the significance of the Constitution in the debate between the North and South

    before the Civil War?

    The power of state governments versus the power of the national government.

    B. Summarize the argument made by John C. Calhoun and an increasing amount of Southerners

    regarding the Constitution and its purpose:

    He described the Constitution as a compact, similar to a treaty between sovereign states. If a state

    finds a national act to be unconstitutional, it could declare that act null and void within the state and

    the federal government should force compliance.

    Section 4: Why did they fight? Cultures in Conflict

    A. IdentifyAT LEAST 3 specific cultural differencesbetween the North and South:

    1. South wanted slaves while North wanted abolition of slaves.

    2. South used handshakes while North used contracts.

    3. North valued education and rejected violence while South did not value education

    and didnt really care about violence.

    B. IdentifyAT LEAST 3 specific economic and political differencesbetween the North and South:

    1. North had rails and canals while South didnt.

    2. North was more developed than the South.

    3. Souths economy relied on slave labor while North relied on their own citizens

    work.

    Section 5: Why did they fight? Ideals in Conflict

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    A. Analyze the significance/role of the Westin the growing regional divide in the years leading

    up to the Civil War.

    North fought the South to keep the West free of slavery than to free the slaves.

    B. What is the Southern perspectiveon each of the items (causes) listed below?

    1. States rights

    Each state could join or leave depending upon the will of the people.

    2. Slavery

    Most planters and small farmers felt certain that freeing the Souths four million blacks would cause

    social and economic chaos. Wealthy whites feared the loss of their property and others dreaded the

    thought of political equality for the slaves.

    3. Liberty

    Many white southerners feared that the U.S. government could not be trusted to protect their

    property, and that the South was becoming dominated by the anti-slavery, industrial North that

    threatened their way of life.

    C. What is the Northern perspectiveon each of the items (causes) listed below?

    1. The Union

    The Union was the greatest republican experiment the world had ever known. The North argued that

    since all the states had formed the Union, no single state had the right to secede and break it up.

    2. Anti-slavery/ Abolition

    Most northern soldiers were anti-slavery and opposed slaverys expansion into thewestern

    territories. They strongly believed that slave labor threatened free institutions and the egalitarian

    ideals of a nation of independent family farmers.

    3. Democracy

    They believed that secession violated their sense of fair play and the idea that all Americans must

    abide by the outcome of free elections. A minority could not be allowed to sabotage the principles of

    majority rule.

    Using the information in this packet, develop a full thesis statement for Essential Question #1:

    1.

    What were the causes of the civil war? Consider: regional tensions around economic

    development, slavery, territorial expansion and governance. *BE SPECIFIC!

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    a.

    The causes of the civil war included cultural differences, different viewpoints

    on slavery, and different perspectives on the way of life.