The South supported the Kansas-Nebraska Act because it aimed to expand slavery into new territories, allowing settlers to decide the issue through popular sovereignty. This legislation was seen as a way to maintain and potentially increase the political power of slave states in Congress. Additionally, it sought to facilitate the construction of a transcontinental railroad, which would benefit Southern interests by connecting them to new markets. Overall, the South hoped the act would solidify and extend their economic and political influence.
Kansas-Nebraska act
Kansas Nebraska Act
Kansas-Nebraska
Kansas was settled around 1850 with the Kansas-Nebraska Act. =)
It could allow the creation of new slave-states, if the locals voted for it.
j
Hopeful that the people of Kansas and Nebraska might vote for slavery in those states.
Kansas-Nebraska act
Kansas and Nebraska
Slaves
Kansas and Nebraska were created after the Kansas-Nebraska Act of 1854. The reason for this Act was to open new farmland and create a Transcontinental Railroad.
The South favoured the Act, because it could allow the creation of new slave-states.
Stephan A. Douglas proposed the Kansas Nebraska Act in 1854.
people from nebraska still went into to vote for the south presidental candidate in a northern state.
The Missouri Compromise was effectively ended by the Kansas-Nebraska Act, however since there was still turmoil as to the "Bleeding Kansas" dispute, it was thought that the Kansas-Nebraska Act would be shortly overturned. The Dred Scott decision by the Supreme Court further strengthened the elimination of the Missouri Compromise and the institution of slavery north of the Mason-Dixon Line by ruling that slaves were not able to take cases to court.
The Kansas-Nebraska Act of 1854 called for "popular sovereignty."
Stephen Douglas