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{{Short description|American political compromise}} |
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[[File:United States 1849-1850.png|thumb|400px|Before the compromise: {{unordered list|[[California Gold Rush|(Gold Rush)]] California applies to become a free state |Texas claims territory as far as the [[Rio Grande]] | [[U.S. provisional government of New Mexico|New Mexico]] resists Texas, applies to become a free state.}}]] |
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{{Use American English|date = May 2021}} |
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[[File:United States 1850-1853-03.png|thumb|400px|Territorial results of the Compromise: {{unordered list|California is admitted as a free state| Texas trades some territorial claims for debt relief | [[U.S. provisional government of New Mexico|New Mexico]] becomes [[New Mexico Territory]] with slavery undecided }}]] |
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{{Use mdy dates|date = May 2021}} |
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The '''Compromise of 1850''' was a package of five separate bills passed by the [[United States Congress]] in September 1850, which defused a four-year political confrontation between [[slave and free states]] on the status of territories acquired during the [[Mexican–American War]] (1846–1848). The compromise, drafted by [[Whig Party (United States)|Whig]] Senator [[Henry Clay]] of Kentucky and brokered by Clay and Democratic Senator [[Stephen Douglas]] of Illinois, reduced sectional conflict. Controversy arose over the Fugitive Slave provision. The Compromise was greeted with relief, but each side disliked some of its specific provisions: |
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| caption1 = The United States after the ratification of the [[Treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo]], with the [[Mexican Cession]] still unorganized |
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| caption2 = The United States after the Compromise of 1850 |
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{{Events leading to American Civil War}} |
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The '''Compromise of 1850''' was a package of five separate bills passed by the [[United States Congress]] in September 1850 that temporarily defused tensions between [[slave and free states]] in the years leading up to the [[American Civil War]]. Designed by [[Whig Party (United States)|Whig]] senator [[Henry Clay]] and [[Democratic Party (United States)|Democratic]] senator [[Stephen A. Douglas]], with the support of President [[Millard Fillmore]], the compromise centered on how to handle slavery in recently acquired [[Mexican Cession|territories]] from the [[Mexican–American War]] (1846–48). |
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* [[Texas]] surrendered its claim to [[New Mexico]] as well as its claims north of [[Parallel 36°30' north|36°30']]. It retained the [[Texas Panhandle]], and the federal government took over the state's public debt. |
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* [[History of California|California]] was admitted as a free state, with its current boundaries. |
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* The South prevented adoption of the [[Wilmot Proviso]] that would have outlawed slavery in the new territories,<ref>Michael Holt, ''The Rise and Fall of the American Whig Party'' (2003) [https://books.google.com/books?id=5aGyVFn3VnMC&pg=PA252 p. 252]</ref> and the new [[Utah Territory]] and [[New Mexico Territory]] were allowed, under [[popular sovereignty]], to decide whether to allow slavery in their borders. In practice, these lands were generally unsuited to plantation agriculture, and their settlers were uninterested in slavery. |
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* The slave trade, but not slavery altogether, was banned in the [[District of Columbia]]. |
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* A more stringent [[Fugitive Slave Act of 1850|Fugitive Slave Law]] was enacted. |
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The provisions of the compromise were:<ref>{{Cite web |last=Drexler |first=Ken |title=Research Guides: Compromise of 1850: Primary Documents in American History: Introduction |url=https://guides.loc.gov/compromise-1850/introduction |access-date=2022-12-03 |website=guides.loc.gov |language=en}}</ref><ref>{{Cite web |date=2021-06-28 |title=Compromise of 1850 (1850) |url=https://www.archives.gov/milestone-documents/compromise-of-1850 |access-date=2022-12-03 |website=National Archives |language=en}}</ref> |
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The Compromise became possible after the sudden death of President [[Zachary Taylor]], who, although a slave owner, wanted to exclude slavery from the Southwest. [[Whig Party (United States)|Whig]] leader Henry Clay designed a compromise, which failed to pass in early 1850 because of opposition by both pro-slavery southern Democrats, led by [[John C. Calhoun]], and anti-slavery northern Whigs. Upon Clay's instruction, Douglas then divided Clay's bill into several smaller pieces and narrowly won their passage, over the opposition of radicals on both sides. |
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* [[An Act for the Admission of the State of California|approved California's request to enter the Union as a free state]] |
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* strengthened fugitive slave laws with the [[Fugitive Slave Act of 1850]] |
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* banned the slave trade in [[Washington, D.C.]] (while still allowing slavery itself there) |
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* defined northern and western borders for Texas while establishing a territorial government for the Territory of New Mexico, with no restrictions on whether any future state from this territory would be free or slave |
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* established a territorial government for the Territory of Utah, with no restrictions on whether any future state from this territory would be free or slave |
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A debate over slavery in the territories erupted during the [[Mexican–American War]], as many Southerners sought to expand slavery to the newly acquired lands and many Northerners opposed any such expansion. The debate was further complicated by Texas's claim to all former Mexican territory north and east of the [[Rio Grande]], including areas it had never effectively controlled. These issues prevented the passage of [[organic act]]s to create organized territorial governments for the land acquired in the Mexican–American War. In early 1850, Clay proposed a package of eight bills that would settle most of the pressing issues before Congress. Clay's proposal was opposed by President [[Zachary Taylor]], anti-slavery Whigs like [[William Seward]], and pro-slavery Democrats like [[John C. Calhoun]], and congressional debate over the territories continued. The debates over the bill are among the most famous in Congressional history, and the divisions devolved into fistfights and drawn guns on the floor of Congress. |
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==Background== |
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[[File:Missouri Compromise Line.svg|thumb|right|300px<!--Prerendered size available now - can change later-->|{{legend|#002255|Free states in early 1850}} {{legend|#d40000|Slave states (without Texas' claims to NM)}}{{legend|#cccccf|Territories (later state borders, [[Gadsden Purchase]])}} {{legend|#008800|[[Parallel 36°30' north|Missouri Compromise Line]] 36°30'}}]] |
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{{Events leading to US Civil War}} |
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Soon after the start of the [[Mexican–American War|Mexican War]], when the extent of the contested territories was still unclear, the question of whether to allow slavery in those territories polarized the [[Northern United States|Northern]] and the [[Southern United States]] in the most bitter sectional conflict until then. A state the size of Texas attracted interest from both state residents and pro-slavery and anti-slavery camps on a national scale. Texas claimed land north of the 36°30' demarcation line for slavery, set by the 1820 Missouri Compromise. |
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After Taylor died and was succeeded by Fillmore, Douglas took the lead in passing Clay's compromise through Congress as five separate bills. Under the compromise, Texas surrendered its claims to present-day [[New Mexico]] and other states in return for federal assumption of Texas's public debt. [[California]] was admitted as a free state, while the remaining portions of the Mexican Cession were organized into [[New Mexico Territory]] and [[Utah Territory]]. Under the concept of [[popular sovereignty in the United States|popular sovereignty]], the people of each territory would decide whether or not slavery would be permitted. The compromise also included a more stringent [[Fugitive Slave Act of 1850|Fugitive Slave Law]] and banned the slave trade in Washington, D.C. The issue of slavery in the territories would be re-opened by the [[Kansas–Nebraska Act]] (1854), but the Compromise of 1850 played a major role in postponing the [[American Civil War]]. |
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The [[Texas Annexation]] resolution had required that if any new states were formed out of Texas' lands, those north of the [[Missouri Compromise]] line would become free states.<ref>[https://www.pbs.org/weta/thewest/resources/archives/two/texannex.htm Joint Resolution of Congress, Mar. 1, 1845]</ref> |
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==Background== |
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According to historian Mark Stegmaier, "The Fugitive Slave Act, the abolition of the slave trade in the District of Columbia, the admission of California as a free state, and even the application of the formula of popular sovereignty to the territories were all less important than the least remembered component of the Compromise of 1850—the statute by which Texas relinquished its claims to much of New Mexico in return for federal assumption of the debts."<ref>{{Cite book|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=RDp6AAAAMAAJ|author=Mark J. Stegmaier|title=Texas, New Mexico, and the compromise of 1850: boundary dispute & sectional conflict|year=1996 | publisher=Kent State University Press}}</ref> |
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{{Further|Presidency of James K. Polk}}The [[Republic of Texas]] declared its independence from [[Mexico]] following the [[Texas Revolution]] of 1836, and, partly because Texas had been settled by a large number of Americans, there was a strong sentiment in both Texas and the United States for the annexation of Texas by the United States.<ref name=Merry120124>Merry, pp. 120–124</ref> In December 1845, President [[James K. Polk]] signed a resolution annexing Texas, and Texas became the 28th state in the union.<ref>Merry, pp. 211–212</ref> Polk, an expansionist and slave owner, sought further expansion through the acquisition of the Mexican province of [[Alta California]], which represented new lands to settle as well as a potential gateway to trade in [[Asia]].<ref>Howe, pp. 735–736</ref> His administration attempted to purchase California from Mexico,<ref>Howe, p. 734</ref> but the annexation of Texas stoked tensions between Mexico and the United States.<ref>Merry, pp. 176–177</ref> Relations between the two countries were further complicated by Texas's claim to all land north of the Rio Grande; Mexico argued that the more northern [[Nueces River]] was the proper Texan border.<ref name=Merry187>Merry, p. 187</ref> |
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In March 1846, a [[Thornton Affair|skirmish]] broke out on the northern side of the Rio Grande, ending in the death or capture of dozens of American soldiers.<ref>Merry, pp. 240–242</ref> Shortly thereafter, the United States declared war on Mexico, beginning the [[Mexican–American War]].<ref name=merry246247>Merry, pp. 246–247</ref> In August 1846, Polk asked Congress for an appropriation that he hoped to use as a down payment for the purchase of California in a treaty with Mexico, igniting a debate over the status of future territories.<ref name=merry283285>Merry, pp. 283–285</ref> A freshman Democratic Representative, [[David Wilmot]] of Pennsylvania, offered an amendment known as the [[Wilmot Proviso]] that would ban slavery in any newly acquired lands.<ref name=merry286289>Merry, pp. 286–289</ref> The Wilmot Proviso was defeated in the Senate, but it injected the slavery debate into national politics.<ref>McPherson, pp. 53–54</ref> |
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Stegmaier also refers to "the principal Southern demand for a division of California at the line of [[35th parallel north|35° north latitude]]" and says that "Southern extremists made clear that a congressionally mandated division of California figured uppermost on their agenda."<ref>Stegmaier, p. 172 and p. 177</ref> |
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In September 1847, an American army under General [[Winfield Scott]] captured the Mexican capital in the [[Battle for Mexico City]].<ref name=merry387388>Merry, pp. 387–388</ref> Several months later, Mexican and American negotiators agreed to the [[Treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo]], under which Mexico agreed to recognize the Rio Grande as Texas's southern border and to cede Alta California and [[Santa Fe de Nuevo México|New Mexico]].<ref name=merry422426>Merry, pp. 424–425</ref> The [[Missouri Compromise]] had settled the issue of the geographic reach of slavery within the [[Louisiana Purchase]] territories by prohibiting slavery in states north of 36°30′ latitude, and Polk sought to extend this line into the newly acquired territory.<ref name=merry452453>Merry, pp. 452–453</ref> However, the divisive issue of slavery blocked any such legislation. As his term came to a close, Polk signed the lone territorial bill passed by Congress, which established the [[Oregon Territory|Territory of Oregon]] and banned slavery in it.<ref>Merry, pp. 460–461</ref> Polk declined to seek re-election in the [[1848 United States presidential election|1848 presidential election]],<ref name=merry376377>Merry, pp. 376–377</ref> and the 1848 election was won by the Whig ticket of [[Zachary Taylor]] and [[Millard Fillmore]].<ref name=merry447-448>Merry, pp. 447–448</ref> |
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During the deadlock of four years, the [[Second Party System]] broke up, [[Mormon pioneers]] settled Utah, the California Gold Rush settled northern California, and New Mexico under a federal military government turned back Texas's attempt to assert control over territory Texas claimed as far west as the Rio Grande. The eventual compromise preserved the Union but only for another decade. |
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Prophetically, [[Ralph Waldo Emerson]] quipped that "Mexico will poison us", referring to the ensuing divisions around whether the newly conquered lands would be slave or free.{{Sfn|McPherson|1988|p=51}} As of the 1848 election of Taylor, the issue was not yet apparent. Taylor was both a Whig and a slaveholder; though Whigs were increasingly anti-slavery, Taylor's slaveholding had reassured the South, and he won handily. Taylor made a key electoral promise that he would not veto any congressional resolution on slavery. Much to the horror of Southerners, however, Taylor indicated that true to his promise, he would not even veto the Wilmot Proviso if it were passed. Tensions accelerated quickly into the fall of 1849. Midterm elections worsened matters, as the [[Free Soil Party]] had gained 12 seats, which gave them a king-maker position in the closely divided House: 105 Whigs to 112 Democrats. After three weeks and 62 ballots, the House could not elect a speaker; the main issue was slavery in the new territories. The tumult of that period was severe, with a loaded revolver drawn on the floor of Congress, several fistfights between Northerners and Southerners, and then Senator [[Jefferson Davis]] challenging an Illinois representative to a duel. Southern representatives increasingly bandied around the idea of secession. Finally, the House adopted a resolution that allowed a speaker to be elected with a plurality, and elected [[Howell Cobb]] on the 63rd ballot. As [[James M. McPherson|James McPherson]] puts it: "It was an inauspicious start to the 1850's."{{Sfn|McPherson|1988|pp=64–68}} |
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==Various proposals== |
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{{refimprove section|date=January 2013}} |
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Proposals in 1846 to 1850 on the division of the Southwest included the following: |
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==Issues== |
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* The '''[[Wilmot Proviso]]''' banning slavery in any new territory to be acquired from Mexico, not including Texas, which had been annexed the previous year. It passed the House in August 1846 and February 1847 but not the Senate. Later, an effort failed to attach the proviso to the [[Treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo]]. |
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Three major types of issues were addressed by the Compromise of 1850: a variety of boundary issues, the status of territory issues, and the issue of slavery. While capable of analytical distinction, the boundary and territory issues were included in the overarching issue of slavery. Pro-slavery and anti-slavery interests were each concerned with both the amount of land on which slavery was permitted and with the number of States in the slave or free camps. Since Texas was a slave state, not only the residents of that state but also both camps on a national scale had an interest in the size of Texas. |
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* The '''Extension of the Missouri Compromise line''' was proposed by failed amendments to the Wilmot Proviso by [[William W. Wick]] and then Stephen Douglas to extend the Missouri Compromise line ([[36°30' parallel north]]) west to the Pacific (south of [[Carmel-by-the-Sea, California]]) to allow the possibility of slavery in most of present-day New Mexico and Arizona, and Southern California. That line was again proposed by the [[Nashville Convention]] of June 1850. |
