Map of the United States, showing by colors the area of freedom and slavery, and the territories whose destiny is yet to be decided : exhibiting also the Missouri compromise line, and the routes of Colonel Fremont in his famous explorations : with importa
1 2021-06-21T15:33:57-04:00 Benjamin Steinig 74775bc5c03628537e0192f4b5deec6811d610f6 7 1 Published as a campaign poster supporting the Republican Party's first presidential bid in 1856, this broadside provides a commentary on the geographical sectionalism that was polarizing the nation. Using 1850 census data, it tabulated the demographic and economic differences between free and slave states, highlighting political concerns that the balance of Congressional power would shift as newly acquired western territories were admitted as states into the Union. The map clearly marked the 1820 Missouri Compromise line, which had defined the boundary between free and slave states. However, the passage of the 1854 Kansas-Nebraska Act nullified this long-standing compromise line, and potentially opened the entire western territory to slavery because it sanctioned “popular sovereignty“ whereby citizens of each territory could vote on the slavery issue. plain 2021-06-21T15:33:57-04:00 40.7103433689794, -74.00535881367396 1856 Benjamin Steinig 74775bc5c03628537e0192f4b5deec6811d610f6Contents of this tag:
- 1 2021-06-21T15:33:49-04:00 Benjamin Steinig 74775bc5c03628537e0192f4b5deec6811d610f6 Primary Source Data Visualizations for U.S. History & Geography 6 This page provides a list of primary source data visualizations to support inquiry in U.S. history and geography. They are organized according to the periodization scheme in Michigan's social studies standards for U.S. history. plain 2022-02-09T23:49:51-05:00 Benjamin Steinig 74775bc5c03628537e0192f4b5deec6811d610f6