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  2. Missouri Compromise - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Missouri_Compromise

    It admitted Missouri as a slave state and Maine as a free state and declared a policy of prohibiting slavery in the remaining Louisiana Purchase lands north of the 36°30′ parallel. [1] The 16th United States Congress passed the legislation on March 3, 1820, and President James Monroe signed it on March 6, 1820. [2]

  3. Mason–Dixon line - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mason–Dixon_line

    The official report on the survey, issued in 1768, did not even mention their names. [12] While the term was used occasionally in the decades following the survey, it came into popular use during congressional debates on the Missouri Compromise named "Mason and Dixon's line" as part of the boundary between slave territory and free territory. [38]

  4. Platte Purchase - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Platte_Purchase

    When Missouri entered the Union, its western border was established as "a meridian line passing through the middle of the mouth of the Kansas river, where the same empties into the Missouri river, thence, from the point aforesaid north, along the said meridian line, to the intersection of the parallel of latitude which passes through the rapids of the river Des Moines, making the said line ...

  5. Parallel 36°30′ north - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Parallel_36°30′_north

    The parallel 36°30′ then forms the rest of the boundary between Missouri and Arkansas. The Missouri Compromise of 1820 established the latitude 36°30′ as the northern limit for slavery to be legal in the territories of the west. As part of this compromise, Maine (formerly a part of Massachusetts) was admitted as a

  6. Peace Conference of 1861 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Peace_Conference_of_1861

    The proposals provided for, among other things, an extension of the Missouri Compromise line dividing the territories to the Pacific Ocean, bringing his efforts directly in conflict with the 1860 Republican Platform and the personal views of President-elect Abraham Lincoln, who had made known his objections. The committee rejected the ...

  7. Appeal of the Independent Democrats - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Appeal_of_the_Independent...

    Realizing that the Missouri Compromise was "canonized in the hearts of the American people", he called for both religious and political action in order to defeat the bill. [4] The Appeal was originally published in the Cincinnati Gazette and widely reprinted by other newspapers throughout the country. Historian Eric Foner wrote, "Historians ...

  8. How the ‘long and stormy’ fight for Fair Housing Act took MLK ...

    www.aol.com/long-stormy-fight-fair-housing...

    They went right to work, introducing the Civil Rights Act of 1966 by August. For the bill’s first House vote, U.S. Rep. Richard Bolling of Kansas City chaired one of the more remarkable debates ...

  9. Wilmot Proviso - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wilmot_Proviso

    Iowa was not a state until December 1846 and Texas's border was not defined this way until 1850.) William W. Wick, Democrat of Indiana, attempted to eliminate total restriction of slavery by proposing an amendment that the Missouri Compromise line of latitude 36°30' simply be extended west to the Pacific. This was voted down 89–54.