Am I the only one who enjoys the beautifully and masterfully edited sequences just as much as the information being presented? I mean, I like learning, but wow... The visuals might be just as good as the information itself. Kudos to Qa'ed Mai.
@@kyleg2756 YES IT WAS, otherwise they would have had no reason establishing slavery in the minor territories they conquered in Mexican land, stop erasing history.
Contemporary standards at the time say slavery is bad. I can't sympathize with the South at all if there argument of freedom is "I want to own people".
Pinkie Pie: and yet you don't advocate invading CHINA over keeping more than a BILLION people in bondage-- because China is a SOVEREIGN NATION, you say. Well, so was every American state. The Declaration of Independence held the colonies to be "Free and Independent states, with the full power to levy war, conclude peace, contract alliances, establish commerce, and do all the other things that independent states may of right do." That's PLURAL; so each state was a SEPARATE nation. FACT.
The issue is simply avoiding PROOF that the states formed a national union, because there isn't any; because you're ignoring the 24 states that didn't HAVE slavery.
The Kansas Nebraska Act was only the last straw. The most consequential legislations were the Vermont Constitution in 1777, the Pennsylvania abolition act in 1780, the 1784 Congressional rejection of Jefferson's slavery ban, and lastly the Northwest Ordinance of 1787. These laws divided the nation long before Stephen Douglas came on the scene.
So the reason of the divide is because of the government concerning the issue of slavery? So they were like, Northerners: what about that slavery issue? Southerners: *REEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEE*
William H. Seward actually brought more followers to the nascent Republican party than Lincoln. He was enormously popular, well-connected, and capable. His election as the first Republican president seemed inevitable even to his opponents. Lincoln was a relatively unknown moderate. The fact that he defeated Seward at the convention came as a shock to nearly everyone. Unfortunately, he is all but forgotten except for his push to have the US purchase the Russian colonial territory of Alaska from the Russian empire.
Lincoln's victory at the convention may have been a shock to many people, but certainly not the steel and financial barons that backed him there. His nomination was bought and paid for.
@@MamaKatt I think he’s referring to the fact that Lincoln being perceived as more moderate then many was seen as more electable. It’s quite shocking that Lincoln is now revered to the level of Jefferson or Washington considering in his time he was so hated even by his own party. He was even assassinated
3:02 "by the light of his own burning effigies." That must have been a popular expression at the time. John Jay said the same thing about traveling from Boston to Philadelphia after signing the Jay Treaty.
Life Is Only Optional: America was NEVER a nation. The "one piece of legislation" was the Declaration of Independence; which held the colonies to be "Free and Independent states, with the full power to levy war, conclude peace, contract alliances, establish commerce, and do all the other things that independent states may of right do." That's PLURAL; so each state was a SEPARATE nation.
If they did, you might know how to spell correctly, but then again probably not because Ted doesn't even know that that isn't the confederate flag, nor was it ever.
Reading about bleeding Kansas really does bring out some excellent lines. I'm paraphrasing, it's been a while, but there was an incident: "realising the town was not going to abide by the new government, the settlers bought up 60 rifles, a mortar and a static machine gun".
Pottawatomie is pronounced "Pot - uh - WATT - uh- mee" Kind of like "not a lot of me" if you replace n with p and l with w. I'm from kansas. There's lakes and towns and all sorts of stuff named after it.
@@antoniusbritannia8217 that is sad, actually. I wonder if they had ever been "pushed out" by any other tribes, or ever "pushed out" tribes that weren't their own? That would be equally sad, would it not?
>"The Democratic Party was shaken when in the newly formed 'Kansas Territory'." >Shows the Arkansas Territory which was carved up into the state of Arkansas and Indian Territory's 18 years before.
It's important to note that Abraham Lincoln's win wasn't the knock-out punch illustrated in this video. Lincoln didn't come close to 50 percent of the popular vote, and Stephen Douglas was fourth in the electoral college votes. John Breckinridge, a former vice president, dominated in the South because of his pro slavery stance. Compared to Breckenridge, Douglas came off as a middle of the road guy. Douglas and Breckinridge split the Southern vote, allowing Lincoln to win a plurality in the electoral college.
@@jesseberg3271 the camel/needle thing is about worshipping wealth. It isn't wrong to have wealth. A lot of people see that verse incorrectly. Thought I'd point it out.
Just my two cents about the Civil War. Slavery was the key reason for the South seceding from the Union, they say it in their constitution. But the reason Union declared war on South was because them trying to keep the Union together, which can be seen by Lincoln stating that he would "allow slavery to stay untouched to preserve the union". So basically southerners were already pissed because of tariffs, taxes and loss of power in the Union compared to those in the North, but the slavery issue got the support of the rich political elite from the south, which were mostly slave owners. So basically they all decided to ally under the same flag and create a new state, the confederacy. Lincoln did not want to see his country get torn apart, so he attempted to make compromises so the US would not divide. South did not accept these compromises, but left the Union guns blazing, taking over and disarming the northern military bases in southern territory.
Markus FIN Well, by abusing power there was the example listed in the video regarding how they ignored the Missouri Compromise. Further back, there is the 3/5 clause. I don't remember the specific issue, but during the times of the Articles of Confederation, the south was already threatening to break relations with their northern neighbors over some really petty issue, I can't remember exactly. Then there were the border ruffians, as mentioned. There were other things too, this isn't an exhaustive list. By being mad whenever they lose power, two things that I mentioned above count here as well: the 3/5 clause which exaggerated their influence in the House of Representatives, and their early threats of secession. I don't remember all the issues where they threatened to secede, and I admit I should do more research in that area, but it occurred quite a few times. Threat of secession was used multiple times by the southern states before the civil war as a scare tactic whenever they couldn't get their way by more logical means.
So the whole idea about the South becoming and independent nation did not just "bounce up" from nowhere when slavery became an issue, but had been there already before and used as an argument every time they couldn't get their way?
Markus FIN Well, "every" time would be an exaggeration. But they had threatened to secede over more petty issues. I don't remember the details right now. Things are kindof hectic right now, so I will do research on what I vaguely remember when I get the opportunity. It was brought up earlier on the slavery issue during the presidency of Andrew Jackson. A senator from ?Virginia? I think. Could have the wrong state, but Jackson was vehemently opposed to secession even though he supported slavery. There was a time before during the Articles o Confederation period, but I don't remember the details. I believe there might have been one other time.
I enjoyed the lesson, like always, but I feel it vastly oversimplifies the literal dozens of problems that America had already been facing. The piece of legislation discussed in this lesson seems like an arbitrary point to start. I also find it quite telling that piece closely follows the lesson on Andrew Jackson. Andrew Jackson probably did more to divide the nation than this piece of legislation! Other major points are the Mexican American War and the Annexation of Texas. The Wilmont Provisio as legislation, Uncle Tom's Cabin, The Supreme Court's decision in Dred Scott, The idea of Manifest Destiny and its effect on Nation building. If we are talking about whether the Civil War was inevitable, the 1850's are well past that date.
Yes, it does, but if all the problems were included & explained we’d have a two year long university level course to go through. There are already several of those available here on YT, which I’d certainly recommend watching.
Karmic Reballance Arkansas means South Wind and Kansas means people of the south Wind so technically people from Arkansas should be called Kansas and Kansas should have a different name.
