The Kansas - Nebraska Act of 1854 put forth the way to solve any issues over slavery. It stipulated that the citizens eligible to vote could put whether to allow slavery or not allow it. In Kansas, the opposing groups on this issue resulted i conflict and bloodshed. Thus the term "bleeding Kansas" was a term used to describe this conflict.
Nebraska came into the Union as a Free State and Kansas as a Slave State.
The Kansas-Nebraska Act of 1854 called for "popular sovereignty." The decision about slavery was to be made by the settlers in Kansas rather than by outsiders. The decision as to whether Kansas would become a free state or a slave state would be decided by the votes of people in Kansas. Whichever side had more votes counted by officials would decide if Kansas would become a free state or a slave state. Kansas became a hotbed of violence and chaos as free state and slave state forces collided.
It kept both Kansas and Nebraska out of the Union until after the Civil War.
From 1854-1861, a variety of conflicts, referred to as 'Bleeding Kansas,' occurred in the territory (and soon-to-be state) of Kansas between pro-slavery and anti-slavery Americans. These conflicts had the general effect of adding to national tensions between the South and the North and may be said to have contributed to the outbreak of the American Civil War.
Civil war. ANSWER: Internecene conflict.
I think it was called "Bleeding Kansas"
The Kansas-Nebraska Act of 1854 resulted in armed conflict between pro-slavery people in Kansas and anti-slavery people there. The terms of Bleeding Kansas and Bloody Kansas in 1854 and the years prior to the US Civil War mean the same thing.
Bleeding kansas
They had their way with President Lincoln
Kansas territory
It inspired some virulent civil strife= called (Bleeding Kansas) on the .36.30 Mason Dixon line boundary between Free and Slave states- a precursor of the actual civil War.
Because of what history today calls bleeding Kansas. Kansas was separated between a pro north and a pro south government during the civil war.
The Kansas-Nebraska Act also led to "Bleeding Kansas," a mini civil war that erupted in Kansas in 1856. Northerners and Southerners flooded Kansas in 1854 and 1855, determined to convert the future state to their view on slavery.
Bleeding Kansas and the Siege of Fort Sumter.
Bleeding Kansas
The term Bleeding Kansas was used to describe an internal struggle that presaged the US Civil War. The Kansas-Nebraska Act of 1854 resulted in armed violence, involving pro-slavery and anti-slavery forces, in the border war referred to as Bleeding Kansas.
Nebraska came into the Union as a Free State and Kansas as a Slave State.