III. Short-answer
Essay Question
A short-answer essay
is a two to three paragraph answer to a historical question. It asks
for more specific detail than an identification, but does not demand
a thesis statement like a long-essay answer would.
For example, I might
ask, "Why did Northerners object to the Dred Scott decision?" To provide
a thorough answer, you would want to use your first one or two paragraphs
to explain what the Dred Scott decision was and the last to consider
why it offended northern public opinion. An answer might run as follows:
"Dred
Scott was a slave who whose owner brought him to Illinois (a free state)
and Wisconsin (a free territory). During that time, Scott married another
slave and they had a daughter, who was born in free territory. When
the family was returned to Illinois, Dred Scott sued for his freedom
and that of his wife and daughter on the grounds that his residence
in free territory made him free. He was freed by a Missouri state court,
but the decision was overturned on appeal. Then Scott's owner moved
to New York and Scott sued him in federal court. In 1857, the case reached
the Supreme Court.
The
court decided against Scott. In an extremely influential majority opinion,
Chief Justice Roger B. Taney ruled that Scott was not a legitimate plaintiff
because no black person, whether free or slave, could be a citizen of
the United States. He further declared that residing in free territory
did not make Scott free because the whole idea of free territory was
unconstitutional-it was a violation of the Fourth Amendment's guarantee
of security of property. Taney was essentially trying to settle the
issue of the expansion of slavery into the territories by saying that
it was not an issue of concern for the federal government.
In
the northern states, response to the decision was outraged. Abolitionists
felt that the decision was morally wrong. However, even northern whites
who were moderate on the issue of slavery often opposed the expansion
of slavery into the territories, which they believed should remain the
province of freehold farmers, not slave-driven plantations. The decision
challenged territorial residents' ability to keep slavery out of the
areas where they moved, and potentially undermined free states' rights
to ban slavery as well. Many northerners saw the decision as a sign
that the federal government had been taken over by a menacing slave
owners' conspiracy."