Tuesday, November 26, 2019
Missouri Applies for Statehood
Missouri Applies for Statehood- 1819     In 1819, Missouri wanted to join the Union, although in the North, as a     slave state. In would make the balance of power in the Congress unequal.     Many Northerners were opposed to the idea. Northerners in Congress refused     to pass the bill. Northerners proposed that Missouri be slave and that no     more slaves were to be brought in and all slave children would be free at     the age of 25, so Missouri would become a Free State.      Southerners were opposed to the idea brought up by Northerners. The     Congress was in debate for many months. Henry Clay proposed that Maine     enter the Union as a Free State. Also, prohibiting slavery north of the     36030, the southern boundary of Missouri. The South agreed since     Plantations would not be able to thrive further North of that line. Many     concerned Americans thought that the slavery issue was resolved.      In 1828, A Tariff was passed to help try to protect New England     Manufactures. The tariff was as high as 45% to 50% of the original     European price. Opponents of the tariff called it the Tariff of     Abomination. Southerners were opposed to the tariff because they exported     cotton and other materials to Europe in exchange European goods were     imported to America. Southerners claimed it was an indirect tax on their     region of the United States. Southerners began to ask for states right.     South Carolina even went as far as to ask for the tariff taken off the     books or they would succeed.  The tariff was lowered by Congress.     Abolitionism was around before the 1830s but, it became a more radical     during this time. Before 1830, Benjamin Lundy ran a anti-slavery     newspaper. In 1829, Lundy hired William Lloyd Garrison. Garrison went on     to publish his own newspaper the Liberator.  Many people also favored a     Colonization movement. In which free slavers would move to Liberia, which     was founded in 1822 in Africa by former slaves. Paul ...    
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