+Grokford Arkansas is actually the Illini Indian name for the Quapaw Indians, the "Down River People". When the French explorers Marquette and Joliet traveled from the Great Lakes down the Mississippi, they encountered the Illini Indians. After spending some time in modern-day Illinois, they continued their travels down the Mississippi River. They asked the Illini Indians what tribes of Indians (peaceful or aggressive) they might encounter. The Illini Indians told them of the Arkansea people, or "Down River People" who were peaceful and friendly. Marquette and Joliet named the land of the Quapaw (or the Arkansea) on the first maps of the region, created in the mid-1760s.
And the WRITER screwed up the FACTS. The USA was NOT a nation. The "one piece of legislation" was the Declaration of Independence; which held the colonies to be "Free and Independent states, with the full power to levy war, conclude peace, contract alliances, establish commerce, and do all the other things that independent states may of right do." That's PLURAL; so each state was a SEPARATE nation.
@@SovereignStatesman Huh? The Declaration of Independence was not a piece of legislation. It was an explanation, not law. The U.S. was absolutely a nation, first united as a confederation of states under the Articles, and then under federalism with the Constitution.
@@sarahmccoin5157 Nope. Every state retained its sovereignty, freedom and independence under the Articles of Confederation; and the Constitution came AFTER the American Revolution, which established the states as separate nations. Check your Dunning-Kruger privilege.
In the 1860 Election there were four candidates vying for President: Douglas, (Democratic, 12 electoral votes, 25.5% popular vote); Lincoln (Republican, 180 electoral votes, 39.8% popular vote), Breckenridge (Southern Democratic, 72 electoral vote, 18.1% popular vote); Bell (Constitutional Union, 39 electoral votes, 12.6% popular vote) The break down still give more electoral votes to Lincoln than the other combined electoral votes for the opposition.
I started spacing out after 2 minutes. Then, I woke up again from 4:25 to 4:40; then, spaced out again. Perhaps add more action when covering this subject? This reminded me why I didn't like history in high school; I guess I'm just simpleminded.
@TriplePlay Yes obviously the United States is still here, a nation divided is not a nation that doesn't exist, or a nation that is crumbling. Just because the US will continue to be split between Democrats and Republicans does not mean our democracy or order will crumble; that's just how the country works. And yes, our nation being divided as it is now is an issue, and will always be an issue.
Being divided may be much healthier than being united in a terrible way. For example, World War 2 Japanese were united in support of their emperor. They could have used a lot more division. Same could be said for the Germans.
There are several errors in the video presentation. The Arkansas Territory is incorrectly labeled as the Kansas Territory. Arkansas, located directly south of Missouri became a territory in 1819. The original Arkansas Territory included the current state of Arkansas and part of what is now Oklahoma. In 1824 and again in 1828, most of what is now Oklahoma was designated as Indian Territory. Native Americans from across the southeast were forced from their homelands through to their reserved lands in modern day Oklahoma, New Mexico, and Arizona. Arkansas became a state on June 15, 1836, 18 years before the Kansas Nebraska Act. The Missouri Compromise outlawed slavery in the remaining Louisiana Territory north of the 36th 30th parallel. Slavery was allowed in the Arkansas Territory, seeing that it's northern border is the 36th 30th parallel. According to Section. 8: "And be it further enacted. That in all that territory ceded by France to the United States, under the name of Louisiana, which lies north of thirty-six degrees and thirty minutes north latitude, not included within the limits of the state, contemplated by this act, slavery and involuntary servitude, otherwise than in the punishment of crimes, whereof the parties shall have been duly convicted, shall be, and is hereby, forever prohibited:" As a territory and as a state, slavery was allowed in Arkansas until the ratification of the 13th Amendment in 1865.
+Kasey Hill It makes me curious how educational content is when their are little errors as such in them? How can we teach history if we don't keep the facts straight. Or are they and it questions what side of the line one is one?
@Kasey Hill, That is right, but it was by no means entirely clear whether the Missouri Compromise applied solely to the those territories under the possession of the United States at the time of the passage of the act, i.e. the Louisiana Territory. As the United States government accrued additional territory, the applicability of the Missouri Compromise was widely discussed and debated which greatly agitated the controversy over slavery in the territories. Slavery was made illegal in Arkansas per the Emancipation Proclamation, not the Thirteenth Amendment, at least as far as the rebellion was concerned. The legality of the proclamation beyond the suppression of the rebellion was questionable though and hence, as far as Arkansas is concerned, the Thirteenth Amendment codified the Emancipation Proclamation into Constitutional law. I would also disagree with the video in terms of assessing the Kansas-Nebraska Act, but that is an interpretative issue.
I feel way smarter about history in the 1800s. Before, I was taught all about this lesson but never really understood the huge cause. Thanks to this video, I memorized the huge cause that began the civil war of 1861 and the reason why the U.S nation was split in half.
Honestly, schools should take notes from this channel, in my personal opinion if I were to be taught with this type of video, I wouldn’t have been kick out of my history classes lol I love history just hated the way my teacher ruled the class
hardwirecars And parties never change? The original Republicans were seen as radicals...crazy etc. Just like One side calls the other side nasty names, this crap is why we can't have nice things...
Which party was behind the move to end racism, from desegregating/integrating the military in the late 40's to the Civil Rights/Voting Rights Act?.... The Democrats! Which party opposes removal of statues, flags and monuments that the Democrats of the past put up and the Democrats of today want to get rid of?.... The Republicans, saying that the Democrats want to destroy OUR ((Republicans') heritage and history 😂😂😂
Interesting, but it misrepresents the main point. The South wasn't attempting to spread slavery to the North; they were attempting to maintain parity in the congress to block potential legislation the South didn't want. This included anything that weakened slavery, but more significantly raising of the tariff.
Bulldog Bank: The USA was NOT a nation, so there was no civil war. The "one piece of legislation" was the Declaration of Independence; which held the colonies to be "Free and Independent states, with the full power to levy war, conclude peace, contract alliances, establish commerce, and do all the other things that independent states may of right do." That's PLURAL; so each state was a SEPARATE nation.
Tom Evans and? So slavery is justifiable? Because the legislation in “independent” states can decide for themselves? Or would you rather go outside now and tell everyone in the US “hey USA was never a nation”.
@@Voltaire8559 As far as I see it, he did not try to justify slavery. I think what he was getting at was that secession, or the right to secede or not, is not written anywhere in the constitution of the United States. The constitution gives power to the states, and puts limits on the federal government. As secession was not mentioned it could be assumed that their was nothing constitutional wrong with it. The constitution did not give authority to the federal government to regulate it. This may be why sometimes the Civil War is referred to as the War between the States, or something along those lines. The reason the Civil War happened has more to do with Abraham Lincoln deciding that he was going to use the office of the presidency to keep the union of all the states together. It is a well known fact that Abraham Lincoln's interests were preserving the Union as a whole, that is why he resisted the Southern states' secession. He would have tried to preserve the union between all the states even if that meant preserving slavery in some of the states. He even said as much. I think the greatest travesty of the Civil War was that it laid the framework for a large federal government, and set the precedent that the federal government would regulate the states, and the union itself even on matters the constitution never gave authority. It is interesting though on two regards, the North would not have had the power at least at the time to outlaw slavery, because they would not have had enough states to outweigh the South's vote to make the constitutional amendment. Abraham Lincoln did not allow the states to secede, always seeing them as part of the U.S.A but after the war would not let them vote on the constitutional amendment. I guess that makes sense. Although it does not add up ideologically. Secondly if I am not mistaken, Texas was its own Republic for a time, and the people of Texas voted to join the United States, with the condition that if the people of Texas ever voted to leave the Union they would be allowed to. Abe didn't allow them to. Don't say yeah well slavery... because that was not Abraham Lincoln's reasoning for not letting them secede, it was solely to stop the states from leaving, as far as he was concerned.
