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Westward Expansion and Slavery. As the United States expanded westward, the conflict over slavery grew more bitter and threatened to tear the country apart. The issue was always whether the number of “free states” and “slave states” would be balanced, thus affecting power in the Congress.
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As the United States expanded westward, the conflict over slavery grew more bitter and threatened to tear the country apart. • The issue was always whether the number of “free states” and “slave states” would be balanced, thus affecting power in the Congress.
Congress made a number of compromises to keep the balance of free and slave states equal
Missouri Compromise (1820) • Missouri would enter US as a slave state, Maine a free state • Line drawn across country at 36’30” degrees latitude • All new states above the line are free states and below the line are slave states
Compromise of 1850 • California would enter as a free state • New Mexico and Utah territories would allow popular sovereignty (people) to choose slavery or not
Compromise of 1850 • Fugitive Slave Act • All escaped slaves in the north can be returned to the south and slavery • A major set back to abolitionist movement
Kansas-Nebraska Act • Gave people in Kansas and Nebraska the choice whether to allow slavery in their states (“popular sovereignty”). • Violated the Missouri Compromise line which upset people in the north
Bloody Kansas • Bloody fighting in Kansas as pro- and anti-slavery forces battled each other • Direct result of the Kansas-Nebraska Act • 1st time white abolitionists fought against pro-slavery groups