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It kept both Kansas and Nebraska out of the Union until after the Civil War.

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What did Radical Republicans believe the South should do before states could be readmitted?

Give free slaves the right to vote immediately


What led to violence in Kansas in 1854?

The violence in Kansas and Missouri from 1854 to 1858 was the result of pro-slavery groups attacking anti-slavery goups in the hopes of pushing Kansas to become a slave holding state. This is often referred to as The Border War or Bleeding Kansas.


Why was the Kansas Nebraska Act unsuccessful?

The Kansas-Nebraska Act was passed by the U.S. Congress on May 30, 1854. It allowed people in the territories of Kansas and Nebraska to decide for themselves whether or not to allow slavery within their borders. The Act served to repeal the Missouri Compromise of 1820 which prohibited slavery north of latitude 36°30´. The Kansas-Nebraska Act infuriated many in the North who considered the Missouri Compromise to be a long-standing binding agreement. In the pro-slavery South it was strongly supported. After the Kansas-Nebraska Act was passed, pro-slavery and anti-slavery supporters rushed in to settle Kansas to affect the outcome of the first election held there after the law went into effect. Pro-slavery settlers carried the election but were charged with fraud by anti-slavery settlers, and the results were not accepted by them. The anti-slavery settlers held another election, however pro-slavery settlers refused to vote. This resulted in the establishment of two opposing legislatures within the Kansas territory. Violence soon erupted, with the anti-slavery forces led by John Brown. The territory earned the nickname "bleeding Kansas" as the death toll rose. President Franklin Pierce, in support of the pro-slavery settlers, sent in Federal troops to stop the violence and disperse the anti-slavery legislature. Another election was called. Once again pro-slavery supporters won and once again they were charged with election fraud. As a result, Congress did not recognize the constitution adopted by the pro-slavery settlers and Kansas was not allowed to become a state. Eventually, however, anti-slavery settlers outnumbered pro-slavery settlers and a new constitution was drawn up. On January 29, 1861, just before the start of the Civil War, Kansas was admitted to the Union as a free state.


How did bleeding Kansas contribute to the Civil War?

Kansas was a major area for fighting both before and during the Civil War. This was due to a Federal law passed known as the Kansas/Nebraska Act. This law was passed as part of a series of laws meant to compromise with the south over the slavery issue. The south wanted new states to become slave states, while the north did not. The Kansas/Nebraska Act recognized these two territories as new states, with the stipulation that the people of these states would choose for themselves whether the state would have slavery. This opened the door for both southern pro-slavery groups and northern abolitionist groups to flood into these states in order to try and influence the people there to take up their respective causes. Eventually fighting broke out between the two groups. The state became known as "bleeding Kansas" because of this. Once the Civil War broke out both sides wanted to have control over this area. The north wanted it so that they could try to cut the Confederacy in half, and the south wated it so that they could use it as a launching point for invasions into the north. just because


What year did bleeding kansas happen?

At the time, passions and tempers were high, and everyone cared very much about the issue of slavery. The state was having a vote, whether to be a free or slave state. Those who supported slavery realized that there were more abolitionists than not in the state and that it would soon become a free state. Many slave supporters crossed the border from Missouri(a slave state) to vote. When abolitionists discovered that they were trying to rig the elections, they got angry. Little fights started, and more people joined in, and more and more, and eventually everyone was fighting.

Related Questions

Importance of bleeding Kansas?

Bleeding Kansas is seen by many as a preview of the American Civil War. It involved a series of bloody or violent events that pitted anti-slavery Northerners against pro-slavery Southerners that ended only months before the Civil War started.


Which state became a battleground between pro-slavery and anti-slavery forces?

Missouri. Before the war, the same thing happened in 'Bleeding Kansas', often seen as a curtain-raiser for main conflict.


Which two groups were involved in the confrontation known as Bleeding Kansas?

Before the US Supreme Court ruled that Congress had no right to interfere with slavery, the Congress had passed in 1854 the Kansas Nebraska Act. This act allowed people in the two territories to vote as to whether the "to be" States would be free ones or slave States. This led to conflict and bloodshed between pro & anti slavery groups. As an aside, the future Harpers Ferry raider fought for anti slavery in Kansas. The two forces caused the label of Bleeding Kansas used to describe the situation there.


Was bleeding kansas before the civil war?

Yes. It is regarded as the curtain-raiser, the forthcoming civil war in microcosm - the proof that the slavery debate would never be settled, except through violence.


What was the reason for 'Bleeding Kansas' in the history of the US?

The term "Bleeding Kansas" was coined in the pages of the New York Tribune for events before the American Civil War. The heart of the problem was whether Kansas would enter the Union as a Free State or a Slave State. It was a proxy war between Northerners and Southerners over the issue of slavery in the United States. Hostilities and violence raged between those who supported slavery and those who opposed it. By the time peace was imposed in 1859, 56 people had died. Kansas entered the Union as a Free state in January, 1861.


What state fought about whether to have slavery or be free before the Civil War?

Kansas


What is the bloody Kansas?

Kansas was called "bloody Kansas" during the Civil war and before it, when there were riots about slavery there.Many of these riots happened after John Brown's riot.


What nickname was given to the territory in which violence occurred between pro and antislavery groups?

"Bleeding Kansas" was the nickname given to the territory where violence erupted between pro-slavery and anti-slavery groups in the years leading up to the Civil War. The conflict was a result of debates over whether Kansas would enter the Union as a free or slave state.


What did Radical Republicans believe the South should do before states could be readmitted?

Give free slaves the right to vote immediately


What did the republicans want from the south before allowing its states to rejoin union?

An agreement to end slavery immediately


Where did Violence over the question of slavery in the territories broke out between northerners and southerners in?

The earliest violence broke out in Kansas (known as "bleeding Kansas") between settlers there who supported abolition, and settlers from neighboring Missouri who ran raiding parties, as supporters of slavery. Kansas had been given the option to choose for itself whether it wanted to be a Free State or a Slave State. This violence broke out well before the Civil War, as early as the 1850s, and continued sporadically straight through the end of the War.


What led to violence in Kansas in 1854?

The violence in Kansas and Missouri from 1854 to 1858 was the result of pro-slavery groups attacking anti-slavery goups in the hopes of pushing Kansas to become a slave holding state. This is often referred to as The Border War or Bleeding Kansas.