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Fugitive Slave Act of 1850

3 articles on Fugitive Slave Act of 1850

  • Fugitive Slave Law of 1850image available

    Source: Encyclopedia of African American History, 1619-1895: From the Colonial Period to the Age of Frederick Douglass

    Word Count: 4277      Includes:  Bibliography

    The Fugitive Slave Law of 1850 was technically an amendment to the federal act of 1793 that regulated both criminal extradition and the return of fugitive slaves. The 1793 law never worked well, and almost immediately some southerners asked for a new law. By the mid-1840s editors and politicians throughout the South were demanding a new, more effective law. The key issue for southerners was an enforcement mechanism that would help them recover their fugitives and return home safely with them.

    The 1793law authorized all state judges and magistrates, as well as all federal judges, to issue certificates of removal to allow masters to take fugitive slaves back to the South. However, many northern jurists refused to cooperate with the implementation of the law. Since there were very few federal judges at the time—usually only one in a state—slave owners ...
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  • Fugitive Slave Act

    Source: The Oxford Companion to United States History

    Word Count: 453     

    (1850). Drafted by Senator James Y. Mason of Virginia and the product of months of contentious debate in the Senate, the Fugitive Slave Act of 1850 was signed into law by President Millard Fillmore as part of the Compromise of 1850. Senator Charles Sumner of Massachusetts, an ardent critic, denounced the law as unconstitutional, but Daniel Webster, in a famous speech on 7 March, supported it as part of a larger political effort to preserve the Union. The southern senators John C. Calhoun and Jefferson Davis doubted that the law would achieve its purpose, but they did not oppose it. Organized opposition to the law in the North faded after the summer of 1851. The Supreme Court in Ableman v. Booth (1859) affirmed the law's constitutionality.

    The Fugitive Slave Act authorized newly appointed fugitive slave commissioners to ...
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  • Fugitive Slave Act of 1850 (18 September 1850)

    Word Count: 3158     
    The provisions of the Fugitive Slave Act of 1850 are almost unimaginable. It is difficult to believe that the “states'-rights” South could so blatantly demand federal power to defend slavery, and it is almost impossible to imagine that the increasingly antislavery North would agree to that demand. Legally, before the act was passed, free states were supposed to help slaveowners apprehend and return to servitude slaves who had run away. In practice the free states did not do much in this regard. So the Fugitive Slave Act took that responsibility out of their hands and put it in the hands of the federal government. The government could deputize people against their will to help in a slave chase. Federal commissioners held trials to determine whether the captive actually was a slave. More federal officials were to be assigned solely to upholding the provisions of the act. ...
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