Please enable JavaScript.
Coggle requires JavaScript to display documents.
Civil War Timeline ((Arrival of the first slaves 1619 (Most of the slaves…
Civil War Timeline
-
Abolitionism
Quakers , slaves , and free slaves
-
Gabriel's rebellion
s Conspiracy was a plan by enslaved African American men to attack Richmond and destroy slavery in Virginia .They planned this as a way to re belle against servery
-
-
-
most of the farmers at North grow food to eat it and lands was not good enough to have huge plantations on it
-
-
-
-
abolitionist movement, was the movement to end slavery.
The Missouri Compromise was the legislation that provided for the admission of Maine to the United States as a free state along with Missouri as a slave state, thus maintaining the balance of power between North and South in the United States Senate.
-
Quakers were among the first white people to denounce slavery.They formed a settlement at Salem, New Jersey, in 1675.
Popular abolitionists want to send all the slave people back , but as a result slaves don't wanna leave
North reason against is because he was an economic-based of buying cotton for their factories so the southern colonies were in control and for them to gain control of the economy they put too much tax on cotton
-
-
4,000 Africans try they best in California in Golden rush
Compromise of 1850 between Southern slave-holding interests and Northern Free-Soilers Abolitionists nicknamed it the "Bloodhound Law", for the dogs that were used to track down runaway slaves
The Kansas-Nebraska Act was passed by the U.S. Congress on May 30, 1854. It allowed people in the territories of Kansas and Nebraska to decide for themselves whether or not to allow slavery within their borders.
-
-
-
Bleeding Kansas, Bloody Kansas or the Border War was a series of violent civil confrontations in the United States between 1854 and 1861 which emerged from a political and ideological debate over the legality of slavery in the proposed state of Kansas.
Rufus King was an American lawyer, politician, and diplomat. He was a delegate for Massachusetts to the Continental Congress and the Philadelphia Convention and was one of the signers of the United States Constitution in 1787text
-
-
-
-