Both the Missouri compromises gave the US more time to consider the issue of slavery and whether slavery would be allowed in the new US territories. There is no direct linkage to the last Missouri compromise of 1850 and the US Civil War.
As the US Civil War began to unfold, the USA was sectionalized. The two main and competing sections were the "Northern" and "Southern" states. The US's western frontiers were either territories or US states with low populations.
At the time of the Civil War (1861-1865), the United States consisted of 34 states and several territories. Key territories included the Kansas Territory, Nebraska Territory, and the New Mexico Territory, among others. The significant division was between the Union states in the North and the Confederate states in the South, with territories primarily leaning towards either side based on their economic and social structures. The war ultimately influenced the status of these territories, leading to changes in their governance and future statehood.
I believe they were the North, the South, and the US Territories? Correct me if I'm wrong.
The United States was involved with several wars in that century. The "big one" was the Civil War, started in 1861.
Relocation to distant territories
First, US Civil War; Last, Vietnam War.
barack abama
The first US draft was during the US Civil War (1861-1865); the last US draft was during the Vietnam War (1961-1975).
The Reconstruction Era describes the time just after the civil war when the US was reconciling the north and south. Additional reading at the link below.
Maryland, Delaware. Missouri and Kentucky. Plus West Virginia which broke away from VirginiaMissouri, Kentucky, Maryland, Delaware.
civil war