Here is the chronological order of the events you provided:
- Election of 1860 - Abraham Lincoln's election prompts Southern states to consider secession.
- Georgia Secedes from the Union - Following Lincoln's election, Georgia secedes in January 1861.
- The Civil War - The war begins in April 1861 and lasts until 1865.
- Dred Scott Court Case - The Supreme Court decision is issued in March 1857, prior to the Civil War, but it has significant implications during this period.
- Founding of the Freedmen's Bureau - Established in March 1865 to aid freed slaves after the Civil War.
- Removal of Black legislators from the Georgia General Assembly during Reconstruction - This occurs in the late 1860s as Reconstruction policies are implemented and then rolled back.
However, the Dred Scott Court Case, while important, technically occurred before the other events in your list and is related but not a direct sequence in this context. Here’s the corrected order excluding that one since it technically predates everything else:
- Election of 1860
- Georgia Secedes from the Union
- The Civil War
- Founding of the Freedmen's Bureau
- Removal of Black legislators from the Georgia General Assembly during Reconstruction
If including the Dred Scott case in context with the other events, it would be treated as early background information on the issue of slavery leading up to the Civil War and might be listed separately.