the missouri compromise of 1820

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A quick overview of the Missouri Compromise and how it only temporarily postponed the Civil War.

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The Missouri Compromise was not so much as a cause of the Civil War as it was another in a series of deals between the North and the South that formed the shaky foundation of our national government. The first great compromises - and a sort of "poison pill" in our national unity - were acceptance of slavery and counting of a slave as "three-fifths of a person." The other great compromise was the formation of the House of Representatives and the Senate. The former would be based on population, the latter would give each state two senators, regardless of population. It was the composition of the Senate that set the stage for the national debate that would result in the historic Missouri Compromise. At the time of Missouri's application for statehood (1818), slave and free states were equally represented in the U.S. Senate (22 senators each). The House of Representatives, however, was stacked in favor of the more heavily populated North (108 to 81). Missouri's proposed constitution would allow slavery in the state (there were over 2,000 slaves within its borders). Allowing another slave state into the Union, then, would upset the balance in favor of the lesser populated South and upset the balance of power in the Senate. Thus, Missouri became the center of a national controversy that threatened to undermine the country's already precarious national unity. It was Henry Clay of Kentucky who came up with the Missouri Compromise that delayed the Civil War for another 40 years. To keep the slave-versus-free state numbers even, a way to admit a new free state had to be found. The solution was the former northeastern portion of Massachusetts, whose inhabitants wanted to break free of the rule of Boston interests. As an idea whose time had come, Maine statehood became the solution to the current crisis. Maine was admitted to the Union as a free state in 1820 and followed the next year by Missouri, a slave state. The balance was maintained. Another important part of the compromise was to set new north and south boundaries for admission of slave and free states. That provision set the southern border of Missouri as the northern boundary for the admission of any new slave state (excepting Missouri). That provision would hold solid until 1850. The Missouri Compromise, then, was not a cause of the Civil War. It did highlight deep sectional divisions and disagreements developing in a divided country. The controversy over the spread of slavery would be a serious handicap to our country's westward expansion as factions within our government worked at cross purposes for the next two generations. Establishing Missouri as a slave state eventually proved to be the cause of what would become known as "bleeding Kansas," as Missouri pro- and anti-slavery thugs took the fight to the Kansas territory in the 1850's. The prelude to the US Civil War was fought to Missouri's west, and the Kansas controversy would not be settled until 1861, after much of the South had seceded. During the Civil War, Missouri remained in the Union, though not totally loyal. Over 30,000 Missouri men fought for the South, but over three times that number fought for the Union, as over 30 minor and one major Civil War battles were fought within the state. Missouri actually had a "Confederate government in exile" for a time, but the breakaway members, who fled to Texas, never actually controlled any territory. The compromises that began with allowing the egregious institution of slavery to be rooted in the power of our Constitution would eventually almost result in its destruction. In the vain hope that slave owners could be bargained with and pacified, and in the name of nationalistic unity, great men like Henry Clay and Stephen Douglas sold their souls and reputations. As sectional differences and the economic and cultural predominance of the North exposed slavery for the evil it

was, there was, in the end, nothing left to compromise. Slavery was swept away on the rivers of blood that flowed from Shiloh to Vicksburg and from Gettysburg to Appomattox. The Missouri Compromise only put the day of reckoning a bit further down the road.