The smaller states benefited, because the smaller states had no use for slaves. Due to the fact that they didn't have any crops or enough property.
The Missouri Compromise succeeded in expanding the boundaries of the United States. However, it did not end the slave trade.
Balancing of slave and free states.
Missouri Compromise
The 1820 Missouri Compromise was put in place by Congress in order to maintain the balance between slave States and non slave States. Senator Henry Clay was one of the key politicians in formulated the Compromise.
Slave states.
Commerce and slave trade compromise
The smaller states benefited, because the smaller states had no use for slaves. Due to the fact that they didn't have any crops or enough property.
The small state benefited from that cuz.....big states did want to share their power equally ....So small states protested that to prevent this problem they established bicameral ( tow houses )..... :) I hope this is help full for you..
The Constitutional convention and Compromises include the three-fifths compromise, the Great Compromise was between the small states, the Commerce Compromise, Slave Trade Compromise, and the election of the President.
There were 12 slave states after the Missouri Compromise.
The 3/5ths compromise benefited Southern states the most as it allowed them to count each slave as 3/5ths of a person. This increased their representation in Congress and gave them increased power in the government.
In America there was 11 free states and 11 slave states, before the compromise.
The Missouri Compromise of 1820 drew an imaginary slave line at 36 degrees 30 minutes north latitude to separate slave and free states. This compromise aimed to maintain a balance between the number of slave states and free states in the United States.
True.
The Commerce and Slave Trade Compromise was a provision in the U.S. Constitution that allowed Congress to regulate commerce and levy tariffs, but prohibited the taxation of exports. It also stipulated that Congress could not ban the slave trade until 1808.
The major compromises that the delegates agreed to make were The Connecticut Compromise, The Three-Fifths Compromise, and The Commerce and Slave Trade Compromise.