Thursday, March 19, 2015

Explaining the Story of the Election of 1860 Through Artwork

 The essential question for this unit was, "How were the results of the  Election of 1860 representative of the deep divisions  over slavery?" To answer this question we watched a Crash-course video by John Green to learn the basic concepts of the Election of 1860 and how the topics of the Fugitive Slave Law, railroads, republicans, Bleeding Kansas, Dred Scott vs Sanford, and John Brown impacted the Civil War. The Election of 1860 was the main cause of the Civil War. Northern and Southern states (the Union and the Confederacy) disputed over the authorization of slavery. We analyzed a map that depicts which states voted for each president. The map shows how the majority of Northern states voted for Lincoln, a republican against slavery. He felt strongly that slavery should be contained. Southern states voted for Breckenridge, a Southern democrat who believed that there should be no limits on slavery. The votes for president clearly indicated that pro-slavery states voted for Lincoln, a pro-slavery president and anti-slavery states voted for Breckenridge, a pro-slavery president. My group also referenced Civil War In Art to analyze civil war artwork and understand events that led to the war. Through watching the Crash-course video, analyzing electoral votes, analyzing Civil War artwork, and creating a reflective Educreations video, we were able to fully understand how and why the nation was divided over the slavery debate and how events led to the battle of the Civil War.

My Group's Educreation Video



















A Map of State Votes

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