@@WhenInDarknessSeekTheLight Slavery was crushed in the United States, after the war. That was not the reason that Abraham Lincoln resisted secession. The war started because Lincoln would not let them leave. He even said that, if he could end the war and keep slavery he would have. He opposed slavery, but that was not the reason for him not allowing the states to secede, and he would have let slavery continue if it would end the war and save the Union. I should also say that the constitutionality of secession is debated, not as though Lincoln let it go to the courts though. Secondly, Abraham Lincoln though he opposed slavery, only made slavery illegal in states that were no longer in the union. So the states he had no control of, it was a political tactic. He let the states that have slavery that did not secede have their slaves until the war ended and the constitutional amendment was passed. Third and most important, slavery still is wide spread on the continent of Africa as it has been for thousands of years. We never talk about it, because we are busy talking about Ukraine, among other things. So slavery is very far from crushed, but there is less of it, and none legal in the States.
Can we just appreciate how the animation only uses 4 COLORS? I mean c'mon, FOUR! That's crazy! (I mean they do use dithering and line shading to break up some colors to give the illusion of more colors, but still, that's pretty awesome)
Good video, but I can't believe it doesn't mention the 36'30 line at all, and how the KNA repealed it. The significance of this act is that it took away the very thing that kept western territory free from slavery. Now that the promise of free land has been taken away, a political party was needed to combat the expansion of slavery, thus the formation of the Republican Party. That connection is the biggest takeaway of the KNA, in my opinion. And, since we're going to summarize the 7 years of events following the KNA in 3 minutes, can't we spend 15 seconds explaining how the Mexican-American War was fueled by Southern interests to gain new land in which to expand slavery, since they were bound by the 36'30 Line?
Just a nit to pick, but it seems to me that along about 2:03, your map is calling the combination of Oklahoma and Arkansas Kansas. Am I misreading that?
+PolyvinyLs no, it wasn't. At no point was Arkansas territory (AR+OK) part of Kansas Territory (present day KS and the part of CO that doesn't want to be CO)
I imagine the only feasible way that South could have eked out some kind of victory during the Civil War is if it started about 10 years ahead of schedule, when the North's industrial and manpower advantages weren't quite as prevalent.
***** Call it outsmarted if you like. Lincoln knew he would have less support for his war among residents of the North if he were not the aggressor. So he took advantage of the Ft. Sumpter situation to outsmart the southerners in to firing first. But the real aggressor in the war was Lincoln, even as the southern plantation holders maintained their aggression on the blacks. And remember, that remedying that aggression was only a pretext for the war. Lincoln said if he could have maintained federal power over the south while keeping slavery, he would have done so. The south wanted to secede and did so peacefully. Lincoln killed 700,000 Americans in order to maintain his own power. Racism today would be much less had the Civil War never been fought, and the South had been allowed to secede peacefully. The scourge of slavery would have died out soon anyway, without war, as it did in nearly every other nation.
freesk8 if i was lincoln i would have killed all the slaveholders. all of them. lincoln wanted only to free the slaves and he unfortunately didn't had any intention in punishing the slave owning motherfuckers. very unfortunate. i would have punished them way more than they and you could have imagined. fuck them.
ptegegn1 It is a very common misconception that Lincoln's primary aim was to free the slaves. Lincoln's primary motivation was to prevent the South from leaving the union. He wanted to preserve the power of the federal government over the southern states. He wanted to maintain the tariff revenue from the southern ports that went to DC. Lincoln was actually quite racist. He voted, as an Illinois legislator, to outlaw freed blacks from moving to Illinois. His favored solution was to ship all of the blacks back to Africa. No, Lincoln merely USED the slavery issue to gain support for the war among people in the North. His emancipation proclamation was an effort to get slaves within Confederate territory to rebel, and divert Confederate troops from the war. Look into it. I am telling the truth. Lincoln cared more about his legacy: he did not want to be the President under whom the southern states were allowed to leave, even though they had a right to. Slavery is evil, but the situation of racism we have today would be a lot better had we done away with slavery the way nearly every other nation on the Earth did it: without a horribly bloody war. And N. America would be better off with the Southern States being their own nation. Less power in DC.
It's worth pointing out the context around John Brown. Most people today now agree that his anti-slavery stance was just, but some may think he was out of line by escalating the violence in the territory, or the brutality of how he killed pro slavery people. This glosses over the fact that he didn't start the violence. For 2 years (from 1854 to 1856) violence had occured many times, with 8 lethal incidents . There were no documented raids by abolitionist geoups on pro slavery ones, and virtually all violence was against abolitionists. After the sacking of Lawrence (where pro slavery forces terrorized abolitionists in the city), Brown launched his raid as a retaliation.
I have a dream that my four little children will one day live in a nation where they will not be judged by the color of their skin, but by the content of their character.
John Brown's raid on Harper's Ferry is just as important, I believe. After the raid, Southerners were extremely afraid that slaves would rise up and kill them while they slept. So, the South started militias. Which were the beginnings of the Southern army.
Militias had been in the United States since the English colonial Trained Bands of Jamestown (1607) and Plymouth (1620). In the United States proper militias, North and South, were nationally consecrated in the Federal Militia Act of 1792. “Militia” in the English sense had its origins as far back as the Saxon Fyrd in the 10th century. It was nothing new and certainly wasn’t particular to the South.
I wonder why they're using a stretched out version of the Battle Flag of the Army of Northern Virginia as a representation for all of the Confederacy...
Because the Confederate Government sucked the Confederate Military on the other hand were bad asses they stood up to a government with way more industry way more man power and way more of everything and almost won
I don't limit my actions based on what is considered illegal by a group of people who claim to have authority over me. I do that which is right even if it conflicts with their political dictates. If you need a series of rules backed by punishment for breaking them to guide your actions you are not a responsible or mature adult. I have my own moral compass. As such, I refuse to be held to the same standards as the lowest common denominator. My choices will be made without regard for that which is legal (not lawful) because I take full responsibility for my actions. If I violate no other during the course of my day then I commit no crime; and I will not be coerced into consenting to the administrative jurisdictions of any bureaucratic, political or corporate entities who operate under fiction while pretending to be real.
Namaste1001 just follow the law dude, there is a reason for it and government can’t judge wether you are fit to not follow the law, there is too much of a risk
Southerners has much reduced tariffs beginning in ~late 1840s. Articles/ordinances of secession all stress the south's (oligarchs') "right" to own humans as slaves.
@@jcbjcb2 Human trafficking and slavery continue under Democrats to this day. The civil war was not a war on poverty. Blacks suffered far greater under northern occupation than they ever did under slavery. The television is not an education on history.
It'll be over that one Abortion Ruling. The fact that 3 states are already pushing to imprison women for having abortions is kind of... well... Long Live the Union, my friend.
Reparations or free college will be the cause of the war. A lot of folk (including myself) voted against Clinton because of Obamacare. Not necessarily because we loved Trump or even that we hated Clinton. What do you think will happen if unnecessary taxation continues?
@@kurousagi8155 There will never be "reparations." "Free" college might be a worthwhile idea. We certainly need to change the way we educate people. It won't be as simple as suddenly paying everyone's tuition. If the govt starts paying more of that cost, it will also expect to have more control is how higher education operates.
I don't even know what the Patriot Act is exactly... because it does not affect me. I don't think it will be the reason for much of anything happening. .... I looked it up. Yeah, I like when law enforcement can protect me. When it can stop criminals. Patriot act sounds great unless I see a lot of evidence that innocent people are being harmed. I have heard of no such thing so far.