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* '''[[Popular sovereignty]]''', developed by [[Lewis Cass]] and Douglas as the position of the Democratic Party position, was to let each territory decide itself whether to allow slavery. |
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* [[William L. Yancey]]'s '''"Alabama Platform,"''' endorsed by the Alabama and the Georgia legislatures and by Democratic state conventions in Florida and Virginia, called for no restrictions on slavery in the territories by the federal government or territorial governments before statehood, opposition to any candidates supporting either the Wilmot Proviso or popular sovereignty, and federal legislation to overrule Mexican anti-slavery laws. |
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* '''Two free states''' were proposed by [[Zachary Taylor]], who served as President from March 1849 to July 1850. As President, he proposed that the entire area become two free states, called California and New Mexico but much larger than the ones today. None of the area would be left as an unorganized or [[organized territory]], which would avoid the question of slavery in the territories. |
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* '''Changing Texas's borders''' was proposed by Senator [[Thomas Hart Benton (senator)|Thomas Hart Benton]] in December 1849 or January 1850. Texas's western and northern boundaries would be the [[102nd meridian west]] and the [[34th parallel north]]. |
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* '''Two southern states''' were proposed by Senator [[John Bell (Tennessee politician)|John Bell]], with the assent of Texas) in February 1850. New Mexico would get all Texas land north of the 34th parallel north, including today's [[Texas Panhandle]], and the area to the south, including the southeastern part of today's New Mexico, would be divided at the [[Colorado River of Texas]] into two Southern states, balancing the admission of California and New Mexico as free states.<ref>{{Cite news|title=ADJUSTMENT OF THE TEXAS BOUNDARY IN 1850.|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=mNQ1AAAAIAAJ&pg=PA185&lpg=PA185|journal=Quarterly of the Texas State Historical Association|date=January 1904|volume=7|author=W. J. Spillman}}</ref> |
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* The '''first draft of the compromise of 1850''' had Texas's northwestern boundary be a straight, diagonal line from the Rio Grande 20 miles north of [[El Paso]] to the [[Red River of the South|Red River (Mississippi watershed)]] at the [[100th meridian west]], the southwestern corner of today's [[Oklahoma]]. |
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===Texas=== |
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===Final proposed compromise=== |
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[[File:Texas proposed boundaries.svg|thumb|upright=1.1|Among several proposals, Texas's borders were set in accordance with the [[James Pearce|Pearce]] Plan]] |
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[[File:Henry Clay Senate3.jpg|thumb|right|300px|'''"The United States Senate, A.D. 1850"''' (engraving by [[Peter F. Rothermel]]):<br />[[Henry Clay]] takes the floor of the [[Old Senate Chamber]]; Vice President [[Millard Fillmore]] presides as [[John C. Calhoun]] (to the right of the Speaker's chair) and [[Daniel Webster]] (seated to the left of Clay) look on.]] |
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On January 29, 1850, Whig Senator [[Henry Clay]] gave a speech for compromise on the issues dividing the Union. However, Clay's specific proposals for achieving a compromise, including his idea for Texas' boundary, were not adopted in a single bill.<ref>Remini, Robert. ''Henry Clay: Statesman for the Union'' (1993) pp 730–61</ref> Upon Clay's urging, Senator [[Stephen A. Douglas]], Democrat of Illinois, divided Clay's bill into several smaller bills and passed each separately. When he instructed Douglas, Clay was nearly dead and unable to guide the congressional debate any further. The Compromise came to coalesce around a plan dividing Texas at its present-day boundaries, creating territorial governments with "popular sovereignty," without the Wilmot Proviso, for New Mexico and Utah, admitting California as a free state, abolishing the slave trade in the District of Columbia, and enacting a new fugitive slave law. |
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The independent [[Republic of Texas]] won the decisive [[Battle of San Jacinto]] (April 21, 1836) against Mexico and captured Mexican president [[Antonio Lopez de Santa Anna]]. He signed the [[Treaties of Velasco]], which recognized the [[Rio Grande]] as the boundary of the Republic of Texas. The treaties were then repudiated by the government of Mexico, which insisted that Mexico remained sovereign over Texas since Santa Anna had signed the treaty under coercion, and promised to reclaim the lost territories. To the extent that there was a ''de facto'' recognition, Mexico treated the [[Nueces River]] as its northern boundary control. A vast, largely unsettled area lay between the two rivers. Neither Mexico nor the Republic of Texas had the military strength to assert its territorial claim. On December 29, 1845, the Republic of Texas was annexed to the United States and became the [[List of U.S. states by date of admission to the Union|28th state]]. To facilitate US annexation, [[Sam Houston]] played a ploy on the American government by flirting with the British. The British believed that they could make the state abolish slavery by purchasing it. However, Southern leaders, alarmed by the threat of British emancipation of Texan slaves, pushed harder for annexation. Eventually, [[John Tyler]], in hopes of appealing to southern Democrats, led the push for annexation with [[Abel P. Upshur|Abel Upshur]]. Texas was staunchly committed to slavery, with its constitution making it illegal for the legislature to free slaves. |
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The Compromise of 1850 was formally proposed by Clay and guided to passage by Douglas over Northern Whig and Southern Democrat opposition. It was enacted September 1850 with the following terms: |
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The United States inherited the Texas-Mexican boundary dispute after annexing Texas, which quickly led to the Mexican-American War. The Treaty of [[Treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo|Guadalupe Hidalgo]], which ended the war, defined the new [[Mexico–United States border]], which followed the Rio Grande in part, but made no specific reference the claims of the Republic of Texas.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.tshaonline.org/handbook/online/articles/nbc02|title=Handbook of Texas Online: Compromise of 1850|website=Tshaonline.org |access-date=2016-02-03|date=June 12, 2010}}</ref> The southwestern part of the ceded territory was referred to as the [[Mexican Cession]]; but the boundaries between this Cession and the State of Texas were unclear, and Texas continued to claim all the territory north and east of the Rio Grande, which included a large stretch of land that it had never effectively controlled in present-day eastern New Mexico. New Mexico had long prohibited slavery, a fact that affected the debate over its territorial status, but many New Mexican leaders opposed joining Texas primarily because Texas's capital lay hundreds of miles away{{sfn|Smith|1988|pp=98, 101–102}} and because Texas and New Mexico had a history of conflict dating back to the 1841 [[Texan Santa Fe Expedition|Santa Fe Expedition]].{{sfn|Bordewich|2012|pp=65–66}} Outside of Texas, many Southern leaders supported Texas's claims to New Mexico to secure as much territory as possible for the expansion of slavery.{{sfn|Bordewich|2012|p=149}} |
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# California admitted as a free state. |
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# Utah Territory and New Mexico Territory organized with slavery to be decided by popular sovereignty. |
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# Texas dropped its claim to land north of the [[32nd parallel north]] and west of the [[103rd meridian west]] in favor of New Mexico Territory, and north of the 36°30' parallel north and east of the 103rd meridian west which became [[unorganized territory]]. Texas's boundaries were set at their present form. Senator [[James Pearce]] of Maryland drafted the final proposal<ref>{{cite news |title=COMPROMISE OF 1850 |author=Texas State Historical Association |newspaper=The Handbook of Texas |date= |url=http://www.tshaonline.org/handbook/online/articles/nbc02 |accessdate=}}</ref> in which Texas ceded its claims to land which later became half of present-day [[New Mexico]], a third of [[Colorado]], and small portions of [[Kansas]], [[Oklahoma]], and [[Wyoming]] to the federal government, in return for the assumption of $10 million of the old republic's debt.<ref name="comp1850">{{Handbook of Texas|id=nbc02|name=Compromise of 1850}}</ref><ref name="CCulture">{{Handbook of Texas|id=afc03|name=Cotton Culture}}</ref> El Paso, where Texas had established county government, was left in Texas. |
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# Slave trade was abolished in the District of Columbia but not slavery itself. |
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# The [[Fugitive Slave Act]] was strengthened. |
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Another issue that would affect the compromise was Texas's debt; it had approximately $10 million in debt left over from its time as an independent nation, and that debt would become a factor in the debates over the territories.{{sfn|Smith|1988|pp=110–111}} |
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==Division of Whigs== |
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Most Northern Whigs, led by [[William Henry Seward]], who delivered his famous "Higher Law" speech during the controversy, opposed the Compromise as well because it would apply the Wilmot Proviso to the western territories and because of the pressing of ordinary citizens into duty on slave-hunting patrols. That provision was inserted by Democratic Virginia Senator [[James M. Mason]] to entice border-state Whigs, who faced the greatest danger of losing slaves as fugitives but were lukewarm on general sectional issues related to the South on Texas's land claims.<ref>John M. Taylor, ''William Henry Seward: Lincoln's right hand'' (1996) p. 85</ref> |
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===California=== |
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[[Zachary Taylor]] avoided the issue as the Whig candidate during the [[1848 US presidential election]] but then as President, he attempted to sidestep the entire controversy by pushing to admit California and New Mexico as free states immediately to avoid the entire territorial process and the Wilmot Proviso question. Taylor was one of the few Southerners to support that idea.<ref>Elbert B. Smith, ''President Zachary Taylor: the hero president'' (2007) p. 238</ref> |
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{{See also|An Act for the Admission of the State of California}} |
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[[File:Map of Mexico including Yucatan and Upper California 1847.jpg|thumb|upright=1.1|''Map of Mexico''. S. Augustus Mitchell, Philadelphia, 1847. New California is depicted with a northeastern border at the meridian leading north of the Rio Grande [[source (river or stream)|headwaters]].]] |
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California was part of the Mexican Cession. After the Mexican War, California was essentially run by military governors. President [[James K. Polk]] tried to get Congress to establish a territorial government in California officially, but the increasingly sectional debates prevented that.<ref>California and New Mexico: Message from the President of the United States. By United States. President (1849–1850 : Taylor), United States. War Dept (Ex. Doc 17 p. 1) Google eBook</ref> The South wanted to extend slave territory to [[Southern California]] and to the Pacific Coast, but the North did not. The issue of whether it would be free or slave might well have gone undecided for years, as it had already after the end of the Mexican American war, if not for the finding of natural riches.{{Sfn|McPherson|1988|pp=64–77}} |
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Northern Democrats and Southern Whigs supported the Compromise. Southern Whigs, many of whom were from the border states, supported the stronger fugitive slave law. |
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Near the end of Polk's term in 1848, incredible news reached Washington: gold had been discovered in California. So began the [[California Gold Rush]], which transformed California from a sleepy and almost forgotten land into a burgeoning hub with a population bigger than Delaware or Florida. The mostly lawless land found itself in desperate need of governance. Californians wanted to be made into a territory or state promptly.{{Sfn|McPherson|1988|pp=64–65}} In response to growing demand for a better more representative government, a [[Constitutional Convention (California)|Constitutional Convention]] was held in 1849. The delegates unanimously outlawed slavery. They had no interest in extending the Missouri Compromise Line through California and splitting the state; the lightly populated southern half never had slavery and was heavily Hispanic.<ref>William Henry Ellison. ''A self-governing dominion, California, 1849–1860'' (1950) [https://books.google.com/books?id=T8v4nWGB0T0C online]</ref> The issue of California would play a central role in the exhausting 1849 speaker dispute.{{Sfn|McPherson|1988|pp=66–68}} |
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==Debate and results== |
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[[File:US Slave Free 1789-1861.gif|right|thumb|400px|An animation showing [[slave and free states]] and territories, 1789–1861.]] |
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On April 17, a "Committee of Thirteen" agreed on the border of Texas as part of Clay's plan. The dimensions were later changed. That same day, during debates on the measures in the Senate, Vice President Fillmore and Senator Benton verbally sparred, with Fillmore charging that the Missourian was "out of order," During the heated debates, Compromise floor leader [[Henry S. Foote]] of [[Mississippi]] drew a pistol on Benton. |
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===Other issues=== |
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In early June, nine slaveholding Southern states sent delegates to the [[Nashville Convention]] to determine their course of action if the compromise passed. While some delegates preached [[secession]], the moderates ruled and proposed a series of compromises, including extending the dividing line designated by the [[Missouri Compromise]] of 1820 to the [[Pacific Coast]]. |
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Aside from the disposition of the territories, other issues had risen to prominence during the Taylor years.{{sfn|Smith|1988|pp=98–99}} The [[Slavery in the District of Columbia|Washington, D.C. slave trade]] angered many in the North, who viewed the presence of slavery in the capital as a blemish on the nation. Disputes around [[fugitive slaves]] had grown since 1830 in part due to improving means of transportation, as the enslaved used roads, railroads, and ships to escape. The [[Fugitive Slave Act of 1793]] had granted jurisdiction to all state and federal judges over cases regarding fugitive slaves, but several Northern states, dissatisfied by the lack of [[due process]] in these cases, had passed [[personal liberty laws]] that made it more difficult to return alleged fugitive slaves to the South.{{sfn|Finkelman|pp=58–62, 71}} Congress also faced the issue of [[Utah]], which like California and New Mexico, had been ceded by Mexico. Utah was inhabited largely by Latter-day Saints whose then-practice of [[Mormonism and polygamy|polygamy]] was unpopular elsewhere in the United States.{{sfn|Smith|1988|pp=97–98}} |
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==Passage== |
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The various bills were initially combined into one "omnibus" bill. Despite Clay's efforts, it failed in a crucial vote on July 31, opposed by southern Democrats and by northern Whigs. He announced on the Senate floor the next day that he intended to pass each individual part of the bill. The 73-year-old Clay, however, was physically exhausted from the effects of [[tuberculosis]], which would eventually kill him, began to take their toll. Clay left the Senate to recuperate in [[Newport, Rhode Island|Newport]], [[Rhode Island]], and [[Stephen A. Douglas]] wrote the separate bills and guided them through the Senate.<ref>Eaton (1957) pp. 192–193. Remini (1991) pp. 756–759</ref> |
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===Taylor takes office=== |
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{{Further|Presidency of Zachary Taylor}} |
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When Taylor took office, the issue of slavery in the Mexican Cession remained unresolved. While a Southern slaveowner himself, Taylor believed that slavery was economically infeasible in the Mexican Cession, and as such he opposed slavery in those territories as a needless source of controversy.<ref>[[#Eisenhower|Eisenhower]], pp. 101–102.</ref> In Taylor's view, the best way forward was to admit California as a state rather than a federal territory, as it would leave the slavery question out of Congress's hands. The timing for statehood was in Taylor's favor, as the [[Gold Rush]] was well underway at the time of his inauguration, and California's population was exploding.<ref>Bauer, pp. 290–291.</ref> In October 1849, a California constitutional convention unanimously agreed to join the Union—and to ban slavery within their borders.<ref>Bauer, pp. 291–292.</ref> In his December 1849 [[State of the Union address|State of the Union report]], Taylor endorsed California's and New Mexico's applications for statehood, and recommended that Congress approve them as written and "should abstain from the introduction of those exciting topics of a sectional character".<ref>Bauer, pp. 298–299.</ref> |
