55:, and a nefarious violation of the terms of the Missouri Compromise. Many were deeply alarmed by the prospect of new slave states being established in northern areas formerly reserved for free white settlers. The issue of not extending slavery into new areas was different from the issue of abolishing slavery in areas where it already existed, and only a minority of Kansas-Nebraska act opponents were abolitionists in the strict sense.
74:. Some were seeking to organize a new political party devoted to anti-slavery-extension principles, while others did not intend to repudiate their existing political affiliations, but merely wished to ally with those of diverse political views on the single issue of opposing the Kansas-Nebraska Act.
85:
was disintegrating at the national level, and there was competition between those who wished to take advantage of this situation to organize a major new party based on anti-slavery-extension principles, and those who wished to organize a new party based on anti-immigration and anti-Catholicism. At
126:
77:
Opinion against the expansion of slavery continued to be politically important in the North after the Kansas-Nebraska Act was passed in May 1854 (reinforced when Kansas under the Act became "
112:
re-entered politics as a result of the Kansas-Nebraska Act (after a period when he devoted himself to his law practice), and was a prominent local anti-Nebraska speaker in central
Illinois.
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in
January 1854. This was followed by locally organized "anti-Nebraska" meetings in many parts of the United States. Supporters included members of the
432:
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seemed to benefit most from the dissolution of the Whigs, but after various complicated political maneuverings (sometimes involving local "
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Most in the anti-Nebraska movement considered the Kansas–Nebraska Act to be a unilateral pro-Southern revision to the supposedly final
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39:. At the time, the name "Nebraska" could loosely refer to areas west of the Missouri River. The
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The first prominent public manifestation of opposition to the act was the
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The Kansas-Nebraska Act and the Rise of the
Republican party, 1854-1856
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35:
provision forbidding slavery in U.S. territories north of latitude
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was one of the prominent figures in the anti-Nebraska movement.
192:"Autobiography written for campaign" (ca. June 1860) in
259:
Historical anti-slavery parties in the United States
196:, edited by Roy P. Basler and Don E. Fehrenbacher (
219:at Abraham Lincoln Historical Digitization Project
194:Selected Speeches and Writings by Abraham Lincoln
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86:first in many areas the "American Party" or
223:Resolutions of the anti-Nebraska convention
173:Ordeal by Fire: Volume I. The Coming of War
152:Ordeal by Fire: Volume I. The Coming of War
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100:1856 United States presidential election
43:grew out of the Anti-Nebraska movement.
94:" alliances), by 1856 the anti-slavery
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16:1854–55 American anti-slavery movement
232:
60:Appeal of the Independent Democrats
13:
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14:
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31:of 1854 and to its repeal of the
23:was a political alignment in the
561:Republican Party (United States)
122:History of the Republican Party
186:
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1:
510:American Anti-Slavery Society
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132:1856 Chicago mayoral election
70:, and anti-slavery-extension
556:Slavery in the United States
27:formed in opposition to the
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571:1855 in the United States
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81:"). Simultaneously, the
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515:Anti-Nebraska movement
21:Anti-Nebraska movement
530:North American Party
426:National conventions
396:National Union Party
265:Presidential tickets
171:James M. McPherson,
150:James M. McPherson,
576:History of Nebraska
457:Other party leaders
448:1864 National Union
225:at Teach US History
33:Missouri Compromise
29:Kansas–Nebraska Act
175:, second edition (
154:, second edition (
53:Compromise of 1850
543:
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479:William H. Seward
421:
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367:William L. Dayton
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525:Conscience Whigs
494:Francis P. Blair
355:Republican Party
340:George W. Julian
326:Charles F. Adams
322:Martin Van Buren
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68:Conscience Whigs
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438:1856 Republican
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404:Abraham Lincoln
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381:Hannibal Hamlin
377:Abraham Lincoln
363:John C. Frémont
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314:Free Soil Party
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295:James G. Birney
281:James G. Birney
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211:Further reading
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110:Abraham Lincoln
79:Bleeding Kansas
64:Free Soil Party
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25:United States
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489:Edward Bates
464:Gerrit Smith
336:John P. Hale
285:Thomas Earle
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106:Salmon Chase
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520:Barnburners
550:Categories
139:References
83:Whig Party
204:) p. 271.
72:Democrats
37:36° 30' N
183:) p. 94.
162:) p. 92.
116:See also
47:History
200:
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412:1864
385:1860
371:1856
344:1852
330:1848
303:1844
289:1840
198:ISBN
177:ISBN
156:ISBN
19:The
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