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2J America: A Nation Divided, c1845–1877

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In-depth, concise and clear essay plans that cover the entire period from 1845 to 1877.

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  • April 29, 2024
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2J: A Nation Divided, c1845 – 1877 Jan Mocks


North and South in c1845
“In c.1845 the most serious divisions between North and
South were economic.” (25)
1. Important economic divisions + divisions due to westward expansion – significance was limited as
both exacerbated by underlying divisions over slavery- more serious sectional divisions
2. Economies of the North and South diverged in terms of development

 Increasingly diverse + capitalistic Northern Market economy- egalitarian vs agrarian slave-based
southern economy- raw agricultural produce – cotton, sugar, tobacco
 Northern towns and cities grow - heavily reliant on internal improvements financed through
money from tariffs – e.g. By 1840- 3326miles of canals and 3000miles of railroad- concentrated
in Northeast and New England
o Development of steamboats – by 1850- 700 steamboats on the Mississippi
 14% of the North living in towns by 1840 (26% by 1850), 6-10% in the South – between
1830-1860 – most of 5million immigrants to US settled in North – 1/6 Northerners were
foreigners vs 1/30 Southerners
 Economic differences fuelled division over role and importance of federal government -
nullification crisis
 South wanted low tariffs whilst North need high levels to protect industry
against European imports - south didn’t need to protect (King Cotton)
i. 1828 Tariff of Abominations – 38% on 92% of imported goods
 Calhoun- South Carolina Exposition and Protest – criticising protective tariff-
should only be used to raise revenue not artificially boost Northern business
 North benefitted disproportionately from tariffs – property of South being
appropriated for benefit of other states – unconstitutional so states can nullify – tariff
ordered not to be collected – Jackson mobilised militia
 Southern states with 35% of population only produced 10% of manufacturing output by 1850,
North had 2x railway track as South
However - Differences overstated

 Compromise that tariff levels would be progressively reduced rather than abolished
 Polk’s electoral campaign 1844- show divisions based on internal improvements weren’t
insurmountable – campaigned for lower tariffs and internal improvements
 Upper South needed internal improvements
 Economies were inter-dependant despite divergence - shared economic interests- finance +
shipping industries in NY had close links to producers in Virginia – Lords of Loom and Lords of
Lash - South need North’s banks to facilitate loans, shipping companies and insurance companies
, North needed produce as 40% of slave-labour profit was held in NY through fees to insurers,
interest payments, loans, shipping
 Most Americans remained farmers – between 1840-1860- food production increased 4x due to
opening up of new land in west and scientific techniques like fertilisation, crop rotation, new
machinery- there were many distinct regions- Eastern southern states like Virginia were very
different to Texas (Western states), only 4 Northern manufacturing industries employed over
50,000 people and the North West remained rural, Tredegar Iron Works in Richmond Virginia
was 4th largest national producer of iron products by 1840
 North wasn’t more egalitarian than South- 1860- wealthiest 10% of North had 68% of wealth
while the typical Northerner= self-sufficient farmer with 50-500 acres of land

,1. It might be argued that Westward expansion fuelled more serious divisions

 Southern Representatives - dominant federal role– 6 out of 8 presidents southerners
 Rapid growth in population- by 1819- northern majority in House of Representatives
o US population doubled every 25 years – 1845- 17million but by 1860- reached 31m
o Between 1815 and 1850- population of west of Appalachians increased 3x as quickly as that
of the original 13 states – by 1850- ½ Americans lived west of Appalachians
 South worried about shift of political balance (growth could give Northern majority in Senate ,
North worried westward expansion -shift political balance back to South
 South felt they needed to add new states to maintain balance –Missouri Controversy
o Application of Missouri for entry into Union as a slave state provoked clash
 Tallmadge- 1819- added anti-slavery amendment– ‘if dissolution of the union must take
place, let it be so’, ‘If Civil War must come, I say let it come’
 Texas admission also provoked controversy as Texas could make up 5 states
o Santa Anna 1835- marched into Texas killed all Texan defenders March 1836- Jackson didn’t
send help but Americans went – April 1836- Sam Houston defeated Mexicans
o Northerners feared accretion of southern political influence with its entry – South could
Resultingly have more congressional influence and dilute Northern interests
o Jackson and Van Buren shelved issue to preserve sectional unity – 1836- then became big
issue again Henry Clay vs Polk 1844- Texas admitted by Whig President Tyler 1845


