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Home  >>  Resources  >>  General Resources  >>  Causes of the Civil War
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Causes of the Civil War: "Bleeding Kansas" and the Dred Scott Decision
By Michael J. Swogger
Published: November 23, 2006
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Immediately following the passage of the Kansas-Nebraska Act, a wave of settlers began pouring into the territory. They first came from Missouri, then from the mid-western states such as Indiana and Illinois. Some were sent by the group known as the New England Emigrant Aid Company. These people were seen by the South as an abolitionist movement in the west. From the early stages of settlement, Free Soilers and pro-slavery settlers clashed over lands, towns, water, etc., and there was little law and order. Although a provisional governor was assigned to the territory by President Pierce, not much was done to curb to violence between the two sides.

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