dildo
The admission of new states to the union and Dred Scott decision fueled the ongoing debate over slavery. (I got this off of ChaCha.com)
Some possible results of the growing sectional debate over slavery include humanitarian results. For example, when people treat others fairly, all will be educated and respected and slavery will stop growing.
Not battle, but a debate. The Missouri Compromise of 1820.
The United States had attempted to balance the number of slave states with the number of states that opposed slavery. By allowing Texas to become a part of the United States, the balance would have shifted.
Slavery had been abolished in the British Empire since The Slavery Abolition Act of 1833, and 13th Amendment to the constitution abolished slavery in the United States in 1864. Therefore in answer to your question, there was no slavery in 1870.
dildo
dildo
The admission of new states to the union and Dred Scott decision fueled the ongoing debate over slavery. (I got this off of ChaCha.com)
The slavery debate was mostly to do with the new states - whether they would be slave or free, the proportion of slave-states in Congress, and their influence on the voting.
I.do not now lalalala ok so better keep it learning those study
Both had a strong position in the Anti Slavery debate. They both were against slavery and agreed that there should be no more slave states.
Some possible results of the growing sectional debate over slavery include humanitarian results. For example, when people treat others fairly, all will be educated and respected and slavery will stop growing.
because they didnt want him to make slavery illegal !
Not battle, but a debate. The Missouri Compromise of 1820.
Some Southern States wanted the wealth brought to them by slavery, and they wanted not to be swamped by ballots by the more populated Northern States, so a compromise was reached.
A possible result of the growing sectional debate over slavery would be states seceding.
Slavery was a contentious issue in United States politics throughout history, becoming a topic in the drafting of the Constitution