Westward Expansion And The American Civil War

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With westward expansion, the question arose as to how these new territories/states would lean--slave or free. The north feared that the addition of slave states to the union would tilt the balance of power in the House and Senate, since such a state would send new representative/senators to Congress. The south feared the same thing--thinking that a tilt against slavery would be forced on the south.

Of course, the sincere feelings about abolition and slavery, as well as the extremists on both sides like John Brown (Northern Abolitionist) of the issue that used the press to harshly condemn the other side, exacerbated it all. The violence in these territories as southerners and northerners used terror tactics to try to gain control of the territories, certainly did nothing to help either. …show more content…

But until the westward expansion, there was some degree of equilibrium. In fact, had America not expanded westward and the related questions arisen, it may be that there would not have been a civil war (at least over slavery). From what I have heard, the south was, more and more, seeing that slavery was not the future, and slavery might have eventually been done away with through southern legislatures. But the extremists on both sides fanned the flames, wanting a showdown on the matter...and that's what they finally

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