Compromise of 1850: Questions
Compromise of 1850: Questions
- Looking at the Compromise as a whole entity, what do you think it's trying to accomplish? Does anything change when the bill is split up into its parts?
- How do you see the sectional tension of the time period reflected in the text of the Compromise?
- Looking at how the Compromise was passed, do you see any parallels to how laws are passed today?
- Who do you think got more out of the Compromise—the North or the South?
- Which state do you think benefitted most from the Compromise? The least?
- Was there anything in the Compromise that would make you think that it would eventually fail to keep the nation together? Do you think the bill did a good job of propping up the institution of slavery?
- What does it say about the Senate in 1850 that Clay, a southerner, and Douglas, from Illinois, worked together to make this thing happen?
- How did the Compromise ensure that this kind of cooperation would continue to be possible?
- Slavery wouldn't be the reason anymore, but what do you think about the idea of the federal government arranging things so that the Senate would be split equally between parties?
- Daniel Webster and John C. Calhoun have a staredown in the Senate. Who's your money on?