l thing that in the 1854
The Kansas Nebraska Act , passed in 1854 , split the democrat party and badly divided.... by A AVID STUDENT were smart as hell BICTHES all hating on us:)
The Kansas Nebraska Act , passed in 1854 , split the democrat party and badly divided.... by A AVID STUDENT were smart as hell BICTHES all hating on us:)
The Kansas Nebraska Act , passed in 1854 , split the democrat party and badly divided.... by A AVID STUDENT were smart as hell BICTHES all hating on us:)
The Kansas Nebraska Act , passed in 1854 , split the democrat party and badly divided.... by A AVID STUDENT were smart as hell BICTHES all hating on us:)
it didnttt................................................
It allowed each new state to vote whether to be slave or free. When Kansas became the first state to vote, all the bully-boys from both sides descended on Kansas to intimidate the voters. This was 'Bleeding Kansas', and it raised the temperature of the slavery debate, bringing war closer.
This Act was trying to allow new states to vote whether to be slave or free.
I. Passage of the Kansas- Nebraska Act a. This act allowed the Kansas and Nebraska territories to decide whether they wanted slavery or not with popular sovereignty b. This created a struggle between the pro slavery and abolitionists c. Fought over whether the state should be free or not
It allowed Kansas to enter the USA as free soil - after every bully-boy in America had descended on that thinly-populated state, to try and interrupt the voting. ("Bleeding Kansas")
The Kansas-Nebraska Act, passed in 1854, created the territories of Kansas and Nebraska and allowed the settlers in those territories to decide whether to allow slavery through the principle of popular sovereignty. This act effectively repealed the Missouri Compromise of 1820, which had prohibited slavery in the northern part of the Louisiana Purchase territory, including present-day Kansas and Nebraska. The conflict over whether these territories would be free or slave states intensified sectional tensions and contributed to the onset of the Civil War. The act led to violent confrontations known as "Bleeding Kansas," as pro-slavery and anti-slavery settlers rushed into the territories to influence the decision.
The Kansas-Nebraska Act of 1854 allowed settlers in those territories to decide for themselves whether to allow slavery, leading to a rush of migration to Kansas from both pro-slavery and anti-slavery advocates. This influx of settlers significantly increased the population density of Kansas, as individuals and families moved there in hopes of influencing the outcome of the slavery debate. The resulting conflict, known as "Bleeding Kansas," further intensified migration, as people sought to escape violence or join the fray. Ultimately, the act transformed Kansas into a battleground for opposing ideologies, shaping its demographic landscape.
It destroyed Confederate hope for negotiated peace.