Northerners protest Douglas's plan to repeal the Missouri Compromise because they wanted slavery to stop and the leaders of the south rejected the plan, they spit upon every plan to the compromise.
Northerners protest Douglas's plan to repeal the Missouri Compromise because they wanted slavery to stop and the leaders of the south rejected the plan, they spit upon every plan to the compromise.
Northerners protest Douglas's plan to repeal the Missouri Compromise because they wanted slavery to stop and the leaders of the south rejected the plan, they spit upon every plan to the compromise.
The northerners protests DouglasÕs plan to repeal the Missouri Compromise because it would have made slavery legal in the northern territories. The Missouri Compromise had outlawed slavery in territories and new states above the Missouri Compromise line.
Northerners protest Douglas's plan to repeal the Missouri Compromise because they wanted slavery to stop and the leaders of the south rejected the plan, they spit upon every plan to the compromise.
yes, when there was popular protest in Germany, the Nazis backed down
To protest means to object something or to disapprove of it. For example, many people in Missouri showed up to protest the Ferguson shootings.
South Carolina accepted the Compromise Tariff of 1833 by revoking its Ordinance of Nullification of 1832. The Ordinance was passed in protest to the Tariffs of 1828 and 1832.
A sit in is a form of protest through sitting on the floor and refusing to leave until a point is heard, or a compromise is reached. The right of peaceful assembly may be a right used at this time - so long as the protest remains non-aggressive.
It was written as a protest against the Fugitive Slave Act of 1850, which forced the general public to act as unpaid slave-catchers. As a best-selling novel, it recruited many people to the cause of Abolitionism, and deepened the divide between the two sections.
The Missouri Compromise (1820), which concerned the new territories acquired from France in the Louisiana Purchase. It drew a line in the sand - anywhere North of that line, slavery would be illegal. Neither side was entirely satisfied with this, but at least they were equally dissatisfied! This had the effect of keeping the situation in balance for thirty years. Until... The Compromise of 1850, which concerned the new territories acquired from Mexico. By this time, it was getting harder to create new slave-states, and Congress had to make a big gesture of appeasement to the South with the Fugitive Slave Act, which turned all citizens into unpaid slave-catchers. It was highly unpopular, and 'Uncle Tom's Cabin' was written as a protest against it.
The Fugitive Slave Act. It was so unpopular in the North that Harriet Beecher Stowe wrote 'Uncle Tom's Cabin' as a direct protest against it.
The same basic issue that had been under debate all along - the slave-or-free constitution of new states entering the Union. It was triggered by the admission of California as free soil. To get this through Congress, the North had to make a big concession by passing the Fugitive Slave Act. This angered the Abolitionists, especialy Harriet Beecher Stowe, who wrote 'Uncle Tom's Cabin' as a protest against it.