The infamous Fugitive Slave Act was passed by Congress on September 18, 1850.
It was one part of a larger Compromise
of 1850 meant to ease tensions between slave
and free states. It did not work. In fact attempts at enforcement of the law
enraged many northerners who would
otherwise have been content to let slavery be out of sight and mind in the South.
A Fugitive Slave Law had been in the
Federal statutes since 1793. It was an enforcement provision for Article 4, Section 2 of
the Constitution, which required the return of runaway slaves and was
passed at a time when slavery was still legal in most states on both sides of
the Mason-Dixon Line. But one by one northern states had abandoned
slavery. Within the next decade the last
slaves set to be freed in some gradual
emancipation plans would be freed.
Many northern states had fairly sizable populations of Free Blacks. Southern states, however, with the
introduction of a wide spread cotton economy
were more dependent on slavery than ever and the end of the international slave trade had cut off a
supply of fresh bodies from Africa and
the Caribbean.
Slavery was not
only disappearing in the North, public opinion was swinging against it,
particularly in New England and
those states carved from the old Northwest
Territories that were heavily settled by the New England diaspora. Many
states had taken actions to blunt the enforcement of the 1793 law. Several had enacted Personal Liberty Laws by which a captured Negro could demand a jury
trial where the claimant would
have to prove that he or she was legal property. This was to prevent free Blacks in the North
from being kidnapped and taken south
to be sold into slavery—a common practice among slave chasers. Other laws
forbad state and local officials from rendering assistance to slave chasers or
the use of local jails to hold
them. This practice was upheld by an
1842 Supreme Court decision, Prigg
v. Pennsylvania, which
essentially gutted enforcement of the 1793 law in much of the North.
Beyond
legal barriers, there was growing popular resistance to slavery which
manifested itself in the network of the Underground
Railroad which actively assisted fleeing slaves to reach either Canada or settle in relatively safe
portions of the North under assumed identities.
In several cities citizens actively interfered with slave catchers. All of this, of course, infuriated the South.
Other
issues were also inflaming North/South tensions, principally whether slavery
would be extended in the vast territories obtained in the Mexican War. The South
wanted all of the land opened to slavery—or failing that something like an
extension of the Missouri Compromise line
that would allow territories to the south of the same or similar line
eventually be admitted to the Union as slave states. They even hoped to possibly divide Texas into two or more states and break
off southern California somewhere
north of Los Angeles. That would give the South and slave holding
border states control of the Senate, and by extension the Federal
government itself.
Northerners,
on the other hand, wanted to exclude slavery from all newly organized
territories and keep Texas and California unified, with the understanding that California
would enter the Union as a free state, balancing slave holding Texas.
President Zachary Taylor, a hero of the Mexican War and
himself a Louisiana planter and
slave holder, stood with the North in opposing the extension of slavery. His Whig
party was becoming unraveled over the issue.
Senator Henry Clay of Kentucky, a border state Whig who had
long dreamed of the Presidency, set out to craft a compromise early in the
year. But with the president of his own
party in opposition, the compromise fell apart in the Senate.
Perhaps Webster should have heeded his own Facebook meme card. |
When the
new session of Congress convened in March Democrat
Stephen Douglas of Illinois and Massachusetts Whig Daniel Webster—Clay’s
long time rival for party leadership—advanced a modified version of Clay’s
compromise proposals. It varied from
Clay’s failed version mostly in the disposal of the thorny issue of Texas. The new version was mostly crafted by Douglas
and incorporated the Democratic platform principle of Popular Sovereignty—that
residents of. Territories should be able to decide by voting whether or not
slavery would be allowed—for the two proposed Territories carved from Texas
claims—Utah and New Mexico. Mormon controlled
Utah would definitely opt to be a free territory, and everyone knew that it was
unlikely that sparsely populated New
Mexico, which was totally
unsuitable to a plantation economy, would elect to allow slavery. California would be admitted to the Union
undivided as a free state.
Debate was fierce. Most northern Whigs led by William Steward of New York were bitterly opposed because the package did not include Wilmot Proviso, a long sought provision
that would have permanently banned slavery from territory acquired as a result
of the Mexican War. Even though no new
slave Territories or States were created, the application of the principle of
Popular Sovereignty left the possibility open in the future. They were also outraged by the inclusion of
the Fugitive Slave Act.