How did they manage to draw the borders right for the Territory of Kansas early in the video, but then fuck up from 2:01 forward? The outline they have for the Territory of Kansas is Arkansas and Oklahoma (Indian Territory at the time)!
Wow, this video is over 2 years old and it looks like I am the first to notice this mistake. That is not the Kansas Territory: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kansas_Territory What you pictured is the ARkanas Territory: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Arkansas_Territory The violence and such happened in the Kansas Territory: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pottawatomie_massacre Except for the map at 1:47, your maps are all wrong. Look at 2:01. You can see how you shift from the right map to the wrong map
The Arkansas Territory was established into the state of Arkansas in 1836 which is 14 years prior to the proposal so even if the areas were disputed it is cannot disputed that the area they picture from 2:01 and on as "Kansas Territory" was actually a state at that point.
You people don't know how to read a map. Like seriously look at them. What they are calling the "Kansas Territory" is actually the Arkansas Territory. Like serious pause at 1:58. You can actually see them using the wrong map right beside the right map. The top representation of the Kansas territory is actually the Arkansas territory, and the bottom one is the correct one. How you can tell them a apart is that the Kansas Territory has straight southern border, ans the Arkansas Territory has a bumpy southern border.
+S Jia I am not disputing that Arkansas existed. I know it already existed. What I am saying is that they are using a depiction of the Arkansas Territory for the Kansas Territory.
"hacked to death proslavery farmers with broadswords" Good, fuck em. I'm from Kansas. There's a giant mural of John Brown in the State House. A hero of the people.
I told my history teacher about this and she was speechless and said this all is a time waste (She told the class something that is said something else here) XD
I got to point out the error in this video. Clearly the "Kansas" territory is not what the video says it is. Rather that is the 1819 Arkansas territory, which by the time of John Brown and the bloody Kansas fiasco, would have been split off as a the state of Arkansas and the Indian Territory.
I'd say it was a lot sooner. when the country was assembling , problems emerged from the southern states wanting more individual rights , while the north was more federalist. That bill didn't cause it , there was a mess to begin with.
If history could be explained like this all the time I'd be an expert by now. Well done!
I pay more attention to this than in history class :)
Sadly this isn't giving the full story as it implies that there was not slavery in the north. That simply isn't factually accurate.
You mean simplistic cartoons that tell falsehoods as facts?
Yeah, EVERYONE would be. But reality is a LITTLE more complicated.
Crash Course History
Extra Credits History
you're welcome
I totally agree!
Am I the only one who enjoys the beautifully and masterfully edited sequences just as much as the information being presented? I mean, I like learning, but wow... The visuals might be just as good as the information itself.
Kudos to Qa'ed Mai.
same
but the civil war was not at all fought over slavery. ua-cam.com/video/gdym0u7suBg/v-deo.html
@@kyleg2756 YES IT WAS, otherwise they would have had no reason establishing slavery in the minor territories they conquered in Mexican land, stop erasing history.
@@oliverock4092 What I mean is that it was not started over slavery, they only brought slavery into it when the north started to lose the war.
Yeah it’s a bunch of well polished pc lies.
"Hey look that's my state! Go Kansas"
*halfway through video"
"Well...that's not good"
Paul Walsh love your profile pic
You do have a tumultuous history my son.
“Bloody Kansas”
Maybe it's good to be from Nebrasks right now
North Carolina gang where you at?
Contemporary standards at the time say slavery is bad. I can't sympathize with the South at all if there argument of freedom is "I want to own people".
Pinkie Pie: and yet you don't advocate invading CHINA over keeping more than a BILLION people in bondage-- because China is a SOVEREIGN NATION, you say. Well, so was every American state. The Declaration of Independence held the colonies to be "Free and Independent states, with the full power to levy war, conclude peace, contract alliances, establish commerce, and do all the other things that independent states may of right do."
That's PLURAL; so each state was a SEPARATE nation. FACT.
Tom Evans Then it’s idiotic to call it a nation, or have a single president!
Except slavery existed in the north and tge south throughout the war.
@@SovereignStatesman ur argument for slavery is that there is no country called the USA wow
The issue is simply avoiding PROOF that the states formed a national union, because there isn't any; because you're ignoring the 24 states that didn't HAVE slavery.
It hurts to see Kansas not being a part of the kansas territory
That is NOT Kansas...That is Arkansas+ Oklahoma....
AngelBlue1302 I know, I'm saying its funny that the territory of modern Kansas is not in the Kansas Territory displayed in this video
I know, ITS STUPID
AngelBlue1302 Yeah, its funny because Arkansas was already a state my 1850 lmao
Ya....
Where's the part where he has to fight vampires?
sonic55193 Yeah
Really, they missed the most important reason of all his actions!!! :D
Ha ha true
Never mind that, what about the zombies?
u guys are crazy!
6:20 - zombies
7:00 - vampires
The Southerners vampires died in Pennsylvenia
The Kansas Nebraska Act was only the last straw.
The most consequential legislations were the Vermont Constitution in 1777, the Pennsylvania abolition act in 1780, the 1784 Congressional rejection of Jefferson's slavery ban, and lastly the Northwest Ordinance of 1787.
These laws divided the nation long before Stephen Douglas came on the scene.
Really? I did not know that. Thanks.
Also the 1772 Somerset Act
So the reason of the divide is because of the government concerning the issue of slavery? So they were like,
Northerners: what about that slavery issue?
Southerners: *REEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEE*
@@orangelake2268 so slavery was illegal in the north but widespread in the south
@@pexfmezccle Yes in the simplest way
William H. Seward actually brought more followers to the nascent Republican party than Lincoln. He was enormously popular, well-connected, and capable. His election as the first Republican president seemed inevitable even to his opponents. Lincoln was a relatively unknown moderate. The fact that he defeated Seward at the convention came as a shock to nearly everyone. Unfortunately, he is all but forgotten except for his push to have the US purchase the Russian colonial territory of Alaska from the Russian empire.
Seward's folly, they called it, I think? Has popularity may have been fading.
Lincoln's victory at the convention may have been a shock to many people, but certainly not the steel and financial barons that backed him there. His nomination was bought and paid for.
@@carltonreese4854 Can you provide a link to that infomation?
Yep. History does not remember losers well and that shows
@@MamaKatt I think he’s referring to the fact that Lincoln being perceived as more moderate then many was seen as more electable. It’s quite shocking that Lincoln is now revered to the level of Jefferson or Washington considering in his time he was so hated even by his own party. He was even assassinated
They referred to Kansas Territory but used the Arkansas Territory on the map.
@@frankxu1407 same
So I am confusion why is this one Kansas this one is not called Ar-kansas America explain explain what do you mean in Arkansas
No, no, they got it right.
3:02 "by the light of his own burning effigies." That must have been a popular expression at the time. John Jay said the same thing about traveling from Boston to Philadelphia after signing the Jay Treaty.
The piece of paper that almost split America in two.
You just earned yourself a sub
The ultimate paper cut.
We are at war in Ohio as we speak. Our Lt. Governor and governor lives are at risk literally. 🤬
Almost?
Life Is Only Optional: America was NEVER a nation. The "one piece of legislation" was the Declaration of Independence; which held the colonies to be "Free and Independent states, with the full power to levy war, conclude peace, contract alliances, establish commerce, and do all the other things that independent states may of right do." That's PLURAL; so each state was a SEPARATE nation.
Who here are watching Ted-Ed because of online school?
Me! ! We meet by the online school, I miss my school.
