New Netherlands and Pennsylvania Colonies

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New Netherlands and Pennsylvania Colonies CH 10 Section 2 New Netherlands and Pennsylvania Colonies

The Compromise of 1850 made the Fugitive Slave Act much stricter The Compromise of 1850 made the Fugitive Slave Act much stricter. It required harsh punishment for escaped slaves—and for anyone who helped them. Nine Northern states passed personal liberty laws. Free African Americans and white abolitionists organized the Underground Railroad.

Underground Railroad: This was a secret network of volunteers who hid fugitive slaves on their dangerous journey north to freedom.

Harriet Tubman: An escaped slave, she was a famous leader of the Underground Railroad.

In 1852, Harriet Beecher Stowe published Uncle Tom’s Cabin In 1852, Harriet Beecher Stowe published Uncle Tom’s Cabin. This novel showed the horrors of slavery. The book prompted abolitionists to increase their protests against the Fugitive Slave Act. Southerners criticized the book as an attack on their way of life.

Kansas-Nebraska Act: Stephen Douglas proposed splitting the Nebraska Territory into two territories—Nebraska and Kansas. He assumed that one state would enter as a free state, the other a slave state. This would keep a balance between the North and South.

The entire Nebraska territory was north of the Missouri Compromise line. Because of this, the North argued that both Nebraska and Kansas should be free states. The Kansas-Nebraska Act became law in 1854. It split Nebraska into the territories of Nebraska and Kansas. Each state would decide whether or not to allow slavery.

Proslavery and antislavery people rushed into Kansas Proslavery and antislavery people rushed into Kansas. It became known as “Bleeding Kansas”. John Brown, a fierce opponent of slavery, killed five proslavery people in a raid. This killing triggered dozens of violent actions throughout the territory.

The widening gulf between North and South affected the nation’s political parties, as well. As the debate over slavery grew more intense, national parties broke apart—and groups started new parties.