free soil

free soil

The settlers moved to the free soil territory to start their farm.

Definition
  1. Noun:
    • Territory without slavery: "free soil" refers to a geographic area or region where the institution of slavery was prohibited, especially in the context of 19th-century United States history.
Usage Examples
  • Noun:
    • The Kansas-Nebraska Act of 1854 allowed settlers to decide whether their territory would be free soil or permit slavery. (A region without slavery.)
    • Many abolitionists advocated for free soil in the Western territories to prevent the expansion of slavery. (Territory where slavery is illegal.)
Advanced Usage
  • "Free Soil Party": a short-lived political party in the United States (1848–1852) that opposed the extension of slavery into new territories.

    • The Free Soil Party nominated Martin Van Buren for president in 1848. (A political group advocating for free soil.)
  • "free-soil movement": the broader social and political campaign to keep slavery out of newly acquired U.S. territories.

    • The free-soil movement gained momentum after the Mexican-American War. (The campaign against slavery expansion.)
Variants and Related Words
  • Free-soiler (n): a person who supported the free-soil movement.

    • Free-soilers believed that slavery should be restricted to existing states. (A supporter of free soil.)
  • Free-soilism (n): the ideology or principles of the free-soil movement.

    • Free-soilism was a key issue in the 1848 presidential election. (The political doctrine of free soil.)
Synonyms
  • Non-slave territory: a region where slavery is not legally permitted.
  • Abolitionist zone: an area free from the institution of slavery (less common).
Related Idioms
  • "Free soil, free speech, free labor, free men": a slogan of the Free Soil Party linking opposition to slavery with broader democratic ideals.
    • The rallying cry "free soil, free speech, free labor, free men" united many Northern voters. (A political motto.)
Historical Context Note
  • The term "free soil" is most closely associated with the pre-Civil War era in the United States, when the debate over slavery's expansion into Western territories was a central political issue. It differs from "abolitionism," which sought to end slavery everywhere, whereas free soil focused only on preventing its spread.

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