6 March 1857 A.D. SCOTUS: Dred Scott Decision
6 March 1857 A.D. SCOTUS: Dred Scott Decision
Editors. “Dred Scot Decision.” History Channel. N.d. http://www.history.com/this-day-in-history/dred-scott-decision. Accessed 5 Mar
2015.
On this day in 1857, the United States Supreme
Court issues a decision in the Dred Scott case, affirming the right of slave
owners to take their slaves into the Western territories, thereby negating the
doctrine of popular sovereignty and severely undermining the platform of the
newly created Republican Party.
At the heart of the case was the most important
question of the 1850s: Should slavery be allowed in the West? As part of the
Compromise of 1850, residents of newly created territories could decide the
issue of slavery by vote, a process known as popular sovereignty. When popular
sovereignty was applied in Kansas in 1854, however, violence erupted. Americans
hoped that the Supreme Court could settle the issue that had eluded a
congressional solution.
Dred Scott was a slave whose owner, an army
doctor, had spent time in Illinois, a free state, and Wisconsin, a free
territory at the time of Scott’s residence. The Supreme Court was stacked in
favor of the slave states. Five of the nine justices were from the South while
another, Robert Grier of Pennsylvania, was staunchly pro-slavery. Chief Justice
Roger B. Taney wrote the majority decision, which was issued on March 6, 1857.
The court held that Scott was not free based on his residence in either
Illinois or Wisconsin because he was not considered a person under the U.S.
Constitution–in the opinion of the justices, black people were not considered
citizens when the Constitution was drafted in 1787. According to Taney, Dred
Scott was the property of his owner, and property could not be taken from a
person without due process of law.
In fact, there were free black citizens of the
United States in 1787, but Taney and the other justices were attempting to halt
further debate on the issue of slavery in the territories. The decision
inflamed regional tensions, which burned for another four years before
exploding into the Civil War.
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