Southerners were delighted with the Dred Scott decision, but northerners were outraged.
Southerners were delighted with the Dred Scott decision, but northerners were outraged.
Southerners were delighted with the Dred Scott decision, but northerners were outraged.
Which proclamation
Many Northerners were for the proclamation that ended slavery. However, there were Northerners who felt like Southerners and opposed it.
They didn't really care until Uncle Tom's Cabin can out, making much more people take action.
Southerners were outraged at John Brown's attempt to steal weapons and ultimately free slaves, while northerners called him a hero and martyr. They believed that he died to for the cause of the abolition of slavery.
That the Supreme Court decision was both unnecessary and invalid.
it depends on what century you are talking about and what kind of people you are talking about. southerners usually supported it. northerners could be a little hesitant
blacks recruited
They were mad about it.
they thought it was unfair
This was taking place during the same time that the Missouri Compromise was taking place. If a slave was taken from a Missouri, a slave state, into Kansas, a free state there was the question of whether or not the slave was now considered a free man. That is why Missouri and Kansas were originally entered into the Union as one, to prevent either the North or the South from having an advantage over the other. There were supposed to an equal amount of both northern and southern states in the Union, both slave states and free states. These were the sentiments that people, chiefly white southerners were having during the time that Dred Scott decision was taking place. They were worried that the Northern states in the Union had more of an advantage in the Union even after the Missouri Compromise, when new boundaries were set between free and slave states. So, after the Dred Scott decision that upheld the law "once a slace, always a slave," I believe white southerners were overjoyed with this decision, and determined to do more to secure their place in the Union, and ensure that their ideas became laws.
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