THE FUGITIVE SLAVE ACT, THE KANSAS-NEBRASKA ACT, AND “BLEEDING KANSAS

UNIT #13A & 13B

Background:

The Compromise of 1850 settled none of the key issues dividing the nation. In retrospect we can see that one of its results was the beginning of the end of the Whig Party and the meteoric rise of the Republican Party and an obscure Illinois politician, Abraham Lincoln. The issue that brought Lincoln and the Republicans onto the national stage was the Kansas-Nebraska Act of 1854 and Lincoln’s famous debates with Senator Stephen A, Douglas. In this lecture we will examine three events that increased northern anti-slavery militancy, transformed national politics, and determined the outcome of thepresidential election of 1856: (1) The fugitive slave issue, (2) the Kansas-Nebraska Act of 1854, and (3) and the civil war in Kansas.

I. THE FUGITIVE SLAVE ISSUE

A. THE PIERCE ADMINISTRATION (DEMOCRAT) ENFORCED THE

FUGITIVE SLAVE LAW

B. THE FALLOUT FROM THE ANTHONY BURNS CASE

______

C. THE CASE OF MARGARET GARNER

II. THE KANSAS-NEBRASKA ACT OF 1854

A. THE ISSUE: ______

______

B. DOUGLAS’S TWO-FOLD SOLUTION:

1. ______

2. ______

C. LINCOLN’S CASE V. DOUGLAS:

1. The founding fathers had opposed slavery. Three points of evidence:

a. Adopted the Declaration of Independence asserting all men were created equal.

b. Enacted Northwest Ordinance of 1787 banning slavery from Northwest Territory.

c. Though owning slaves, they asserted hostility to slavery in principle while tolerating

it temporarily in practice. That was why they did not mention the words “slave” or

“slavery” in the Constitution” but referred only to “persons held in service.”

2. In light of above,two actions required:

#1: ______, which the fathers did with the Northwest

Ordinance, the prohibition of the African slave trade in 1807, and the MC of 1820.

#2: ______

3. Lincoln admitted that the Constitution protected slavery ______

______. But that did not justify allowing slavery to spread into free territories.

4. “The great “moral wrong and injustice” of the Kansas-Nebraska Act was that it

______, thus putting the institution “on the high

road to extension and perpetuity” instead of restricting it in order gradually to end it.

5. Popular sovereignty was “false in principle and pernicious in practice,” said Lincoln:

Itassumed thatthe question of slavery in a territory concerned ______

______. In reality, it affected the future of the whole nation.

6. Lincoln called Douglas’s assertion that natural conditions would prevent bondage from

taking root in Kansasa “LULLIBY argument.” “Climate will not…keep slavery out

of these territories…nothing in nature will.” The only way to stop them was for

Congress to vote slavery out.

7. But such action, Douglas protested, would violate the “sacred right of

self-government.” Nonsense, replied Lincoln. Slavery was contrary to that right.

“When the white man governs himself that is self-government; but when he governs

himself, and also governs another man…that is despotism…The Negro is a

man…There can be no moral right in connection with one man’s making a slave of

another,” “Let no one be deceived,” concluded Lincoln:

“The spirit of seventy-six and the spirit of Nebraska, are utter antagonisms….Little by

little…we have been giving up the old for the new faith. Near eighty years ago we

began by declaring that all men are created equal; but now from that beginning we

have run down to the other direction, that for some men to enslave others is a ‘sacred

right of self-government.’ These principles cannot stand together….Our republican

robe is soiled, and trailed in the dust. Let us repurify it….Let us re-adopt the

Declaration of Independence, and with it, the practices and policy, which harmonize

with it….If we do this, we shall not only have saved the Union; but we shall have so

saved it, as to make, and to keep it, forever worthy of the saving.” [129]

D. THE TWO-FOLD SIGNIFICANCE OF LINCOLN’S SPEECHES:

1. ______

2. ______

E. KANSAS-NEBRASKA FINISHED OFF THE WHIG PARTY

F. THE RISE OF NATIVISM AND A POWERFUL NATIVIST PARTY, 1854-1856

1. The rise of nativism and a powerful nativist party which came to be known as the

______. Their main goal was to ______

______.

The antislavery movement grew from the same cultural soil of evangelical

Protestantism as temperance and nativism.

2. By 1855, Republicans and Know-Nothings had succeeded in breaking down the Whigs

and weakening the Democrats in most parts of the North. In 1854, the Know-Nothings

(the American Party) had elected 50 congressmen to the House of Representatives; the

Republicans 105. But it remained uncertain which of these two parties would emerge

as the principle alterative to the Democrats.

3. Within less than two years, however (by February 1856), the Republicans had surged

to become the North’s majority party. What made possible this remarkable eclipse of

the Know-Nothings? The main reason could be expressed in two words: “______

______.” Events in that far-off territory convinced most northerners that the

Slave Power was a much greater threat to republican liberty than the Pope was.

