Across
- 2. Won the race for Senate in 1858
- 5. His capture and return to slavery prompted William Lloyd Garrison to burn copies of the Fugitive Slave Act and the Constitution
- 10. Author of Uncle Tom’s Cabin
- 11. Samuel Prime wrote The Power of Prayer about the “Businessmen’s Revival” in 1857-1858 in which he acknowledged the connection between the revival and the ____________ troubles
- 14. this controversial principle said that individual US territories should decide for themselves whether to allow slavery
- 15. Abraham Lincoln spoke against this man’s Kansas-Nebraska plan in a 1854 speech in Peoria, Illinois
- 16. in the mid-1950s this new political party emerged as a northern-only party and was committed to the restriction of slavery to those states where it already existed
- 17. The Know Nothing American Party nominated this former US president as their candidate in 1856
- 18. The New England Emigrant Aid Company placed as many of these farmers in Kansas as possible to fight for the vote to admit Kansas into the Union as a free state
- 19. Other names for this political organization included Order of the Star-Spangled Banner and American Party
- 20. This law repealed the Missouri Compromise and damaged the national unity of the Democrats
Down
- 1. This man from Pennsylvania won the 1856 election for the US presidency
- 3. This senator was brutally attacked at his desk after delivering his “Crime against Kansas” oration
- 4. this territory was admitted into the Union as a free state in 1861
- 6. This Senator from South Carolina gave a speech in 1858 entitled “Cotton is King”
- 7. Crushed his competition in the Electoral College in the election of 1852
- 8. Members of the American Party vowed never to support foreign-born or __________ candidates
- 9. these debates became the most celebrated political debates in American history
- 12. Visited Liberia, learned about Islam, and wrote the book entitled “Christianity, Islam, and the Negro Race
- 13. Lincoln delivered this speech when he accepted the Republican nomination for Senate in 1858
- 21. Supreme Court Justice Roger Taney used the case of Dred Scott v. Sandford to assert limitations of Congress over this
