The Missouri Compromise - No slavery North of the parallel 36.30
there was no slavery allowed
The Missouri Compromise was passed in 1820 and was a set of agreements between those who were against slavery and those who were for it. It forbade slavery north of the 36th parallel, except where designated in Missouri.
The Missouri Compromise was a temporary band aid on the problem of slavery. Many in the South wanted slavery and many in the North did not. It made more people unhappy.
It sounds like the Missouri Compromise, where slavery would be permitted 'not north' of Missouri's Southern border.
The Missouri Compromise splits the early America into the South (where slavery is upheld) and the North ( Where slavery is banned)
It would allow slavery to spread north of the line established by the Missouri compromise. - Novanet
no because after the Missouri compromise it was prohibited to have slaves north of Missouri
The Missouri Compromise - No slavery North of the parallel 36.30
there was no slavery allowed
No - in the North. It banned slavery anywhere North of the parallel that marked Missouri's Southern border. This was a successful compromise which kept the peace for thirty years.
Slavery. It established a parallel, North of which slavery was illegal.
The Missouri Compromise was passed in 1820 and was a set of agreements between those who were against slavery and those who were for it. It forbade slavery north of the 36th parallel, except where designated in Missouri.
An advantage to the Missouri Compromise of 1820 was that slavery would not be permitted in the territory that is now the state of Missouri. A disadvantage to the Missouri Compromise was that people who believed in slavery in the South could not move north to gain more land and keep their slaves.
It allowed Slavery in the north.
The Missouri Compromise was a temporary band aid on the problem of slavery. Many in the South wanted slavery and many in the North did not. It made more people unhappy.
It sounds like the Missouri Compromise, where slavery would be permitted 'not north' of Missouri's Southern border.