This is exactly what APUSH students needed! A historically knowledgable teacher who puts everything into clear and cohesive common language that we can all understand! Thanks so much, you make this easy!
@@heimlershistory You literally are the besttt. My APUSH teacher literally puts ur videos as the best ways to study for the tests we have. I have one tomorrow and i’m currently watching all of your videos.
Timestamps: 0:56 Kansas-Nebraska Act 1854 1:11 Stephen Douglas, Popular Sovereignty 1:45 Bleeding Kansas 2:49 Lecompton Pro-slavery, Topeka Anti 3:07 Franklin Pierce 3:29 Dred Scott Decision 1857 3:52 Chief Justice Roger Taney Decision 4:56 Cotton Whigs (Pro-Slavery), Conscience Whigs (Anti) 5:16 Democratic Party 5:20 Republican Part formed in 1854
Heimler I seriously wanted to thank you from the bottom of my heart for making these videos. You are quite literally the only reason I got a 4 on my WHAP test and you're going to be my savior once again for APUSH. You are doing gods work for students in this country, have a great one.
Yeah, that's the thing about doing curriculum-based videos. I'm probably ahead of the majority of the folks watching, and they won't watch till they need it. Videos in previous units are doing well, though.
Hi, I don’t usually comment, but I want to thank you for helping me pull through APUSH when I’m struggling. These videos are so well-organized and thought out. Thank you so much!
Thank you so much for your videos they have really helped me so much and I know that it has helped many other students as well. We really appreciate it!!
Heimler I gotta 4 last year on ap world thanks to your brilliance and immersive learning experience. Thank you for your love and support, let's see how I do this year with APUSH
APUSH video idea -- could you go over the history of political parties in the United States (ex. Federalists and Democratic Republicans to modern-day Republicans and Democrats)? It would be super helpful for all of us APUSH students. Edit: Thanks for all the videos so far. Keep up the good work :D
In 1857, the Supreme Court members were: Roger Taney - Maryland John McLean - Ohio J M Wayne - Georgia J Catron - Pennsylvania P V Daniel - Virginia S Nelson - New York R C Grier - Pennsylvania B R Curtis - Massachusetts J A Campbell - Georgia
Hey Mr. Heimler! My school is doing semester long classes instead of year long because of COVID so my APUSH class is going to end in January and my teacher thinks we are only going to get as far as WW1. This makes me nervous about having to keep on track for the exam in May, are you going to keep pace and keep posting all the way up to May? If so I will definitely keep up with these videos as a resource to keep me on track. Also, you are the bomb and the best. Thank you
So if popular sovereignty was a popular belief before the civil war, then why didn't the entire nation just vote on whether they wanted or didn't want slavery and apply that vote?
Good question. Popular sovereignty could only be applied on a state level because the Constitution already protected slavery on a federal level, for example, in the Three-Fifths Compromise.
Hey Mr. Heimler, great video, but small note. The ugly chief justice Roger Taney name is actually not pronounced "Tayney" it is pronounced "Taw-ney." Keep up the good work!
The war was about saving the union and not about slavery. The south was tired of supporting the federal government and wanted to succeed. A letter Lincoln wrote to Horace Greeley proves it wasn't about slavery. Time to question everything.