Pre-Civil War By Samantha Moccaro ; Antebellum

  • The Underground Railroad

    The Underground Railroad
    Harriet Tubman was called the "conductor" of the Underground Railroad. She helped free over two hundred slaves. If slaves were caught escaping using their codes and signals, they would be sold back into slavery.
  • Fugative Slave Act

    Fugative Slave Act
    The Fugative Slave Act was passed to prevent slaves from being able to have a trial by jury. Anyone caught helping a fugative slave would be put in jail or fined.
  • Uncle Tom's Cabin

    Uncle Tom's Cabin
    Harriet Beecher Stowe had witnessed butality in the south and wrote Uncle Tom's Cabin. This fueled the abolitionist movement and led up to the Civil War.
  • Kansas Nebraska Act

    Kansas Nebraska Act
    Stephen Douglass proposed the bill which divided Kansas and Nebraska by the 40th parallel. It was decided that they would use popular sovereignty on the issue of slavery.
  • The Sack of Lawrence

    The Sack of Lawrence
    In Lawrence, Kansas, eight hundred armed men swept in. The burned down antislavery head quarters and resortedto violence.
  • Violence in the Senate

    Violence in the Senate
    While Charles Sumner's was giving his speach called 'The Crime Against Kansas' Andrew P. Butler increasingly became livid. He took his cane and beat Sumner for his proslavery beliefs.
  • The Pottawatomie Massacre

    The Pottawatomie Massacre
    John Brown commited the Pottawatomie Massacre as a result of being angry because of the Sack of Lawrence. He a group of abolitionists killed five settlers near Pottawatomie Creek. This became another event leading up to the Civil War and started Bleeding Kansas.
  • Lecompton Constitution

    Lecompton Constitution
    The Lecompton Constitution was in response to antislavery movements. It protected the rights of slave owners. President Buchanan endorsed a referendum saying free soilers were over reacting. Stephan Douglass gets the voters to reject the constitution and is seen as a new hero.
  • Harpers Ferry

    Harpers Ferry
    John Brown lead eighteen men to Harpers Ferry. He planned to take the federal arsenal and distribute weapons to the slaves to begin a revolution. Instead he was caught, eight of his men died and there was a decision to hang Brown.
  • Abraham Lincoln Elected President

    Abraham Lincoln Elected President
    Lincoln's election was a signal of seccesion of the southern states. Public appearences were watched widespread and were called the Lincoln-Douglass Debates. Lincoln fought against slavery while Douglass believed in popular sovereignty. During Lincoln's presidency was the end to slavery.