Hi I’m John Green; this is Crash Course US History
and today we discuss one of the most confusing
questions in American history:
What caused the Civil War?
Just kidding it’s not a confusing question at all:
Slavery caused the Civil War.
Mr. Green, Mr. Green, but what about, like, 
states rights and nationalism, economics –
Me from the Past, your senior year of high school you will be taught American Government by Mr. Fleming, a white Southerner who will seem to you to be about 182 years old,
and you will say something to him in
class about states rights.
And Mr. Fleming will turn to
you and he will say,
“A state’s rights to what, sir?” And
for the first time in your snotty little life,
you will be well and truly speechless
[Theme Music]
The road to the Civil War leads to
discussions of states rights...to slavery,
and differing economic systems...
Specifically whether those economic systems should involve slavery, and the election of Abraham Lincoln.
Specifically how his election impacted slavery, but none  of those things would have been issues without slavery.
So let’s pick up with the most controversial section
of the Compromise of 1850, the fugitive slave law.
Now, longtime Crash Course viewers will remember that there was already a Fugitive Slave Law written into the United States Constitution, so what made this one so controversial?
Under this new law, any citizen was required to turn
in anyone he or she knew to be a slave to authorities.
And that made, like, every person in New England
into a sheriff, and it also required them to enforce
a law they found abhorrent.
So, they had to be sheriffs and they didn’t
even get little gold badges.
Thought Bubble, can I have a gold badge?
Oh. Awesome. Thank you.
This law was also terrifying to people of
color in the North, because even if you’d
been, say, born free in Massachusetts,
the courts could send you into slavery if
even one person swore before a judge that
you were a specific slave.
And many people of color responded to the
fugitive slave law by moving to Canada,
which at the time was still technically
an English colony,
thereby further problematizing the whole
idea that England was all about tyranny and
the United States was all about freedom.
But anyway the most important result of the fugitive slave law was that it convinced some Northerners that the government was in thehands of a sinister “slave power.”
Sadly, slave power was not a heavy metal
band or Britney Spears’s new single or even
a secret cabal of powerful slaves,
but rather a conspiracy theory about a
secret cabal of pro-slavery congressmen.
That conspiracy theory is going to grow in importance,
but before we get to that let us discuss Railroads.
Underrated in Monopoly and underrated in
the Civil War. Let’s go to the Thought Bubble.
Railroads made shipping cheaper and more efficient
and allowed people to move around the country quickly,
and they had a huge backer (also a tiny backer)
in the form of Illinois congressman Stephen Douglas,
who wanted a transcontinental railroad because
1. he felt it would bind  the union together at
a time when it could use some binding,
and 2. he figured it would go through Illinois,
which would be good for his home state.
But there was a problem: To build a railroad,
the territory through which it ran needed
to be organized, ideally as states,
and if the railroad was going to run through
Illinois, then the Kansas and Nebraska territories
would need to become state-like.
So Douglas pushed forward the
Kansas Nebraska Act in 1854.
The Kansas-Nebraska Act formalized the
idea of popular sovereignty,
which basically meant that (white)
residents of states could decide for themselves
whether the state should allow slavery.
Douglas felt this was a nice way of avoiding saying whether he favored slavery;
instead, he could just be in favor of letting
other people be in favor of it.
Now you’ll remember that the previously
bartered Missouri Compromise banned slavery
in new states north of this here line.
And since in theory Kansas or Nebraska could have slavery if people there decided they wanted it under the Kansas-Nebraska Act despite being north of that there line,
this in practice repealed the Missouri Compromise.
As a result, there was quite a lot of violence
in Kansas, so much so that some people say
the Civil War really started there in 1857.
Also, the Kansas Nebraska Act led to the
creation of a new political party: The Republicans.
Yes, those Republicans.
Thanks, Thought Bubble.
So, Douglas’s law helped to create a new coalition
party dedicated to stopping the extension of slavery.
It was made of former Free-Soilers, Northern
anti-slavery Whigs and some Know-Nothings.
It was also a completely sectional party,
meaning that it drew supporters almost exclusively
from the free states in the North and West,
which, you’ll remember from like, two minutes
ago, were tied together by common economic
interests, and the railroad.
I’m telling you, don’t underestimate railroads.
By the way, we are getting to you, Dred Scott.
And now we return at last to “slave power.”
For many northerners, the Kansas Nebraska
Act which repealed the Missouri Compromise,
was yet more evidence that Congress was
controlled by a sinister “slave power” group doing
the bidding of rich plantation owners.
Which, as conspiracy theories go,
wasn’t the most far-fetched.
