Apush ch 18
Stephen A. Douglas's plans for deciding the slavery question in the Kansas-Nebraska scheme repeal of the
Missouri compromise
During the 1950s, slaves probably gained their freedom most frequently by
Self-purchase it voluntary emancipation
The most alarming aspect of the Compromise of 1850 to northerners was the decision concerning
The revised, most stringent and coercive Fugitive slave law
According to the principle of popular sovereignty, the question of slavery in the territories would be determined by
The self-determination of people in any given territory
Harriet Tubman gained fame
by helping slaves to escape to Canada
In light of future evidence, it seems apparent that in the compromise of 1850 the south made a tactical blunder and exacerbated sectional tensions by
demanding a strong fugitive slave law
The public liked popular sovereignty because it
fit in with the democratic tradition of self-determination
An event that helped prompt the congressional enactment of the Compromise of 1850 was when President Zachary Taylor
died suddenly and a conciliatory Millard Fillmore became president.
Stephen A. Douglas proposed that the question of slavery in the Kansas-Nebraska Territory be decided by
popular sovereignty or democratic vote by the white male residents of each divided territory
Undoubtedly the most durable political offspring of the Kansas-Nebraska Act was
the emergence of the new Republican political party
Many northern states passed personal liberty laws in response to the Compromise of 1850's provision regarding
the facilitation of the return of runaway slaves to slaveowners.
One of Stephen Douglas's mistakes in proposing the Kansas-Nebraska Act was
underestimating the depth of northern opposition to the spread of slavery