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Q: What did the compromise of 1850 in the District of Columbia?
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What did the compromise of 1850 do about slavery in the District of Columbia?

It abolished the slave trade in the District of Columbia.


The compromise of 1850 did not provide for?

the abolition of slavery in the District of Columbia


The compromise of 1850 banned slave trade where?

District of Columbia


Place where the slave trade was ended by the Compromise of 1850?

District of Columbia


Was slave trade but not slavery prohibited in the District of Columbia?

Yes, the slave trade was indeed prohibited in the District of Columbia in 1850 through the passage of the Compromise of 1850. However, slavery itself remained legal in the District until it was abolished with the passage of the 13th Amendment in 1865.


Which of these is incorrectly matched with regard to the Compromise of 1850?

the slave trade would be abolished in the District of Columbia. this was a concession for the south.


Place where northerners tried but failed to get the federal government to abolish slavery but where the slave trade was ended by the Compromise of 1850?

District of Columbia


Was not a part of the Compromise of 1850?

Missouri entered as a slave state. Slavery was abolished in Washington, D.C. The abolition of slavery in the District of Columbia


Where did the Compromise of 1850 outlaw slavery in the US?

Washington, D. C. Or strictly, it was the slave trade, rather than slavery. And it related to all of D.C.


What state abolished slavery in 1850?

Not slavery - slave-trading. It was the District of Columbia.


Which of the following was not part of the Compromise of 1850?

Missouri entered as a slave state. Slavery was abolished in Washington, D.C. The abolition of slavery in the district of Columbia


Northern and Southern gains of compromise of 1850?

Northern Gains: California was admitted a free state, slave TRADE was abolished in the District of Columbia (Washington D.C.)Southern Gains: There were no restrictions on slavery in Mexico, SLAVERY itself was not abolished in the District of Columbia, the fugitive slave law (capturing runaways) became stronger.