Compromise of 1850: Compare and Contrast
Compromise of 1850: Compare and Contrast
The Louisiana Purchase
In 1803, The U.S. doubled in size practically overnight when it purchased about 828,000 square miles of territory from France. President Thomas Jefferson had sent some envoys (including future pres...
The Missouri Compromise
From the nation's founding, there'd been a policy of maintaining a delicate balance of slaveholding vs. free states so that sectional conflict might be avoided and no state would feel they'd have t...
The Kansas-Nebraska Act of 1854
Henry Clay and his Compromise of 1850 had calmed things down for the time being between North and South. But the sectional conflict never really went away, and it erupted again when the Nebraska Te...
The Dred Scott Case
In 1833, Army surgeon John Emerson purchased a slave, Dred Scott, and when Emerson moved to the Wisconsin Territory, he took Scott with him. Because of the Missouri Compromise, Wisconsin was a free...