In fact, by 1854, the North was far more populous
than the South – it had almost double the South’s
congressional representation –
but in spite of this advantage, Congress had just
passed a law extending the power of slave states,
and potentially – because two new states
meant four new senators – making the federal
government even more pro-slavery.
And to abolitionists, that didn’t really
seem like democracy.
The other reason that many northerners cared
enough about Kansas and Nebraska to abandon
their old party loyalties
was that having them become slave states was seen
as a threat to northerner’s economic self-interest.
Remember the west was seen as a place
where individuals – specifically white individuals –
could become self-sufficient farmers.
As Lincoln wrote: “The whole nation is interested
that the best use be made of these territories.
We want them for the homes of free white people.
They cannot be, to any considerable extent,
if slavery is planted within them.
New Free States are places for poor people
to go to and better their condition.”
So, the real question was: Would these
western territories have big slave-based
plantations like happened in Mississippi?
Or small family farms full of frolicking
free white people, like happened in Thomas
Jefferson’s imagination?
So the new Republican party ran its first presidential
candidate in 1856 and did remarkably well.
John C. Fremont from California picked up 39%
of the vote, all of it from the North and West, and
lost to the Democrat James Buchanan,
who had the virtue of having spent much of
the previous decade in Europe and thus not
having a position on slavery.
I mean, let me take this opportunity to
remind you that James Buchanan’s nickname
was The Old Public Functionary.
Meanwhile, Kansas was trying to become a state
by holding elections in 1854 and 1855.
I say trying because these elections were
so fraudulent that they would be funny,
except that everything stops being funny like
12 years before the Civil War and doesn’t get really
funny again until Charlie Chaplin.
Ah, Charlie Chaplin, thank you for being in the public domain and giving us a much-needed break from a nation divided against itself, discovering that it cannot stand.
Right so part of the Kansas problem was that hundreds of so called border ruffians flocked to Kansas from pro-slavery Missouri to cast ballots in Kansas elections,
which led to people coming in from free states
and setting up their own rival governments.
Fighting eventually broke out and more
than 200 people were killed.
In fact, in 1856, pro-slavery forces laid siege
to anti-slavery Lawrence, Kansas with cannons.
One particularly violent incident involved the
murder of an entire family by an anti-slavery
zealot from New York named John Brown.
He got away with that murder but hold on
a minute, we’ll get to him.
Anyway, in the end Kansas passed two
constitutions because, you know, that’s a
good way to get started as a government.
The pro-slavery Lecompton Constitution was the first that went to the U.S. Congress and it was supported by Stephen Douglas as an example of popular sovereignty at work,
except that the man who oversaw the
voting in Kansas called it a “vile fraud.”
Congress delayed Kansas’ entry into the Union
(because Congress’s primary business is delay)
until another, more fair referendum took place.
And after that vote, Kansas eventually
did join the U.S. as a free state in 1861,
by which time it was frankly too late.
All right so while all this craziness was going on
in Kansas and Congress, the Supreme Court was
busy rendering the worst decision in its history.
Oh, hi there, Dred Scott.
Dred Scott had been a slave whose master had taken him to live in Illinois and Wisconsin, both of which barred slavery.
So, Scott sued, arguing that if slavery was
illegal in Illinois, then living in Illinois made
him definitionally not a slave.
The case took years to find its way to
the Supreme Court
and eventually, in 1857, Chief Justice
Roger B. Taney, from Maryland, handed
down his decision.
The Court held that Scott was still a slave, 
but it went even further, attempting to settle
the slavery issue once and for all.
Taney ruled that black people “had for
more than a century before been regarded
as beings of an inferior order,
and altogether unfit to associate with the
white race, either in social or political relations;
and so far inferior that they had no rights
which the white man was bound to respect;
and that the negro might justly and lawfully
be reduced to slavery for his benefit.”
So...that is an actual quote from an actual
decision by the Supreme Court of the United
States of America. Wow.
I mean, Taney’s ruling basically said that
all black people anywhere in the United States
could be considered property,
and that the court was in the business
of protecting that property.
This meant a slave owner could take
his slaves from Mississippi to Massachusetts
and they would still be slaves.
Which meant that technically, there was
no such thing as a free state.
At least that’s how people in the north,
especially Republicans saw it.
The Dred Scott decision helped convince
even more people that the entire government,
Congress, President Buchanan, and now
the Supreme Court, were in the hands of the
dreaded “Slave Power.”
Oh, we’re going to do the
Mystery Document now?
Stan, I am so confident about today’s Mystery Document that I am going to write down my guess right now.
