The Southern United States considered it their right to own slaves and wanted the decision of legal slavery to be left up to the individual states. The Northern United States disagreed with this and believed slavery should be outlawed everywhere. As a result, the South decided to attempt succession from the Union, thus setting off the Civil War.
Southerners called for states' rights and the preservation of the institution of slavery to protect their right to own slaves. They argued that the federal government should not interfere with the laws of individual states regarding slavery.
In most cases, enslaved people were considered property and did not have legal rights to inherit or pass down their status. Their status was determined by their owner.
The state law in 1846 in the United States granted enslaved people the right to file lawsuits against those who had wrongfully enslaved them, allowing them to seek their freedom through legal means.
A rising fear of slave revolts
The Fugitive Slave Act was supported by Southern slaveholders and their political allies in the United States government. They saw the law as a way to uphold the Fugitive Slave Clause of the Constitution and protect their property rights in enslaved people.
Enslaved people are people who doesn't have freedom or rights
Southerners wanted Congress to pass laws that would require northern states to return enslaved people who had fled to the North. They sought the enforcement of a strong Fugitive Slave Law, which would mandate the return of escaped enslaved individuals to their owners. This demand was rooted in the belief that enslaved people were property, and their escape was a violation of southern property rights. The debate over this issue heightened tensions between the North and South leading up to the Civil War.
Southerners called for states' rights and the preservation of the institution of slavery to protect their right to own slaves. They argued that the federal government should not interfere with the laws of individual states regarding slavery.
Southerners generally viewed the Freedmen's Bureau with suspicion and hostility. Many white Southerners resented the bureau's efforts to assist formerly enslaved people, seeing it as an infringement on their rights and a tool of federal overreach. The bureau's focus on promoting education and civil rights for African Americans was perceived as a threat to the social order that had existed prior to the Civil War. This antagonism contributed to ongoing tensions during the Reconstruction era.
who believe that people had rights to remove a government that didnt protect their rights
They define and protect rights.
people created government to protect our rights
Harriet Beecher Stowe
to protect people's rights
they have certain laws to protect our rights such as people who commit crimes are prosecuted
because people agreed on it
In most cases, enslaved people were considered property and did not have legal rights to inherit or pass down their status. Their status was determined by their owner.