Compromise of 1850: The Missouri Compromise

    Compromise of 1850: The Missouri Compromise

      From the nation's founding, there'd been a policy of maintaining a delicate balance of slaveholding vs. free states so that sectional conflict might be avoided and no state would feel they'd have to bolt from the Union. If a free state was admitted to the Union, a slave state got an invitation. Otherwise, one region of the country would have an advantage in the Senate and might pass bills that disadvantaged the other. Like outlawing slavery, for instance.

      When the Louisiana Purchase doubled the size of the U.S., people knew that this conflict could be ramped up big-time as new states would be formed and request admission to the Union.

      By 1818, Missouri had gotten populous enough for apply for statehood. One of the states created out of the Louisiana Purchase, it asked for admission as a slave state. The problem was that there wasn't a free state to admit and keep the balance. When Alabama was admitted to the Union as a slave state in 1819, the fight over Missouri got worse. Admitting Missouri as a slave state would give the South a Senate majority.

      An amendment allowing Missouri to keep its current slaves but not to have any others (and to emancipate everyone at age 25) was shot down.

      Then, just as it did with its L.L. Bean Baxter State Parka which will keep you warm down to -45 degrees, Maine came to the rescue. Carved out of Massachusetts territory, it wanted admission as a Free State.

      Problem solved? Not really. The balanced was maintained for now, but what about future states?

      Enter Speaker of the House Henry Clay—the same guy who'd also save the day in 1850.

      Clay proposed an imaginary boundary to be drawn east-west across the territory of the Louisiana Purchase at the 33 30' latitude line. North of the line, all future states would be free (Missouri got a pass); south of it, slavery was permitted. President Monroe signed the bill on March 5, 1820, and Clay earned the nickname "The Great Pacificator."

      The Missouri Compromise did keep the peace; or, depending how you looked at it, kicked the can down the road for another Congress to deal with later.

      P.S. For more on this compromise, head over to our learning guide on it.

      Former Prez Jefferson thought the Compromise was a disaster for the Union, that it would guarantee secession at some point (source). After all, who was the federal government to dictate to states whether or not they could allow slavery? Unfortunately, he'd eventually be proven right, but not for another forty years.