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I think it was because the first people to get there could choose whether or not the state allowed slaves. Therefore both sides wanted to quickly get there and claim it as their own.

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Q: Why did the violence break out in Kansas?
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Related questions

What was the effect of an event in bleeding kansas?

Tensions and violence over slavery spread outside Kansas


What was the nickname for the violence that happened after the Kansas-Nebraska Act?

Bleeding Kansas


What was an effect of events in Bleeding Kansas?

Tensions and violence over slavery spread outside Kansas


What was an effect of the events of bleeding Kansas?

Tensions and violence over slavery spread outside Kansas


What was the cause of the violence in the Kansas territory?

Lincoln wanted Kansas to fight the south; instead, Kansas seceded from the union and fought with the south


What was effect of the event bleeding Kansas bleeding?

Tensions and violence over slavery spread outside Kansas


What was the outcome of the section to select a legislature in the kansas territory?

Violence


Can a person convicted of domestic violence in Kansas buy a gun?

no


Can you own a gun if convicted of domestic violence misdemeanor in Kansas?

No- and not just Kansas, but nowhere in the US. FEDERAL law.


What led to a violent struggle over slevery in Kansas?

Violence erupted in Kansas due to the passage of the Kansas-Nebraska Act of 1854. Pro-slavery people and anti-slavery people became savage with each other over the issue of slavery. The result of the severe violence is termed "Bleeding Kansas".


What was in effect of the events in “bleeding Kansas?

Tensions and violence over slavery spread outside Kansas


What was the name give to the violence between proslavery and antislavery settlements in Kansas?

Prior to Kansas joining the Union, the Kansas Territory was a hotbed of violence and chaos between anti-slavery and pro-slavery settlers. Kansas was known as Bleeding Kansas as these forces collided over the issue of slavery in the United States. The term "Bleeding Kansas" was coined by Republican Horace Greeley, editor of the New York Tribune.