fugitive slave laws
The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition | Date: 2008
fugitive slave laws in U.S. history, the federal acts of 1793 and 1850 providing for the return between states of escaped black slaves. Similar laws existing in both North and South in colonial days applied also to white indentured servants and to Native American slaves. As slavery was abolished in the Northern states, the 1793 law was loosely enforced, to the great irritation of the South, and as abolitionist sentiment developed, organized efforts to circumvent the law took form in the Underground Railroad . Many Northern states also passed personal-liberty laws that allowed fugitives a jury trial, and others passed laws forbidding state officials to help capture alleged fugitive slaves or to lodge them in state jails. As a concession to the South a second and more rigorous fugitive slave law was passed as part of the Compromise of 1850 . By it "all good citizens" were "commanded to aid and assist [federal marshals and their deputies] in the prompt and efficient execution of this law," and heavy penalties were imposed upon anyone who assisted slaves to escape from bondage. When apprehended, an alleged fugitive was taken before a federal court or commissioner. He was denied a jury trial and his testimony was not admitted, while the statement of the master claiming ownership, even though absent, was taken as the main evidence. The law was so weighted against the fugitives that many Northerners, formerly unconcerned, were now aroused to opposition. New personal-liberty laws contradicting the legislation of 1850 (and described, with some reason, by Southerners as equivalent to South Carolina's notorious ordinance of nullification) were passed in most of the Northern states. Abolitionists fearlessly defied the 1850 act, often mobbing federal officials in attempts to rescue fugitives. In Boston, for instance, the "good citizens," including some of the foremost Brahmins, stormed the federal courthouse, but failed to free the escaped Virginia slave Anthony Burns; moreover, it was thought expedient to have 1,100 soldiers guard him when he was marched aboard ship for his return to bondage. In Lancaster co., Pa., a riot broke out when a federal official ordered Quaker bystanders to help catch a runaway; the Quakers were prosecuted, but not convicted. Other notable fugitive-slave cases arose in Northern courts, and the trials further stirred up public opinion both North and South. The whole dispute, combined with the question of the extension of slavery into the territories, served to set the two sections at each other's throats. The actions of Northern states in nullifying the fugitive slave laws or rendering "useless any attempt to execute them" were cited (Dec. 24, 1860) by South Carolina as one cause for secession. Both acts were finally repealed by Congress on June 28, 1864.
Author not available, FUGITIVE SLAVE LAWS.,
The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition 2008
The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition. Copyright 2008 Columbia University Press
Related newspaper, magazine, and journal articles from HighBeam Research
|
Northern States weighs venture
The Milwaukee Journal Sentinel; 6/26/1997; 114 words
; Northern States Power Co. may take a closer look at a venture it passed up while a merger with Wisconsin Energy Corp. was pending. Minneapolis-based Northern States and Milwaukee-based Wisconsin Energy called off their merger May 16 after federal regulators rejected the merger plan. "Now it's time
Read more
|
|
Northern States plugs into regional group Non-profit entity will manage bulk sales of electricity
The Milwaukee Journal Sentinel; 8/21/1999; LEE BERGQUIST; 320 words
; After balking for months at joining a utility organization that will oversee bulk electricity sales, Northern States Power Co. said Friday that it intends to join the Midwest Independent System Operator. The Minneapolis-based utility, which serves portions of western Wisconsin, said it will become
Read more
|
|
Northern States Power Company.(Brief Article)
Railway Age; 11/1/2000; 18 words
; Northern States Power Company (Minneapolis, Minn Received 220 AutoFlood II [TM] cars from Johnstown America Corp.
Read more
|
|
STOCK IN THE NEWS NORTHERN STATES POWER CO.(Business)
Wisconsin State Journal (Madison, WI); 8/18/2000; 169 words
; Daily close $25.75, down 43.75 cents Consensus Recommendation*2.2 Consensus 5-yr Growth Rate7% P/E Ratio - Dec. 00 FY13.5 P/E Ratio -Dec. 01 FY12.4 * 1 = Buy, 3 = Hold, 5 = Sell SOURCE: First Call/Thomson Financial Company profile Northern States Power Co. and New Century Energies won U.S.
