Moreover, the southerners felt that they should be allowed to expand their plantation. These dividing differences made the south believe that the north was out to destroy their way of life. One of the ways of deescalating tempers was to reach a compromise, this compromise was known as The Missouri Compromise. The Missouri Compromise was the outcome of the argument between the north and south. The Missouri compromise was supposed to entail that the north got the parts of the new territory that they occupied would be free, and for the southerners, they got the fugitive slave act. This act passed in 1793. This law made it a law for any slave who escaped into free states to be returned to their slave owners, or to be returned to a southern state where they would be held on trial, to determine which slave owner an escaped slave has escaped from. This law, however, immediately made the northerners upset because they felt that this law was unjust to escaped slaves, and the northerners decided to forewarn any escaped slaves that they should not talk to any strangers or policemen as they could be working as “spies” for the southerners in the effort to get their escaped slaves back. This enraged the south because in their …show more content…
This later accumulated into what slavery’s role in the civil war was. In terms of the humanitarian side of slavery, there are again two sides of this story, one sides is the north and northern abolitionists. And the other side to this story would be the southerners and southern slaveholders who see nothing wrong with subjecting another group of people to slavery and horrid mistreatment. This humanitarian issue sprung up from the early days and what differentiated the north from the south. On the one hand, In the north people believed that the establishment of slavery was wrong but initially they did not do anything to change it because the existence of slavery never bothered nor did it change their way of life up north. In fact, a northerner could go his or her whole life without ever seeing a slave. This showed a somewhat tolerant attitude of slavery that the northerners had. On the other hand, southerners believed that it was their right to own slaves, because slavery had existed in the south since the colonial days. Although in the colonial times, slavery was seen as a temporary establishment. However, in the years that lead up to the civil war, slavery was a very solidified part of life in the south. While many people in the south owned slaves and felt it their right and privilege to treat slaves a something less than human, there were