Search this site
Embedded Files
Skip to main content
Skip to navigation
Teaching & Learning Resource Hub
Curriculum Home
Calendar
Contact
Teaching & Learning Resource Hub
Curriculum Home
Calendar
Contact
More
Curriculum Home
Calendar
Contact
Missouri Compromise
Back to Social Studies
Lesson 1: An Early Threat of Secession: The Missouri Compromise of 1820 and the Nullification Crisis
Americans affirmed their independence with the ringing declaration that “all men are created equal.” Some of them owned slaves, however, and were unwilling to give them up as they gave speeches and wrote pamphlets championing freedom, liberty, and equality. So “to form a more perfect union” in 1787, certain compromises were made in the Constitution regarding slavery. This settled the slavery controversy for the first few decades of the American republic, but this situation changed with the application of Missouri for statehood in 1819.
Maine_and_Missouri_lesson_plan.pdf
tko_lesson_secession.pdf
Missouri Compromise.pdf
April 16_SS8.pdf
task---social-studies---grade-7---slavery-compromises0090fc5b8c9b66d6b292ff0000215f92.pdf
MISSOURI_COMPROMISE_2019.pptx
Google Sites
Report abuse
Page details
Page updated
Google Sites
Report abuse