What was Manifest Destiny and how did it shape policy during 1844–1877?
Manifest Destiny was the belief that Americans were destined to expand across the continent; it drove mass migration west and prompted federal actions like the Homestead Act and Pacific Railroad Act to support settlement and infrastructure.
How did the Mexican‑American War intensify the slavery debate?
The Treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo (1848) added the Mexican Cession to U.S. territory, creating the central question of whether slavery would be allowed in those new lands and sparking measures like the Wilmot Proviso and later the Compromise of 1850.
What were the major elements of the Compromise of 1850 that affected North‑South relations?
Key elements included admitting California as a free state, popular sovereignty for Utah and New Mexico, banning the slave trade in D.C., a stricter Fugitive Slave Act, and resolving Texas land claims — the Fugitive Slave Act especially angered many Northerners.
Why did Reconstruction fail to secure lasting rights for freedpeople despite the 14th and 15th Amendments?
Although amendments granted citizenship and voting rights, Southern white resistance (black codes, KKK violence), Supreme Court setbacks (e.g., Slaughterhouse Cases), and the withdrawal of federal troops after the Compromise of 1877 undermined enforcement, allowing segregation and disenfranchisement to take hold.
What event symbolically began the Civil War in 1861?
Confederate forces fired on Fort Sumter in April 1861, prompting Lincoln to call for troops and marking the start of open hostilities.