Douglas supported the idea of building a railroad from Illinois to California, but before that could be done, the Kansas and Nebraska Territories had to be organized.
Explanation:
- The man who invented the Kansas-Nebraska Act in early 1854, Senator Stephen A. Douglas, had a pretty practical goal in mind: widening the railroad.
- Douglas, who moved to Illinois, had a grand vision of railroads crossing the continent, with its hub in Chicago, in his adopted home state.
- The immediate problem was that the vast wilderness west of Iowa and Missouri would have to be organized and brought to the Union before the railroad was built in California.
- All it held was a perennial slavery debate. Douglas himself opposed slavery but did not have much condemnation for the issue, perhaps because he had never lived in a state where slavery was legal.
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