This arrangement for new states to vote on the slavery issue encouraged terrorists from both sides (including John Brown) to cross into the state, terrorise voters and cause chaos by declaring every result to be rigged.
It was like a miniature version of the upcoming Civil War, and it foreshadowed the real thing.
bleeding kansas, two governments in kansas
Nebraska had less problems than Kansas so Nebraska is a better state
The Kansas-Nebraska Act became a Law on March 30, 1854.
nothing
The Kansas-Nebraska Act
bleeding kansas, two governments in kansas
bleeding Kansas, two governments in kansas
of course it did
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Kansas-Nebraska act
Yes it does
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 Kansas-Nebraska Act also led to "Bleeding Kansas," a mini civil war that erupted in Kansas in 1856. Northerners and Southerners flooded Kansas in 1854 and 1855, determined to convert the future state to their view on slavery.
Stephan A. Douglas proposed the Kansas Nebraska Act in 1854.
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.