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American Rhetorical
Movements
to the Civil War
and Reconstruction: A Chronology
1562 |
British slave trading to the New World begins. |
1750’s |
Quakers in PA, NJ, and New England prohibit slavery amongst their members. John Woolman, Journal |
1776 |
|
1784 |
Thomas Jefferson attempts to prohibit slavery after 1800 in new states. Clause struck by one vote. Question of extent of federal power in the territories opens |
1786 |
Jefferson, "Letter to Jean Nicholas Démeunier." |
Northwest Ordinance:
slavery prohibited, fugitive slave clause added. See Map. |
|
1787–1788 |
James Madison, Alexander Hamilton and John Jay, Federalist Papers. |
1788 |
VA ratification debates. Patrick Henry, "Against the Federal Constitution." |
1789 |
Constitution ratified. "Great Compromise" between large and small states results in House and Senate balance of power. A slave counted for 3/5ths of a person for apportioning representatives, augmenting Southern voting power by 30%. |
1791 |
Successful slave revolution in Haiti led by François Dominique Toussaint L'Ouverture. |
1792 |
Kentucky enters the Union a slave state. Slavery extended to Mississippi south of the Ohio River. |
1793 |
Fugitive Slave Law enacted. |
1797 |
Bingham, Columbian Orator 1st ed. |
1798 |
Mississippi Territory organized with slavery permitted. |
1800 |
Thomas Jefferson elected President (Democratic Republican). |
Louisiana purchase permitted
to retain slavery throughout its extent. See Map of Louisiana Purchase. |
|
1807 |
British slave trade abolished. |
1808 |
Importation of slaves into
the U.S. prohibited. |
1811 |
Henry Clay elected to House, becomes Speaker. John C. Calhoun elected to House. |
1812–1814 |
War with Britain. |
1812 |
Daniel
Webster elected to House as Federalist. Anti-war. |
1815 |
Arkansas territory organized with slavery permitted. |
Missouri Compromise
accomplished by Clay: Missouri admitted as slave, Maine as free. Slavery
prohibited in the remainder of the Louisiana Territory N. of 36°30´
(Thomas amendment). Controversy viewed as serious threat to the Union. |
|
1821 |
Benjamin
Lundy, a Quaker, begins abolitionist newspaper, The Genius of
Universal Emancipation. |
1822 |
Slave revolt organized by Denmark Vesey, Charleston, SC. |
1823 |
Slavery abolished in Chile. |
1824 |
John Quincy Adams, an ex-Federalist, elected President ("National Republican"). Andrew Jackson had plurality of electoral votes. Slavery abolished in Central America. |
1825 |
John C. Calhoun Vice President under Adams. |
1826 |
Death of Thomas Jefferson on 4 July. |
1827 |
Slaves over 40 freed in
NY, Sojourner Truth among them. |
1828 |
Andrew Jackson elected President
(Birth of Democratic Party). |
1829 |
Slavery abolished in Mexico. David Walker publishes his Appeal... addressed primarily to slaves and urging revolution. |
1830-1838 |
Removal of Choctaw, Creek and Cherokee from territory in GA, AL and MS to land beyond the Mississippi. "Trail of Tears". |
1830 |
Webster-Hayne Debate over Federal tariffs. |
William Lloyd Garrison publishes
first issue of The Liberator. Contains his statement "To the
Public." Conventional date for beginning of radical abolitionism. Slavery
abolished in Bolivia. |
|
1832 |
South Carolina passes Nullification Ordinance. Calhoun resigns Vice Presidency to enter Senate. Force Bill gives Jackson more military power and compromise tariff gradually lowers rates. SC nullifies the Force Bill but accepts the compromise tariff. Texas War of Independence begins. Abolitionists, among them Benjamin Lundy, argue that Texas is warring with Mexico to reinstitute slavery. |
1833 |
American Anti-Slavery Society
formed by Garrison and Mott. "Declaration of Sentiments" published in The Liberator. Slavery abolished in Britain. |
1835 |
Andrew Jackson asks for law prohibiting the mailing of "incendiary publications intended to instigate the slaves to insurrection." |
1836–1837 |
"Gag Rule" controversy in Congress. John Quincy Adams agitates to admit abolitionist petitions. |
1836 |
Van Buren (Democrat) wins Presidency in close election against Whigs. Texas wins independence from Mexico. |
1837 |
Calhoun, "On
Reception of the Abolition Petitions." |
1839 |
