The Louisiana Purchase gave land that would eventually help to form the following states (states entirely included in the Louisiana Purchase are bolded):
The Louisiana Purchase encompassed all or part of 15 current U.S states and two Canadian Provinces. The land purchased contained all of Arkansas, Missouri, Iowa, Oklahoma, Kansas and Nebraska; parts of Minnesota that were west of the Mississippi River; most of North Dakota; nearly all of South Dakota; northeastern New Mexico; northern Texas; the portions of Montana, Wyoming, and Colorado east of the Continental Divide; and Louisiana west of the Mississippi River, including the city of New Orleans. (Parts of this area were still claimed by Spain at the time of the purchase.) In addition, the purchase contained small portions of land that would eventually become part of the Canadian provinces of Alberta and Saskatchewan.
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The addition of new territories through the Louisiana purchase alarmed many southerners, including North Carolinians. As territories acquired by the Louisiana purchase applied for admission to the union, they might apply as free states, states that had banned slavery. Doing so would throw the balance in congress to free states, who might then move to ban slavery throughout the nation.
Louisiana remains part of the United States of America.
As more of the Louisiana territory became states, the issue of slavery grew. For example, if a state wanted to enter the Union as a free state, there had to be a slave state to keep the # of slave and free states equal.
This is somewhat of an issue as the Louisiana Purchase happened in 1803 and had more than just Louisiana in the area that was purchased and not all of what we know now as Louisiana was in the Purchase. The area covered under the Purchase was all of South Dakota, Iowa, Nebraska, Missouri, Kansas, Arkansas, Oklahoma. Then you have other states that parts of them were included in the Purchase such as Wyoming, Colorado, Montana, North Dakota, Minnesota, New Mexico, Texas and Louisiana. Louisiana became an official state on April 30, 1812 becoming the 18th in the Union.
The Louisiana Purchase and the State of the Union address.
Vermont,Kentucky,Tennessee,and Ohio.
presidents
Vermont, Tennesse, Kentucky, and Ohio
Because there were no Western territories at that time. It was before the Louisiana Purchase.
louisiana
No, they are separate states within the Union.
The addition of new territories through the Louisiana purchase alarmed many southerners, including North Carolinians. As territories acquired by the Louisiana purchase applied for admission to the union, they might apply as free states, states that had banned slavery. Doing so would throw the balance in congress to free states, who might then move to ban slavery throughout the nation.
Louisiana remains part of the United States of America.
In 1877 the United States was made up of 38 states. By now both expansions for the Louisiana Purchase and the Kansas-Nebraska act had both been enacted.
The states added to the Union from 1792-1819 were Kentucky, Tennessee, Ohio, Louisiana, Indiana, Mississippi, Illinois, and Alabama. Kentucky (1792) Tennessee (1796) Ohio (1803) Louisiana (1812) Indiana (1816) Mississippi (1817) Illinois (1818) Alabama (1819)
As more of the Louisiana territory became states, the issue of slavery grew. For example, if a state wanted to enter the Union as a free state, there had to be a slave state to keep the # of slave and free states equal.
The Missouri Compromise, 1820, where Missouri was admitted to the Union as slave-holding state, but all other states to come of the Louisiana Purchase should be non-slavery states.