Here is the synopsis of our sample research paper on Western Opportunity and the Issues of Slavery. Have the paper e-mailed to you 24/7/365.
Essay / Research Paper Abstract
This 3 page paper explores western expansion and its association with the American institution of slavery. Bibliography lists 1 source.
Page Count:
3 pages (~225 words per page)
File: AM2_PPslvUnfnshed.rtf
Buy This Term Paper »
 
Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
upon using the institution of slavery. Slavery, after all, had been at the heart of the economy of the southern states throughout the history of the United States.
Indeed, slavery had an integral connection to the capitalist economic system which prevailed in this so-called "New World". Unlike the North where farms were relatively small and industry took a
more prominent role in the economy, however, Southern plantations were massive in size and saw the slave as a particularly crucial economic means of working those plantations. By the
mid-nineteenth century the North had established itself more as an industrial power than as an agricultural one. While the South might need slaves to turn the type of economic
profit that it was used to turning, northern whites saw the west in a different light. They too valued the expansion from an economic perspective but they felt that
they didnt need slaves to effect profit. In the decades leading up to the wars outbreak the southern states had become more and more suspicious of the northern
states intentions in terms of interceding in what were regarded as southern affairs. The northern states had their own paranoias as well, however. Some believed that the southern
states were involved in a conspiracy to destroy northern liberty. By the nineteenth century, Western territories had become viewed as playing pawns in the issue of slavery.
Missouris request to join the union even teetered on the scale because she was a slave state. This controversy was temporarily addressed with the Missouri compromise. Missouri was
admitted to the Union but so was Main. Because Maine was a free state this resulted in the overall balance between free states and slave states being retained.
...