Answer: The correct answer is b frolicked
Explanation:
The Kansas-Nebraska Act was controversial because it left the issue of whether slavery should be allowed to a popular vote, which brought about a series of violent confrontations called bleeding Kansas.
The Emancipation Proclamation promptly declared that all slaves in slave states were freed.
However, there were certain caveats to this. First, the Emancipation Proclamation did not affect slave states that stayed in the Union, at least not until the end of the war. Secondly, the Emancipation Proclamation did not have effect on slave states that joined the Confederate States of America, and therefore was voided. The Emancipation Proclamation, in the end, was a token set up by President Lincoln as a promise that slavery would end one day. He was able to follow through with such a promise after the Union won the American Civil War.
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Answer:
Louisiana had a difficult road to statehood because of disagreements over the western boundaries of the state with colonial Mexico and cultural differences with the United States.
Explanation:
President James Madison signed Louisiana into statehood with a bill dated April 30, 1812. This made Louisiana 18th state. However, in the interim between the Lousiana Purchase in 1803 and statehood in 1812, some difficulties arose like the western border dispute between Spain and the United States which even led them to hault diplomatic relations in 1805. It was believed that military action would be necessary to resolve the conflict. Disagreements over the contested area were not fully resolved until 1819 when both parties agreed to the Sabine River as the western boundary. There were also cultural differences in that many residents of Louisana identified with its French past and they had a different system of local governance with the parish system.