Yeah I am. It sucks
Sophia Cadenas me lmfaoooo 🤣😂
Me 😡😡😡😡
me
if only my teaches taught like you.
Teachers*
If they did, you might know how to spell correctly, but then again probably not because Ted doesn't even know that that isn't the confederate flag, nor was it ever.
Matt Boyd well to be fair its the virginian battle flag so it is a type of confederate flag just not the confederate flag
In an ideal world.
What a beautiful way to learn history, I look forward to more videos with the same style!
Those vibrations, in the music, at the end make watching the video thru-'n-thru so much more fulfilling.
Reading about bleeding Kansas really does bring out some excellent lines. I'm paraphrasing, it's been a while, but there was an incident: "realising the town was not going to abide by the new government, the settlers bought up 60 rifles, a mortar and a static machine gun".
Pottawatomie is pronounced "Pot - uh - WATT - uh- mee"
Kind of like "not a lot of me" if you replace n with p and l with w.
I'm from kansas. There's lakes and towns and all sorts of stuff named after it.
Sadly their home was Indiana-Illinois area. White settlers pushed them out.
@@antoniusbritannia8217 that is sad, actually. I wonder if they had ever been "pushed out" by any other tribes, or ever "pushed out" tribes that weren't their own? That would be equally sad, would it not?
There's a county. I live "near enough" that county to tell you.
@@migiddymike1403 yes
>"The Democratic Party was shaken when in the newly formed 'Kansas Territory'."
>Shows the Arkansas Territory which was carved up into the state of Arkansas and Indian Territory's 18 years before.
Also bugged me.
It's important to note that Abraham Lincoln's win wasn't the knock-out punch illustrated in this video. Lincoln didn't come close to 50 percent of the popular vote, and Stephen Douglas was fourth in the electoral college votes.
John Breckinridge, a former vice president, dominated in the South because of his pro slavery stance. Compared to Breckenridge, Douglas came off as a middle of the road guy.
Douglas and Breckinridge split the Southern vote, allowing Lincoln to win a plurality in the electoral college.
www.neh.gov/humanities/2011/novemberdecember/feature/the-man-who-came-in-second
you moron. Lincoln received over 50% in Illinois.
Lol. If you say so.
You had a reading fail, which is funny since you called another person a moron. Jonathan was talking about the national election. Not Illinois.
He still won the popular vote though....
So...greed is the root cause of our problems.
Isn't there a book somewhere that says that?
I seem to recall something about a camel passing through the eye of a needle, but I couldn't say for sure.
Christopher Diaz, PhD maybe...
@@jesseberg3271 the camel/needle thing is about worshipping wealth. It isn't wrong to have wealth. A lot of people see that verse incorrectly. Thought I'd point it out.
When history is in bite-sized pieces like this, it makes it more interesting.
Just my two cents about the Civil War. Slavery was the key reason for the South seceding from the Union, they say it in their constitution. But the reason Union declared war on South was because them trying to keep the Union together, which can be seen by Lincoln stating that he would "allow slavery to stay untouched to preserve the union". So basically southerners were already pissed because of tariffs, taxes and loss of power in the Union compared to those in the North, but the slavery issue got the support of the rich political elite from the south, which were mostly slave owners. So basically they all decided to ally under the same flag and create a new state, the confederacy. Lincoln did not want to see his country get torn apart, so he attempted to make compromises so the US would not divide. South did not accept these compromises, but left the Union guns blazing, taking over and disarming the northern military bases in southern territory.
+Markus FIN The South was always mad whenever they lost power, they had grown used to abusing it.
You mind opening that comment up a bit, because I am not sure what you mean?
Markus FIN Well, by abusing power there was the example listed in the video regarding how they ignored the Missouri Compromise. Further back, there is the 3/5 clause. I don't remember the specific issue, but during the times of the Articles of Confederation, the south was already threatening to break relations with their northern neighbors over some really petty issue, I can't remember exactly. Then there were the border ruffians, as mentioned. There were other things too, this isn't an exhaustive list.
By being mad whenever they lose power, two things that I mentioned above count here as well: the 3/5 clause which exaggerated their influence in the House of Representatives, and their early threats of secession. I don't remember all the issues where they threatened to secede, and I admit I should do more research in that area, but it occurred quite a few times. Threat of secession was used multiple times by the southern states before the civil war as a scare tactic whenever they couldn't get their way by more logical means.
So the whole idea about the South becoming and independent nation did not just "bounce up" from nowhere when slavery became an issue, but had been there already before and used as an argument every time they couldn't get their way?
Markus FIN Well, "every" time would be an exaggeration. But they had threatened to secede over more petty issues. I don't remember the details right now. Things are kindof hectic right now, so I will do research on what I vaguely remember when I get the opportunity.
It was brought up earlier on the slavery issue during the presidency of Andrew Jackson. A senator from ?Virginia? I think. Could have the wrong state, but Jackson was vehemently opposed to secession even though he supported slavery.
There was a time before during the Articles o Confederation period, but I don't remember the details.
I believe there might have been one other time.
I enjoyed the lesson, like always, but I feel it vastly oversimplifies the literal dozens of problems that America had already been facing. The piece of legislation discussed in this lesson seems like an arbitrary point to start. I also find it quite telling that piece closely follows the lesson on Andrew Jackson. Andrew Jackson probably did more to divide the nation than this piece of legislation! Other major points are the Mexican American War and the Annexation of Texas. The Wilmont Provisio as legislation, Uncle Tom's Cabin, The Supreme Court's decision in Dred Scott, The idea of Manifest Destiny and its effect on Nation building. If we are talking about whether the Civil War was inevitable, the 1850's are well past that date.
Yes, it does, but if all the problems were included & explained we’d have a two year long university level course to go through. There are already several of those available here on YT, which I’d certainly recommend watching.
"It's my right to own people!"
Can't believe they're still waving their flags 170 years later after losing.
Circa 2013, 2 "conservative intellectuals" promoted re-legalizing contract slavery.
i have to write an essay about the act and this really really helps!!
Im so glad all you see from DC to Chicago is trees, lakes, cars, trucks and busses.
At 4:05, the Kansas territory shown is actually Arkansas. Had anyone noticed that?
4:00 I guess what I thought was Arkansas is really Kansas. Thanks.
Karmic Reballance Arkansas means South Wind and Kansas means people of the south Wind so technically people from Arkansas should be called Kansas and Kansas should have a different name.
+Grokford Arkansas is actually the Illini Indian name for the Quapaw Indians, the "Down River People". When the French explorers Marquette and Joliet traveled from the Great Lakes down the Mississippi, they encountered the Illini Indians. After spending some time in modern-day Illinois, they continued their travels down the Mississippi River. They asked the Illini Indians what tribes of Indians (peaceful or aggressive) they might encounter. The Illini Indians told them of the Arkansea people, or "Down River People" who were peaceful and friendly. Marquette and Joliet named the land of the Quapaw (or the Arkansea) on the first maps of the region, created in the mid-1760s.
Kasey Hill really, that's fascinating I wonder where my information came from.
"so I am confusion. Why iz dis one KansasS? but this one is not R KansasS? AMEeRICA EsPLAIN!
What I want to know is how the animator screwed up Arkansas-Oklahoma with Kansas territory.
And the WRITER screwed up the FACTS. The USA was NOT a nation. The "one piece of legislation" was the Declaration of Independence; which held the colonies to be "Free and Independent states, with the full power to levy war, conclude peace, contract alliances, establish commerce, and do all the other things that independent states may of right do." That's PLURAL; so each state was a SEPARATE nation.
