This Compromise admitted California as a free state and created Utah and New Mexico territories, asking those territories to decide on slavery later.
The Compromise of 1850.
Many cultural groups in New Mexico maintained traditions while adapting to new U.S. systems during the territorial period. Give one example of a tradition or cultural practice they preserved.
— Example: Spanish language use, Catholic religious practices, traditional farming methods, or village land-use customs.
What is a "slave code"?
A law that defines enslaved people as the property of slave owners.
Compared to other places, was there a lot of Black slavery in New Mexico during the 1850s? Answer "Yes" or "No" and give one brief reason.
No. Few Black slaves lived in New Mexico by the 1850s; Indian slavery had existed earlier.
What major construction project brought jobs, miners, farmers, and new settlers to New Mexico during the territorial period?
Railroad construction.
The payment of $10 million by Congress was made to which state in exchange for giving up disputed land claims during the Compromise of 1850?
Texas
Las Gorras Blancas are best known for defending which group's land rights?
Hispanic (Mexican-American) farmers and land grant heirs.
New Mexico’s slave code limited freedoms. Name one restriction it placed on Black people.
Could not testify in court / could not travel / could not carry weapons (any one).
Before American territorial control, what form of coerced labor existed under Spanish colonial rule in New Mexico?
Indian slavery (enslavement of Indigenous people).
Name two economic areas that benefited from the railroad’s arrival (list two).
Mining and agriculture/farming (also transportation and trade).
What governing status describes New Mexico before it became a state under U.S. authority?
Territorial status (a U.S. territory).
Describe one way the arrival of the railroad changed daily life for New Mexico communities.
Example: easier transport of goods, faster travel, new businesses, or more jobs.
In what year did the federal government outlaw slavery in U.S. territories, effectively overturning New Mexico’s slave code?
1862
Give two ways New Mexico’s slave code restricted enslaved people’s lives (list two).
Examples: could not travel; could not testify in court; could not carry weapons.
How did the railroad help New Mexico move toward statehood? Provide one clear reason.
By encouraging migration, investment, and economic development, which increased population and political pressure for statehood.
Name the practice by which newly created U.S. territories could decide whether to allow slavery by a vote of the people.
Popular sovereignty.
During the territorial period, Pueblo peoples negotiated with the U.S. government.
Name one main focus of these negotiations.
Sovereignty and land rights (control over ancestral lands and legal recognition).
Congress passed laws and agreements that shaped New Mexico’s borders. Name one political or legal result of the Compromise of 1850 besides admitting California.
Establishing New Mexico and Utah as territories and setting terms for Texas’s payment.
Explain how the idea of slaves being "property" affected where slave owners claimed they could take enslaved people.
Slaveholders argued that the Constitution protected property, so enslaved people (as property) could be taken into free states/territories.
Describe one economic cause that contributed to conflicts over land grants like the Maxwell Land Grant.
Competing claims over ownership, value of land for mining and settlement, and unclear or overlapping grant documentation.
The Colfax County War involved disputes over a major land grant. Identify this disputed land grant that became central to the conflict.
The Maxwell Land Grant.
Explain how migration and new settlers during the territorial period affected New Mexico’s cultural landscape (two-sentence answer).
Example answer: New settlers brought new languages, religions, and economic systems that mixed with existing Pueblo and Hispano traditions, changing town structures and land use.
Explain how the U.S. Constitution was used to justify protecting slavery across state and territory lines according to slaveholders.
Because slaves were defined as property, the Constitution’s protection of property was used to argue slaveholders could take enslaved people into free territories.
Although few in number, enslaved people and slavery laws affected New Mexico. Discuss one long-term effect of slavery laws on New Mexican communities (short paragraph).
Example effect: Laws and attitudes limited freedoms and participation of Black people and shaped legal and social systems even after slavery ended.
Analyze how dispute over land (such as the Maxwell Land Grant) and the influx of settlers created both economic opportunity and social conflict in New Mexico.
Example answer: Large land grants attracted speculators and settlers who sought mining and farming profits, which increased land value but displaced original landholders; legal battles and violence sometimes followed, harming community stability even as some businesses grew.