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![]() Date: 2010-11-08 10:25:23History of the United States United States Kansas–Nebraska Act Popular sovereignty Slave and free states Kansas Territory Nebraska Kansas Politics Bleeding Kansas States of the United States Slavery in the United States | Add to Reading List |
![]() | Bleeding Wisconsin 1. In 1854, the US Congress passed the Kansas-Nebraska Act. The act, advertised as a compromise, was in fact a capitulation. The law proclaimed not equality, but the power of slave labor over free laboDocID: 1ulAx - View Document |
![]() | Lincoln 1860 sample chapter - PrologueDOCXDocID: 1qL77 - View Document |
![]() | John Brown and George Kellogg By Jean Luddy When most people think of John Brown, they remember the fiery abolitionist who attacked pro-slavery settlers in Kansas in 1855 and who led the raid on the Federal arsenal at HaDocID: 1qay6 - View Document |
![]() | Empowering all Kansans to meet community needs through service. FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASECONTACT: Cheri FaunceDocID: 1pKV4 - View Document |
![]() | NewsLetter SUMMER 2013.inddDocID: 1pFj2 - View Document |