No. The Missouri Compromise was in 1820 after Missouri entered the union as as slave state. To keep the Senate balanced, Maine was admitted as a free state. The final agreement stated that no slave states could enter the Union above the southern border of Missouri, which is mostly 36° 30' degrees N latitude.
Three-Fifths Compromise, Missouri Compromise, Compromise of 1850, Emancipation Proclamation
the Missouri compromise, the 3/5 compromise, and the compromise of 1850 no it was thethe Missouri compromise, the 3/5 compromise, and the compromise of 1850
The Missouri Compromise was not 1850 but 1820, and it was engineered by the politician Henry Clay. It was also Clay, in his old age, who was called out of retirement to engineer the Compromise of 1850.
the kansas nebraska act, of the compromise of 1850
The Missouri Compromise The Compromise of 1850 The Kansas-Nebraska Act.
They made the Missouri Compromise and the Compromise of 1850.
Missouri Compromise was signed in 1820s. The Compromise of 1850 was signed in the 1850s
compromise of 1850
Henry Clay was the one who drafted the compromise of 1850 and the Missouri compromise of 1820.
Henry Clay
Stephen Douglas
Basically the Missouri Compromise of 1850 was a fair compromise. One problem for Northern abolitionists was that the Compromise ushered in the Fugitive Slave Act. They were outraged that the new compromise included this law.