Examples of The Fugitive Slave Act in the following topics:
-
- The Fugitive Slave Act, passed in 1850, caused controversy and contributed
to Northern fears of a "slave power conspiracy."
- The
Fugitive Slave Act was passed by Congress as part of the Compromise of 1850
between Southern slave interests and the Northern Free Soil movement.
- The Fugitive Slave Act of 1793
required the return of runaway slaves by requiring authorities in free states
to return fugitive slaves to their masters.
- However, many Northern states found
ways to circumvent the Fugitive Slave Act.
- The
Fugitive Slave Act was met with violent protest in the North.
-
- The presidential election of 1852 was the last time the Whig Party nominated a candidate; the party collapsed shortly thereafter.
- The election of 1852 was
the last election in which the Whig Party nominated a candidate before the
party collapsed following Winfield Scott’s loss to Franklin Pierce.
- The
outcome was a testament to the sectional and organizational weaknesses within
the Whig Party.
- During his years in office, Pierce’s support of the Compromise
of 1850—particularly his rigorous enforcement of the Fugitive Slave Act—appalled
and alienated many Northerners, including factions of the Democratic Party.
- With the demise of the Whig Party, many Northerners, bitterly resenting the
heavy enforcement of the Fugitive Slave Act under Pierce, began to loosely
coalesce with the emerging antislavery Republican Party.
-
- The Compromise of 1850 left the question of slave versus free states to popular sovereignty.
- The Fugitive Slave Act of 1850 would be passed into law.
- The slave trade would be abolished in the District of Columbia.
- In the Compromise of 1850, popular sovereignty was not defined
as a guiding principle on the slave issue going forward.
- Furthermore, the
bill's strengthening of the Fugitive Slave Act angered many Northerners, and
even provoked violence in Northern cities.
-
- The term is also applied to the abolitionists—black and white, free and
enslaved—who aided the fugitives.
- With heavy political lobbying, the Compromise of
1850, passed by Congress after the Mexican-American War, stipulated a more
stringent Fugitive Slave Law.
- Federal marshals and professional bounty
hunters known as "slave catchers" pursued fugitives as far as the Canadian
border.
- The
risk was not limited solely to actual fugitives.
- Under the terms of the Fugitive Slave Act of
1850, when suspected fugitives were seized and brought to a special magistrate
known as a "commissioner," they had no right to a jury trial and could not
testify on their own behalf.
-
- The Slave Community: Plantation Life in the Antebellum South is a book written by American historian John W.
- Using psychology, Blassingame analyzes fugitive slave narratives published in the 19th century to conclude that an independent culture developed among the enslaved and that there were a variety of personality types exhibited by slaves.
- The importance of The Slave Community as one of the first studies of slavery from the perspective of the slave was recognized by historians.
- He asserts that the retention of African culture acted as a form of resistance to enslavement.
- Culture developed within the slave community independent of the slaveowners' influence.
-
- The Slave Community: Plantation Life in the Antebellum South is a book written by American historian John W.
- Using psychology, Blassingame analyzes fugitive slave narratives published in the 19th century to conclude that an independent culture developed among the enslaved.
- He asserts that the retention of African culture acted as a form of resistance to enslavement: "All things considered, the...Africans enslaved in seventeenth- and eighteenth-century America appear to have survived their traumatic experiences without becoming abjectly docile, infantile or submissive" and "since an overwhelming percentage of nineteenth-century Southern slaves were native Americans, they never underwent this kind of shock [the Middle Passage] and were in a position to construct psychological defenses against total dependency on their masters. "
- In the quarters, he "acted like a man," castigating whites for the mistreatment of himself and his family.
- Explain the growth of slave religion in the United States according to Blassingame's argument
-
- Escaped slaves would move north along the route from one way station to the next.
- In 1850, Congress (disproportionally represented by Southerners) passed a more stringent fugitive slave federal law.
- Massachusetts had abolished slavery in 1783, but the Fugitive Slave Law of 1850 required government officials to assist slavecatchers in capturing fugitives within the state.
- A Ride for Liberty – The Fugitive Slaves by Eastman Johnson
- Many slaves fled through the Underground Railroad, seeking freedom in the North.
-
- The first of these laws to be implemented was the First Confiscation Act of August 1861, which authorized the confiscation of any Confederate property, including slaves, by Union forces.
- In March 1862, Congress approved a Law Enacting an Additional Article of War, which forbade Union Army officers from returning fugitive slaves to their owners.
- The following month, Congress declared that the federal government would compensate slave owners who freed their slaves.
- In June 1862, Congress passed a Law Enacting Emancipation in the Federal Territories, and in July, passed the Second Confiscation Act, which contained provisions intended to liberate slaves held by rebels.
- The latter act also declared that any Confederate official, military or civilian, who did not surrender within 60 days of the act's passage would have his slaves freed.
-
- Many individual acts of manumission freed thousands of slaves in total.
- Outraged by the Fugitive Slave Law of 1850, Stowe emphasized the horrors of slavery.
- All importation of slaves was prohibited, but none freed at first; only the slaves of masters who failed to register them with the state, along with the future children of enslaved mothers.
- (Virginia had also attempted to do so before the Revolution, but the Privy Council had vetoed the act.)
- These northern emancipation acts typically provided that slaves born before the law was passed would be freed at a certain age, so remnants of slavery lingered.
-
- An
Act for the Gradual Abolition of Slavery, passed by the Pennsylvania
legislature on March 1, 1780, was the first attempt by a government in the
Western Hemisphere to begin the abolition of slavery.
- The Act prohibited
further importation of slaves into the state, required Pennsylvania
slaveholders to annually register their slaves (under pain of forfeiture for
noncompliance, and manumission for the enslaved), and established that all
children born in Pennsylvania were free persons regardless of the condition or
race of their parents.
- In 1847, the Pennsylvania legislature
passed another act freeing its slaves altogether.
- Though illegal under the Fugitive Slave Law of 1850,
participants such as Harriet Tubman, Henry Highland Garnet, Alexander Crummell,
Amos Noë Freeman, and others put themselves at risk to help slaves escape to freedom.
- Her book depicted the harsh conditions in which slaves lived, the danger they
were willing to place themselves in to escape, and the detrimental ways in
which the institution of slavery effected slave owners.