The rivalry between proslavery and antislavery settlers
What started it was the Kansas- Nebraska Act of 1854 which led to poular soveirgnty and popular soveirgty led to The Bloodshed.
fuhh this question daw
By local vote. This sounded reasonable enough, but it led to bloodshed.
Bloody Kansas. Federal troops were sent there to protect the lives of slave holders from anti-slavery vigilante groups several years before the Civil War started.
Domestic violence is generally violence between related people, or between people living in a family-type ralationship. Generally, if the two people involved in the violence are related by: marriage, living together, have children in common, parent-child relationship, etc, the the violence is classified as domestic violence.
Kansas-Nebraska Act!
The Kansas-Nebraska Act also led to "Bleeding Kansas," a mini civil war that erupted in Kansas in 1856. Northerners and Southerners flooded Kansas in 1854 and 1855, determined to convert the future state to their view on slavery.
he killed a group of proslavery settlers near pottawatomie creek
Violence erupted in Kansas due to the passage of the Kansas-Nebraska Act of 1854. Pro-slavery people and anti-slavery people became savage with each other over the issue of slavery. The result of the severe violence is termed "Bleeding Kansas".
Bleeding Kansas
Tensions and violence over slavery spread outside Kansas
The Kansas-Nebraska Act of 1854 was primarily written for the state of Kansas. This act allowed for the territories of Kansas and Nebraska to decide whether they would allow slavery based on popular sovereignty. It ultimately led to violence and conflict in Kansas known as "Bleeding Kansas."
Prior to Kansas joining the Union, the Kansas Territory was a hotbed of violence and chaos between anti-slavery and pro-slavery settlers. Kansas was known as Bleeding Kansas as these forces collided over the issue of slavery in the United States. The term "Bleeding Kansas" was coined by Republican Horace Greeley, editor of the New York Tribune.
Yes. It sounded reasonable enough, but the only time it was tried (in Kansas), it led to violence and bloodshed.
Prior to the Civil War, several bloody clashes occurred between pro-slave and pro-free citizens while they were deciding their own status: whether to allow slavery or not, when they became a state.
The Kansas - Nebraska Act was passed by both Houses in the Congress. This resulted in violence between pro slavery people and anti slavery abolitionists. Thus the term "Bleeding Kansas was used to describe the fighting there.
Because it repealed the Missouri Compromise