Soru

Zorluk: Çok zorIdeological and Legal Debates over Slavery

"We arraign this bill as a gross violation of a sacred pledge; as a criminal betrayal of precious rights; as part and parcel of an atrocious plot to exclude from a vast unoccupied region immigrants from the Old World and free laborers from our own States, and convert it into a dreary region of despotism, inhabited by masters and slaves. . . . We implore the Christian people of the United States, by the grave responsibilities of that heritage of liberty which has been bequeathed to them, to rise in their strength and save our country from this great ruin."

— Salmon P. Chase et al., "Appeal of the Independent Democrats," 1854

Which of the following developments in the sectional debates of the 1850s is most directly illustrated by the rhetoric in the excerpt?

  1. The consolidation of a Northern political coalition centered on free-labor ideology and the containment of the 'Slave Power'Cevap
  2. B
    The emergence of a consensus that Southern attempts to raise protective tariffs would dismantle the agrarian economy of the West
  3. C
    The belief that the Kansas-Nebraska Act would establish a federal executive mandate to outlaw slavery throughout all newly organized territories
  4. D
    The contention that Western territory should be reserved for European immigrants bound to contracts of indentured labor rather than chattel slavery

Cevap

The rhetoric in the excerpt most directly illustrates the consolidation of a Northern political coalition centered on free-labor ideology and the containment of the 'Slave Power.'
The correct option is correct because the 'Appeal of the Independent Democrats' was a crucial turning point in the sectional crisis. By framing the repeal of the Missouri Compromise line as a slaveholder conspiracy (the 'Slave Power') to exclude free white laborers from Western lands, the authors mobilized Northern public opinion. This free-labor ideology became the unifying glue for the newly formed Republican Party, bringing together Whigs, Free-Soilers, and anti-Nebraska Democrats.

Adım Adım Çözüm

1
Analyze the stimulus context and authorship.
The excerpt is from the 'Appeal of the Independent Democrats' (1854), written by Free-Soil congressmen in response to the introduction of the Kansas-Nebraska Act.
Identifying the source and its context allows us to recognize the primary motivations of the authors, who were political opponents of slavery's expansion.
2
Examine the core arguments and rhetoric within the text.
The authors frame the bill as an 'atrocious plot' to exclude 'free laborers' and turn the West into a 'dreary region of despotism' ruled by 'masters and slaves.'
This analysis reveals the core tenets of free-labor ideology, which argued that slavery degraded manual labor and blocked economic opportunity for free white men.
3
Connect the textual evidence to broader historical developments of the 1850s.
This rhetoric fed directly into the concept of the 'Slave Power conspiracy' and laid the intellectual and political foundations for the Republican Party, which united Northern anti-slavery factions.
Linking the document to the rise of the Republican coalition demonstrates how ideological debates over slavery reorganized the national party system.

Anahtar Kavram

Free-Labor Ideology and the Rise of the Republican Party
Bu soruyu puanla