Top 10 events that led to the Civil War

  • 1820 | The Missouri Compromise

    1820 | The Missouri Compromise
    In the growth years following the 1803 Louisiana Purchase, Congress was compelled to establish a policy to guide the expansion of slavery into the new western territory. Missouri’s application for statehood as a slave state sparked a bitter national debate. In addition to the deeper moral issue posed by the growth of slavery, the addition of pro-slavery Missouri legislators would give the pro-slavery faction a Congressional majority.
  • 1831 | Nat Turner’s Rebellion

    1831 | Nat Turner’s Rebellion
    Virginia lawmakers reacted to the crisis by rolling back what few civil rights slaves and free black people possessed at the time. Education was prohibited and the right to assemble was severely limited.
  • 1846 - 1850 | The Wilmot Proviso

    1846 - 1850 | The Wilmot Proviso
    He offered it as a rider on existing bills, introduced it to Congress on its own, and even tried to attach it to the Treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo. All attempts failed. Nevertheless, the intensity of the debate surrounding the Proviso prompted the first serious discussions of secession.
  • 1850 | The Compromise of 1850

    1850 | The Compromise of 1850
    While the agreement succeeded in postponing outright hostilities between the North and South, it did little to address, and in some ways even reinforced, the structural disparity that divided the United States. The new Fugitive Slave Act, by forcing non-slaveholders to participate in the institution, also led to increased polarization among centrist citizens.
  • 1852 | Uncle Tom’s Cabin

    1852 | Uncle Tom’s Cabin
    Uncle Tom’s Cabin was the second-best-selling book in America in the 19th century, second only to the Bible. Its popularity brought the issue of slavery to life for those few who remained unmoved after decades of legislative conflict and widened the division between North and South.
  • 1854 - 1861 | Bleeding Kansas

    1854 - 1861 | Bleeding Kansas
    narrowly passed while Congressmen brandished weapons and uttered death threats in the House chambers, overturned parts of the Missouri Compromise by allowing the settlers in the two territories to determine whether or not to permit slavery by a popular vote.
  • 1857 | Dred Scott v. Sanford

    1857 | Dred Scott v. Sanford
    Dred Scott was a Virginia slave who tried to sue for his freedom in court. The case eventually rose to the level of the Supreme Court, where the justices found that, as a slave, Dred Scott was a piece of property that had none of the legal rights or recognitions afforded to a human being.
  • 1859 | John Brown’s Raid

    1859 | John Brown’s Raid
    In mid-October of 1859, the crusading abolitionist organized a small band of white allies and free blacks and raided a government arsenal in Harpers Ferry, Virginia. He hoped to seize weapons and distribute them to Southern slaves in order to spark a wracking series of slave uprisings.
  • 1860 | Abraham Lincoln’s Election

    1860 | Abraham Lincoln’s Election
    On December 20, 1860, a little over a month after the polls closed, South Carolina seceded from the Union. Six more states followed by the spring of 1861
  • 1861 | The Battle of Fort Sumter

    1861 | The Battle of Fort Sumter
    The Civil War was now underway. On April 15, Lincoln called for 75,000 volunteers to join the Northern army. Unwilling to contribute troops, Virginia, Arkansas, North Carolina, and Tennessee dissolved their ties to the federal government.