This purchase more than doubled the size of the US, part of which included the port city of New Orleans
Louisiana Purchase
These people seeked to end slavery in the US and free all those who were enslaved
Abolitionists
Before the Civil War, states were typically added in pairs as to maintain the balance between these
Free and Slave states
This deal attempted to end the issue of slavery by establishing a line dividing where new Free and Slave states could be established
Missouri Compromise
The first shots of the Civil War were fired upon this fort as Confederate forces looked to claim US forts in their territories
Fort Sumpter
This concept was the justification for expanding west, with settlers arguing it was their God-given right to move into newly acquired territories
Manifest Destiny
This passage was commonly used for slaves to escape their masters and become free
Underground Railroad
This series of violent actions was the result of pro-slavery and pro-abolitionist settlers trying to influence the vote in Kansas and Nebraska, resulting in death and mass destruction of property
Bleeding Kansas
This Compromise attempted to resolve the issue of slavery after the mass territorial gains following the Mexican-American War which included California
Compromise of 1850
This was the Union plan to suffocate the Confederacy like a snake, enforcing a naval blockade of all southern ports
Anaconda Plan
This was the most commonly used pathway which settlers moved west, seeking to settle in one of the modern West Coast states
Oregon Trail
Slavery was on a slow decline until this invention by Eli Whitney made it more profitable to produce cotton
Cotton Gin
The actions of this abolitionist, including his raid on the arms storage at Harper's Ferry, ignited fears of a forcible freeing of slaves from their masters
John Brown
Part of the Compromise of 1850 included this law which allowed Southern slave holders to search for their escaped slaves in northern free states
Fugitive Slave Act
This document, signed into effect by President Lincoln, officially freed the slaves in the states of the Confederacy and unquestionably made the war a fight for the end of American slavery
Emancipation Proclomation
This war saw the expansion of American holdings to include the Pacific Coast and the Southwest
Mexican-American War
The writings of this former slave include his 12 Years as a slave and his questioning of "What to the Slave is the 4th of July?"
Frederick Douglass
The election of Abraham Lincoln lead to this state to become the first to secede from the United States
South Carolina
The Missouri Compromise allowed for the addition of Missouri to the Union as a Slave State if this state joined the Union as a Free State
Maine
This General's actions during the war would win the war for the Union, being the one to be able to finally defeat General Lee of the Confederacy
Ulysses S. Grant
The discovery of gold in this territory lead to mass migration to the west starting in 1849
California
The publication of this book spurred the Abolitionist movement as it showed the world how slaves in southern states were treated
Uncle Tom's Cabin
Slavery
The Kansas-Nebraska Act permitted for a direct vote on the issue of slavery, an example of this
Popular Sovereignty
This state joined the Union during the war, seceding from the seceded Virginia
West Virginia