However

 Issues resolved- Missouri compromise –maintain balance admission of future states +
mechanism for determining whether states could apply as free/ slave states(36,30) -no slavery in
the Louisiana Purchase Territory
 Election of 1844- Polk’s platform- embracing broad vision of manifest destiny and policy of
westward expansion including both Texas and Oregon – capturing young population’s
enthusiasm for expansion- shows divisions were resolved
 Created division when perceived to be in interest of 1 section over the other – national
politicians and parties could diffuse division by promoting national interests


1. More divisive than economy and westward expansion was growing division over slavery

 Quakers in 1790s condemned slavery as moral evil- Northern states abolished slavery 1787-
Northwest ordinance while South King Cotton throve- 1790 -9000 bales of cotton produced in US
but Eli Whitney cotton gin 1793 revitalised southern agriculture – became profitable again- by
1830s- South producing 2million bales of cotton a year – demand for unskilled labour increased -
Economic divergence +westward expansion entrenched divisions over slavery as rather than
become uneconomical – westward expansion allowed value of slaves to increase- more
profitable institution to the South – principal labour system
o By 1850- 1/3 white southern families owned slaves – 55% worked in cotton, 10% in tobacco,
10% rice, sugar, hemp, 15% as domestic servants
 Wealthy south elite conscious need to legitimise slavery – show it wasn’t immoral
o Calhoun reframed slavery as positive good NOT necessary evil- central institution of Southern
Society - slavery society superior to northern wage slavery
 Hostility of abolitionists to slavery was reframed as hostility to South
 Perceived threat- stirring up slave rebellion posed threat to Southern peace+ security-
c.1845 conception that abolitionism was widespread in north- impression that northern
and southern societies were increasingly different.
 Exacerbated an already serious division

, o Slaveowners- right of property in people were enshrined in the constitution
 Constitution served to protect freedom of individuals- slavery- local Southern institution
not constitutionally protected national institution
o 1820 – Mason Dixon Line – ended slavery above 36.30 , 1840 – 9 states- Personal liberty Laws
–wouldn’t assist slaveowners seeking to recover runaway property
o Southerners perceive general hostility to slavery and southern society- unwillingness to
acknowledge constitutional rights
 Presented Underground Railway as an organised conspiracy rather than an ad hoc and
loosely organised idea
 Nat Turner Rebellion 1831- 55 whites killed – Southerners blames abolitionists
 South excluded abolitionist literature – circulation had penalty of death in some states
 Saw creation of new slave states as essential to protecting equality and rights in
Washington + states’ rights as guarantee of rights -limit power of a federal government
 William Lloyd Garrison – 1830s- Liberator – arguing slavery was a sin and demanded
immediate abolition, National Anti-Slavery Society 1833- militant – by 1838- 250,000
members including Frederick Douglass- churned out anti-slavery literature, petitioned
congress BUT Congress introduced gag rule 1836- abolitionist petitions weren’t discussed
o Abolitionism had limited appeal in North – didn’t want northern exodus of slaves – anti-
slavery mobs were broken up by angry Northern mobs- Elijah Lovejoy 1837 murdered by
Northern Mob Illinois – didn’t even win support of Democrats/ Whigs – 1840- Abolitionist
Liberty Party presidential candidate only won 7000 votes
 Though economic change and westward expansion highlighted differences between N + S ,
c.1845 the divisions they provoked could be diffused by compromise
Slavery was a more important division between the sections – by 1845

