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der existing conditions; be fatal to the institution of slavery。 West Virginia did become a free State at the first opportunity。 Counties in western North Carolina claim to have furnished a larger proportion of their men to the Union army than any other counties in the country。 Had the plan for peaceable emancipation projected by abolitionists been permitted to take its course; the uplands of South Carolina would have been pitted against the lowlands; and Senator Tillman would have appeared as a rampant abolitionist。 There might have been violence; but it would have been confined to limited areas in the separate States。 Had the crisis been postponed; there surely would have been a revival of abolitionism within the Southern States。 Slavery in Missouri was already approaching a crisis。 Southern leaders had long foreseen that the State would abolish slavery if a free State should be established on the western boundary。 This was actually taking place。 Kansas was filling up with free…state settlers and; by the act of its own citizens; a few years later did abolish slavery。 Republicans naturally made use of Helper's book for party purposes。 A cheap abridged edition was brought out。 Several Republican leaders were induced to sign their names to a paper commending the publication。 Among these was John Sherman of Ohio; who in the organization of the newly elected House of Representatives in 1859 was the leading candidate of the Republicans for the speakership。 During the contest the fact that his name was on this paper was made public; and Southern leaders were furious。 Extracts were read to prove that the book was incendiary。 Millson of Virginia said that 〃one who consciously; deliberately; and of purpose lends his name and influence to the propagation of such writings is not only not fit to be speaker; but he is not…fit to live。〃 It is one of the ironies of the situation that the passage selected to prove the incendiary character of the book is almost a literal quotation from the debate in the Virginia Legislature of 1832。

CHAPTER X。 〃BLEEDING KANSAS〃 Both the leading political parties were; in the campaign of 1852; fully committed to the acceptance of the so…called Compromise of 1850 as a final settlement of the slavery question; both were committed to the support of the Fugitive Slave Act。 The Free…soil party; with John P。 Hale as its candidate; did make a vigorous attack upon the Fugitive Slave Act; and opposed all compromises respecting slavery; but Free…Boilers had been to a large extent reabsorbed into the Democratic party; their vote of 1852 being only about half that of 1848。 Though the Whig vote was large and only about two hundred thousand less than that of the Democrats; yet it was so distributed that the Whigs carried only four States; Massachusetts; Vermont; Kentucky; and Tennessee。 The other States gave a Democratic plurality。 Had there been time for readjustment; the Whig party might have recovered lost ground; but no time was permitted。 There was in progress in Missouri a political conflict which was already commanding national attention。 Thomas H。 Benton; for thirty years a Senator from Missouri; and a national figure; was the storm…center。 His enemies accused him of being a Free…Boiler; an abolitionist in disguise。 He was professedly a stanch and uncompromising unionist; a personal and political opponent of John C。 Calhoun。 According to his own statement he had been opposed to the extension of slavery since 1804; although he had advocated the admission of Missouri with a pro…slavery constitution in 180。 He was; from the first; senior Senator from the State; and by a peculiar combination of influences incurred his first defeat for reelection in 1851。 Benton's defeat in the Missouri Legislature was largely the result of national pro…slavery influences。 In a former chapter; reference was made to the Ohio River as furnishing a 〃providential argument against slavery。〃 The Mississippi River as the eastern boundary of Missouri furnished a like argument; but on the north not even a prairie brook separated free labor in Iowa from slave labor in Missouri。 The inhabitants of western Missouri; realizing that the tenure of their peculiar institution was becoming weaker in the east and north; early became convinced that the organization of a free State along their western boundary would be followed by the abolition of slavery in their own State。 This condition attracted the attention of the national guardians of pro…slavery interests。 Calhoun; Davis; Breckinridge; Toombs; and others were in constant communication with local leaders。 A certain Judge W。 C。 Price; a religious fanatic; and a pro…slavery devotee; was induced to visit every part of the State in 1844; calling the attention of all slaveholders to the perils of the situation and preparing the way for the repeal of the Missouri Compromise。 Senator Benton; who was approached on the subject; replied in such a way that all radical defenders of slavery; both national leaders and local politicians; were moved to unite for his political defeat。 David R。 Atchison; junior Senator from Missouri; had been made the leader of the pro…slavery forces。 The defeat of Benton in the Missouri Legislature did not end the strife。 He at once became a candidate for Atchison's place in the election which was to occur in 1855; and he was in the meantime elected to the House of Representatives in 1852。 The most telling consideration in Benton's favor was the general demand; in which he himself joined; for the immediate organization of the western territory in order to facilitate the building of a system of railways reaching the Pacific; with St。 Louis as the point of departure。 For a time; in 1859; and 1853; Benton was apparently triumphant; and Atchison was himself willing to consent to the organization of the new territory with slavery excluded。 The national leaders; however; were not of the same mind。 The real issue was the continuance of slavery in the State; the one thing which must not be permitted was the transfer of anti…slavery agitation to the separate States。 Henry Clay's proposal of 1849 to provide for gradual emancipation in Kentucky was bitterly resented。 It had long been an axiom with the slavocracy that the institution would perish unless it had the opportunity to expand。 Out of this conviction arose Calhoun's famous theory that slaveowners had under the Constitution an equal right with the owners of all other forms of property in all the Territories。 The theory itself assumed that the act prohibiting slavery in the territory north of the southern boundary of Missouri was unconstitutional and void。 But this theory had not yet received judicial sanction; and the time was at hand when the question of freedom or slavery in the western territory was to be determined。 Between March and December; 1853; the discovery was made that the Act of 1850 organizing the Territories of New Mexico and Utah had superseded the Compromise of 1820; that a principle had been recognized applicable to all the Territories; that all were open to settlement on equal terms to slaveholders and non…slaveholders; that the subject of slavery should be removed from Congress to the people of the Territories; and that they should decide; either when a territorial legislature was organized or at the time of the adoption of a constitution preparatory to statehood; whether or not slavery should be authorized。 These ideas found expression in various newspapers during the month of December; 1853。 Though the authorship of the new theory is still a matter of dispute; it is well known that Stephen A。 Douglas became its chief sponsor and champion。 The real motives and intentions of Douglas himself and of many of his supporters will always remain obscure and uncertain。 But no uncertainty attaches to the motives of Senator Atchison and the leaders of the Calhoun section of the Democratic party。 For ten years at least they had been laboring to get rid of the Missouri Compromise。 Their motive was to defend slavery and especially to forestall a successful movement for emancipation in the State of Missouri。 From early in January; 1854; until late in May; Douglas's Nebraska bill held the attention of Congress and of the entire country。 At first the measure simply assumed that the Missouri Compromise had been superseded by the Act of 1850。 Later the bill was amended in such a way as to repeal distinctly that time…honored act。 At first the plan was to organize Nebraska as a single Territory extending from Texas to Canada。 Later it was proposed to organize separate Territories; one west of Missouri under the name of Kansas; the other west of Iowa under the name of Nebraska。 Opposition came from Free…soilers; from Northern Whigs and a few Whigs from the South; and from a large proportion of Northern Democrats。 The repeal of the Missouri Compromise came like a thunderbolt out of a clear sky to the people of the North。 For a time Douglas was the most unpopular of political leaders and was apparently repudiated by his party。 The first name designating the opponents of the Douglas bill was 〃Anti Nebraska men;〃 for which the name Republican was gradually substituted and in 1858 became the accepted title of the party。 The provision for two territorial

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