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  2. Feb 17, 2022 · When California became a state in 1850, it did not allow slavery. That's the history most people know. But in reality, California did allow slavery, and its early leaders sided with the South and the rights of enslavers through a litany of early laws.

    • Katrina Schwartz
  3. Per the terms of the Compromise of 1850, California was admitted as a free state. The Act may informally be referred to as the California Statehood Act or the California Admission Act. Background Start of Mexican-American War and Bear Flag Revolt Todd's original Bear Flag, photographed in 1890

  4. Aug 26, 2017 · Following the discovery of gold in California, in 1848, this territory desired to become a state-a free state. Previously, the South had strongly backed the Mexican War, looking towards newly acquired territories being broken up into slave states.

  5. The Compromise of 1850 later permitted California to be admitted to the Union as a free state. Gwin and war hero/abolitionist John C. Frémont became California's first Senators . Although California entered the Union as a free state, the framers of the state constitution wrote into law the systematic denial of suffrage and other civil rights ...

  6. Feb 25, 2021 · California entered the Union as a free state, part of the complicated political jiggering of the Compromise of 1850. But this didn’t mean slavery was absent from California, nor that it disappeared upon statehood.

  7. Political parties were divided according to whether they believed that California should be a free state or a slave state. One movement, led by the backers of California Sen. William M. Gwin, sought to divide California into two states, one slave and one free.

  8. Oct 27, 2009 · It admitted California as a free state, left Utah and New Mexico to decide for themselves, defined a new Texas-New Mexico boundary, and made it easier for slaveowners to recover runway slaves.