William H. Seward

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    A man named John Wilkes Booth killed President Abraham Lincoln. Booth was born in Maryland in 1838. He lived in the North during the Civil War, even though he believed the South should win. Booth believed that President Lincoln was responsible for the Civil War. Originally, Booth wanted to kidnap President Lincoln and take him to Richmond, Virginia, the Confederate capitol. However, Lincoln never traveled through the place where Booth and his conspirators were waiting to kidnap him. Booth

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    John Wilkes Booth is often the first person who comes to mind when one thinks about the assassination of President Abraham Lincoln. However, most people are unaware that this assassination was a larger conspiracy. Booth had at least four other known co-conspirators, and many scholars argue whether or not Booth was the only conspirator, or if all of them planned the assassination together and each had different roles. Others say Vice President Andrew Johnson had a vendetta against Lincoln because

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    The Compromise of 1850 was a bundle of five separate bills went by the United States Congress in September 1850, which defused a four-year political showdown in the middle of slave and freed states with respect to the status of regions procured amid the Mexican-American War (1846–1848). Divisions over oppression in locale grabbed in the Mexican-American (1846-48). War were resolved in the Compromise of 1850. It involved laws yielding California as a free state, making Utah and New Mexico areas with

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    for slavery liberation. Later in 1862, slaves started to join the northern army. President Lincoln perceived this this as a sign of nullification and he could now continue on with the Emancipation Proclamation. Lincoln’s Secretary of State was William H. Seward, he advised that they waited to issue the Proclamation until they

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    destination. There she was given directions to a safe house and names of people that would help her get across the Mason-Dixon Line. She was taken to Philadelphia, where she got a job and saved her money to help free other slaves. With the help of William Still and other members of the Philadelphia Anti-Slavery Society, she learned how the Underground Railroad worked. In 1850 Harriet helped her first slaves escape to the north. She sent notes to her sister’s older son that said for him and other family

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    The Republican Party has a total of 18 US presidents that were in office, the most of any political party to date. The Republican Party started with Abraham Lincoln and working its way down to George W Bush. The first start of the Party was in February, 1854, when antislavery Whigs met together to discuss a formation of a new political party. One such meeting on March 20th, 1854, in Wisconsin, is remembered as the Founding meeting of the Republican Party. The Civil War made the Republican Party victorious

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    Team Of Rivals Summary

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    book: Team of Rivals portrays the competition in 1860 for presidential nomination. In first chapter of this book, it describes who four major candidates were waiting for the results of national convention by telegraph. These four rivals were William H. Seward (Former governor and New York Senator), Salmon P. Chase (Ohio Governor), Edwards Bates (Missouri Attorney General) and Abraham Lincoln (former US representative form Illinois). Focus of this book is on the successful attempts made by Lincoln

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    The plot to assasinate Lincoln was more than a plan to kill the president. Nonetheless, “ In the century and a half since it happened, populist history has largely boiled down the assassination of Abraham Lincoln to the story of a single perpetrator: John Wilkes Booth” (Levins). However, the assassination plot also consisted of the assassination of the Secretary of State and Vice President. Their goal was to unhinge the government and to give the South a better chance at success as opposed to their

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    though Mary Surratt knew Booth and may have been in a plot to kidnap Lincoln, did not receive the correct sentence. First, Booth and his accomplices admitted to her innocence. The man, Lewis Paine, that failed to kill Secretary of State William H. Seward, seemed to be “singularly truthful.” When asked by an officer, Paine declared “In the presence of Almighty God, I swear Mrs.Surratt

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    - VOCAB LIST - (6) Imperialism – The act of stronger nations taking direct control of weaker nations in order to to create empires economically, politically, culturally, and/or militarily. Much of Africa and Asia were under European domination because of imperialism. Nationalism – A citizen’s passionate feeling of devotion and pride for their country. Nationalism usually suggests that a nation’s people believe themselves, their ideals, and their goals to be superior to those of other nations.

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