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The situation had been changed by the sudden death of Taylor and the accession of Vice President [[Millard Fillmore]] to the presidency, on July 9, 1850. Fillmore, anxious to find a quick solution to the conflict in Texas over the border with New Mexico, which threatened to become armed conflict between Texas militia and the federal soldiers, reversed the administration's position late in July and threw its support to the compromise measures.<ref>Michael Holt, ''The Rise and Fall of the American Whig Party'' (1999), pp. 529–530: "only rapid passage of the omnibus bill appeared to offer a timely escape from the crisis."</ref> The Northern Democrats held together and supported each of the bills and gained enough Whigs or Southern Democrats to pass all of them. They were signed by Fillmore between September 9 and September 20, 1850. |
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=== Main figures === |
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# California was admitted as a free state. It passed the House 150–56.<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.govtrack.us/congress/votes/31-1/h363 |title=TO PASS S. 169. (P.1772-1). |website=GovTrack.us |date=2014-11-08 |accessdate=2016-02-03}}</ref><ref>Holman Hamilton, ''Prologue to Conflict'' (University of Kentucky Press, 1965), p. 160</ref> It passed the Senate 34–18.<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.govtrack.us/congress/votes/31-1/s230 |title=ON PASSAGE S. 169. |website=GovTrack.us |date=2014-11-08 |accessdate=2016-02-03}}</ref> |
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[[File:Henry Clay Senate3.jpg|thumb|upright=1.1|''The United States Senate, A.D. 1850'' (engraving by [[Peter F. Rothermel]]):<br />[[Henry Clay]] takes the floor of the [[Old Senate Chamber]]; Vice President [[Millard Fillmore]] presides as [[John C. Calhoun]] (to the right of Fillmore's chair) and [[Daniel Webster]] (seated to the left of Clay) look on.]]The problem of what to do with the territories became the leading issue in Congress. So began the most famous debates in the history of Congress. At the head were the three titans of Congress: Henry Clay, [[Daniel Webster]], and [[John C. Calhoun]]. All had been born during the American Revolution, and had carried the torch of the [[Founding Fathers of the United States|Founding Fathers]]. This represented their last and greatest act in politics. The nationalist Clay and Webster sought compromise, while Southern sectionalist Calhoun warned of imminent disaster. The triumvirate would be broken before long as Calhoun would die of [[tuberculosis]]. In March, shortly before his death, his final speech was delivered by his friend the Virginia Senator [[James M. Mason]], as the blanket-wrapped Calhoun sat nearby, too weak to do it himself. He provided a prescient warning that the South perceived the balance between North and South as broken, and that any further imbalance might lead to war. The situation was severe.{{Sfn|McPherson|1988|pp=70–72}} |
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# The slave ''trade'' was abolished (the sale of slaves, not the institution of slavery) in the [[District of Columbia]]. |
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# The [[Territory of Utah]] was organized under the rule of [[popular sovereignty]]. It passed the House 97–85.<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.govtrack.us/congress/votes/31-1/h364 |title=TO PASS S. 225 (9 STAT. 453, APP. 9/9/1850), AN ACT TO ESTABLISH A TERRITORIAL GOVERNMENT FOR UTAH. (P.1776-1). |website=GovTrack.us |date=2014-11-08 |accessdate=2016-02-03}}</ref> |
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# The [[Territory of New Mexico]] was organized under the rule of [[popular sovereignty]]. It passed the House 108–97.<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.govtrack.us/congress/votes/31-1/h357 |title=TO PASS S. 307. (P.1764-3). |website=GovTrack.us |date=2014-11-08 |accessdate=2016-02-03}}</ref> It passed the Senate 30–20.<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.govtrack.us/congress/votes/31-1/s222 |title=ON PASSAGE OF THE BILL S. 307. (P. 1555-3). |website=GovTrack.us |date=2014-11-08 |accessdate=2016-02-03}}</ref> |
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# A harsher [[Fugitive Slave Act of 1850|Fugitive Slave Act]] was passed by the Senate 27–12,<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.govtrack.us/congress/votes/31-1/s246 |title=ON ORDERING ENGROSSMENT AND 3RD READING OF THE BILL S. 23. (P. 1630-2). |website=GovTrack.us |date=2014-11-08 |accessdate=2016-02-03}}</ref> and by the House 109–76.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.govtrack.us/congress/votes/31-1/h377 |title=TO PASS S. 23. (P.1817-1). |website=GovTrack.us |date=2014-11-08 |accessdate=2016-02-03}}</ref> |
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# Texas gave up much of the western land it claimed and received compensation of $10,000,000 to pay off its national debt. |
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Other players included a variety of rising politicians who would play key roles in the Civil War, such as the staunch anti-slavery [[William H. Seward]] and [[Salmon P. Chase]], who would be in Lincoln's cabinet; the future president of the [[Confederate States of America|Confederacy]], [[Jefferson Davis]]; and rival to Abraham Lincoln, [[Stephen A. Douglas]].{{Sfn|McPherson|1988|pp=70–72}} |
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Clay was still given much of the credit for success. It quieted the controversy between Northerners and Southerners over the expansion of slavery and delayed secession and civil war for another decade. Senator Henry S. Foote of Mississippi, who had suggested the creation of the Committee of Thirteen, later said, "Had there been one such man in the Congress of the United States as Henry Clay in 1860–'61 there would, I feel sure, have been no civil war."<ref>Remini (1991) pp. 761–62</ref> |
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===Clay proposes compromise=== |
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==Implications== |
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{{multiple image |
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[[File:Map of Free and Slave States.jpg|thumb|300px|Map of free and slave states {{circa|1856}}]] |
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The Compromise proved widely popular politically, and both parties committed themselves in their platforms to the finality of the Compromise on sectional issues. The strongest opposition in the South occurred in the states of South Carolina, Georgia, Alabama, and Mississippi, but Unionists soon prevailed, spearheaded by Georgians [[Alexander Stephens]], [[Robert Toombs]], and [[Howell Cobb]] and the creation of the [[Georgia Platform]]. The peace was broken only by the divisive [[Kansas–Nebraska Act]] of 1854 introduced by Stephen Douglas, which had the effect of repealing the Missouri Compromise and led directly to the formation of the [[History of the United States Republican Party|Republican Party]], whose capture of the national government in 1860 led directly to the secession crisis of 1860–1861. |
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| footer = Original proposals submitted by [[Henry Clay|Clay]] in January 1850 |
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}} |
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On January 29, 1850, Senator Henry Clay introduced a plan which combined the major subjects under discussion. His legislative package of eight bills included the admission of California as a free state, the [[State cessions|cession]] by Texas of some of its northern and western territorial claims in return for debt relief, the establishment of [[New Mexican Territory|New Mexico]] and [[Utah Territory|Utah]] territories, a ban on the importation of slaves into the District of Columbia for sale, and a more stringent fugitive slave law.{{sfn|Smith|1988|pp=111–112}}{{Sfn|McPherson|1988|pp=70–72}} Clay had originally favored voting on each of his proposals separately, but Senator [[Henry S. Foote]] of Mississippi convinced him to combine the proposals regarding California's admission and the disposition of Texas's borders into one bill.{{sfn|Smith|1988|pp=132–139}} Clay hoped that this combination of measures would convince House members from both North and South to support the overall package of laws even if they objected to specific provisions.{{sfn|McPherson|1988|p=74}} Clay's proposal attracted the support of some Northern Democrats and Southern Whigs, but it lacked the backing necessary to win passage, and debate over the bill continued.{{sfn|McPherson|1988|p=74}} Seven months of agonizing politicking lay ahead.{{Sfn|McPherson|1988|pp=70–72}} |
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===Opposition=== |
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Many historians argue that the Compromise played a major role in postponing the American Civil War for a decade, while the Northwest was growing more wealthy and more populous and was being brought into closer relations with the Northeast.<ref>Robert Remini,''The House: A History of the House of Representatives'' (2006) p. 147</ref> During that decade, the Whig Party had completely broken down, to be replaced with the new Republican Party dominant in the North and the Democrats in the South.<ref>Holt, Michael F. ''The Political Crisis of the 1850s'' (1978).</ref> Others argue that the Compromise only made more obvious the pre-existing sectional divisions and laid the groundwork for future conflict. They view the Fugitive Slave Law ad helping to polarize the US, as shown in the enormous reaction to [[Harriet Beecher Stowe]]'s novel ''[[Uncle Tom's Cabin]]''. The passage of the Fugitive Slave Law aroused feelings of bitterness in the North. Furthermore, the Compromise of 1850 led to a breakdown in the spirit of compromise in the United States in the antebellum period, directly before the Civil War. The Compromise exemplifies that spirit, but the deaths of influential senators who worked on the compromise, primarily Henry Clay and [[Daniel Webster]], contributed to the feeling of increasing disparity between the North and South. |
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President Taylor opposed the compromise and continued to call for immediate statehood for both California and New Mexico.{{sfn|McPherson|1988|p=74}} Senator Calhoun and some other Southern leaders argued that the compromise was biased against the South because it would lead to the creation of new free states.{{sfn|Smith|1988|pp=112–113, 117}} Most Northern Whigs, led by [[William Henry Seward]], who delivered his famous "Higher Law" speech during the controversy, opposed the Compromise as well because it would apply the Wilmot Proviso to the western territories and because of the pressing of ordinary citizens into duty on slave-hunting patrols. That provision was inserted by Democratic Virginia Senator [[James M. Mason]] to entice border-state Whigs, who faced the greatest danger of losing slaves as fugitives but were lukewarm on general sectional issues related to the South on Texas's land claims.<ref>John M. Taylor, ''William Henry Seward: Lincoln's right hand'' (1996) p. 85</ref> |
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===Debate and results=== |
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The delay of hostilities for ten years allowed the free economy of the northern states to continue to industrialize. The southern states, largely based on slave labor and cash crop production, lacked the ability to industrialize heavily.<ref>Elizabeth Fox-Genovese, ''Fruits of Merchant Capital'' (1983).</ref> By 1860, the northern states had added many more miles of railroad, steel production, modern factories, and population to the advantages already possessed in 1850. The North was better able to supply, equip, and man its armed forces, which would prove decisive in the later stages of the war. |
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[[File:US Slave Free 1789-1861.gif|thumb|upright=1.1|An animation showing [[slave and free states]] and territories, 1789–1861]] |
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On April 17, a "Committee of Thirteen" agreed on the border of Texas as part of Clay's plan. The dimensions were later changed. That same day, during debates on the measures in the Senate, Vice President Fillmore and Senator Benton verbally sparred, with Fillmore charging that the Missourian was "out of order." During the heated debates, Compromise floor leader [[Henry S. Foote]] of [[Mississippi]] drew a pistol on Benton. |
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==Issues== |
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Three major types of issues were addressed by the Compromise of 1850: a variety of boundary issues, the status of territory issues, and the issue of slavery. While capable of analytical distinction, the boundary and territory issues were actually included in the overarching issue of slavery. Pro-slavery and anti-slavery interests were each concerned with both the amount of land on which slavery was permitted and with the number of States in the slave or free camps. Since Texas was a slave state, not only the residents of that state but also both camps on a national scale had an interest in the size of Texas. |
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In early June, nine slave-holding Southern states sent delegates to the [[Nashville Convention]] to determine their course of action if the compromise passed. While some delegates preached [[secession]], the moderates ruled and proposed a series of compromises, including extending the dividing line designated by the [[Missouri Compromise]] of 1820 to the [[West Coast of the United States|Pacific Coast]]. |
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The general solution that was adopted by the Compromise of 1850 was to transfer a considerable part of the territory claimed by the state to the federal government; to organize two new territories formally, the Territory of New Mexico and the Territory of Utah, which expressly would be allowed to locally determine whether they would become slave or free territories( to add another free state to the Union (California), to adopt a severe measure to recover slaves who had escaped to a free state or free territory (the Fugitive Slave Law); and to abolish the slave trade in the District of Columbia. |
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Taylor died in July 1850, and was succeeded by Vice President Fillmore, who had privately come to support Clay's proposal.{{sfn|Smith|1988|pp=158, 165–166}} The various bills were initially combined into one "omnibus" bill. Despite Clay's efforts, it failed in a crucial vote on July 31, opposed by southern Democrats and by northern Whigs. He announced on the Senate floor the next day that he intended to pass each part of the bill. The 73-year-old Clay, however, was physically exhausted as the effects of [[tuberculosis]], which would eventually kill him, began to take their toll. Clay left the Senate to recuperate in [[Newport, Rhode Island|Newport]], [[Rhode Island]], and Senator [[Stephen A. Douglas]] took the lead in attempting to pass Clay's proposals through the Senate.<ref>Eaton (1957) pp. 192–193. Remini (1991) pp. 756–759</ref> |
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[[File:Texas proposed boundaries.svg|thumb|right|250px|Proposals for Texas northwestern boundary]] |
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Fillmore, anxious to find a quick solution to the conflict in Texas over the border with New Mexico, which threatened to become an armed conflict between Texas militia and the federal soldiers, reversed the administration's position late in July and threw its support to the compromise measures.<ref>Michael Holt, ''The Rise and Fall of the American Whig Party'' (1999), pp. 529–530: "only rapid passage of the omnibus bill appeared to offer a timely escape from the crisis."</ref> At the same time, Fillmore denied Texas's claims to New Mexico, asserting that the United States had promised to protect the territorial integrity of New Mexico in the Treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo.{{sfn|Smith|1988|pp=181–184}} Fillmore's forceful response helped convince Texas's U.S. Senators, [[Sam Houston]] and [[Thomas Jefferson Rusk]], to support Stephen Douglas's compromise. With their support, a Senate bill providing for a final settlement of Texas's borders won passage days after Fillmore delivered his message. Under the terms of the bill, the U.S. would assume Texas's debts, while Texas's northern border was set at the 36° 30' parallel north (the Missouri Compromise line) and much of its western border followed the 103rd meridian. The bill attracted the support of a bipartisan coalition of Whigs and Democrats from both sections, though most opposition to the bill came from the South.{{sfn|Bordewich|2012|pp=306–313}} The Senate quickly moved on to the other major issues, passing bills that provided for the admission of California, the organization of New Mexico Territory, and the establishment of a new fugitive slave law.{{sfn|Bordewich|2012|pp=314–316, 329}} |
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===Texas=== |
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The independent [[Republic of Texas]] won the decisive [[Battle of San Jacinto]] (April 21, 1836) against Mexico and captured Mexican president [[Antonio Lopez de Santa Anna]]. He signed the [[Treaties of Velasco]], which recognized the [[Rio Grande]] as the boundary of the Republic of Texas. The treaties were then repudiated by the government of Mexico, which insisted that it was sovereign over Texas and promised to reclaim the lost territories. To the extent that there was a ''de facto'' recognition, Mexico treated the [[Nueces River]] as its northern boundary control. A huge, largely-unsettled area was between the two rivers. Neither Mexico nor the Republic of Texas had the military strength to assert its territorial claim. On December 29, 1845, the Republic of Texas was annexed to the United States and became the [[List of U.S. states by date of admission to the Union|28th state]]. Texas was staunchly committed to slavery, with its constitution making illegal for the legislature to free slaves. With the annexation, the United States inherited the territorial claims of the former Republic of Texas against Mexico. The territorial claim to the area between the Nueces River and the Rio Grande and Mexican resistance to it both led to the [[Mexican–American War]]. On February 2, 1848, the war was concluded by the [[Treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo]]. |