Tom Evans hmm I wonder if the country changed in hundred years 😂😂😂 like what dude
The worst part is they label it correctly a minute or so before hand, before dropping the ball.
@@SovereignStatesman Huh? The Declaration of Independence was not a piece of legislation. It was an explanation, not law. The U.S. was absolutely a nation, first united as a confederation of states under the Articles, and then under federalism with the Constitution.
@@sarahmccoin5157 Nope. Every state retained its sovereignty, freedom and independence under the Articles of Confederation; and the Constitution came AFTER the American Revolution, which established the states as separate nations. Check your Dunning-Kruger privilege.
In the 1860 Election there were four candidates vying for President: Douglas, (Democratic, 12 electoral votes, 25.5% popular vote); Lincoln (Republican, 180 electoral votes, 39.8% popular vote), Breckenridge (Southern Democratic, 72 electoral vote, 18.1% popular vote); Bell (Constitutional Union, 39 electoral votes, 12.6% popular vote) The break down still give more electoral votes to Lincoln than the other combined electoral votes for the opposition.
I started spacing out after 2 minutes. Then, I woke up again from 4:25 to 4:40; then, spaced out again. Perhaps add more action when covering this subject? This reminded me why I didn't like history in high school; I guess I'm just simpleminded.
Maybe a laser show to get people bumpin'.
Nice quick summarization for people not aware of American History !!
If you think the issue of a divided nation is in the past, you are sadly mistaken.....
@TriplePlay Yes obviously the United States is still here, a nation divided is not a nation that doesn't exist, or a nation that is crumbling. Just because the US will continue to be split between Democrats and Republicans does not mean our democracy or order will crumble; that's just how the country works. And yes, our nation being divided as it is now is an issue, and will always be an issue.
Being divided may be much healthier than being united in a terrible way.
For example, World War 2 Japanese were united in support of their emperor. They could have used a lot more division.
Same could be said for the Germans.
This is more relevant then ever
There are several errors in the video presentation. The Arkansas Territory is incorrectly labeled as the Kansas Territory. Arkansas, located directly south of Missouri became a territory in 1819. The original Arkansas Territory included the current state of Arkansas and part of what is now Oklahoma. In 1824 and again in 1828, most of what is now Oklahoma was designated as Indian Territory. Native Americans from across the southeast were forced from their homelands through to their reserved lands in modern day Oklahoma, New Mexico, and Arizona. Arkansas became a state on June 15, 1836, 18 years before the Kansas Nebraska Act.
The Missouri Compromise outlawed slavery in the remaining Louisiana Territory north of the 36th 30th parallel. Slavery was allowed in the Arkansas Territory, seeing that it's northern border is the 36th 30th parallel. According to Section. 8: "And be it further enacted. That in all that territory ceded by France to the United States, under the name of Louisiana, which lies north of thirty-six degrees and thirty minutes north latitude, not included within the limits of the state, contemplated by this act, slavery and involuntary servitude, otherwise than in the punishment of crimes, whereof the parties shall have been duly convicted, shall be, and is hereby, forever prohibited:" As a territory and as a state, slavery was allowed in Arkansas until the ratification of the 13th Amendment in 1865.
Shut up
Shut up
+Kasey Hill It makes me curious how educational content is when their are little errors as such in them? How can we teach history if we don't keep the facts straight. Or are they and it questions what side of the line one is one?
bruh you serious?
@Kasey Hill,
That is right, but it was by no means entirely clear whether the Missouri Compromise applied solely to the those territories under the possession of the United States at the time of the passage of the act, i.e. the Louisiana Territory. As the United States government accrued additional territory, the applicability of the Missouri Compromise was widely discussed and debated which greatly agitated the controversy over slavery in the territories.
Slavery was made illegal in Arkansas per the Emancipation Proclamation, not the Thirteenth Amendment, at least as far as the rebellion was concerned. The legality of the proclamation beyond the suppression of the rebellion was questionable though and hence, as far as Arkansas is concerned, the Thirteenth Amendment codified the Emancipation Proclamation into Constitutional law.
I would also disagree with the video in terms of assessing the Kansas-Nebraska Act, but that is an interpretative issue.
I feel way smarter about history in the 1800s. Before, I was taught all about this lesson but never really understood the huge cause. Thanks to this video, I memorized the huge cause that began the civil war of 1861 and the reason why the U.S nation was split in half.
Honestly, schools should take notes from this channel, in my personal opinion if I were to be taught with this type of video, I wouldn’t have been kick out of my history classes lol
I love history just hated the way my teacher ruled the class
"Sir, look at these numbers!"
"Yes?"
"We got a 400 percent voter turnout!"
"What?"
"400 percent for slavery!"
"Alright do it"
lol
I love your historically accurate and objective videos
Finally, a good history lesson that shows that the American civil war was in fact due to slavery and not the cop-out "states rights" viewpoint.
notice who wanted that slavery? democrats HA!
hardwirecars And parties never change? The original Republicans were seen as radicals...crazy etc. Just like One side calls the other side nasty names, this crap is why we can't have nice things...
hardwirecars
Notice who defends the confederates and the use of the traitor flag now?
@@nurb101 lol. Good point.
Which party was behind the move to end racism, from desegregating/integrating the military in the late 40's to the Civil Rights/Voting Rights Act?.... The Democrats!
Which party opposes removal of statues, flags and monuments that the Democrats of the past put up and the Democrats of today want to get rid of?.... The Republicans, saying that the Democrats want to destroy OUR ((Republicans') heritage and history 😂😂😂
Im a simple man, i see one piece, i clic-
Wait a second this isnt a one piece video
* checks title again *^
Oh.
mind blown constantly. amazing video, thanks you guys.
Excellent video of the turbulent political atmosphere before the civil war
Interesting, but it misrepresents the main point. The South wasn't attempting to spread slavery to the North; they were attempting to maintain parity in the congress to block potential legislation the South didn't want. This included anything that weakened slavery, but more significantly raising of the tariff.
I also love thismasterfully,well crafted presentation..Love it and neatly understood.Keep up the good work🤙
And yet to today, people still argue over if the civil war was fought over slavery or not. Yes it was.
Bulldog Bank: The USA was NOT a nation, so there was no civil war. The "one piece of legislation" was the Declaration of Independence; which held the colonies to be "Free and Independent states, with the full power to levy war, conclude peace, contract alliances, establish commerce, and do all the other things that independent states may of right do." That's PLURAL; so each state was a SEPARATE nation.
Tom Evans and? So slavery is justifiable? Because the legislation in “independent” states can decide for themselves? Or would you rather go outside now and tell everyone in the US “hey USA was never a nation”.
@@Voltaire8559 As far as I see it, he did not try to justify slavery. I think what he was getting at was that secession, or the right to secede or not, is not written anywhere in the constitution of the United States. The constitution gives power to the states, and puts limits on the federal government. As secession was not mentioned it could be assumed that their was nothing constitutional wrong with it. The constitution did not give authority to the federal government to regulate it.
This may be why sometimes the Civil War is referred to as the War between the States, or something along those lines. The reason the Civil War happened has more to do with Abraham Lincoln deciding that he was going to use the office of the presidency to keep the union of all the states together. It is a well known fact that Abraham Lincoln's interests were preserving the Union as a whole, that is why he resisted the Southern states' secession. He would have tried to preserve the union between all the states even if that meant preserving slavery in some of the states. He even said as much.
I think the greatest travesty of the Civil War was that it laid the framework for a large federal government, and set the precedent that the federal government would regulate the states, and the union itself even on matters the constitution never gave authority.
