Free Soilers were members of a 19th-century political movement in the United States that opposed the expansion of slavery into the western territories. Formed in the late 1840s, the Free Soil Party advocated for free land and free labor, promoting the idea that the western lands should be reserved for free men and not be tainted by the institution of slavery. The party played a significant role in the lead-up to the Civil War, emphasizing the rights of white settlers and the economic opportunities of free labor. Notable figures included former President Martin Van Buren and abolitionist leaders like Salmon P. Chase.
No, they were not. Free-Soilers wanted to stop the spread of slavery, while abolitionists wanted to abolish it alltogether.
Free Soilers
The slogan of the Free Soil Party.
Abolitionists wanted to end slavery, while "Free Soilers" were more interested in making sure the state they lived in was not a slave state. Some people were both, but there were Free Soilers who (perhaps through believing that slavery could not be done away with completely) had only the goal of making sure the new territory they had moved into entered the Union as a free state.
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For the region to have no slavery and only whites be the ones living
false
True
Free-Soilers were Northerners who wanted to contain slavery, as in keep it from spreading to new territories. Free-Soilers were alright with keeping the existing slavery where it was already prevalent. They're opinions were based on more political aspects.Abolitionists wanted to completely get rid of existing slavery and prevent it from becoming legal in new territories. They're opinions were based more on moral aspects.
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The Free-soilers also known as the American Party.
The Republican Party.