And I’m going to put it in this envelope
and then when I’m right I want a prize.
All I ever get is punishment,
I want prizes.
OK. The rules here are simple. I guess the
author of the Mystery Document.
I already did that. And then I get
rewarded for being right.
Alright total confidence. Let’s just read
this thing. And then I get my reward.
“I look forward to the days when there shall
be a servile insurrection in the South,
when the black man … shall assert his freedom
and wage a war of extermination against his master;
when the torch of the incendiary shall
light up the towns and cities of the South,
and blot out the last vestige of slavery.
And though I may not mock at their calamity,
nor laugh when their fear cometh, yet I will
hail it as the dawn of a political millennium.”
I was right! Right here.
Guessed in advance. John Brown.
[buzzing] What? STAN!
Ohio Congressman Joshua Giddings?
Seriously, Stan? AH!
Whatever. I’m gonna talk about John Brown anyway.
In 1859, John Brown led a disastrous
raid on the federal arsenal at Harpers Ferry,
hoping to capture guns and then give
them to slaves who would rise up and use
those guns against their masters.
But, Brown was an awful military commander,
and not a terribly clear thinker in general,
and the raid was an abject failure.
Many of the party were killed
and he was captured.
He stood trial and was sentenced to death.
Thus he became a martyr to the abolitionist
cause, which is probably what he wanted anyway.
On the morning of his hanging, he wrote,
“I, John Brown, am now quite certain that
the crimes of this guilty land will never be
purged away but with blood.”
Well, he was right about that, but in general, any statement that begins “I-comma-my-name” Meh.
And, so the stage was set for one of the
most important Presidential elections in
American history.
Dun dun dun dun dun dahhhhh.
In 1860, the Republican Party chose as its
candidate Abraham Lincoln, whose hair and
upper forehead you can see here.
He’d proved his eloquence, if not his electability,
in a series of debates with Stephen Douglas when
the two were running for the Senate in 1858.
Lincoln lost that election, but the debates
made him famous,
and he could appeal to immigrant voters, because
he wasn’t associated with the Know Nothings.
The Democrats, on the other hand, were
– to use a historian term – a hot mess.
The Northern wing of the party favored
Stephen Douglas, but he was unacceptable
to voters in the deep South.
So Southern Democrats nominated John C. Breckinridge of Kentucky, making the Democrats, the last remaining truly national party, no longer truly a national party.
A third party, the Constitutional Union Party, dedicated
to preserving the Constitution “as it is” i.e. including
slavery, nominated John Bell of Tennessee.
Abraham Lincoln received 0 votes in
nine American states.
But he won 40% of the overall popular vote,
including majorities in many of the most populous
states, thereby winning the electoral college.
So, anytime a guy becomes President who
literally did not appear on your ballot, there is
likely to be a problem.
And indeed, Lincoln’s election led to a number
of Southern states seceding from the Union.
Lincoln himself hated slavery, but he repeatedly said that he would leave it alone in the states where it existed.
But the demographics of Lincoln’s election showed
Southerners and Northerners alike that slave power
– to whatever extent it had existed –was over.
By the time he took office on March 1, 1861,
seven states had seceded and formed the
Confederate States of America.
And the stage was set for the fighting to begin, which it did, when Southern troops fired upon the Union garrison at Fort Sumter in Charleston harbor on April 12, 1861.
So, that’s when the Civil War started, but it
became inevitable earlier – maybe in 1857,
or maybe in 1850, or maybe in 1776.
Or maybe in 1619, when the first African
slaves arrived in Virginia.
Because here’s the thing: In the Dred Scott decision,
Chief Justice Taney said that black Americans had
“no rights which the white man was bound to respect.”
But this was demonstrably false.
Black men had voted in elections and
held property, including even slaves.
They’d appeared in court on their own
behalf. They had rights.
They’d expressed those rights when given
the opportunity.
And the failure of the United States to understand that the rights of black Americans were as inalienable as those of white Americans is ultimately what made the Civil War inevitable.
So next week, it’s off to war we go.
Thanks for watching.
Crash Course is produced and directed by
Stan Muller.
Our script supervisor is Meredith Danko.
The show is written by my high school
history teacher, Raoul Meyer, and myself.
Our associate producer is Danica Johnson.
And our graphics team is Thought Café.
Usually every week there’s a libertage with
a caption, but there wasn’t one this week
because of stupid Chief Justice Roger Taney.
However, please suggest captions in comments where you can also ask questions about today’s video that will be answered by our team of historians.
Thanks for watching Crash Course US History
and as we say in my hometown of Nerdfighteria,
don’t forget to be awesome.
