The Missouri River flows through several states, primarily traveling north and south through Montana, North Dakota, South Dakota, Nebraska, Kansas, and Missouri. It begins in the Rocky Mountains of Montana and ultimately empties into the Mississippi River in Missouri. The river serves as a significant waterway for these states, influencing their geography and economy.
The Missouri Compromise provided that no Slave State could be established to the north of a line represented by the parallel 36° 30' coincident with the Southern boundary of Missouri.
there are only 7 states listed in the Midwest region. 1. North Dakota 2. South Dakota 3. Nebraska 4. Kansas 5. Missouri 6. Iowa 7. Minnesota
The Missouri Compromise was an agreement between the North and the South and passed by Congress in 1820 that allowed Missouri to be admitted as the 24th state in 1821. One slave state (Missouri) and one free state (Maine) were admitted to the Union, maintaining the balance. The balance of power between free and slave states in Congress was maintained to ease tensions between the North and South. The North's attempt to force emancipation upon Missouri when it applied for admission as a slave state in 1819 rankled white southerners, and they threatened secession during the debates over the conditions under which Missouri should be granted statehood. The debates resulted in a compromise that involved the drawing of a line through the United States prohibiting slavery in future states north of the latitude 36°30′ and allowing it in future states south of that. (Missouri itself, despite lying almost entirely north of the line, was admitted as a slave state.) This worked for about 34 years. The Missouri Compromise was a compromise of new territory should be considered a free state or slave state. This compromise proposed whatever was north of the 36'30' line was to be a free state and whatever was south of this line was to be slave state.
Arkansas, Colorado, Iowa, Kansas, Louisiana, Minnesota, Missouri, Montana, Nebraska, North Dakota, Oklahoma, South Dakota, and Wyoming. 13 states
There are several states that border Iowa. Wisconsin and Illinois are on the east side, Nebraska is on the west, and Minnesota is on the north. The state of Missouri borders the south of Iowa.
figure out your self you are stupid if you don't know idiots
Minnesota is the state which is east of both North Dakota and South Dakota. Minnesota shares its western border with North Dakota and South Dakota. Minnesota is bordered on the south by Iowa and on the east by Wisconsin and Michigan. Minnesota is bordered on the north by the Canadian provinces of Manitoba and Ontario.
minnesota Wisconsin Illinois Missouri nebraska & South Dakota
minnesota is both farther north & farther south
The US state of Minnesota borders North Dakota and part of South Dakota on their eastern borders and the US state of Montana borders North Dakota and part of South Dakota on their western borders.
Minnesota is east of North Dakota and South Dakota.
Missouri was already a state in the Civil War.
Arkansas borders Louisiana to the south. Arkansas also is bordered by Texas to the southwest, Oklahoma to the west, Missouri to the north, and both Tennessee and Mississippi on the east.
The US state of Minnesota is east of North Dakota and south of Canada.
North Dakota and South Dakota border Minnesota to the east.
Minnesota is both farther north & farther south