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Essay On Missouri Compromise

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Missouri Compromise of 1820
In 1819, Missouri requested statehood, and the freedom to become a slave state.
This set off a heated debate, as the twenty two states then part of the union were evenly divided eleven and eleven between free and slave. While northerners, in accordance with their plan to slowly kill off slavery by not allowing new states to be free, were against the idea of Missouri being a slave state, while Southerners used a state's rights argument. They reasoned that, like the original thirteen states, new states should be able to decide the issue of slavery for themselves. In the end, both sides reached a compromise. In the immediate future, so the states were not unbalanced, Maine became a free state, and going forward no state north of the …show more content…
The most famous of these was Nat Turner’s rebellion in 1831. Nat Turner, a literate and intelligent slave in Virginia, and around 70 of his followers went from plantation to plantation, killing whites and setting blacks free. The rebellion was eventually put down by local militia and federal troops. Over 200 blacks were killed, many of whom had not taken part. In the aftermath of the rebellion slaves codes through the country were significantly strengthened (as we saw in the Slave Code Presentations).

The Mexican American War (1846-1847)
The United States’s victory in the Mexican American war only exacerbated its internal problems. Although the territory wasn’t yet important politically, it inflamed tensions by pushing the issue of new states and territory to forefront of political discussion. It was especially significant because the conquered land was below the line drawn by the Missouri Act of 1820. Abolitionists, who had previously thought slavery was going to be contained, now had to deal with the possibility of more slave states.

The Compromise of 1850
The compromise of 1850 calmed many of the tensions brought on by victory

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