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Q: How did the framers of the Constitution approach the issue of slavery A. They argued for the immediate end to the slave trade. B. They set a date for abolition in the northern states. C. They chose to?
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Related questions

When do you capitalize abolition?

Abolition is rarely capitalized. It occasionally is when referring to the abolition of slavery.


How did some northern workers fell about abolition?

They didnt like them


Which of the northern groups supported the south in its resistance to abolition?

Urban white workers and wealthy industrialists from the North supported the South in its resistance to abolition.


How did abolition help fight slavery?

Abolition-was the movement to end slavery, began in the late 1700s. By 1804, most of Northern states had outlawed slavery.


Why were the northern businesses nervouse about abolition?

Because slavery was the mainstay of the cotton industry.


copperheads?

Northern democrats who advocated peace in the south


Why did northern workers oppose the abolition of slaverys?

Northern workers opposed the abolition of slavery because they liked the cotton that was produced in the south. For those that did not oppose, and help free the slaves, many of them were Quakers that felt the light of God was in everybody.


When did the Constitution of the Northern Mariana Islands become effective?

The Constitution of the Northern Mariana Islands became effective on January 1, 1978.


What is an abolitiondom?

An abolitiondom is a group of abolitionists, those who support the abolition of something, especially those who were members of the northern states during the United States Civil War.


What states left slaves out of constitution?

The Northern States during the 1800s or something.


How did the conflict at the appomatix courthouse change the course of the civil war?

It brought about the immediate surrender of the Army of Northern Virginia.


Which best describes Northern views toward slavery in the 1840s?

Most wanted the south to continue to have slavery. Most were opposed to abolition. Most did not want it to spread at all.