You can either take the full extent of the KANSAS TURNPIKE (toll road), which is I-35 NORTH to I-335 NORTH to TOPEKA, and then I-335 NORTH to I-470 EAST (around Topeka) to I-70 EAST, and then I-70 EAST to KANSAS CITY. Or you could take EXIT 127 off of the KANSAS TURNPIKE to continue on I-35 NORTH to Kansas City.
I say it takes about a month
At first, they would sneak out at night, and follow the North Star, a star that led them North. They would travel at night, and hide during the day, from slave owners. Then when Kansas was given the option to vote on weather or not Kansas should be a Free State or a Slave State. That's when Bleeding Kansas Came in. People were having a miniature Civil War between Missouri and Kansas. John brown, a Jawhawker (antislavery) would take a group of men, and go to Missouri, and take some slaves, and bring them back to Kansas. Because Missouri was a Slave State... Then Later the Civil War broke out. Im only 13, and this is the best information i can provide you with!
Take I-35 NORTH to Kansas City.
Take I-35 NORTH from Kansas City to I-80 EAST to DAVENPORT in Des Moines, IOWA.Continue EAST on I-80 to Chicago. To get to the city itself, take I-55 NORTH (EXIT 126B off I-80 in ILLINOIS).
The Kansas-Nebraska Act became a Law on March 30, 1854.
457 miles taking this route:Take I-40 EAST from Amarillo to the KILPATRICK TURNPIKE (toll) at EXIT 139 in OKLAHOMA.Take the KILPATRICK TURNPIKE (toll), around OKLAHOMA CITY, to I-35 NORTH to WICHITA.Take I-35 NORTH to KANSAS, where I-35 continues NORTH as the KANSAS TURNPIKE (toll road).Take I-35 KANSAS TURNPIKE (toll) NORTH to I-235 NORTH at EXIT 42.Take I-235 NORTH, around WICHITA, to K-96 WEST to HUTCHINSON at EXIT 13.Take K-96 WEST to Yoder.
The north wanted to block there ports, take control of the mississippi river and take the capitol, richmond VA. The south just wanted to defend the north and hope that they would lose interest.
North and East.
Mississippi river.
The territory of Kansas, in the debate about its forthcoming admission as a state.
No more than three days, but most likely two.