On the other hand Southern
firebrands led by John C. Calhoun were
just as voraciously opposed because they did not get the division of California
or any new slave holding Territories.
They also had to give up the continuation of the slave trade in the District of Columbia, although slavery
itself would be preserved there.
Numerous alternative plans were
advanced and beaten back. Douglas and
Webster, with the support of Clay, had to stitch together a Senate majority
from northern Democrats, moderate southern Democrats, and southern Whigs. The opposition was split between to extremes,
northern Whigs on one hand, and southern firebrands
on the other.
The compromise got a boost when
Taylor died suddenly and his Vice
President Millard Fillmore ascended to the White House. Fillmore was
one of Webster’s few Northern Whig allies and supported the compromise. Douglas separated out five separate bills
from an original omnibus bill, and
carefully crafted narrow majorities for each, with each bill getting support
from a slightly different combination of forces. It was precarious, but it worked.
The bills, passed independently
between September 9 and 20 and quickly signed into law by President Fillmore
included:
- The admission of California as a free state.
- The abolition of the slave trade in the District of Columbia.
- The organization Territory of New Mexico (including present-day Arizona) and the Territory of Utah under the rule of popular sovereignty.
- The enactment of Fugitive Slave Act requiring all U.S. citizens to assist in the return of runaway slaves.
- Texas ceding of much of its western land claims in exchange for of $10 million to pay off its national debt.
Douglas and Webster thought they had
crafted a compromise which saved the union.
Instead, they reaped the whirlwind, especially because of the onerous
provisions of the Fugitive Slave Act.
The Act made any Federal Marshal or other official who
did not arrest an alleged runaway slave liable to a fine of $1,000. Local law
enforcement were required to arrest anyone suspected of being a runaway
slave on no more evidence than a claimant’s sworn testimony of ownership. The suspected slave could not ask for
a jury trial or testify on his or her own behalf. Anyone aiding a runaway slave
by providing food or shelter was subject to a six month imprisonment and a
$1,000 fine. Officers who captured a fugitive slave were entitled to a bonus or
promotion for their work. Slave owners only needed to supply an affidavit to a
Federal Marshal to capture an escaped slave and since a suspected slave was not
eligible for a trial to prove his status, many free blacks could be conscripted
into slavery.
Outrage in the North, particularly
in New England was fierce. Daniel
Webster, the political hero of the region for more than 40 years, was
excoriated as a traitor. The hand of Abolitionists, a previously despised
minority, was greatly strengthened.
Some Abolitionists even contemplated northern secession from the union in response to the Act and the
still open possibility of the extension of slavery into new territories. Even Ralph
Waldo Emerson flirted with the idea.
From a Boston broadside. |
Citizens of Boston and other towns organized to oppose slave catchers and
interfere with their work in every way possible. Handbills
were circulated warning free Blacks that the local police were cooperating with
slave catchers under the law.
Politically, the enactment of the
Fugitive Slave Law spelled the end of the Whigs as a national party. Northern
Whigs swung to the new Free Soil Party and
four years later into the new Republican
Party alongside anti-slavery northern Democrats. Southern Whigs were re-absorbed into the
Democratic Party from which most of them had originated. Democrats were riven by sectional conflicts
themselves.
Whatever “peace” might have been
bought fell apart four years later as the future of Kansas turned on the principle of Popular Sovereignty leading to a local civil war as slave holders and
Free Soilers rushed to the territory to attempt to control the Territorial Government.
From a modern perspective, it is
useful to compare the provisions of the Fugitive Slave Act to the Arizona anti-immigration legislation of
a few years back which became a model for even more draconian legislation in Tea Party dominated states—most of them
in the Deep South. There werere many parallels including requiring local police
to act on mere suspicion, and the denial of detainees of adequate rights to
prove their status, thus inevitably leading to the detention deportation of
legal immigrants and even citizens. And
citizens aiding suspected illegals would be criminalized themselves. Many of the more draconian provisions of the anti-immigration
laws were gutted by Federal Courts, but other onerous provisions remain in
force and right wing zealots continually
demand harsher measures. With some armed
“volunteers” now patrolling the borders, heavy handed immigration enforcement
is proving just as divisive to the nation today as the Fugitive Slave Act was
164 years ago.
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