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English, 27.04.2021 20:10 austin5053

At A Nation's Crisis The fall of Fort Sumter in April 1861, did not produce the Civil War crisis. For many months, the gigantic struggle then imminent had been painfully
discernible to far-seeing men. In 1858, Lincoln had forewarned the country in his "House Divided" speech. As early as the beginning of the year 1860 the
Union had been plainly in jeopardy. Early in February of that momentous year, Jefferson Davis, on behalf of the South, had introduced his famous
resolutions in the Senate of the United States. This document was the ultimatum of the dissotisfied slave-holding commonwealths. It demanded that
Congress should protect slavery throughout the domain of the United States. The territories, it declared, were the common property of the states of the
Union and hence open to the citizens of all states with all their personal possessions. The Northern stores, furthermore, were no longer to interfere with
the working of the Fugitive Slave Act. They must repeat their Personal Liberty laws and respect the Dred Scor Decision of the Federal Supreme Court
Neither in their own legislatures nor in Congress should they trespass upon the right of the South to regulate slavery as it best sow fit.
These resolutions, demanding in effect that slavery be thus safeguarded-almost to the extent of introducing it into the free states-really
foreshadowed the Democratic platform of 1860 which led to the great split in that party, the victory of the Republicans under Lincoln, the
subsequent secession of the more radical southern states, and finally the Civil War, for it was inevitable that the North, when once aroused,
would bitterly resent such pro-slavery demands.
And this great crisis was only the bursting into flame of many smaller fires that had long been smoldering. For generations the two
Sections had been drifting apart. Since the middle of the seventeenth century, Mason and Dixon's line had been a line of real division
separating two inherently distinct portions of the country.
Reread these lines from the Chapter 1 excerpt and answer the question that follows:
And this great crisis was only the bursting into flame of many smaller fires that had long been smoldering, For generations the two sections had been
drifting apart Since the middle of the seventeenth century, Moson and Dixon's line had been a line of real division separating two inherently distinct
portions of the country
Which of the following best summarizes the main message of these lines? (5 points)
a
The two sides of the country were irreconcilably different
The two sides of the country should never have been together.
The great crisis was caused by Mason and Dixon's division
The great crisis was the result of long-building tensions
Od

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At A Nation's Crisis The fall of Fort Sumter in April 1861, did not produce the Civil War crisis....
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