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The debate then moved to the House of Representatives, where Fillmore, Senator Daniel Webster, Douglas, Representative [[Linn Boyd]], and Speaker of the House [[Howell Cobb]] took the lead in convincing members to support the compromise bills that had been passed in the Senate.{{sfn|Bordewich|2012|pp=333–334}} The Senate's proposed settlement of the Texas-New Mexico boundary faced intense opposition from many Southerners, as well as from some Northerners who believed that Texas did not deserve monetary compensation. After a series of close votes that nearly delayed consideration of the issue, the House voted to approve a Texas bill similar to that which had been passed by the Senate.{{sfn|Smith|1988|pp=186–188}} Following that vote, the House and the Senate quickly agreed on each of the major issues, including the banning of the slave trade in Washington.{{sfn|Smith|1988|pp=188–189}} The president quickly signed each bill into law save for the [[Fugitive Slave Act of 1850]]; he ultimately signed that law as well after Attorney General Crittenden assured him that the law was constitutional.{{Citation needed|date=November 2022}} Though some in Texas still favored sending a military expedition into New Mexico, in November 1850 the state legislature voted to accept the compromise.{{sfn|Bordewich|2012|pp=347–348, 359–360}} |
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Among its provisos was the recognition by Mexico of the area between the Nueces River and the Rio Grande as part of the United States. |
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==Provisions== |
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The Republic of Texas had claimed ownership of the eastern half of present-day New Mexico, along with sections of Colorado, Kansas and Wyoming, but Texas had never effectively controlled the area, which was dominated by hostile Indian tribes (see [[Comancheria]]). However, the federal government now controlled the area after 1846. The Compromise of 1850 solved the problem by setting the present boundaries of Texas, in return for $10 million in federal bonds paid to the State of Texas.<ref>Mark J. Stegmaier, ''Texas, New Mexico, and the Compromise of 1850: Boundary Dispute and Sectional Crisis'' (1998)</ref> |
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The general solution that was adopted by the Compromise of 1850 was to transfer a considerable part of the territory claimed by Texas state to the federal government; to organize two new territories formally, the [[Territory of New Mexico]] and the [[Territory of Utah]], which expressly would be allowed to locally determine whether they would become slave or free territories, to add another free state to the Union (California), to adopt a severe measure to recover slaves who had escaped to a free state or free territory (the Fugitive Slave Law); and to abolish the [[Slavery in the District of Columbia|slave trade in the District of Columbia]]. A key provision of each of the laws respectively organizing the Territory of New Mexico and the Territory of Utah was that slavery would be decided by local option, called [[popular sovereignty]]. That was an important repudiation of the idea behind the failure to prohibit slavery in any territory acquired from Mexico. However, the admission of California as a free state meant that Southerners were giving up their goal of a coast-to-coast belt of slave states.<ref>Not all southerners gave up on the idea. After California's admission, there were several [[Partition and secession in California#Post-statehood|efforts to divide the state]]. At least one of these enjoyed significant support from southern members of Congress, but the Civil War prevented action on it.</ref> |
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===Settlement of borders=== |
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The state was heavily burdened with debt, which had been contracted during its struggles as the Republic of Texas. The federal government agreed to pay $10 million of bonds in return for the transfer of a large portion of the claimed area of the state to the territory of the federal government and for the relinquishment of various claims of Texas had on the federal government. (The bonds bore interest at the rate of 5%, which interest was collectible by Texas every six months, and the principal was redeemable at the end of fourteen years.)<ref>{{cite journal |title=Texas Bonds and Northern Profits: A Study in Compromise, Investment, and Lobby Influence |last=Hamilton |first=Holman |journal=[[The Mississippi Valley Historical Review]] |publisher=[[Organization of American Historians]] |issn=0161-391X |volume=43 |issue=4 |year=1957 |pages=579–94 |doi=10.2307/1902274 |jstor=1902274 |via=[[JSTOR]]|registration=y}}</ref> |
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[[File:New Mexico Territory, 1852.png|thumb|upright=1.1|Map of [[New Mexico Territory]] in 1852]] |
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[[File:Utah Territory with Deseret Border, vector image - 2011.svg|thumb|upright=1.1|The Utah Territory is shown in blue and outlined in black. The boundaries of the provisional [[State of Deseret]] are shown with a dotted line.]] |
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The Constitution (Article IV, Section 3) does not permit Congress unilaterally to reduce the territory of any state so the first part of the Compromise of 1850 had to take the form of an offer to the Texas State Legislature, rather than a unilateral enactment |
Texas was allowed to keep the following portions of the disputed land: south of the [[32nd parallel north|32nd parallel]] and south of the [[36°30' parallel north]] and east of the [[103rd meridian west]]. The rest of the disputed land was transferred to the United States. The final border was designed to keep the frontier settlement of [[El Paso]] in Texas, since despite that settlement's geographic, historic, and economic ties to New Mexico, Texas had recently established a county government in El Paso and thus successfully claimed it as an integral part of Texas. A similar attempt to keep [[Santa Fe, New Mexico|Santa Fe]] in Texas failed, and Santa Fe became part of the New Mexico territory.<ref name="elpaso117125">''El Paso, A Borderlands History'', by W.H. Timmons, pp. 117–125</ref> The United States Constitution (Article IV, Section 3) does not permit Congress unilaterally to reduce the territory of any state, so the first part of the Compromise of 1850 had to take the form of an offer to the [[Texas State Legislature]], rather than a unilateral enactment. This ratified the bargain and, in due course, the transfer of a broad swath of land from the state of Texas to the federal government was accomplished. In return for Texas's giving up this land, the United States assumed the debts of Texas. |
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From the Mexican Cession, the New Mexico Territory received most of the present-day state of Arizona, most of the western part of the present-day state of New Mexico, and the southern tip of present-day Nevada (south of the [[37th parallel north|37th parallel]]). The territory also received most of present-day eastern New Mexico, a portion of present-day Colorado (east of the crest of the [[Rocky Mountains]], west of the 103rd meridian, and south of the [[38th parallel north|38th parallel]]); all of this land had been claimed by Texas. |
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Texas was allowed to keep the following portions of the disputed land: south of the [[32nd parallel north|32nd parallel]] and south of the [[36°30' parallel north]] and east of the [[103rd meridian west]]. The rest of the disputed land was transferred to the Federal Government. |
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From the Mexican Cession, the Utah Territory received present-day Utah, most of present-day Nevada (everything north of the 37th parallel), a major part of present-day Colorado (everything west of the crest of the Rocky Mountains), and a small part of present-day Wyoming. That included the newly founded colony at [[Salt Lake City|Salt Lake]], of [[Brigham Young]]. The Utah Territory also received some land that had been claimed by Texas; this land is now part of present-day Colorado that is east of the crest of the Rocky Mountains. |
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===New Mexico and Utah Territories=== |
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[[File:Boundaries of State of New Mexico proposed in 1850.png|thumb|right|250px|[[New Mexico]] proposed boundary before Compromise of 1850]] |
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[[File:Utah Territory with Deseret Border, vector image - 2011.svg|thumbnail|right|250px|The Utah Territory is shown in blue and outlined in black. The boundaries of the provisional [[State of Deseret]] are shown with a dotted line.]] |
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The first law of the Compromise of 1850 also organized the [[Territory of New Mexico]]. The second law, also enacted September 9, 1850, organized the [[Territory of Utah]]. |
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===Fugitive Slave Act=== |
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Some of the land had been claimed by the Republic of Texas. The Treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo made no mention of the claims of the Republic of Texas; Mexico simply agreed to a [[Mexico-U.S. border]] south of both the "Mexican Cession" and the Republic of Texas claims.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.tshaonline.org/handbook/online/articles/nbc02|title=Handbook of Texas Online: Compromise of 1850|website=Tshaonline.org|accessdate=2016-02-03}}</ref> Before the Compromise of 1850, the disputed land had been claimed but never controlled by the state of Texas. Of importance in 1850 was land included in present-day eastern New Mexico. |
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{{main|Fugitive Slave Act of 1850}} |
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Perhaps the most important part of the Compromise received the least attention during debates. Enacted September 18, 1850, it is informally known as the Fugitive Slave Law, or the [[Fugitive Slave Act of 1850|Fugitive Slave Act]]. It bolstered the [[Fugitive Slave Act of 1793]]. The new version of the Fugitive Slave Law now required federal judicial officials in all states and federal territories, including free states, to assist with the return of escaped slaves to their masters in slave states. Any [[US Marshals Service|federal marshal]] or other official who did not arrest an alleged runaway slave was liable to a fine of $1,000 ({{inflation|US|1,000|1850|fmt=eq}}). Law enforcement everywhere in the US now had a duty to arrest anyone suspected of being a [[fugitive slave]] on no more evidence than a claimant's sworn testimony of ownership. Suspected slaves could neither ask for a jury trial nor testify on their own behalf. Also, aiding a runaway slave by providing food or shelter was now a crime nationwide, punished by six months' imprisonment and a $1,000 fine. Officers capturing a fugitive slave were entitled to a fee for their work, and this expense was to be paid by the Federal Government.{{Sfn|McPherson|1988|pp=77–81}} |
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The law was so completely pro-slavery as to prohibit the admission of the testimony of a person accused of being an escaped slave into evidence at the judicial hearing to determine the status of the accused escaped slave. Thus, if free Blacks were claimed to be escaped slaves, they could not resist their return to slavery (or enslavement for the first time) by truthfully telling their actual history. Furthermore, the federal commissioners overseeing the hearings were paid $5 for ruling that a person was free, but were paid $10 for determining that he or she was a slave, thus providing a financial incentive to rule in favor of slavery regardless of the evidence.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://socialwelfare.library.vcu.edu/federal/fugitive-slave-act-of-1850/|title = Fugitive Slave Act of 1850|date = December 26, 2015}}</ref> The law further exacerbated the problem of free Blacks being kidnapped and sold as slaves.{{Sfn|McPherson|1988|pp=81–82}} |
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From the Mexican Cession, the New Mexico Territory received most of the present-day state of Arizona, most of the western part of the present-day state of New Mexico, and the southern tip of present-day Nevada (south of the [[37th parallel north|37th parallel]]). From Texas, the territory received most of present-day eastern New Mexico, a portion of present-day Colorado (east of the crest of the [[Rocky Mountains]], west of the 103rd meridian, and south of the [[38th parallel north|38th parallel]]). |
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The Fugitive Slave Act was essential to meet Southern demands. In terms of public opinion in the North, the critical provision was that ordinary citizens were required to aid slave catchers and that it was a crime to assist a fugitive. Many Northerners deeply resented these provisions. The violent process of returning slaves to the South made the act abhorrent to many Northerners.<ref>{{Cite web |title=Compromise of 1850 |url=https://www.history.com/topics/slavery/compromise-of-1850 |access-date=2023-01-10 |website=History.com |language=en}}</ref> Resentment towards the Act further heightened tensions between the North and South, which were then inflamed further by [[abolitionism in the United States|abolitionists]] such as [[Harriet Beecher Stowe]]. Her novel, ''[[Uncle Tom's Cabin]]'', stressed the horrors of recapturing escaped slaves and outraged Southerners.<ref>Larry Gara, "The Fugitive Slave Law: A Double Paradox," ''Civil War History'', September 1964, vol. 10#3, pp. 229–240</ref> |
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From the Mexican Cession, the Utah Territory received present-day Utah, most of present-day Nevada (everything north of the 37th parallel), a major part of present-day Colorado (everything west of the crest of the Rocky Mountains), and a small part of present-day Wyoming. That included the newly founded colony at [[Salt Lake City|Salt Lake]], of [[Brigham Young]]. From Texas, the Utah Territory received most of present-day eastern New Mexico and some of present-day Colorado that is east of the crest of the Rocky Mountains. |
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===End of slave trade in District of Columbia=== |
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A key provision of each of the laws respectively organizing the Territory of New Mexico and the Territory of Utah was that slavery would be decuded by local option, called popular sovereignty. That was an important repudiation of the idea behind the failed to prohibit slavery in any territory acquired from Mexico. |
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A statute enacted as part of the compromise prohibited [[Slavery in the District of Columbia|the slave trade in Washington, D.C.]], but not slave ownership.<ref>David L. Lewis, ''District of Columbia: A Bicentennial History'', (W.W. Norton, 1976), 54–56.</ref> Southerners in Congress, alarmed and outraged,<ref>{{citation |
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|title=Border War |
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|series=War and Reconstruction. The Mid-Missouri Civil War Project |
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|year=2010 |
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|publisher=[[University of Missouri School of Law]] |
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|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20100615053551/http://law.missouri.edu/bowman/hatts/john_brown/border_war_1.html |
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|archive-date=June 15, 2010 |
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|url-status=dead |
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|url=http://law.missouri.edu/bowman/hatts/john_brown/border_war_1.html}}</ref> were unanimous in opposing the provision, seen as a concession to the [[Abolitionism in the United States|abolitionists]] and a bad precedent, but they were outvoted.<ref>Damani Davis, "Slavery and Emancipation in the Nation's Capital," ''Prologue'', Spring 2010, vol. 42#1, pp. 52–59</ref> However, Washington's residents could still easily buy and sell slaves in the nearby states of Virginia and Maryland. |
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== |
==Implications== |
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{{see also|Presidency of Franklin Pierce|Origins of the American Civil War}} |
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[[File:Map of Mexico including Yucatan and Upper California 1847.jpg|thumb|left|300px|''Map of Mexico''. S. Augustus Mitchell, Philadelphia, 1847. New California is depicted with a northeastern border at the meridian leading north of the Rio Grande [[source (river or stream)|headwaters]].]] |
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[[File:Map of Free and Slave States.jpg|thumb|upright=1.1|Map of free and slave states {{circa|1856}}]] |
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California was part the Mexican Cession. After the Mexican War, California was essentially run by military governors. President [[James K. Polk]] tried to get Congress to establish a territorial government in California officially, but the increasingly-sectional debates prevented that.<ref>California and New Mexico: Message from the President of the United States. By United States. President (1849–1850 : Taylor), United States. War Dept (Ex. Doc 17 page 1) Google eBook</ref> The South wanted to extend slave territory to [[Southern California]] and to the Pacific Coast, but the North did not. |
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Passage of the Compromise of 1850, as it came to be known, caused celebration in Washington and elsewhere, with crowds shouting, "The Union is saved!" Fillmore himself described the Compromise of 1850 as a "final settlement" of sectional issues, though the future of slavery in New Mexico and Utah remained unclear.{{sfn|McPherson|1988|pp=75–76}} The admission of new states, or the organization of territories in the remaining unorganized portion of the Louisiana Purchase, could also potentially reopen the polarizing debate over slavery.{{sfn|McPherson|1988|pp=121–123}}{{sfn|Smith|1988|p=248}} |
