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The Missouri Comprimise


            The Missouri discussions held 1819-1821 functioned as an important turn in the United States' major disagreement over slavery. The arguments held over tightening the grasp of slavery in the new state was the outcome of previous debates and the start of unwanted events. Paused lawfully by two compromises, the concerns this crisis raised throughout the 1820s were a crucial marker on what later became obvious, the road to the Civil War.
             When the Missouri Territory opted for statehood in February 1819, an amendment to the statehood bill created by Congressman James Tallmadge Jr. of New York began the first dispute, which continued until February 1820 (Appleton). The Tallmadge Amendment would have ceased the import of slaves into Missouri and progressively freed those already in oppression there. This stage of the disaster dissipated with the original Missouri Compromise, which approved Missouri to enter the Union deprived of a limit on slavery, but also allowed the liberated state of Maine to the Union.
             It also depicted a mental line over the rest of the Louisiana Purchase regions at Missouri's southern border, controlling slavery north of that line but tolerating it below. The planned admittance of Missouri to the Union sanctioned its populations to draft a state constitution and Missourians began the second act of the problematic situation with a draft constitution ensuring slavery and excluding free people of color from coming into their state. In 1820 to 1821, the nation and Congress disputed the suitability of the Missouri state constitution. An extra congressional compromise finished the second round, and a presidential announcement in August 1821 acknowledged Missouri's admittance with no statement on the current racial situation.
             Although finishing in compromises, the debates directed shock through American governments. At the peak of the primary debate, Speaker of the House Henry Clay perceived that the Missouri query "monopolizes all our conversation, all our thoughts and.


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