 Economic growth and growing population imbalance – rise of northern anti-slavery attitudes and
planters paranoia regarding their ability to protect their rights within the federal government-
slavery became the most serious division between N + S
‘The main issue dividing north and south, c1845, was
disagreement about the balance of power between the
Federal Government and the States.’(25)
Introduction
 Disagreement about balance of power did cause division between the North and the South but
wasn’t main cause of division between North and South- slavery and westward expansion were
Para 1 – Disagreement did cause lasting damage between the North and South
 2 opposing ideologies between North and South – states’ rights vs federalism
 South = states’ rights- States agree to share some sovereignty with federal government as long
as the government serves in their best interests and can nullify legislation if they don’t
o Limited federal government power - wasn’t important early stages of Union – South had
more electoral college votes - dominated federal government – 6/8 presidents up to Jackson
Southerners -Northern population growth led to growth in representation
 North believed federalism - States don’t share sovereignty with federal govt.- union created in
response to people NOT states
o Daniel Webster Speech in response to Robert Hayne - Union Is 1 , states are inseparable - No
state has right to nullify –disintegrates bonds of the Union
 States’ rights key in defence of slavery which was threatened by the North - removal of slavery
could not be imposed on the slave states
 North believed that their states’ rights were being encroached on by what they saw as ‘slave
power’ taking control of Federal Government, notably under the Presidency of Polk.

,  Nevertheless - political parties divided by states’ rights (Democrats for stronger states’ rights,
Whigs for stronger Federal Government)- both parties received votes in both North and South
Para 2 – State rights ideology that came from disagreements about how much power is shared by
the states created other issues that caused Division between the North and South
 South believed on issues like imposition of tariffs- interests of Southerners were being ignored
o South favoured low levels of tariffs, North wanted high tariffs to protect industry
 Difference explicated through the Nullification crisis and ‘Tariff of Abominations’
o 1828 Tariff triggered South Carolinian response –38% tariff on 92% of all imported goods –
protecting Northern industry from competition but disadvantaging South
 Triggered Southern anger + some states nullifying it –constitutional crisis
o The Nullification Crisis highlighted belief held by some in the South that states had the right
to nullify Federal laws. South Carolinian actions led to outrage in the North
o South’s view that the Northern states benefitted disproportionately as a result of the tariffs
was divisive, and that essentially they were paying for the Northerners benefit.
 Calhoun– ‘South Carolina Exposition and Protest’- criticising protective tariff –tariffs
should raise revenue NOT artificially boost Northern business
 Labelled S. Carolina as ‘serf of the system’- due to how they were forced to pay higher
prices for necessities.
 Tariff ordered not to be collected – Jackson mobilised militia – showing divisive nature of
conflict
o The compromise made by Henry clay – tariff levels progressively being reduced now and in
the future = Calhoun and S. Carolina accept compromise BUT they still nullified the Force Act
– establishing in Southern Mind that they still have the right to nullify
o Continued to be a source of political tension - President Tyler vetoing 2 bills passed by
Congress calling for higher tariffs 1840- Whigs beginning impeachment proceedings.
Para 3 – Westward Expansion and economic was the most divisive
Para 4 – Slavery was most divisive not disagreement
a. Slavery – constitution itself was a compromise – degree of ambiguity – no reference to slavery
but reference to property 5th amendment + does make provision for recovery of property and by
extension slavery if they run away – how it has to be performed isn’t prescribed in constitution
itself- just indicates that slaveowners have right to regain property themselves
b. 1793 Fugitive Slave Act – extent to which laws of one state are recognised by other states – you
have to rely on other states recognising your state law but if they don’t acknowledge that – this
creates a problem – slaves may run away or people may procure their freedom – issues over
how to uphold property rights of Southerners- FSA may say you have right to cover but doesn’t
produce federal tools to enforce it – no police force or means to procure recovery of property –
depends on state governments – seen through personal liberty laws which gives turn to legal
judgement – Prigg v Pennsylvania 1840- acknowledges the right of slaveowners to recover prop-
erty but also the right of a state to decide themselves on whether to acknowledge this right –
cant require citizens of a state that outlaws slavery to assist slaveowners in recovering property
on their behalf
c. In 1830s following nullification crisis – the Liberator William Garrison talking about secession
from the South – talking about evil of the South – slavery is its own issue in its own right how-
ever NOT constitution- now moral issue – abolitionism sees it as moral taint
i. Remain in a union with tainted states – lords of loom vs lash – abolitionists see north as
complicit in slavery- Whigs are the lords of the loom – abolitionism raises whole issue
of slavery – unresolved issues are important and in slavery they have become very im-
portant -1 unresolved issue that is now distinct from constitutional issue

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