Amistad mutiny. John Quincy Adams argues before the Supreme Court on behalf of the escaped slaves. Controversy breaks out in the American AntiSlavery Society over tactics: moral suasion vs. forming a political party. James Birney and William Lloyd Garrison exchange views in the pages of the Liberator. |
1840-1855 |
Massive immigration from Germany and Ireland into Northeast and upper Midwest. These immigrants become the first tenement laborers and will serve disproportionately as Union foot soldiers in the Civil War. |
1840 |
Mott and Stanton attend
London Anti-Slavery Society, where women delegates were excluded. American
Anti-Slavery Society splits, in part over issue of women delegates. |
1841 |
Harrison (Whig) dies soon after taking office. Replaced by Tyler, a state rights Whig. |
1842 |
Prigg v. Pennsylvania. Prigg convicted of kidnapping in PA for retrieving slave without certificate. Conviction reversed. |
1843 |
Sojourner Truth begins public career. |
1844 |
Clay (Whig) loses Presidential election to James Polk (Democrat). |
1845 |
Texas
annexed as slave state. War declared with Mexico. |
1846-1848 |
War with Mexico. |
1846 |
Wilmot Proviso, an amendment to territorial legislation prohibiting slavery in territories acquired from Mexico, fails. Southerners claim that only states are sovereign, and Congress has no right to exclude some states from equal access to territorial property. |
1847 |
Stephen A. Douglas (Democrat,Illinois)
elected to Senate. |
Oregon territory
organized with slavery prohibited. |
|
Henry Clay returns
to Senate. |
|
1851 |
Sojourner Truth, "A’n’t
I a Woman?" |
1852 |
Death of Daniel Webster. |
1853–1856 |
Know-Nothing Party flourishes (anti-foreign, anti-Catholic). Takes many seats from Whigs, competes with Republicans. |
Kansas-Nebraska
Act is held to repeal
the Thomas amendment. Kansas admitted under Stephen Douglas' doctrine
of "popular sovereignty." |
|
1855 |
"Bleeding Kansas": Kansas erupts in armed attacks as Free Soilers compete with Missourians over slavery clauses in rival constitutions. |
1856 |
James Buchanan elected (Democrat). Demise of Whig Party. Sumner is severely beaten in Kansas by Preston Brooks, congressman from South Carolina, for anti-slavery speech. |
Dred Scott decision. Chief Justice Roger Taney writes majority decision holding that African Americans are not citizens and endorsing consitutionality of popular sovereignty. |
|
1858 |
Lincoln, "A House Divided." Douglas, "Popular Sovereignty." Lincoln-Douglas debates. Lincoln loses Senate campaign to Stephen Douglas. |
1859 |
John Brown’s insurrection at Harper’s Ferry. "Speech to the Court." |
1860 |
Lincoln, nominated for President by Republicans, defeats Douglas. South Carolina leads move toward secession (Sep. 20, 1860); |
MS (1/9) FL (1/10); AL (1/12) GA (1/19); LA (1/26); TX (2/1) follow SC in seceding from the Union. Provisional Constitution
of the Confederate States written in convention
on Feb. 9; Jefferson Davis elected President. |
|
1863 |
Emancipation Proclamation issued as wartime emergency act to destabilize states in rebellion against the Union. Slavery abolished in the Netherlands and its colonies. |
1865 |
Lee surrenders. Lincoln assassinated; Andrew Johnson, a pro-Union Democrat, becomes President. 13th Amendment passed abolishing slavery. |
Woman's Rights association splits over issue of universal (i.e. woman) versus Negro suffrage. American Equal Rights Association formed to promote universal suffrage by Lucretia Mott and Elizabeth Cady Stanon. Stanton and Susan B. Anthony form a second organization, the National Woman Suffrage Association, to promote woman suffrage and full social equality. Lucy Stone, Henry Blackwell, and Julia Ward Howe form another, rival organization, the American Woman Suffrage Association, promoting a more moderate view of woman suffrage which separated political and social roles. | |
1867 |
Supported by anti-Negro suffrage advocate George Francis Train, Stanton and Anthony campaign for woman suffrage in Kansas. Kansas Referendum Speech. |
1870 |
15th Amendment ratified granting suffrage to African Americans and freed slaves. |
Continue
the chronology: labor, women's rights, civil
rights and student protests in the 20th century |