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Runaway Slavery

Decent Essays

In 1850, the topic of runaway slaves was becoming more frequent. Though there were passed laws that allowed owners of slaves to recapture “slave property” in other territories, the South felt the laws needed to be more iron-fisted. (This was mostly due to the Northern abolitionists making the South uncomfortable with their current grip on the government.) Of course, they got their way, and the Fugitive Slave Act. This allowed the slave holders to say a slave was his in front of a government official (even if they were not) and have legal right to claim them. Not soon after, Northern writer Harriet Beecher Stowe, wrote about a slave, in her book Uncle Tom’s Cabin; drove even more Northerners against slavery. The south denounced her book, calling it slander and “intense fanaticism”. Still Stowe’s book sold 300,000 (sadly ten times the amount Frederick Douglas’ autobiography sold for). But still the …show more content…

With fighting in "Bleeding Kansas" over slave state laws, and the dreaded Dred Scott decision, southern slave territories became inflamed. The Dred Scott case gave office seekers, such as Abe Lincoln, amble opportunities to get their name out to the public. Though Lincoln disagreed with slavery, he kept it on the down low and let states who were in "slave territory" continue slavery. Although Lincoln believed that Black people deserved natural rights, he found it would be impossible to achieve.
People thinking expansion of slavery would cause problems with free men, and their will. The Dred Scott decision became proof of the White South's aggression; they actually believed they were under attack. Talk of separating from the Union was starting to swarm, and though this talk had been heard for years from the South, it was becoming a real threat. The only way the country felt confidence is if slavery remained, but after Lincoln won election, that went out the door. All the South was waiting for was another

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