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Not all accepted the Compromise of 1850. Longing for the former national influence of the South, a South Carolina newspaper wrote, "the [[Crossing the Rubicon|Rubicon is passed]] ... and the Southern States are now [[vassal state|vassals]] in this Confederacy."{{sfn|Smith|1988|pp=193–194}} (This was not referring to the then-future [[Confederate States of America]]; many still considered the [[United States]] a [[confederation|confederacy]] at the time.) Many Northerners, meanwhile, were displeased by the Fugitive Slave Act.{{sfn|Smith|1988|p=201}} The debate over slavery in the territories would be re-opened in 1854 through the [[Kansas–Nebraska Act]]. It continued throughout the late 1850s, which culminated in one of the more well-known debates over slavery, the Lincoln-Douglas debates. |
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From late 1848, Americans and foreigners of many different countries rushed into California for the [[California Gold Rush]], exponentially increasing the population. In response to growing demand for a better more representative government, a [[Constitutional Convention (California)|Constitutional Convention]] was held in 1849. The delegates unanimously outlawed slavery. They had no interest in extending the Missouri Compromise Line through California and splitting the state; the lightly-populated southern half never had slavery and was heavily Hispanic.<ref>William Henry Ellison. ''A self-governing dominion, California, 1849–1860'' (1950) [https://books.google.com/books?id=T8v4nWGB0T0C online]</ref> |
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In hindsight, the Compromise merely postponed the American Civil War for a decade, contrary to the expectations of many at the time, who felt the issue of slavery had finally been settled.<ref>Robert Remini,''The House: A History of the House of Representatives'' (2006) p. 147</ref>{{Sfn|McPherson|1988|p=72-77}} During that decade, the [[Whig Party (United States)|Whig Party]] completely broke down, to be replaced with the new [[Republican Party (United States)|Republican Party]] dominant in the North, while Democrats reigned in the South.<ref>Holt, Michael F. ''The Political Crisis of the 1850s'' (1978).</ref> |
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The third statute of the Compromise of 1850 allowed California to be admitted to the Union, undivided, as a free state on September 9, 1850.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://memory.loc.gov/cgi-bin/ampage?collId=llsl&fileName=009/llsl009.db&recNum=479 |title=A Century of Lawmaking for a New Nation: U.S. Congressional Documents and Debates, 1774 - 1875 |website=Memory.loc.gov |date= |accessdate=2016-02-03}}</ref> |
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Others{{who|date=August 2021}} argue that the Compromise only made more obvious the pre-existing sectional divisions, and laid the groundwork for future conflict. They view the Fugitive Slave Law as helping to polarize the US, as shown in the enormous reaction to [[Harriet Beecher Stowe]]'s novel ''[[Uncle Tom's Cabin]]''. The passage of the Fugitive Slave Law aroused feelings of bitterness in the North. Furthermore, the Compromise of 1850 led to a breakdown in the spirit of compromise in the [[Antebellum period]]. The Compromise exemplifies that spirit,{{which|date=August 2021}} but the deaths of influential senators who worked on the compromise, primarily Henry Clay and [[Daniel Webster]], contributed to the feeling of increasing disparity between the North and South.{{Citation needed|date=June 2021}} |
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===Fugitive Slave Law=== |
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The fourth statute of the Compromise of 1850, enacted September 18, 1850, is informally known as the Fugitive Slave Law, or the Fugitive Slave Act. It bolstered the [[Fugitive Slave Act of 1793]]. The new version of the Fugitive Slave Law required federal judicial officials in all states and federal territories, including in those states and territories in which slavery was prohibited, to assist with the return of escaped slaves to their masters actively in the states and territories permitting slavery. Any [[US Marshals Service|federal marshal]] or other official who did not arrest an alleged runaway slave was liable to a fine of $1000. Law enforcement everywhere in the US had a duty to arrest anyone suspected of being a [[fugitive slave]] on no more evidence than a claimant's sworn testimony of ownership. Suspected slaves could neither ask for a jury trial nor testify on their own behalf. In addition, any person aiding a runaway slave by providing food or shelter was to be subject to six months' imprisonment and a $1000 fine. Officers capturing a fugitive slave were entitled to a fee for their work. |
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The delay of hostilities for ten years allowed the Northern states to continue to industrialize. The Southern states, largely based on slave labor and cash crop production, lacked the ability to industrialize heavily.<ref>{{cite book |last1=Fox-Genovese |first1=Elizabeth |last2=Genovese |first2=Eugene D. |title=Fruits of Merchant Capital: Slavery and Bourgeois Property in the Rise and Expansion of Capitalism |date=1983 |publisher=Oxford Univ. Press |location=New York |isbn=0-19-503157-1 |url=https://archive.org/details/fruitsofmerchant00foxg/ |url-access=registration}}</ref>{{page needed|date=August 2021}} |
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In addition to federal officials, the ordinary citizens of free states could be summoned to join a posse and be required to assist in the capture, custody, and/or transportation of the alleged escaped slave. |
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According to historian Mark Stegmaier, "The Fugitive Slave Act, the abolition of the slave trade in the District of Columbia, the admission of California as a free state, and even the application of the formula of popular sovereignty to the territories were all less important than the least remembered component of the Compromise of 1850—the statute by which Texas relinquished its claims to much of New Mexico in return for federal assumption of the debts."{{explain|date=August 2021}}<ref>{{Cite book|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=RDp6AAAAMAAJ|author=Mark J. Stegmaier|title=Texas, New Mexico, and the compromise of 1850: boundary dispute & sectional conflict|year=1996 | publisher=Kent State University Press|isbn=9780873385299}}</ref>{{page needed|date=August 2021}} |
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The law was so rigorously pro-slavery as to prohibit the admission of the testimony of a person accused of being an escaped slave into evidence at the judicial hearing to determine the status of the accused escaped slave. Thus, iffreedmen were claimed to be an escaped slave, they could not resist their return to slavery by truthfully telling their own actual history. |
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==Other proposals== |
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The Fugitive Slave Act was essential to meet Southern demands. In terms of public opinion in the North, the critical provision was that ordinary citizens were required to aid slave catchers. Many northerners deeply resented that requirement to help slavery personally. Resentment towards the Act continued to heighten tensions between the North and South, which were inflamed further by abolitionists such as [[Harriet Beecher Stowe]]. Her book, ''[[Uncle Tom's Cabin]]'', stressed the horrors of recapturing escaped slaves and outraged Southerners.<ref>Larry Gara, "The Fugitive Slave Law: A Double Paradox," ''Civil War History'', September 1964, vol. 10#3, pp. 229–240</ref> |
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Proposals in 1846 to 1850 on the division of the Southwest included the following (some of which are not mutually exclusive): |
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===End of slave trade in District of Columbia=== |
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* The [[Wilmot Proviso]] banning slavery in any new territory to be acquired from Mexico, not including Texas, which had been annexed the previous year. It passed the House in August 1846 and February 1847 but not the Senate. Later, an effort failed to attach the proviso to the [[Treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo]]. |
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The fifth law, enacted on September 20, 1850, prohibited the slave trade but allowed slavery itself in the [[District of Columbia]].<ref>David L. Lewis, ''District of Columbia: A Bicentennial History'', (W.W. Norton, 1976), 54-56.</ref> Southerners in Congress were unanimous in opposing that provision, which was seen as a concession to the [[Abolitionism in the United States|abolitionists]], but they were outvoted.<ref>Damani Davis, "Slavery and Emancipation in the Nation'S Capital," ''Prologue'', Spring 2010, vol. 42#1, pp. 52–59</ref> |
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* The Extension of the Missouri Compromise line was proposed by failed amendments to the Wilmot Proviso by [[William W. Wick]] and then Stephen Douglas to extend the Missouri Compromise line ([[36°30' parallel north]]) west to the Pacific (south of [[Carmel-by-the-Sea, California]]) to allow the possibility of slavery in most of present-day New Mexico and Arizona, and southern California. That line was again proposed by the [[Nashville Convention]] of June 1850. |
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* [[Popular sovereignty]], developed by [[Lewis Cass]] and Stephen Douglas as the position of the Democratic Party, was to let the (white male) residents of each territory decide by vote whether to allow slavery. It was implemented in the [[Kansas–Nebraska Act]] of 1854, giving rise to the violence of the "[[Bleeding Kansas]]" period. |
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* [[William L. Yancey]]'s "Alabama Platform", endorsed by the Alabama and the Georgia legislatures and by Democratic state conventions in Florida and Virginia, called for no restrictions on slavery in the territories by the federal government or territorial governments before statehood, opposition to any candidates supporting either the Wilmot Proviso or popular sovereignty, and federal legislation to overrule Mexican anti-slavery laws. |
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* Two free states were proposed by [[Zachary Taylor]], who served as president from March 1849 to July 1850. As President, he proposed that the entire area become two free states, called California and New Mexico but much larger than the ones today. None of the area would be left as an unorganized or [[organized territory]], which would avoid the question of slavery in the territories. |
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* Changing Texas's borders was proposed by Senator [[Thomas Hart Benton (senator)|Thomas Hart Benton]] in December 1849 or January 1850. Texas's western and northern boundaries would be the [[102nd meridian west]] and the [[34th parallel north]]. |
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* Two southern states were proposed by Senator [[John Bell (Tennessee politician)|John Bell]], with the assent of Texas, in February 1850. New Mexico would get all Texas land north of the [[34th parallel north]], including today's [[Texas Panhandle]], while the area to the south, including the southeastern part of today's New Mexico, would be divided at the [[Colorado River of Texas]] into two Southern states, balancing the admission of California and New Mexico as free states.<ref>{{Cite news|title=Adjustment of the Texas Boundary in 1850|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=mNQ1AAAAIAAJ&pg=PA185|journal=Quarterly of the Texas State Historical Association|date=January 1904|volume=7|author=W. J. Spillman}}</ref><ref>{{cite periodical |last=Bell |first=John |date=February 28, 1850 |title=Another Proposed Compromise |url=https://memory.loc.gov/cgi-bin/ampage?collId=llcg&fileName=022/llcg022.db&recNum=523 |magazine=[[Congressional Globe]] |volume=31 |issue=1 |pages=436–439 |access-date=July 4, 2023 |publisher=John C. Rives}}</ref> |
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* The first draft of the compromise of 1850 had Texas's northwestern boundary be a straight, diagonal line from the Rio Grande 20 miles north of [[El Paso, Texas|El Paso]] to the [[Red River of the South|Red River (Mississippi watershed)]] at the [[100th meridian west]], the southwestern corner of today's [[Oklahoma]]. |
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==See also== |
==See also== |
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* [[Timeline of events leading to the American Civil War]] |
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* ''[[Uncle Tom's Cabin]]''{{snd}} a reaction against the Fugitive Slave Law |
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* [[Missouri Compromise]] |
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* [[Kansas–Nebraska Act]] of 1854, which reopened the slavery issue |
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* [[Kansas–Nebraska Act|Kansas-Nebraska Act]] |
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==References== |
==References== |
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{{Reflist}} |
{{Reflist}} |
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== |
==Bibliography== |
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{{refbegin|2}} |
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* {{cite book |last=Bauer |first=K. Jack |title=Zachary Taylor: Soldier, Planter, Statesman of the Old Southwest |publisher=[[Louisiana State University Press]] |year=1985 |isbn=0-8071-1237-2 |ref=Bauer |url=https://archive.org/details/zacharytaylorsol00baue }} |
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* Bell, John Frederick. "Poetry's Place in the Crisis and Compromise of 1850." ''Journal of the Civil War Era'' 5#3 (2015): 399–421. |
* Bell, John Frederick. "Poetry's Place in the Crisis and Compromise of 1850." ''Journal of the Civil War Era'' 5#3 (2015): 399–421. |
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* Bordewich |
* {{cite book |last=Bordewich |first=Fergus M. |title=America's Great Debate: Henry Clay, Stephen A. Douglas, and the Compromise That Preserved the Union |date=2012 |publisher=Simon & Schuster}} |
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* {{cite |
* {{cite book |last=Eisenhower |first=John S.D. |title=Zachary Taylor |series=The American Presidents series |publisher=[[Times Books]] ([[Macmillan Publishers|Macmillan]]) |year=2008 |isbn=978-0-8050-8237-1 |ref=Eisenhower |url=https://archive.org/details/zacharytaylor00eise }} |
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* {{cite book|last=Finkelman|first=Paul|title= Millard Fillmore|publisher=Times Books|year=2011|series=The American Presidents|isbn=978-0-8050-8715-4|ref={{sfnRef|Finkelman}}}} |
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* Heidler, David S., and Jeanne T. Heidler. ''Henry Clay: The Essential American'' (2010), major scholarly biography; 624 pp. |
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* {{cite journal|last=Foster |first=Herbert D. |title=Webster's Seventh of March Speech and the Secession Movement, 1850 |journal=[[American Historical Review]] |volume=27 |year=1922 |issue=2 |pages=245–270 |doi=10.2307/1836156 |url=https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/1663 |jstor=1836156 |hdl=2027/loc.ark:/13960/t44q80t43 |hdl-access=free }} |
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* Hamilton, Holman. ''Prologue to Conflict: The Crisis and Compromise of 1850'' (1964), the standard historical study |
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* {{cite journal |title=Democratic Senate Leadership and the Compromise of 1850 |last=Hamilton |first=Holman |journal=[[The Mississippi Valley Historical Review]] |issn=0161-391X |volume=41 |issue=3 |year=1954 |pages= |
* Hamilton, Holman. ''Prologue to Conflict: The Crisis and Compromise of 1850'' (1964), the standard historical study {{ISBN?}} |
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* {{cite journal |title=Democratic Senate Leadership and the Compromise of 1850 |last=Hamilton |first=Holman |journal=[[The Mississippi Valley Historical Review]] |issn=0161-391X |volume=41 |issue=3 |year=1954 |pages=403–418|doi=10.2307/1897490 |jstor=1897490 }} |
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* Holman Hamilton. ''Zachary Taylor, Soldier in the White House'' (1951). |
* Holman Hamilton. ''Zachary Taylor, Soldier in the White House'' (1951). {{ISBN?}} |
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* Heidler, David S., and Jeanne T. Heidler. ''Henry Clay: The Essential American'' (2010), major scholarly biography; 624 pp. {{ISBN?}} |
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* Holt, Michael F. ''The Political Crisis of the 1850s'' (1978). |
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* {{cite book |last=Howe |first=Daniel Walker |title=What Hath God Wrought: the Transformation of America, 1815–1848 |url=https://archive.org/details/whathathgodwroug00howe |url-access=registration |date=2007 |location=Oxford, NY |publisher=Oxford University Press|isbn=978-0-19-507894-7 }} |
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* Holt, Michael F. ''The Fate of Their Country: Politicians, Slavery Extension, and the Coming of the Civil War'' (2005). |
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* |
* Holt, Michael F. ''The Political Crisis of the 1850s'' (1978). {{ISBN?}} |
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* Holt, Michael F. ''The Fate of Their Country: Politicians, Slavery Extension, and the Coming of the Civil War'' (2005). {{ISBN?}} |
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* Johannsen, Robert W. ''Stephen A. Douglas'' (1973) {{ISBN|0195016203}} |
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* {{cite book|ref=Keleher|title=Turmoil in New Mexico|author=William Aloysius Keleher|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=yoZCx5MnOO0C|place=Santa Fe|publisher=Rydal Press|year=1951 |isbn=978-0-8263-0632-6}} |
* {{cite book|ref=Keleher|title=Turmoil in New Mexico|author=William Aloysius Keleher|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=yoZCx5MnOO0C|place=Santa Fe|publisher=Rydal Press|year=1951 |isbn=978-0-8263-0632-6}} |
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* Knupfer, Peter B. "Compromise and Statesmanship: Henry Clay's Union." in Knupfer, ''The Union As It Is: Constitutional Unionism and Sectional Compromise, 1787–1861'' (1991), pp. |
