How the Dred Scott Decision Affected the U.S. Election of 1860
The Dred Scott decision of 1857 put a match to the tinderbox of sectional conflict over the future of slavery, the most important issue in the mid-19th century United States. It exploded the hard-won rules under which the expansion of the United States had been undertaken over the previous four or so decades and presented the bleakest possible future for African Americans, slave or free—that they were not and never would become citizens with guaranteed rights. In the process it set the stage for and had a huge impact on the historic presidential election of 1860.
The Kansas-Nebraska Act already had repealed the Missouri Compromise’s prohibition of slavery in the territories west of Missouri and north of latitude 36˚30’, but what caused the Dred Scott decision to rock the American political landscape was its ruling that the Constitution barred the federal government from prohibiting slavery in any territories. That ruling seemingly affirmed the South’s vision of the American future and invalidated the platform of the Republican Party, which had come into existence in response to the Kansas-Nebraska Act. However, the determination by many in the North to oppose and in some cases ignore the Dred Scott decision meant that the ranks of the Republican Party swelled. Its new bigger tent came to envelop radical abolitionists, who previously had believed that participation in any political party would water down their objectives; antislavery Democrats, who saw themselves at irreparable odds with their party’s Southern contingent; Free-Soilers, who saw their hopes of settling in the West disappearing; and even members of the disintegrating nativist Know-Nothing party, despite the Republicans’ overtures to immigrants. Moreover, the decision became the last straw that energized many moderates within the Republican Party.
For many Americans the Dred Scott decision confirmed their belief that compromise had been exhausted as a solution of the problem of slavery. Nevertheless, as the Republicans gathered in Chicago for their 1860 national convention, a significant number of delegates saw the frontrunner, William H. Seward of New York, and his principal challenger, Salmon P. Chase of Ohio, as too radical to appeal to voters in the “Lower North” (Indiana, Pennsylvania, and New Jersey) and border states. Thus Seward and Chase were thought to be unelectable. The raucous convention turned instead to Abraham Lincoln, who was seen as a moderate but whose steadfast opposition to slavery and to the Dred Scott decision was widely known, especially in the South. Lincoln saw the decision as a manifestation of “slave power,” the notion (some would say conspiracy theory) that a group of oligarchical plantation owners held sway over the U.S. government. He became hardened in the belief that only a comprehensive monolithic solution to slavery would resolve the conflict. As he had said in his famous “A House Divided” speech in 1858, “I believe this government cannot endure, permanently half slave and half free.”
Lincoln aside, at the center of the Republican Party’s platform for the election was plank number eight, which expressly repudiated the Dred Scott decision:
That the normal condition of all the territory of the United States is that of freedom: That, as our Republican fathers, when they had abolished slavery in all our national territory, ordained that "no persons should be deprived of life, liberty or property without due process of law," it becomes our duty, by legislation, whenever such legislation is necessary, to maintain this provision of the Constitution against all attempts to violate it; and we deny the authority of Congress, of a territorial legislature, or of any individuals, to give legal existence to slavery in any territory of the United States
Significantly, the Republican Party was not a national party but rather a party of the North. Lincoln’s name would not even appear on the ballot in 10 slave states. On the other hand, as the election approached, the country’s only truly national party, the Democratic Party, was splintering. Its most prominent member, Sen. Stephen A. Douglas, the champion of the popular sovereignty policy that was at the heart of the Kansas-Nebraska Act, entered the Democratic National Convention in Charleston, South Carolina, in April as the frontrunner for the nomination, but he was seen as no friend of the South. At Freeport, Illinois, during one of the famous debates between Douglas and Lincoln that were part of their 1858 campaign for Douglas’s seat in the U.S. Senate, Lincoln had challenged Douglas to defend his popular sovereignty policy in the light of the Dred Scott decision. Douglas responded that territories could effectively ban slavery by choosing not to make laws that supported it. This equivocation, which became known as the Freeport Doctrine, proved to be anathema for many Southern Democrats at the Charleston convention, especially the “fire-eaters” from the Deep South who supported adoption of a revised version of the Alabama Platform first submitted by William L. Yancey at the party’s 1848 convention. That platform called for the passage of legislation that would specifically codify the Dred Scott decision so as to prevent Congress or territorial legislatures from prohibiting slavery in any territory.
The Northern Democrats constituted the largest presence at the Charleston convention, but they could not muster the two-thirds majority necessary to nominate Douglas. On the other hand, they registered the absolute majority that was necessary to prevent the adoption of the revised Alabama Platform. That rejection prompted delegates from eight Southern states to leave the convention and the party, an outcome that may have been the premeditated objective of the fire-eaters, many of whom were already committed to secession as the answer to the slavery problem.
The Northern portion of the party met again later, this time in Baltimore, Maryland, in June as the National Democratic Party. Still convinced, as they had been going into the Charleston convention, that no Southern Democrat would be able to compete with Lincoln in the North, they selected Douglas as their candidate over Kentuckian John C. Breckinridge, the sitting vice president of the United States. The Southern Democrats convened separately, too, and chose Breckinridge, a slaveholder, as their candidate. They then mounted a campaign based on the demand for federal legislation and intervention to protect slaveholding. The field was completed by the 11th-hour formation of a new party, the Constitutional Union Party, which rallied to support the Union and the Constitution without regard to slavery. Drawing former Whigs who had yet to find a political home and other moderates, the party nominated John Bellas its candidate.
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