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AP U.S. History Diagnostic 8. How did the Missouri Compromise temporarily ease tensions over slavery?

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English Language

Transcript

00:00

[ musical flourish ]

00:03

And here's your Shmoop du jour, brought to you by the Missouri Compromise,

00:07

the decision-making process for choosing what

00:09

kind of music to listen to while on the Oregon trail.

00:12

Cha-ching.

00:13

All right, how did the Missouri Compromise temporarily ease tensions over slavery?

00:18

And here are the potential answers.

00:19

[ buzzing ] [ mumbling ]

00:22

[ mumbling continues ] Hmm.

00:25

Well, in the first half of the 19th century, tensions

00:28

were mighty high regarding what the country would do

00:31

with the new territories acquired through the Louisiana Purchase.

00:35

Let's see what the Missouri Compromise did to keep both sides at bay

00:39

for just a little while longer.

00:41

Did the Missouri Compromise ease tensions over slavery

00:44

A - by putting an end to the Atlantic slave trade?

00:48

Well, the Missouri Compromise came about in 1820.

00:50

The Atlantic slave trade ended with an 1807

00:53

Act of Congress. So A kind of misses the boat by at least 13 years.

00:57

Would the Missouri Compromise have soothed

00:59

political fears B - by establishing a clear line

01:02

between the North and South?

01:04

Well, the Compromise did include a proviso to divide

01:07

the Louisiana Purchase territories between slave

01:10

and free at a specific parallel.

01:13

Like, here.

01:14

But that line didn't extend throughout the entire

01:17

North and South. So cross B off the list.

01:20

Could the Compromise have helped

01:21

D - by allowing citizens to vote on the legality of slavery?

01:26

Ah, now we're too early.

01:28

The 1854 Kansas-Nebraska Act allowed citizens

01:32

to vote on the legality of slavery and, boy, did those polls pack a punch.

01:36

So it's not D, either.

01:38

Which means that the Missouri Compromise temporarily

01:41

eased tensions over slavery C -

01:44

by creating a balance between the number of free

01:47

and slave states.

01:49

When all that territory was added to the U.S.

01:51

in the Louisiana Purchase,

01:53

both sides were afraid of the other gaining

01:55

too many votes as new states joined the Union.

01:58

In the Missouri Compromise, Missouri was added as

02:01

a slave state and Maine was added as free,

02:04

which kept both sides with an equal number of states.

02:07

So the correct answer is C.

02:09

Of course, this Compromise would soon dissolve,

02:11

dragging the country into the Civil War.

02:13

It wasn't even fun while it lasted.

02:15

[ explosion ]

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