* Knupfer, Peter B. "Compromise and Statesmanship: Henry Clay's Union." in Knupfer, ''The Union As It Is: Constitutional Unionism and Sectional Compromise, 1787–1861'' (1991), pp. 119–157. |
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* {{cite book |last1=Maizlish |first1=Stephen E. |title=A Strife of Tongues: The Compromise of 1850 and the Ideological Foundations of the American Civil War |date=2018 |publisher=University of Virginia Press |location=Charlottesville |isbn=978-0813941196}} |
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* Morrison, Michael A. ''Slavery and the American West: The Eclipse of Manifest Destiny and the Coming of the Civil War'' (1997) ({{ISBN|0807823198}}) |
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* {{cite book| last= McPherson | first= James M. | title= Battle Cry of Freedom: The Civil War Era| year= 1988 | publisher= Oxford University Press | location= Oxford, New York |isbn= 978-0-19-503863-7| title-link= Battle Cry of Freedom: The Civil War Era }} |
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* Nevins, Allan. ''Ordeal of the Union'' (1947) v 2, highly detailed narrative |
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* {{cite book|last1=Merry|first1=Robert W.|title-link=A Country of Vast Designs|title=A Country of Vast Designs: James K. Polk, the Mexican War, and the Conquest of the American Continent|date=2009|publisher=Simon & Schuster|location=New York|isbn=978-0-7432-9743-1|ref=Merry}} |
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* Potter, David M. ''The Impending Crisis, 1848–1861'' (1977), pp 90–120; Pulitzer Prize |
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* Morrison, Michael A. ''Slavery and the American West: The Eclipse of Manifest Destiny and the Coming of the Civil War'' (1997) {{ISBN|0807823198}} |
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* Remini, Robert. ''Henry Clay: Statesman for the Union'' (1991) |
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* Nevins, Allan. ''Ordeal of the Union'' (1947) v 2, highly detailed narrative{{ISBN?}} |
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* Remini, Robert. ''At the Edge of the Precipice: Henry Clay and the Compromise That Saved the Union'' (2010) 184 pages; the Compromise of 1850 |
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* Potter, David M. ''The Impending Crisis, 1848–1861'' (1977), pp. 90–120; Pulitzer Prize {{ISBN?}} |
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* Remini, Robert. ''Henry Clay: Statesman for the Union'' (1991) {{ISBN?}} |
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* Remini, Robert. ''At the Edge of the Precipice: Henry Clay and the Compromise That Saved the Union'' (2010) 184 pages; the Compromise of 1850 {{ISBN?}} |
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* Rhodes, James Ford. ''History of the United States from the Compromise of 1850'', vol. i. (1896). [https://books.google.com/books?id=eFZHAAAAYAAJ complegte text online] |
* Rhodes, James Ford. ''History of the United States from the Compromise of 1850'', vol. i. (1896). [https://books.google.com/books?id=eFZHAAAAYAAJ complegte text online] |
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* Rozwenc, Edwin C. ed. ''The Compromise of 1850.'' (1957) convenient collection of primary and secondary documents; 102 pp. |
* Rozwenc, Edwin C. ed. ''The Compromise of 1850.'' (1957) convenient collection of primary and secondary documents; 102 pp. {{ISBN?}} |
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* {{cite journal |title=What Was the Compromise of 1850? |last=Russel |first=Robert R. |journal=[[The Journal of Southern History]]|publisher=[[Southern Historical Association]] |issn=0022-4642 |volume=22 |issue=3 |year=1956 |pages=292–309 |doi=10.2307/2954547|jstor=2954547 |
* {{cite journal |title=What Was the Compromise of 1850? |last=Russel |first=Robert R. |journal=[[The Journal of Southern History]]|publisher=[[Southern Historical Association]] |issn=0022-4642 |volume=22 |issue=3 |year=1956 |pages=292–309 |doi=10.2307/2954547|jstor=2954547 }} |
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* Sewell, Richard H. ''Ballots for Freedom: Antislavery Politics in the United States 1837–1860'' New York: Oxford University Press, 1976. |
* Sewell, Richard H. ''Ballots for Freedom: Antislavery Politics in the United States 1837–1860'' New York: Oxford University Press, 1976. {{ISBN?}} |
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* {{cite book| |
* {{cite book|last=Smith|first=Elbert B.|title=The Presidencies of Zachary Taylor & Millard Fillmore|publisher=University Press of Kansas|year=1988|series=The American Presidency|isbn=978-0-7006-0362-6|url=https://archive.org/details/isbn_9780700603626}} |
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* {{cite book|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=RDp6AAAAMAAJ|author=Stegmaier, Mark J.|title=Texas, New Mexico, and the Compromise of 1850: Boundary Dispute & Sectional Crisis|publisher=Kent State University Press|year=1996|isbn=978-0873385299}} |
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* Wiltse, Charles M. ''John C. Calhoun, Sectionalist, 1840–1850'' (1951) |
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* Waugh, John C. ''On the Brink of Civil War: The Compromise of 1850 and How It Changed the Course of American History'' (2003) {{ISBN?}} |
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* Wiltse, Charles M. ''John C. Calhoun, Sectionalist, 1840–1850'' (1951) {{ISBN?}} |
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{{refend}} |
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==External links== |
==External links== |
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{{NIE Poster|year=1905|Compromise Measures of 1850}} |
{{NIE Poster|year=1905|Compromise Measures of 1850}} |
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* [ |
* [https://guides.loc.gov/compromise-1850 Compromise of 1850] from the [[Library of Congress]] |
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* [ |
* [https://www.archives.gov/milestone-documents/compromise-of-1850 Compromise of 1850] from the [[National Archives and Records Administration|National Archives]] |
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* [https://www.govinfo.gov/link/statute/9/462?link-type=pdf&.pdf Fugitive Slave Act of 1850] as enacted ([https://www.govinfo.gov/link/statute/9/462?link-type=details 9 Stat. 462]) in the [[United States Statutes at Large|US Statutes at Large]] |
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* [http://www2.tsl.state.tx.us/treasures/earlystate/boundary.html Texas Library and Archive Commission Page on 1850 Boundary Act] |
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* [https://www.govinfo.gov/link/statute/9/467?link-type=pdf&.pdf An Act to suppress the Slave Trade in DC] as enacted ([https://www.govinfo.gov/link/statute/9/467?link-type=details 9 Stat. 467]) in the US Statutes at Large |
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* [https://www.govinfo.gov/link/statute/9/452?link-type=pdf&.pdf California Admission Act] as enacted ([https://www.govinfo.gov/link/statute/9/452?link-type=details 9 Stat. 452]) in the US Statutes at Large |
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* [https://www.govinfo.gov/link/statute/9/453?link-type=pdf&.pdf Utah Territorial Act] as enacted ([https://www.govinfo.gov/link/statute/9/453?link-type=details 9 Stat. 453]) in the US Statutes at Large |
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* [https://www.govinfo.gov/link/statute/9/446?link-type=pdf&.pdf Texas Boundary Act] as enacted ([https://www.govinfo.gov/link/statute/9/446?link-type=details 9 Stat. 446]) in the US Statutes at Large |
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* [https://www.tsl.texas.gov/treasures/earlystate/boundary.html 1850 Boundary Act] from the [[Texas State Library and Archives Commission]] |
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* {{Cite EB1911 |last=Smith |first=William Roy |wstitle=Compromise Measures of 1850|short=x}} |
* {{Cite EB1911 |last=Smith |first=William Roy |wstitle=Compromise Measures of 1850|short=x}} |
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* [http://omniatlas.com/maps/northamerica/18500909/ Map of North America at the time of the Compromise of 1850 |
* [http://omniatlas.com/maps/northamerica/18500909/ Map of North America at the time of the Compromise of 1850] on omniatlas.com |
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Latest revision as of 21:27, 20 October 2024
- Northwest Ordinance
- Kentucky and Virginia Resolutions
- End of Atlantic slave trade
- Missouri Compromise
- Tariff of 1828
- Nat Turner's Rebellion
- Nullification crisis
- End of slavery in British colonies
- Texas Revolution
- United States v. Crandall
- Gag rule
- Commonwealth v. Aves
- Murder of Elijah Lovejoy
- Burning of Pennsylvania Hall
- American Slavery As It Is
- United States v. The Amistad
- Prigg v. Pennsylvania
- Texas annexation
- Mexican–American War
- Wilmot Proviso
- Nashville Convention
- Compromise of 1850
- Uncle Tom's Cabin
- Recapture of Anthony Burns
- Kansas–Nebraska Act
- Ostend Manifesto
- Bleeding Kansas
- Caning of Charles Sumner
- Dred Scott v. Sandford
- The Impending Crisis of the South
- Panic of 1857
- Lincoln–Douglas debates
- Oberlin–Wellington Rescue
- John Brown's raid on Harpers Ferry
- Virginia v. John Brown
- 1860 presidential election
- Crittenden Compromise
- Secession of Southern states
- Peace Conference of 1861
- Corwin Amendment
- Battle of Fort Sumter
The Compromise of 1850 was a package of five separate bills passed by the United States Congress in September 1850 that temporarily defused tensions between slave and free states in the years leading up to the American Civil War. Designed by Whig senator Henry Clay and Democratic senator Stephen A. Douglas, with the support of President Millard Fillmore, the compromise centered on how to handle slavery in recently acquired territories from the Mexican–American War (1846–48).
The provisions of the compromise were:[1][2]
- approved California's request to enter the Union as a free state
- strengthened fugitive slave laws with the Fugitive Slave Act of 1850
- banned the slave trade in Washington, D.C. (while still allowing slavery itself there)
- defined northern and western borders for Texas while establishing a territorial government for the Territory of New Mexico, with no restrictions on whether any future state from this territory would be free or slave
- established a territorial government for the Territory of Utah, with no restrictions on whether any future state from this territory would be free or slave
A debate over slavery in the territories erupted during the Mexican–American War, as many Southerners sought to expand slavery to the newly acquired lands and many Northerners opposed any such expansion. The debate was further complicated by Texas's claim to all former Mexican territory north and east of the Rio Grande, including areas it had never effectively controlled. These issues prevented the passage of organic acts to create organized territorial governments for the land acquired in the Mexican–American War. In early 1850, Clay proposed a package of eight bills that would settle most of the pressing issues before Congress. Clay's proposal was opposed by President Zachary Taylor, anti-slavery Whigs like William Seward, and pro-slavery Democrats like John C. Calhoun, and congressional debate over the territories continued. The debates over the bill are among the most famous in Congressional history, and the divisions devolved into fistfights and drawn guns on the floor of Congress.
After Taylor died and was succeeded by Fillmore, Douglas took the lead in passing Clay's compromise through Congress as five separate bills. Under the compromise, Texas surrendered its claims to present-day New Mexico and other states in return for federal assumption of Texas's public debt. California was admitted as a free state, while the remaining portions of the Mexican Cession were organized into New Mexico Territory and Utah Territory. Under the concept of popular sovereignty, the people of each territory would decide whether or not slavery would be permitted. The compromise also included a more stringent Fugitive Slave Law and banned the slave trade in Washington, D.C. The issue of slavery in the territories would be re-opened by the Kansas–Nebraska Act (1854), but the Compromise of 1850 played a major role in postponing the American Civil War.
Background
[edit]The Republic of Texas declared its independence from Mexico following the Texas Revolution of 1836, and, partly because Texas had been settled by a large number of Americans, there was a strong sentiment in both Texas and the United States for the annexation of Texas by the United States.[3] In December 1845, President James K. Polk signed a resolution annexing Texas, and Texas became the 28th state in the union.[4] Polk, an expansionist and slave owner, sought further expansion through the acquisition of the Mexican province of Alta California, which represented new lands to settle as well as a potential gateway to trade in Asia.[5] His administration attempted to purchase California from Mexico,[6] but the annexation of Texas stoked tensions between Mexico and the United States.[7] Relations between the two countries were further complicated by Texas's claim to all land north of the Rio Grande; Mexico argued that the more northern Nueces River was the proper Texan border.[8]
In March 1846, a skirmish broke out on the northern side of the Rio Grande, ending in the death or capture of dozens of American soldiers.[9] Shortly thereafter, the United States declared war on Mexico, beginning the Mexican–American War.[10] In August 1846, Polk asked Congress for an appropriation that he hoped to use as a down payment for the purchase of California in a treaty with Mexico, igniting a debate over the status of future territories.[11] A freshman Democratic Representative, David Wilmot of Pennsylvania, offered an amendment known as the Wilmot Proviso that would ban slavery in any newly acquired lands.[12] The Wilmot Proviso was defeated in the Senate, but it injected the slavery debate into national politics.[13]
In September 1847, an American army under General Winfield Scott captured the Mexican capital in the Battle for Mexico City.[14] Several months later, Mexican and American negotiators agreed to the Treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo, under which Mexico agreed to recognize the Rio Grande as Texas's southern border and to cede Alta California and New Mexico.[15] The Missouri Compromise had settled the issue of the geographic reach of slavery within the Louisiana Purchase territories by prohibiting slavery in states north of 36°30′ latitude, and Polk sought to extend this line into the newly acquired territory.[16] However, the divisive issue of slavery blocked any such legislation. As his term came to a close, Polk signed the lone territorial bill passed by Congress, which established the Territory of Oregon and banned slavery in it.[17] Polk declined to seek re-election in the 1848 presidential election,[18] and the 1848 election was won by the Whig ticket of Zachary Taylor and Millard Fillmore.[19]
Prophetically, Ralph Waldo Emerson quipped that "Mexico will poison us", referring to the ensuing divisions around whether the newly conquered lands would be slave or free.[20] As of the 1848 election of Taylor, the issue was not yet apparent. Taylor was both a Whig and a slaveholder; though Whigs were increasingly anti-slavery, Taylor's slaveholding had reassured the South, and he won handily. Taylor made a key electoral promise that he would not veto any congressional resolution on slavery. Much to the horror of Southerners, however, Taylor indicated that true to his promise, he would not even veto the Wilmot Proviso if it were passed. Tensions accelerated quickly into the fall of 1849. Midterm elections worsened matters, as the Free Soil Party had gained 12 seats, which gave them a king-maker position in the closely divided House: 105 Whigs to 112 Democrats. After three weeks and 62 ballots, the House could not elect a speaker; the main issue was slavery in the new territories. The tumult of that period was severe, with a loaded revolver drawn on the floor of Congress, several fistfights between Northerners and Southerners, and then Senator Jefferson Davis challenging an Illinois representative to a duel. Southern representatives increasingly bandied around the idea of secession. Finally, the House adopted a resolution that allowed a speaker to be elected with a plurality, and elected Howell Cobb on the 63rd ballot. As James McPherson puts it: "It was an inauspicious start to the 1850's."[21]
Issues
[edit]Three major types of issues were addressed by the Compromise of 1850: a variety of boundary issues, the status of territory issues, and the issue of slavery. While capable of analytical distinction, the boundary and territory issues were included in the overarching issue of slavery. Pro-slavery and anti-slavery interests were each concerned with both the amount of land on which slavery was permitted and with the number of States in the slave or free camps. Since Texas was a slave state, not only the residents of that state but also both camps on a national scale had an interest in the size of Texas.
Texas
[edit]The independent Republic of Texas won the decisive Battle of San Jacinto (April 21, 1836) against Mexico and captured Mexican president Antonio Lopez de Santa Anna. He signed the Treaties of Velasco, which recognized the Rio Grande as the boundary of the Republic of Texas. The treaties were then repudiated by the government of Mexico, which insisted that Mexico remained sovereign over Texas since Santa Anna had signed the treaty under coercion, and promised to reclaim the lost territories. To the extent that there was a de facto recognition, Mexico treated the Nueces River as its northern boundary control. A vast, largely unsettled area lay between the two rivers. Neither Mexico nor the Republic of Texas had the military strength to assert its territorial claim. On December 29, 1845, the Republic of Texas was annexed to the United States and became the 28th state. To facilitate US annexation, Sam Houston played a ploy on the American government by flirting with the British. The British believed that they could make the state abolish slavery by purchasing it. However, Southern leaders, alarmed by the threat of British emancipation of Texan slaves, pushed harder for annexation. Eventually, John Tyler, in hopes of appealing to southern Democrats, led the push for annexation with Abel Upshur. Texas was staunchly committed to slavery, with its constitution making it illegal for the legislature to free slaves.
