Missouri Compromise – The Missouri Compromise was created by Henry Clay. This was a law that was produced in the United States and passed by the State Congress as a law in 1820. This law helped regulate slavery in the western regions. In 1819, Missouri wished and requested to be a slave state which upset the people who were for slavery and against slavery in the United States. This is because there was an equal number of states who had slavery and states who didn’t have slavery. If this was granted to Missouri there would then be an unequal number of slave states and Free states. The solution to this was to grant the request of the state of Missouri to be a slave state but let Maine be a free state. Congress also passed an amendment that established …show more content…
The American Revolution started over the disagreement between Great Britain and the colonies. Great Britain always tried to control everyone and everything and the people of the colonies felt differently. The Revolution began in 1775 and ended in 1783 by the Treaty of Paris. There were numerous major events that had happened overtime which lead to this war. Some of which include French and Indian war, Proclamation of 1763, Sugar Act, Currency Act, Quartering Act, Stamp Act, Townshend Acts, Tea Act, Boston Tea Party, Intolerable Acts, and Bunker Hill. As you can see most of these were acts or laws that kept taking rights and freedom away from the colonists. The French and Indian war resulted in Britain losing and being in debt so they demanded more profits from the colonists. Of course this would eventually lead to more and more colonist’s rebelling against the British. The Sugar Act resulted in higher prices on sugar imported from the West Indies. American associations were barred from supplying bills of credit and paper bills which was known as the Currency Act. The Quartering Act which in my opinion was completely uncalled for stated that if British soldiers needed food or shelter that the colonist had to provide that to them. The Stamp Act in comparison with the Sugar Act also outraged the colonists because they now had to come up with more money to put stamps on almost everything including newspapers and documents. As a result the American Revolution