It is interesting though on two regards, the North would not have had the power at least at the time to outlaw slavery, because they would not have had enough states to outweigh the South's vote to make the constitutional amendment. Abraham Lincoln did not allow the states to secede, always seeing them as part of the U.S.A but after the war would not let them vote on the constitutional amendment. I guess that makes sense. Although it does not add up ideologically.
Secondly if I am not mistaken, Texas was its own Republic for a time, and the people of Texas voted to join the United States, with the condition that if the people of Texas ever voted to leave the Union they would be allowed to. Abe didn't allow them to. Don't say yeah well slavery... because that was not Abraham Lincoln's reasoning for not letting them secede, it was solely to stop the states from leaving, as far as he was concerned.
@@leviturner3265 Slavery was crushed secession too end of story.
@@WhenInDarknessSeekTheLight Slavery was crushed in the United States, after the war. That was not the reason that Abraham Lincoln resisted secession. The war started because Lincoln would not let them leave. He even said that, if he could end the war and keep slavery he would have. He opposed slavery, but that was not the reason for him not allowing the states to secede, and he would have let slavery continue if it would end the war and save the Union. I should also say that the constitutionality of secession is debated, not as though Lincoln let it go to the courts though.
Secondly, Abraham Lincoln though he opposed slavery, only made slavery illegal in states that were no longer in the union. So the states he had no control of, it was a political tactic. He let the states that have slavery that did not secede have their slaves until the war ended and the constitutional amendment was passed.
Third and most important, slavery still is wide spread on the continent of Africa as it has been for thousands of years. We never talk about it, because we are busy talking about Ukraine, among other things. So slavery is very far from crushed, but there is less of it, and none legal in the States.
it was inserting and it caught my attention grate editing 👍👍
Can we just appreciate how the animation only uses 4 COLORS? I mean c'mon, FOUR! That's crazy!
(I mean they do use dithering and line shading to break up some colors to give the illusion of more colors, but still, that's pretty awesome)
somebody could make a map! en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Four_color_theorem
Good video, but I can't believe it doesn't mention the 36'30 line at all, and how the KNA repealed it. The significance of this act is that it took away the very thing that kept western territory free from slavery. Now that the promise of free land has been taken away, a political party was needed to combat the expansion of slavery, thus the formation of the Republican Party. That connection is the biggest takeaway of the KNA, in my opinion. And, since we're going to summarize the 7 years of events following the KNA in 3 minutes, can't we spend 15 seconds explaining how the Mexican-American War was fueled by Southern interests to gain new land in which to expand slavery, since they were bound by the 36'30 Line?
Or the Morrill Tariff that effectively subjugated the southern economy and made secession inevitable?
@@carltonreese4854 Tariff political wars went back to the 1700s, but the Slavers had been winning since ~late 1840s (? or for a while).
Just a nit to pick, but it seems to me that along about 2:03, your map is calling the combination of Oklahoma and Arkansas Kansas. Am I misreading that?
Smh, that's what it was back then. Can't you see that?
PolyvinyLs Arkansas was already an admitted state in 1854, by 18 years.
PolyvinyLs The rivers haven't changed though. Look at a map.
+PolyvinyLs no, it wasn't. At no point was Arkansas territory (AR+OK) part of Kansas Territory (present day KS and the part of CO that doesn't want to be CO)
Such a nice explanation, and great graphics. I live in Freeport, IL. Where one of the Lincolin-Douglas debates for presidency took place.
The "Kansas Territory" you showed has actually the ARKANSAS Territory.
Buchanan's 'Dred Scott' decision in 1857 was equally disastrous.
I imagine the only feasible way that South could have eked out some kind of victory during the Civil War is if it started about 10 years ahead of schedule, when the North's industrial and manpower advantages weren't quite as prevalent.
The other way was not to have been tricked in to firing first on Ft. Sumter...
*****
Call it outsmarted if you like. Lincoln knew he would have less support for his war among residents of the North if he were not the aggressor. So he took advantage of the Ft. Sumpter situation to outsmart the southerners in to firing first. But the real aggressor in the war was Lincoln, even as the southern plantation holders maintained their aggression on the blacks. And remember, that remedying that aggression was only a pretext for the war. Lincoln said if he could have maintained federal power over the south while keeping slavery, he would have done so. The south wanted to secede and did so peacefully. Lincoln killed 700,000 Americans in order to maintain his own power. Racism today would be much less had the Civil War never been fought, and the South had been allowed to secede peacefully. The scourge of slavery would have died out soon anyway, without war, as it did in nearly every other nation.
Blarghalt
The US Civil War WAS a violent implosion. So was the Great Depression. Nations have violent implosions.
freesk8 if i was lincoln i would have killed all the slaveholders. all of them. lincoln wanted only to free the slaves and he unfortunately didn't had any intention in punishing the slave owning motherfuckers. very unfortunate. i would have punished them way more than they and you could have imagined. fuck them.
ptegegn1 It is a very common misconception that Lincoln's primary aim was to free the slaves. Lincoln's primary motivation was to prevent the South from leaving the union. He wanted to preserve the power of the federal government over the southern states. He wanted to maintain the tariff revenue from the southern ports that went to DC. Lincoln was actually quite racist. He voted, as an Illinois legislator, to outlaw freed blacks from moving to Illinois. His favored solution was to ship all of the blacks back to Africa. No, Lincoln merely USED the slavery issue to gain support for the war among people in the North. His emancipation proclamation was an effort to get slaves within Confederate territory to rebel, and divert Confederate troops from the war. Look into it. I am telling the truth. Lincoln cared more about his legacy: he did not want to be the President under whom the southern states were allowed to leave, even though they had a right to. Slavery is evil, but the situation of racism we have today would be a lot better had we done away with slavery the way nearly every other nation on the Earth did it: without a horribly bloody war. And N. America would be better off with the Southern States being their own nation. Less power in DC.
It's worth pointing out the context around John Brown.
Most people today now agree that his anti-slavery stance was just, but some may think he was out of line by escalating the violence in the territory, or the brutality of how he killed pro slavery people.
This glosses over the fact that he didn't start the violence. For 2 years (from 1854 to 1856) violence had occured many times, with 8 lethal incidents . There were no documented raids by abolitionist geoups on pro slavery ones, and virtually all violence was against abolitionists.
After the sacking of Lawrence (where pro slavery forces terrorized abolitionists in the city), Brown launched his raid as a retaliation.
What a wonderful concise brief! Well researched. Full of information and facts,yet it flows beautifully. Well done! Thank you!
Fantastic video. Definitely using this in my APUSH class.
I have a dream that my four little children will one day live in a nation where they will not be judged by the color of their skin, but by the content of their character.
Four?
I should've watched this before my civil war test last week, cause I missed a question about the Kansas-Nebraska act of 1854 😅😅
I was just looking for the anime one piece
This video taught me more than the entire semester that my U.S. History class dedicated to it.
Excelente presentación gráfica del motivo de la Guerra Civil de USA!! Saludos desde Costa Rica
Just started our Civil War unit, such perfect timing. I see a future video "warm up" in the future. Yes, I do. :)
John Brown's raid on Harper's Ferry is just as important, I believe. After the raid, Southerners were extremely afraid that slaves would rise up and kill them while they slept. So, the South started militias. Which were the beginnings of the Southern army.
If I didn't know any better, I'd swear I was listening to Ed Bearss in Ken Burn's Civil War documentary.
John Brown had a huge impact on history.
