Friday, July 19, 2019
What was the 1850 Compromise and Why did it Fail? Essay -- politics sl
What was the 1850 Compromise and Why did it Fail?    In 1850, Henry Clay one of the most influential political leaders in  American history introduced a set of resolutions, which aimed to  please both North and South America. The five proposals were rolled  into a single 'omnibus' bill, which offered a solution to the growing  sectional conflict over slavery and westward expansion, which arose  from the 1846 Mexican War. The 1850 Compromise, which Senator Douglas  stripped down and effectively helped pass, failed for a number of  reasons, the greatest of which was that it was unable to please both  anti-slave and pro-slave groups. In fact it merely 'papered over the  crack', and did not prove, as Daniel Webster a Clay supporter had  hoped, 'a finality that would give peace to a country long distracted  by the quarrel over slavery'. Why did the Compromise ultimately fail,  and lead to polarization, featuring a party, which had begun to  establish itself in the 1820s.    The conflict between the North and South stemmed back to 1846, when  the U.S.A won a huge area of Mexican territory as the result of what  became known as the Mexican War. The land acquired revived controversy  over the extension of slavery, as many Northerners wanted the new  territory to become a free state with no slavery, and many Southerners  wanted slavery to expand. Numerous compromises were conceded, to try  to resolve the sectional conflict, for example the Wilmot Proviso of  1846 attempted to exclude slavery from any territory gained as a  result of the war. The Calhoun Doctrine issued in 1847, and known as  'The Platform of the South', asserted that the territories were common  property of all the states. However the argument of whether slavery  should be...              ... of the affects to their economy. However many Northerners  who did resist slavery probably had a free labour ideology; that  Northern farmers could grown cotton to fuel the trade industries of  the North, as a replacement for slave labour.    The events that had occurred before and after 1846 had shown that  expansion of America created major sectional conflict and jealousies,  due principally to the question of slavery. The resolutions had  actually managed to delay the immediate danger of sectional split.  However as the apparent fairness of the Compromise was false, like all  other attempts at compromise it failed. Slavery was a moral issue,  which proved that more than a compromise was needed to resolve it. The  Compromise of 1850 ultimately resulted with a large number of  Southerners seceding from the union, furthermore political  polarization of the Democrats.                      
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.