The United States inherited the Texas-Mexican boundary dispute after annexing Texas, which quickly led to the Mexican-American War. The Treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo, which ended the war, defined the new Mexico–United States border, which followed the Rio Grande in part, but made no specific reference the claims of the Republic of Texas.[22] The southwestern part of the ceded territory was referred to as the Mexican Cession; but the boundaries between this Cession and the State of Texas were unclear, and Texas continued to claim all the territory north and east of the Rio Grande, which included a large stretch of land that it had never effectively controlled in present-day eastern New Mexico. New Mexico had long prohibited slavery, a fact that affected the debate over its territorial status, but many New Mexican leaders opposed joining Texas primarily because Texas's capital lay hundreds of miles away[23] and because Texas and New Mexico had a history of conflict dating back to the 1841 Santa Fe Expedition.[24] Outside of Texas, many Southern leaders supported Texas's claims to New Mexico to secure as much territory as possible for the expansion of slavery.[25]
Another issue that would affect the compromise was Texas's debt; it had approximately $10 million in debt left over from its time as an independent nation, and that debt would become a factor in the debates over the territories.[26]
California
[edit]California was part of the Mexican Cession. After the Mexican War, California was essentially run by military governors. President James K. Polk tried to get Congress to establish a territorial government in California officially, but the increasingly sectional debates prevented that.[27] The South wanted to extend slave territory to Southern California and to the Pacific Coast, but the North did not. The issue of whether it would be free or slave might well have gone undecided for years, as it had already after the end of the Mexican American war, if not for the finding of natural riches.[28]
Near the end of Polk's term in 1848, incredible news reached Washington: gold had been discovered in California. So began the California Gold Rush, which transformed California from a sleepy and almost forgotten land into a burgeoning hub with a population bigger than Delaware or Florida. The mostly lawless land found itself in desperate need of governance. Californians wanted to be made into a territory or state promptly.[29] In response to growing demand for a better more representative government, a Constitutional Convention was held in 1849. The delegates unanimously outlawed slavery. They had no interest in extending the Missouri Compromise Line through California and splitting the state; the lightly populated southern half never had slavery and was heavily Hispanic.[30] The issue of California would play a central role in the exhausting 1849 speaker dispute.[31]
Other issues
[edit]Aside from the disposition of the territories, other issues had risen to prominence during the Taylor years.[32] The Washington, D.C. slave trade angered many in the North, who viewed the presence of slavery in the capital as a blemish on the nation. Disputes around fugitive slaves had grown since 1830 in part due to improving means of transportation, as the enslaved used roads, railroads, and ships to escape. The Fugitive Slave Act of 1793 had granted jurisdiction to all state and federal judges over cases regarding fugitive slaves, but several Northern states, dissatisfied by the lack of due process in these cases, had passed personal liberty laws that made it more difficult to return alleged fugitive slaves to the South.[33] Congress also faced the issue of Utah, which like California and New Mexico, had been ceded by Mexico. Utah was inhabited largely by Latter-day Saints whose then-practice of polygamy was unpopular elsewhere in the United States.[34]
Passage
[edit]Taylor takes office
[edit]When Taylor took office, the issue of slavery in the Mexican Cession remained unresolved. While a Southern slaveowner himself, Taylor believed that slavery was economically infeasible in the Mexican Cession, and as such he opposed slavery in those territories as a needless source of controversy.[35] In Taylor's view, the best way forward was to admit California as a state rather than a federal territory, as it would leave the slavery question out of Congress's hands. The timing for statehood was in Taylor's favor, as the Gold Rush was well underway at the time of his inauguration, and California's population was exploding.[36] In October 1849, a California constitutional convention unanimously agreed to join the Union—and to ban slavery within their borders.[37] In his December 1849 State of the Union report, Taylor endorsed California's and New Mexico's applications for statehood, and recommended that Congress approve them as written and "should abstain from the introduction of those exciting topics of a sectional character".[38]
Main figures
[edit]The problem of what to do with the territories became the leading issue in Congress. So began the most famous debates in the history of Congress. At the head were the three titans of Congress: Henry Clay, Daniel Webster, and John C. Calhoun. All had been born during the American Revolution, and had carried the torch of the Founding Fathers. This represented their last and greatest act in politics. The nationalist Clay and Webster sought compromise, while Southern sectionalist Calhoun warned of imminent disaster. The triumvirate would be broken before long as Calhoun would die of tuberculosis. In March, shortly before his death, his final speech was delivered by his friend the Virginia Senator James M. Mason, as the blanket-wrapped Calhoun sat nearby, too weak to do it himself. He provided a prescient warning that the South perceived the balance between North and South as broken, and that any further imbalance might lead to war. The situation was severe.[39]
Other players included a variety of rising politicians who would play key roles in the Civil War, such as the staunch anti-slavery William H. Seward and Salmon P. Chase, who would be in Lincoln's cabinet; the future president of the Confederacy, Jefferson Davis; and rival to Abraham Lincoln, Stephen A. Douglas.[39]
Clay proposes compromise
[edit]On January 29, 1850, Senator Henry Clay introduced a plan which combined the major subjects under discussion. His legislative package of eight bills included the admission of California as a free state, the cession by Texas of some of its northern and western territorial claims in return for debt relief, the establishment of New Mexico and Utah territories, a ban on the importation of slaves into the District of Columbia for sale, and a more stringent fugitive slave law.[40][39] Clay had originally favored voting on each of his proposals separately, but Senator Henry S. Foote of Mississippi convinced him to combine the proposals regarding California's admission and the disposition of Texas's borders into one bill.[41] Clay hoped that this combination of measures would convince House members from both North and South to support the overall package of laws even if they objected to specific provisions.[42] Clay's proposal attracted the support of some Northern Democrats and Southern Whigs, but it lacked the backing necessary to win passage, and debate over the bill continued.[42] Seven months of agonizing politicking lay ahead.[39]
Opposition
[edit]President Taylor opposed the compromise and continued to call for immediate statehood for both California and New Mexico.[42] Senator Calhoun and some other Southern leaders argued that the compromise was biased against the South because it would lead to the creation of new free states.[43] Most Northern Whigs, led by William Henry Seward, who delivered his famous "Higher Law" speech during the controversy, opposed the Compromise as well because it would apply the Wilmot Proviso to the western territories and because of the pressing of ordinary citizens into duty on slave-hunting patrols. That provision was inserted by Democratic Virginia Senator James M. Mason to entice border-state Whigs, who faced the greatest danger of losing slaves as fugitives but were lukewarm on general sectional issues related to the South on Texas's land claims.[44]
Debate and results
[edit]On April 17, a "Committee of Thirteen" agreed on the border of Texas as part of Clay's plan. The dimensions were later changed. That same day, during debates on the measures in the Senate, Vice President Fillmore and Senator Benton verbally sparred, with Fillmore charging that the Missourian was "out of order." During the heated debates, Compromise floor leader Henry S. Foote of Mississippi drew a pistol on Benton.
In early June, nine slave-holding Southern states sent delegates to the Nashville Convention to determine their course of action if the compromise passed. While some delegates preached secession, the moderates ruled and proposed a series of compromises, including extending the dividing line designated by the Missouri Compromise of 1820 to the Pacific Coast.
Taylor died in July 1850, and was succeeded by Vice President Fillmore, who had privately come to support Clay's proposal.[45] The various bills were initially combined into one "omnibus" bill. Despite Clay's efforts, it failed in a crucial vote on July 31, opposed by southern Democrats and by northern Whigs. He announced on the Senate floor the next day that he intended to pass each part of the bill. The 73-year-old Clay, however, was physically exhausted as the effects of tuberculosis, which would eventually kill him, began to take their toll. Clay left the Senate to recuperate in Newport, Rhode Island, and Senator Stephen A. Douglas took the lead in attempting to pass Clay's proposals through the Senate.[46]
Fillmore, anxious to find a quick solution to the conflict in Texas over the border with New Mexico, which threatened to become an armed conflict between Texas militia and the federal soldiers, reversed the administration's position late in July and threw its support to the compromise measures.[47] At the same time, Fillmore denied Texas's claims to New Mexico, asserting that the United States had promised to protect the territorial integrity of New Mexico in the Treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo.[48] Fillmore's forceful response helped convince Texas's U.S. Senators, Sam Houston and Thomas Jefferson Rusk, to support Stephen Douglas's compromise. With their support, a Senate bill providing for a final settlement of Texas's borders won passage days after Fillmore delivered his message. Under the terms of the bill, the U.S. would assume Texas's debts, while Texas's northern border was set at the 36° 30' parallel north (the Missouri Compromise line) and much of its western border followed the 103rd meridian. The bill attracted the support of a bipartisan coalition of Whigs and Democrats from both sections, though most opposition to the bill came from the South.[49] The Senate quickly moved on to the other major issues, passing bills that provided for the admission of California, the organization of New Mexico Territory, and the establishment of a new fugitive slave law.[50]
The debate then moved to the House of Representatives, where Fillmore, Senator Daniel Webster, Douglas, Representative Linn Boyd, and Speaker of the House Howell Cobb took the lead in convincing members to support the compromise bills that had been passed in the Senate.[51] The Senate's proposed settlement of the Texas-New Mexico boundary faced intense opposition from many Southerners, as well as from some Northerners who believed that Texas did not deserve monetary compensation. After a series of close votes that nearly delayed consideration of the issue, the House voted to approve a Texas bill similar to that which had been passed by the Senate.[52] Following that vote, the House and the Senate quickly agreed on each of the major issues, including the banning of the slave trade in Washington.[53] The president quickly signed each bill into law save for the Fugitive Slave Act of 1850; he ultimately signed that law as well after Attorney General Crittenden assured him that the law was constitutional.[citation needed] Though some in Texas still favored sending a military expedition into New Mexico, in November 1850 the state legislature voted to accept the compromise.[54]
Provisions
[edit]The general solution that was adopted by the Compromise of 1850 was to transfer a considerable part of the territory claimed by Texas state to the federal government; to organize two new territories formally, the Territory of New Mexico and the Territory of Utah, which expressly would be allowed to locally determine whether they would become slave or free territories, to add another free state to the Union (California), to adopt a severe measure to recover slaves who had escaped to a free state or free territory (the Fugitive Slave Law); and to abolish the slave trade in the District of Columbia. A key provision of each of the laws respectively organizing the Territory of New Mexico and the Territory of Utah was that slavery would be decided by local option, called popular sovereignty. That was an important repudiation of the idea behind the failure to prohibit slavery in any territory acquired from Mexico. However, the admission of California as a free state meant that Southerners were giving up their goal of a coast-to-coast belt of slave states.[55]
Settlement of borders
[edit]Texas was allowed to keep the following portions of the disputed land: south of the 32nd parallel and south of the 36°30' parallel north and east of the 103rd meridian west. The rest of the disputed land was transferred to the United States. The final border was designed to keep the frontier settlement of El Paso in Texas, since despite that settlement's geographic, historic, and economic ties to New Mexico, Texas had recently established a county government in El Paso and thus successfully claimed it as an integral part of Texas. A similar attempt to keep Santa Fe in Texas failed, and Santa Fe became part of the New Mexico territory.[56] The United States Constitution (Article IV, Section 3) does not permit Congress unilaterally to reduce the territory of any state, so the first part of the Compromise of 1850 had to take the form of an offer to the Texas State Legislature, rather than a unilateral enactment. This ratified the bargain and, in due course, the transfer of a broad swath of land from the state of Texas to the federal government was accomplished. In return for Texas's giving up this land, the United States assumed the debts of Texas.
From the Mexican Cession, the New Mexico Territory received most of the present-day state of Arizona, most of the western part of the present-day state of New Mexico, and the southern tip of present-day Nevada (south of the 37th parallel). The territory also received most of present-day eastern New Mexico, a portion of present-day Colorado (east of the crest of the Rocky Mountains, west of the 103rd meridian, and south of the 38th parallel); all of this land had been claimed by Texas.
From the Mexican Cession, the Utah Territory received present-day Utah, most of present-day Nevada (everything north of the 37th parallel), a major part of present-day Colorado (everything west of the crest of the Rocky Mountains), and a small part of present-day Wyoming. That included the newly founded colony at Salt Lake, of Brigham Young. The Utah Territory also received some land that had been claimed by Texas; this land is now part of present-day Colorado that is east of the crest of the Rocky Mountains.
Fugitive Slave Act
[edit]Perhaps the most important part of the Compromise received the least attention during debates. Enacted September 18, 1850, it is informally known as the Fugitive Slave Law, or the Fugitive Slave Act. It bolstered the Fugitive Slave Act of 1793. The new version of the Fugitive Slave Law now required federal judicial officials in all states and federal territories, including free states, to assist with the return of escaped slaves to their masters in slave states. Any federal marshal or other official who did not arrest an alleged runaway slave was liable to a fine of $1,000 (equivalent to $36,624 in 2023). Law enforcement everywhere in the US now had a duty to arrest anyone suspected of being a fugitive slave on no more evidence than a claimant's sworn testimony of ownership. Suspected slaves could neither ask for a jury trial nor testify on their own behalf. Also, aiding a runaway slave by providing food or shelter was now a crime nationwide, punished by six months' imprisonment and a $1,000 fine. Officers capturing a fugitive slave were entitled to a fee for their work, and this expense was to be paid by the Federal Government.[57]
The law was so completely pro-slavery as to prohibit the admission of the testimony of a person accused of being an escaped slave into evidence at the judicial hearing to determine the status of the accused escaped slave. Thus, if free Blacks were claimed to be escaped slaves, they could not resist their return to slavery (or enslavement for the first time) by truthfully telling their actual history. Furthermore, the federal commissioners overseeing the hearings were paid $5 for ruling that a person was free, but were paid $10 for determining that he or she was a slave, thus providing a financial incentive to rule in favor of slavery regardless of the evidence.[58] The law further exacerbated the problem of free Blacks being kidnapped and sold as slaves.[59]
The Fugitive Slave Act was essential to meet Southern demands. In terms of public opinion in the North, the critical provision was that ordinary citizens were required to aid slave catchers and that it was a crime to assist a fugitive. Many Northerners deeply resented these provisions. The violent process of returning slaves to the South made the act abhorrent to many Northerners.[60] Resentment towards the Act further heightened tensions between the North and South, which were then inflamed further by abolitionists such as Harriet Beecher Stowe. Her novel, Uncle Tom's Cabin, stressed the horrors of recapturing escaped slaves and outraged Southerners.[61]
End of slave trade in District of Columbia
[edit]A statute enacted as part of the compromise prohibited the slave trade in Washington, D.C., but not slave ownership.[62] Southerners in Congress, alarmed and outraged,[63] were unanimous in opposing the provision, seen as a concession to the abolitionists and a bad precedent, but they were outvoted.[64] However, Washington's residents could still easily buy and sell slaves in the nearby states of Virginia and Maryland.
Implications
[edit]Passage of the Compromise of 1850, as it came to be known, caused celebration in Washington and elsewhere, with crowds shouting, "The Union is saved!" Fillmore himself described the Compromise of 1850 as a "final settlement" of sectional issues, though the future of slavery in New Mexico and Utah remained unclear.[65] The admission of new states, or the organization of territories in the remaining unorganized portion of the Louisiana Purchase, could also potentially reopen the polarizing debate over slavery.[66][67]
Not all accepted the Compromise of 1850. Longing for the former national influence of the South, a South Carolina newspaper wrote, "the Rubicon is passed ... and the Southern States are now vassals in this Confederacy."[68] (This was not referring to the then-future Confederate States of America; many still considered the United States a confederacy at the time.) Many Northerners, meanwhile, were displeased by the Fugitive Slave Act.[69] The debate over slavery in the territories would be re-opened in 1854 through the Kansas–Nebraska Act. It continued throughout the late 1850s, which culminated in one of the more well-known debates over slavery, the Lincoln-Douglas debates.
