10
John C. Calhoun: pro-South, pro- Slavery Bram Sims HIST299 Final Presentation

Bram Sims HIST299 Final Presentation. Outline Thesis Historiography Background Main arguments Conclusion

Embed Size (px)

Citation preview

Page 1: Bram Sims HIST299 Final Presentation. Outline Thesis Historiography Background Main arguments Conclusion

John C. Calhoun:pro-South, pro-Slavery

Bram SimsHIST299 Final Presentation

Page 2: Bram Sims HIST299 Final Presentation. Outline Thesis Historiography Background Main arguments Conclusion

OutlineThesisHistoriographyBackgroundMain argumentsConclusion

Page 3: Bram Sims HIST299 Final Presentation. Outline Thesis Historiography Background Main arguments Conclusion

Pro-South, Pro-Slavery influencesPaternal FinancialPolitical

Page 4: Bram Sims HIST299 Final Presentation. Outline Thesis Historiography Background Main arguments Conclusion

Historiography Frederic Bancroft, Calhoun and the South

Carolina nullification movement, 1928.Irving Bartlett, John C. Calhoun, A Biography,

1993.August Spain, The Political Theory of John C.

Calhoun, 1951. Charles Wiltse, John C. Calhoun, Nullifier,

1829-1839, John C. Calhoun, Sectionalist, 1840-1850, 1949 and 1951 respectively.

Page 5: Bram Sims HIST299 Final Presentation. Outline Thesis Historiography Background Main arguments Conclusion

BackgroundEarly life NationalistSectionalist

Page 6: Bram Sims HIST299 Final Presentation. Outline Thesis Historiography Background Main arguments Conclusion

Paternal Influences

•Patrick Calhoun•Standards: Self-government and slavery•Stability

Page 7: Bram Sims HIST299 Final Presentation. Outline Thesis Historiography Background Main arguments Conclusion

Financial Influences

•Agriculture• Recession

Page 8: Bram Sims HIST299 Final Presentation. Outline Thesis Historiography Background Main arguments Conclusion

Politics

•Tariff of 1828 a.k.a. Tariff of Abominations•Petticoat Affair•Switch from Nationalist to Sectionalist

Page 9: Bram Sims HIST299 Final Presentation. Outline Thesis Historiography Background Main arguments Conclusion

ConclusionInfluences “Calhoun’s strengths, however, were limited

by his unquestioning commitment to his culture and its institutions. Those commitments seemed increasingly out of place in a revolutionary world that chanted the mantra of liberty, equality, and nationality”

-John Belohlavek

Page 10: Bram Sims HIST299 Final Presentation. Outline Thesis Historiography Background Main arguments Conclusion

ReferencesBancroft, Frederic. Calhoun and the South Carolina

nullification movement. Baltimore: The John Hopkins Press, 1928.

Bartlett, Irving. John C. Calhoun: A Biography. New York: W.W. Norton and Company, 1993.

Calhoun, John. Slavery a positive good. 1837.Spain, August. The Political Theory of John C.

Calhoun. New York: Bookman Associates, 1951.Wiltse, Charles. John C. Calhoun, Nullifier, 1829-1839.

Indianapolis: Bobbs-Merrill, 1949.Wiltse, Charles. John C. Calhoun, Sectionalist, 1840-

1850. Indianapolis: Bobbs-Merrill, 1951.