"Fugitive slave act 1850" Essays and Research Papers

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    The Fugitive Slave Act was one of the five acts contained in the Compromise of 1850. The highly controversial new law required the return of all runaway slaves to their masters. The recovery of runaway slaves was now under Federal Jurisdiction. Federal Marshalls were now bound by duty to return any runaway and also now had the authority to require assistance from any individual. If the assistance was not provided‚ the individual faced prosecution and fines. The law also stripped runaway slaves

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    Caitlinn Lovett Professor Jimmy Pigg US History 201 16 June 2015 The Fugitive Slave Law of 1850 The Fugitive Slave Law or Fugitive Slave Act was part of a group of laws that are known as the Compromise of 1850. The law required that all escaped slaves who fled were to be returned to their masters and prohibited anyone from aiding runaway slaves. Abolitionists hated the passage of this law so much that it played a major role in the end of slavery. The northern attitude toward slavery was resented

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    part of the Southern way of life‚ and slave labor was a major aspect of the Southern states’ economy. Northerners opposed slavery yet were concerned that the political‚ economic‚ and conflict with the South over slavery could threaten a civil war between the two sides. The conflict intensified over the issue of fugitive‚ or escaped‚ slaves. Because slaves were treated as property in the South‚ slave owners felt it was their right to seek out and recapture slaves who had escaped to free Northern states

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    History of Business Fugitive Slave Act The westward expansion of slavery was one of the most dynamic economic and social processes going on in this country. The Industrial Revolution had changed every aspect of American life and the country’s borders spread westward with the addition of the Mexican Cession—opening new cotton fields. To maintain the original Constitutional balance of lawmaking power‚ Congress continued to play the compromise game in 1820 and 1850 to maintain an equal number of

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    sacrificed for us to have better lives today even if it wasn’t by choice. The Fugitive Slave Act of 1850 is an epitome source of one of the obstacles that African-American slaves had to face. The Fugitive Slave Act of 1850 mandated that in which slaves were to escape they were obligated to return them to their masters upon discovery. Criminal sanctions were also given to those who‚ in any form helped any slaves’ runaway. This act also made any federal marshal or any other

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    Valentin Ania-bell TWIN CITIES YOUTH CAMP FOR FINE & PERFORMING ARTS JULY 9‚ 2013 The Twin Cities Youth Camp for Fine & Performing Arts on the Twin Cities University campus is scheduled for two weeks‚ from Sunday afternoon‚ July 9‚ to Saturday night‚ July 22. Made possible by grants from the Carnegie Foundation and the national Endowment for the Arts‚ the camp will give approximately forty students a rare opportunity to study and work with outstanding specialists in the fields of

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    Congress had no right to add the Fugitive Slave Act to the Compromise of 1850 back in September 18‚ 1850. The act is requiring that everyone -- no matter where you reside in the U.S.-- is to apprehend any runaway slaves including those who are free. I still do not understand why it is that people think slavery is right when in fact it is WRONG! This issue made abolitionists‚ like myself‚ help create Personal Liberty Laws‚ which allowed the Fugitive Slave Act to be nullified up in the free states

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    The Fugitive Slave Act | The Publication of Harriet Beecher Stowe’s‚ Uncle Tom’s Cabin On September 8th‚ 1850‚ the Fugitive Slave Act was created as a compromise. It stated to capture any fugitive/ runaway slave and to be returned to their owner because they considered slaves as their property. If anyone in the North were to be aiding a fugitive‚ they would be fined and imprisoned for about six months. Sometimes‚ slaves would escape by a secret system called the Underground Railroad. Later

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    biggest trade was agriculture. Slavery allowed the south to prosper‚ their whole economy was based off of it. Though change was inevitable two documents that sped up the war process were the Fugitive Slave Act and Harriet Beecher Stowe’s Uncle Tom’s Cabin. Fugitive Slave Laws prohibited the harboring of run away slaves. It was first passed in 1793 but was amended later to reduce tensions‚ though it had the opposite affect. Some say it nationalized the crisis

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    Document A: Compromise of 1850 Map A map like this gives you all kinds of openings for outside information. Think about prior Constitutional crises prior to 1850 (like the Missouri Compromise situation) and how this legislation changed that. The notion of popular sovereignty‚ of course‚ is a great one for thinking about Constitutional principles related to people having a “voice” in their government. Document B: Words from an anonymous Georgian to the “north” This guy is voicing the classic Southern

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