Militias had been in the United States since the English colonial Trained Bands of Jamestown (1607) and Plymouth (1620). In the United States proper militias, North and South, were nationally consecrated in the Federal Militia Act of 1792. “Militia” in the English sense had its origins as far back as the Saxon Fyrd in the 10th century. It was nothing new and certainly wasn’t particular to the South.
They didn't get the location of Kansas and Nebraska right in the graphics.
I wonder why they're using a stretched out version of the Battle Flag of the Army of Northern Virginia as a representation for all of the Confederacy...
Cause most people think the Confederate Battle Flag is the official confederate flag.
+Ideally Jekyl, At least we know, now.
It looks cool.
Because the Confederate Government sucked the Confederate Military on the other hand were bad asses they stood up to a government with way more industry way more man power and way more of everything and almost won
Didn't the Missouri compromise of 1820 also create the state of Maine?
The Kansas territory was not made up of Arkansas and Oklahoma. Arkansas was a state by this point and Oklahoma was Indian territory.
Just saw the same thing. Hope the historians are better than the animators.
joseblancoize this video is factually accurate, but yeah idk what they did with that map
Jefferson called the Missouri Compromise a "fireball in the night". They knew a fight was inevitable.
I don't limit my actions based on what is considered illegal by a group of people who claim to have authority over me. I do that which is right even if it conflicts with their political dictates. If you need a series of rules backed by punishment for breaking them to guide your actions you are not a responsible or mature adult. I have my own moral compass. As such, I refuse to be held to the same standards as the lowest common denominator. My choices will be made without regard for that which is legal (not lawful) because I take full responsibility for my actions. If I violate no other during the course of my day then I commit no crime; and I will not be coerced into consenting to the administrative jurisdictions of any bureaucratic, political or corporate entities who operate under fiction while pretending to be real.
Namaste1001 just follow the law dude, there is a reason for it and government can’t judge wether you are fit to not follow the law, there is too much of a risk
LOL!
i so love these animations
The nullification crisis over tariffs was the single, event preceding the civil war.
Southerners has much reduced tariffs beginning in ~late 1840s. Articles/ordinances of secession all stress the south's (oligarchs') "right" to own humans as slaves.
@@jcbjcb2 Human trafficking and slavery continue under Democrats to this day.
The civil war was not a war on poverty.
Blacks suffered far greater under northern occupation than they ever did under slavery.
The television is not an education on history.
thanks for the help... Hate online school tho..
i can picture your video 20 years from now
"Causes for the 2nd American Civil War" - The Patriot Act
It'll be over that one Abortion Ruling. The fact that 3 states are already pushing to imprison women for having abortions is kind of... well...
Long Live the Union, my friend.
Reparations or free college will be the cause of the war.
A lot of folk (including myself) voted against Clinton because of Obamacare. Not necessarily because we loved Trump or even that we hated Clinton. What do you think will happen if unnecessary taxation continues?
@@kurousagi8155 There will never be "reparations."
"Free" college might be a worthwhile idea. We certainly need to change the way we educate people.
It won't be as simple as suddenly paying everyone's tuition. If the govt starts paying more of that cost, it will also expect to have more control is how higher education operates.
I don't even know what the Patriot Act is exactly... because it does not affect me. I don't think it will be the reason for much of anything happening.
.... I looked it up. Yeah, I like when law enforcement can protect me. When it can stop criminals. Patriot act sounds great unless I see a lot of evidence that innocent people are being harmed. I have heard of no such thing so far.
The 2:10 map is wrong - the bottom territory is Arkansas
r.i.p. john brown
The map is wrong, they keep highlighting Arkansas and Indian territories instead of Kansas.
1:08 Where's Delaware?
+Maryland DelaWHERE is it?
Thanos snapped it away
You did leave out one very significant divider of that decade, the Dred Scott decision of 1857, which made popular sovereignty impossible.
NEVER READ THE COMMENT SECTION. YOU'VE BEEN WARNED.
i learned all this in my history class - my textbook is awesome! 😁😄😎
Any particular reason this "Kansas Territory" looks axe toy like the Arkansas Territory.
Well, only sometimes. At the beginning and end it was Kansas but in the middle it became Arkansas.
How did they manage to draw the borders right for the Territory of Kansas early in the video, but then fuck up from 2:01 forward? The outline they have for the Territory of Kansas is Arkansas and Oklahoma (Indian Territory at the time)!
Wow, this video is over 2 years old and it looks like I am the first to notice this mistake.
That is not the Kansas Territory: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kansas_Territory
What you pictured is the ARkanas Territory: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Arkansas_Territory
The violence and such happened in the Kansas Territory: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pottawatomie_massacre
Except for the map at 1:47, your maps are all wrong. Look at 2:01. You can see how you shift from the right map to the wrong map
Check my links and look at the maps closely you moron.
The Arkansas Territory was established into the state of Arkansas in 1836 which is 14 years prior to the proposal so even if the areas were disputed it is cannot disputed that the area they picture from 2:01 and on as "Kansas Territory" was actually a state at that point.
You're not american if you don't know this. I bet you voted for Trump. Dimwit moron.
You people don't know how to read a map. Like seriously look at them. What they are calling the "Kansas Territory" is actually the Arkansas Territory.
Like serious pause at 1:58. You can actually see them using the wrong map right beside the right map. The top representation of the Kansas territory is actually the Arkansas territory, and the bottom one is the correct one.
How you can tell them a apart is that the Kansas Territory has straight southern border, ans the Arkansas Territory has a bumpy southern border.
+S Jia I am not disputing that Arkansas existed. I know it already existed. What I am saying is that they are using a depiction of the Arkansas Territory for the Kansas Territory.
That fact should be in children's text books, definitely wasn't in mine growing up
"hacked to death proslavery farmers with broadswords"
Good, fuck em.
I'm from Kansas. There's a giant mural of John Brown in the State House. A hero of the people.
I want to watch that movie.
Darris Hawks ya and there's a confederate flag on my state flag, a symbol of the people lel
I love the visuals
I told my history teacher about this and she was speechless and said this all is a time waste (She told the class something that is said something else here) XD
I don't understand what you're trying to say. What did your teacher say?
Best historical video i've ever seen
John Brown was a hero. It's a moral imperative to destroy the worst of humanity.
I agree, no matter how hard some try to push the idea he was a terrorist, opposing slavery is a most noble cause.
I got to point out the error in this video. Clearly the "Kansas" territory is not what the video says it is. Rather that is the 1819 Arkansas territory, which by the time of John Brown and the bloody Kansas fiasco, would have been split off as a the state of Arkansas and the Indian Territory.
Hard to believe I just watched an entire video on the Civil War without a single mention of race.
I'd say it was a lot sooner. when the country was assembling , problems emerged from the southern states wanting more individual rights , while the north was more federalist. That bill didn't cause it , there was a mess to begin with.
can we get much h
so h
Both parties drastically changed
First, and last, time Nebraska or Kansas was significant lolololol
except for feeding most of the nation. and kansas suppling one of the greatest presidents ever.
The most irrelevant state is Delaware. Most people don't even know where it is.
Thank you. That was so enlightening!
And what happened to the native americans?
The 20 dollar bill.
Joolsthejools just a little bit of Tears on the roadside, noting that Andrew Jackson can't sweep under the rug
Think of the meme guess all die
Also from the looks of it it seems that the Act itself was never formally repealed (even if it is dead letter)
0:15 West Virginia is not a blue state and Colorado is not a red state.
this is according to the past
Dude, this is long time ago
Not really. 4 years doesnt change much.
no ?
Harrison Shone check the upload date this was before trump got elected
President Lincoln is my favorite president. He is godly, merciful, just and kind. He is just a perfect leader.