III. “BLEEDING KANSAS” (THE CIVIL WAR IN KANSAS)

SIGNIFICANCE: THE CIVIL WAR IN KANSAS SHAPED THE CONTEXT FOR THE PRESIDENTIAL ELECTION OF 1856.

A. HAVING LOST THE BATTLEIN CONGRESS FOR A FREE KANSAS,

ANTI-SLAVERY MEN DETERMINED TO WAGE WAR ON THE KANSAS

PRAIRIE.

1. The first act of the newly “elected” legislature at ______was to impose

a fine an imprisonment for expressing opinions against slavery, authorizing the death

penalty for encouraging slave revolts or helping slaves escape, required all voters to

take an oath to uphold these laws, and retroactively legalized the border ruffian ballots

requiring no prior residence in Kansas in order to vote.

2. BUT PRO-SLAVERY SETTLERS HAD NO INTENTION OF OBEYING THESE

LAWS OR OF RECOGNIZING THE “BOGUS LEGISLATURE” THAT HAD

PASSED THEM. Free soil delegates met in ______Topeka in October 1855

and drew up a free-state constitution and called elections for a new legislature and

government.

3. By January 1856, Kansas had two territorial governments: the official one at

Lecompton and an unofficial one at Topeka representing an actual majority of actual

residents.

B. THE NATIONAL DEBATE ON KANSAS

1. Both Republicans and democrats in Congress introduced bills for the admission of

Kansas as a state.

a. Southerners viewed this matter as ______

b. Democratic support of proslavery excesses in Kansas offered a ready-made

opportunity to dramatize yet another slave-power attack on northern rights.

C. BLEEDING SUMNER

1. For North, this attack was viewed as a symbol of ______

2. The South view of the caning of Sumner: ______

D. JOHN BROWN

1. Impact on presidential election of 1856: ______

E. THE PRESIDENTIAL CAMPAIGN OF 1856

1. For mainstream Republicans, ______not Roman Catholicism,

was the real danger that threatened American liberties.

2. The Democrats nominated James Buchanan. The platform endorsed (1) ______

______, (2)______, (3)______,

and (4)______.

3. The key issues were ______, ______, and above all, ______.

4. The threats of secession proved effective. To preserve the Union, enough former

Whigs voted for Buchanan who won the election.

5. The vital struggle took place in the lower-North states of Pennsylvania, Indiana,

Illinois, and New Jersey.

F. THE LECOMPTON CONSTITUTION DEFEATED

1. Buchanan was determined to resolve the Kansas crisis by submitting the constitution

being drafted at Lecompton to a referendum.

2. With Democratic control of Congress, and southern control of the Democratic Party,

pro-slavery forces decided to send the constitution and petition for statehood to

Congress without a referendum—in defiance of pledges made by President Buchanan

and Governor Walker.

a. The pro-slavery Lecompton constitutional convention declared that “the right of

property is before and higher than any constitutional sanction, and the right of the

owner of a slave…is…an inviolable as the right of owners of any property

whatever.”

b. On February 2, 1858, Buchanan sent the Lecompton constitution to Congress with a

message recommending admission of a sixteenth slave state. It seemed a “done

deal.”

3. But Douglas, leader of the northern Democrats, stunned his southern colleagues by

opposing Lecompton, declaring that he could never vote to “force this constitution

down the throats of the people of Kansas, in opposition to their wishes and in violation

of our pledges.”

4. On April 1, in a dramatic roll call, 22 of 53 northern Democrats joined the Republicans

and a handful of Know Nothings to defeat Lecompton by a vote of 120 to 112. Kansas

finally became a free state in January 1861, joining California, Minnesota, and Oregon,

whose entry since the Mexican War had given the North a four-state edge over the

South.

G. THE SIGNIFICANCE OF THE DEFEAT OF LECOMPTON CONSTITUTION

1. It destroyed Douglas’ hope to win the presidency in 1860.

2. ______

3. The whole Kansas affair had strengthened ______

to the point where it was now the dominant party in the North.

Copyrighted 3/23/04: AFR

All rights reserved

Then a development of great significance occurred in 1855. The slavery issue began

to split the Know-Nothings along sectional lines. The logical place for anti-slavery

Know Nothings to go was into the Republican Party. Lincoln was not happy to see

them enter. “Our progress in degeneracy appears to me to be pretty rapid. As a

nation, we began by declaring that ‘all men are created equal.’ We now practically

read it ‘all men are created equal, except Negroes.’ When the Know-Nothings get

control, it will read ‘all men are created equal except negroes, and foreigners, and

catholics.’ When it comes to this I should prefer emigrating to some country where

they make no pretense of loving liberty—to Russia, for instance, where despotism

can be taken pure, and without the base alloy of hypocrisy.” [141]

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