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![]() Date: 2010-11-08 10:25:23Bleeding Kansas African slave trade African-American culture Cultural history of the United States Slavery in the United States Abolitionism Frederick Douglass Abraham Lincoln Stephen A. Douglas Government of Illinois Illinois Slavery | 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 |