Read more
|
|
Northern States, Wisconsin Energy Propose Merger
The Journal Record; 5/2/1995; Agis Salpukas; 879 words
; Two large and strong utilities in the Midwest, Northern States Power Co. and Wisconsin Energy Corp., said Monday that they would merge into a new company, with a combined market value of about $6 billion. Analysts said the deal, which could put pressure on other utilities to seek partners, showed
Read more
|
|
Former Northern States Beef workers may be awarded $1 million ConAgra violated state's plant closing law, judge has ruled
The Milwaukee Journal Sentinel; 5/3/1996; TANNETTE JOHNSON-ELIE; 242 words
; A Nebraska-based meat processor may owe nearly $1 million in lost wages to 346 former employees at its northern Wisconsin facility because it illegally shut down the plant, a state agency said Thursday. ConAgra Corp., of Omaha, violated the state's plant closing law by not providing workers at
Read more
|
|
New Century Energies and Northern States Power to merge in $11 billion deal
Weekly Corporate Growth Report; 3/29/1999; Anonymous; 297 words
; The Deal: New Century Energies and Northern States Power Company have agreed to merge in an $11 billion deal that will create an electric and natural gas distribution company stretching from Mexico to Canada. Holders of New Century Energies stock will receive 1.55 shares of the merged company stock
Read more
|
|
SLOWDOWN IN MEXICAN INDUSTRIAL SECTOR MAINLY HURTS NORTHERN STATES
Infolatina; 8/17/2001; 150 words
; Infolatina 08-17-2001 Slowdown In Mexican Industrial Sector Mainly Hurts Northern States MEXICO CITY, Aug 17, 2001 (Reforma/Corporate Mexico by Internet Securities, Inc. via COMTEX) -- The industrial sector's recession has overwhelmingly affected Mexico's northern states, which rely on industrial
Read more
|
|
Bharti Airtel to expand its presence in rural parts of three northern states.(WIRELESS)(IFFCO)(Brief article)
India Telecom; 5/1/2008; 157 words
; India's largest mobile operator Bharti Airtel, which has already proved its mettle in the urban regions of Haryana, Punjab and Himachal Pradesh, is now contemplating expanding in the rural areas by launching new facilities in the northern part of India. According to Chief Executive Officer of the
Read more
|
|
BEEF SHORTAGE HITS NORTHERN STATES AFTER DUTY RISES ON IMPORTS
Infolatina; 9/7/1999; 118 words
; Infolatina 09-07-1999 Beef Shortage Hits Northern States After Duty Rises on Imports MEXICO CITY, Sep. 7 (El Universal/Infolatina What the Trade Department said would never happen is now a reality as northern states report shortages of beef, particularly in the state of Nuevo Leon, after the
Read more
|
Related entries from encyclopedias, dictionaries, and thesauruses
|
Resistance to the Fugitive Slave Act
American Eras
... offering the writ of habeas corpus to detained fugitives, affirming their right to a jury trial, and ... in each county to intervene on behalf of fugitives in rendition proceedings. In 1854 – ... Connecticut, Ohio, Wisconsin, and Michigan passed laws to prevent state officials from taking ...
Read more
|
|
Fugitive Slave Acts
Britannica Concise Encyclopedia
U.S. laws of 1793 and 1850 (repealed in 1864 ... decide the status of an alleged fugitive slave. Northern opposition led to enactment of state personal-liberty laws that entitled slaves to a jury trial ... individuals who helped slaves to escape; fugitives could not testify on their own ...
Read more
|
|
personal-liberty laws
Britannica Concise Encyclopedia
Laws passed by U.S. states in the North to counter the Fugitive Slave Acts . Such states as Indiana (1824) and Connecticut (1828) enacted laws giving escaped slaves the right to jury ... Vermont and New York (1840) assured fugitives the right of jury trial and provided ... punishment for illegal ...
Read more
|
|
1850-1877: Law and Justice: Chronology
American Eras
... Fillmore signs the Fugitive Slave Act. 22 Oct . The Chicago ... resolution nullifying the Fugitive Slave Act. 30 Oct . Slave catchers trying to retrieve ... Alger. 15 Feb . The fugitive Shadrach escapes from ... in Boston. Apr. The fugitive Thomas Sims returns ... Massacre, ...
Read more
|
|
1850-1877: Law and Justice: Topics in the News
American Eras
1850-1877: Law and Justice: Topics in the News The Ascendancy of Legal Formalism Corporations and Business Regulation Expansion of Judicial Review The Legal Profession Resistance to the Fugitive Slave Act Warfare and the Rule of Law Writing Citizenship into the Constitution
Read more
|