In hindsight, the Compromise merely postponed the American Civil War for a decade, contrary to the expectations of many at the time, who felt the issue of slavery had finally been settled.[70][71] During that decade, the Whig Party completely broke down, to be replaced with the new Republican Party dominant in the North, while Democrats reigned in the South.[72]
Others[who?] argue that the Compromise only made more obvious the pre-existing sectional divisions, and laid the groundwork for future conflict. They view the Fugitive Slave Law as helping to polarize the US, as shown in the enormous reaction to Harriet Beecher Stowe's novel Uncle Tom's Cabin. The passage of the Fugitive Slave Law aroused feelings of bitterness in the North. Furthermore, the Compromise of 1850 led to a breakdown in the spirit of compromise in the Antebellum period. The Compromise exemplifies that spirit,[which?] but the deaths of influential senators who worked on the compromise, primarily Henry Clay and Daniel Webster, contributed to the feeling of increasing disparity between the North and South.[citation needed]
The delay of hostilities for ten years allowed the Northern states to continue to industrialize. The Southern states, largely based on slave labor and cash crop production, lacked the ability to industrialize heavily.[73][page needed]
According to historian Mark Stegmaier, "The Fugitive Slave Act, the abolition of the slave trade in the District of Columbia, the admission of California as a free state, and even the application of the formula of popular sovereignty to the territories were all less important than the least remembered component of the Compromise of 1850—the statute by which Texas relinquished its claims to much of New Mexico in return for federal assumption of the debts."[further explanation needed][74][page needed]
Other proposals
[edit]Proposals in 1846 to 1850 on the division of the Southwest included the following (some of which are not mutually exclusive):
- The Wilmot Proviso banning slavery in any new territory to be acquired from Mexico, not including Texas, which had been annexed the previous year. It passed the House in August 1846 and February 1847 but not the Senate. Later, an effort failed to attach the proviso to the Treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo.
- The Extension of the Missouri Compromise line was proposed by failed amendments to the Wilmot Proviso by William W. Wick and then Stephen Douglas to extend the Missouri Compromise line (36°30' parallel north) west to the Pacific (south of Carmel-by-the-Sea, California) to allow the possibility of slavery in most of present-day New Mexico and Arizona, and southern California. That line was again proposed by the Nashville Convention of June 1850.
- Popular sovereignty, developed by Lewis Cass and Stephen Douglas as the position of the Democratic Party, was to let the (white male) residents of each territory decide by vote whether to allow slavery. It was implemented in the Kansas–Nebraska Act of 1854, giving rise to the violence of the "Bleeding Kansas" period.
- William L. Yancey's "Alabama Platform", endorsed by the Alabama and the Georgia legislatures and by Democratic state conventions in Florida and Virginia, called for no restrictions on slavery in the territories by the federal government or territorial governments before statehood, opposition to any candidates supporting either the Wilmot Proviso or popular sovereignty, and federal legislation to overrule Mexican anti-slavery laws.
- Two free states were proposed by Zachary Taylor, who served as president from March 1849 to July 1850. As President, he proposed that the entire area become two free states, called California and New Mexico but much larger than the ones today. None of the area would be left as an unorganized or organized territory, which would avoid the question of slavery in the territories.
- Changing Texas's borders was proposed by Senator Thomas Hart Benton in December 1849 or January 1850. Texas's western and northern boundaries would be the 102nd meridian west and the 34th parallel north.
- Two southern states were proposed by Senator John Bell, with the assent of Texas, in February 1850. New Mexico would get all Texas land north of the 34th parallel north, including today's Texas Panhandle, while the area to the south, including the southeastern part of today's New Mexico, would be divided at the Colorado River of Texas into two Southern states, balancing the admission of California and New Mexico as free states.[75][76]
- The first draft of the compromise of 1850 had Texas's northwestern boundary be a straight, diagonal line from the Rio Grande 20 miles north of El Paso to the Red River (Mississippi watershed) at the 100th meridian west, the southwestern corner of today's Oklahoma.
See also
[edit]References
[edit]- ^ Drexler, Ken. "Research Guides: Compromise of 1850: Primary Documents in American History: Introduction". guides.loc.gov. Retrieved December 3, 2022.
- ^ "Compromise of 1850 (1850)". National Archives. June 28, 2021. Retrieved December 3, 2022.
- ^ Merry, pp. 120–124
- ^ Merry, pp. 211–212
- ^ Howe, pp. 735–736
- ^ Howe, p. 734
- ^ Merry, pp. 176–177
- ^ Merry, p. 187
- ^ Merry, pp. 240–242
- ^ Merry, pp. 246–247
- ^ Merry, pp. 283–285
- ^ Merry, pp. 286–289
- ^ McPherson, pp. 53–54
- ^ Merry, pp. 387–388
- ^ Merry, pp. 424–425
- ^ Merry, pp. 452–453
- ^ Merry, pp. 460–461
- ^ Merry, pp. 376–377
- ^ Merry, pp. 447–448
- ^ McPherson 1988, p. 51.
- ^ McPherson 1988, pp. 64–68.
- ^ "Handbook of Texas Online: Compromise of 1850". Tshaonline.org. June 12, 2010. Retrieved February 3, 2016.
- ^ Smith 1988, pp. 98, 101–102.
- ^ Bordewich 2012, pp. 65–66.
- ^ Bordewich 2012, p. 149.
- ^ Smith 1988, pp. 110–111.
- ^ California and New Mexico: Message from the President of the United States. By United States. President (1849–1850 : Taylor), United States. War Dept (Ex. Doc 17 p. 1) Google eBook
- ^ McPherson 1988, pp. 64–77.
- ^ McPherson 1988, pp. 64–65.
- ^ William Henry Ellison. A self-governing dominion, California, 1849–1860 (1950) online
- ^ McPherson 1988, pp. 66–68.
- ^ Smith 1988, pp. 98–99.
- ^ Finkelman, pp. 58–62, 71.
- ^ Smith 1988, pp. 97–98.
- ^ Eisenhower, pp. 101–102.
- ^ Bauer, pp. 290–291.
- ^ Bauer, pp. 291–292.
- ^ Bauer, pp. 298–299.
- ^ a b c d McPherson 1988, pp. 70–72.
- ^ Smith 1988, pp. 111–112.
- ^ Smith 1988, pp. 132–139.
- ^ a b c McPherson 1988, p. 74.
- ^ Smith 1988, pp. 112–113, 117.
- ^ John M. Taylor, William Henry Seward: Lincoln's right hand (1996) p. 85
- ^ Smith 1988, pp. 158, 165–166.
- ^ Eaton (1957) pp. 192–193. Remini (1991) pp. 756–759
- ^ Michael Holt, The Rise and Fall of the American Whig Party (1999), pp. 529–530: "only rapid passage of the omnibus bill appeared to offer a timely escape from the crisis."
- ^ Smith 1988, pp. 181–184.
- ^ Bordewich 2012, pp. 306–313.
- ^ Bordewich 2012, pp. 314–316, 329.
- ^ Bordewich 2012, pp. 333–334.
- ^ Smith 1988, pp. 186–188.
- ^ Smith 1988, pp. 188–189.
- ^ Bordewich 2012, pp. 347–348, 359–360.
- ^ Not all southerners gave up on the idea. After California's admission, there were several efforts to divide the state. At least one of these enjoyed significant support from southern members of Congress, but the Civil War prevented action on it.
- ^ El Paso, A Borderlands History, by W.H. Timmons, pp. 117–125
- ^ McPherson 1988, pp. 77–81.
- ^ "Fugitive Slave Act of 1850". December 26, 2015.
- ^ McPherson 1988, pp. 81–82.
- ^ "Compromise of 1850". History.com. Retrieved January 10, 2023.
- ^ Larry Gara, "The Fugitive Slave Law: A Double Paradox," Civil War History, September 1964, vol. 10#3, pp. 229–240
- ^ David L. Lewis, District of Columbia: A Bicentennial History, (W.W. Norton, 1976), 54–56.
- ^ Border War, War and Reconstruction. The Mid-Missouri Civil War Project, University of Missouri School of Law, 2010, archived from the original on June 15, 2010
- ^ Damani Davis, "Slavery and Emancipation in the Nation's Capital," Prologue, Spring 2010, vol. 42#1, pp. 52–59
- ^ McPherson 1988, pp. 75–76.
- ^ McPherson 1988, pp. 121–123.
- ^ Smith 1988, p. 248.
- ^ Smith 1988, pp. 193–194.
- ^ Smith 1988, p. 201.
- ^ Robert Remini,The House: A History of the House of Representatives (2006) p. 147
- ^ McPherson 1988, p. 72-77.
- ^ Holt, Michael F. The Political Crisis of the 1850s (1978).
- ^ Fox-Genovese, Elizabeth; Genovese, Eugene D. (1983). Fruits of Merchant Capital: Slavery and Bourgeois Property in the Rise and Expansion of Capitalism. New York: Oxford Univ. Press. ISBN 0-19-503157-1.
- ^ Mark J. Stegmaier (1996). Texas, New Mexico, and the compromise of 1850: boundary dispute & sectional conflict. Kent State University Press. ISBN 9780873385299.
- ^ W. J. Spillman (January 1904). "Adjustment of the Texas Boundary in 1850". Quarterly of the Texas State Historical Association. Vol. 7.
- ^ Bell, John (February 28, 1850). "Another Proposed Compromise". Congressional Globe. Vol. 31, no. 1. John C. Rives. pp. 436–439. Retrieved July 4, 2023.
Bibliography
[edit]- Bauer, K. Jack (1985). Zachary Taylor: Soldier, Planter, Statesman of the Old Southwest. Louisiana State University Press. ISBN 0-8071-1237-2.
- Bell, John Frederick. "Poetry's Place in the Crisis and Compromise of 1850." Journal of the Civil War Era 5#3 (2015): 399–421.
- Bordewich, Fergus M. (2012). America's Great Debate: Henry Clay, Stephen A. Douglas, and the Compromise That Preserved the Union. Simon & Schuster.
- Eisenhower, John S.D. (2008). Zachary Taylor. The American Presidents series. Times Books (Macmillan). ISBN 978-0-8050-8237-1.
- Finkelman, Paul (2011). Millard Fillmore. The American Presidents. Times Books. ISBN 978-0-8050-8715-4.
- Foster, Herbert D. (1922). "Webster's Seventh of March Speech and the Secession Movement, 1850". American Historical Review. 27 (2): 245–270. doi:10.2307/1836156. hdl:2027/loc.ark:/13960/t44q80t43. JSTOR 1836156.
- Hamilton, Holman. Prologue to Conflict: The Crisis and Compromise of 1850 (1964), the standard historical study [ISBN missing]
- Hamilton, Holman (1954). "Democratic Senate Leadership and the Compromise of 1850". The Mississippi Valley Historical Review. 41 (3): 403–418. doi:10.2307/1897490. ISSN 0161-391X. JSTOR 1897490.
- Holman Hamilton. Zachary Taylor, Soldier in the White House (1951). [ISBN missing]
- Heidler, David S., and Jeanne T. Heidler. Henry Clay: The Essential American (2010), major scholarly biography; 624 pp. [ISBN missing]
- Howe, Daniel Walker (2007). What Hath God Wrought: the Transformation of America, 1815–1848. Oxford, NY: Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-507894-7.
- Holt, Michael F. The Political Crisis of the 1850s (1978). [ISBN missing]
- Holt, Michael F. The Fate of Their Country: Politicians, Slavery Extension, and the Coming of the Civil War (2005). [ISBN missing]
- Johannsen, Robert W. Stephen A. Douglas (1973) ISBN 0195016203
- William Aloysius Keleher (1951). Turmoil in New Mexico. Santa Fe: Rydal Press. ISBN 978-0-8263-0632-6.
- Knupfer, Peter B. "Compromise and Statesmanship: Henry Clay's Union." in Knupfer, The Union As It Is: Constitutional Unionism and Sectional Compromise, 1787–1861 (1991), pp. 119–157.
- Maizlish, Stephen E. (2018). A Strife of Tongues: The Compromise of 1850 and the Ideological Foundations of the American Civil War. Charlottesville: University of Virginia Press. ISBN 978-0813941196.
- McPherson, James M. (1988). Battle Cry of Freedom: The Civil War Era. Oxford, New York: Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-503863-7.
- Merry, Robert W. (2009). A Country of Vast Designs: James K. Polk, the Mexican War, and the Conquest of the American Continent. New York: Simon & Schuster. ISBN 978-0-7432-9743-1.
- Morrison, Michael A. Slavery and the American West: The Eclipse of Manifest Destiny and the Coming of the Civil War (1997) ISBN 0807823198
- Nevins, Allan. Ordeal of the Union (1947) v 2, highly detailed narrative[ISBN missing]
- Potter, David M. The Impending Crisis, 1848–1861 (1977), pp. 90–120; Pulitzer Prize [ISBN missing]
- Remini, Robert. Henry Clay: Statesman for the Union (1991) [ISBN missing]
- Remini, Robert. At the Edge of the Precipice: Henry Clay and the Compromise That Saved the Union (2010) 184 pages; the Compromise of 1850 [ISBN missing]
- Rhodes, James Ford. History of the United States from the Compromise of 1850, vol. i. (1896). complegte text online
- Rozwenc, Edwin C. ed. The Compromise of 1850. (1957) convenient collection of primary and secondary documents; 102 pp. [ISBN missing]
- Russel, Robert R. (1956). "What Was the Compromise of 1850?". The Journal of Southern History. 22 (3). Southern Historical Association: 292–309. doi:10.2307/2954547. ISSN 0022-4642. JSTOR 2954547.
- Sewell, Richard H. Ballots for Freedom: Antislavery Politics in the United States 1837–1860 New York: Oxford University Press, 1976. [ISBN missing]
- Smith, Elbert B. (1988). The Presidencies of Zachary Taylor & Millard Fillmore. The American Presidency. University Press of Kansas. ISBN 978-0-7006-0362-6.
- Stegmaier, Mark J. (1996). Texas, New Mexico, and the Compromise of 1850: Boundary Dispute & Sectional Crisis. Kent State University Press. ISBN 978-0873385299.
- Waugh, John C. On the Brink of Civil War: The Compromise of 1850 and How It Changed the Course of American History (2003) [ISBN missing]
- Wiltse, Charles M. John C. Calhoun, Sectionalist, 1840–1850 (1951) [ISBN missing]
External links
[edit]- Compromise of 1850 from the Library of Congress
- Compromise of 1850 from the National Archives
- Fugitive Slave Act of 1850 as enacted (9 Stat. 462) in the US Statutes at Large
- An Act to suppress the Slave Trade in DC as enacted (9 Stat. 467) in the US Statutes at Large
- California Admission Act as enacted (9 Stat. 452) in the US Statutes at Large
- Utah Territorial Act as enacted (9 Stat. 453) in the US Statutes at Large
- Texas Boundary Act as enacted (9 Stat. 446) in the US Statutes at Large
- 1850 Boundary Act from the Texas State Library and Archives Commission
- Smith, William Roy (1911). Encyclopædia Britannica (11th ed.). .
- Map of North America at the time of the Compromise of 1850 on omniatlas.com
- 31st United States Congress
- 1850 in American politics
- 1850 in California
- 1850 in New Mexico Territory
- 1850 in Texas
- 1850 in Utah Territory
- 1850 in American law
- Henry Clay
- History of United States expansionism
- Presidency of Millard Fillmore
- New Mexico Territory
- United States slavery law
- United States federal territory and statehood legislation
- Utah Territory
- September 1850 events
- Origins of the American Civil War
- Political compromises in the United States
- Expansion of slavery in the United States
- Millard Fillmore administration controversies
- Stephen A. Douglas