In Missouri and Maryland, which were border states during the Civil War, slavery persisted until the Thirteenth Amendment abolished it in 1865. Many enslaved individuals sought freedom by escaping to Union-held territories or through the efforts of abolitionists. In Maryland, the Emancipation Proclamation of 1863 declared freedom for enslaved people in Confederate-held territories, but it did not immediately free those in loyal border states. Ultimately, both states saw a gradual transition towards emancipation, culminating in the legal end of slavery.
Those states didn't have slaves.
Missouri, Kentucky, West Virginia, Delaware, and Maryland.
The slaves in the border states, Missouri, Maryland, and West Virginia .
The number of slaves in these states was insignificant and posed no threat to the Union.
Missouri was a slave state. Maryland and Kentucky were slave states.
ANSWER In the Confederacy : 3,024,745; in the Border States (Kentucky, Missouri, Maryland) 312,473
First answer IDK, people help me out here!!!!!!!' My answer Kentucky, Delaware, Maryland, and Missouri
The Emancipation Proclamation freed slaves in all of the rebel states, but it failed to set the slaves free in the 4 "border states." (Deleware, Maryland, Kentucky, Missouri)
Delaware, Kentucky, Maryland, missouri
The four states of the Upper South that had decided to stay loyal - Missouri, Kentucky, Maryland, Delaware.
The Emancipation Proclamation only freed slaves in any of the Confederacy States of America. Any state in or allied with the Union were allowed to keep any slaves they had. Since Lincoln had no authority to free slaves in the rebelling states, Union armies did free slaves in those states they occupied.
Missouri, Kentucky, Maryland, and Delaware…