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OpenStudy (anonymous):

Does anyone have connections academy in AP U.S history??

OpenStudy (anonymous):

what is your question

OpenStudy (anonymous):

19 is a

OpenStudy (anonymous):

lol i know that but 18 idk

OpenStudy (anonymous):

im not sure but this might help, from Wikipedia: The party declined rapidly in the North after 1855. In the Election of 1856 it was bitterly divided over slavery. The main faction supported the ticket of presidential nominee Millard Fillmore and vice-presidential nominee Andrew Jackson Donelson. Fillmore, a former President, had been a Whig, and Donelson was the nephew of Democratic President Andrew Jackson, so the ticket was designed to appeal to loyalists from both major parties. It won 23% of the popular vote and carried one state, Maryland, with eight electoral votes. Fillmore did not win enough votes to block Democrat James Buchanan from the White House. After the Supreme Court's controversial Dred Scott v. Sandford ruling in 1857, most of the anti-slavery members of the American Party joined the Republican Party. The pro-slavery wing of the American Party remained strong on the local and state levels in a few southern states, but by the 1860 election, they were no longer a serious national political movement. Most of their remaining members supported the Constitutional Union Party in 1860.[18]

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