The Crittenden Compromise was perhaps the last-ditch effort to
resolve the secession crisis of 1860-61 by political negotiation.
Authored by Kentucky Senator John Crittenden (whose two sons
would become generals on opposite sides of the Civil War) it was
an attempt to resolve the crisis by addressing the concerns that led
the states of the Lower South to contemplate secession. As such, it
gives a window into what the politicians of the day thought the cause
of the crisis to be. The Compromise, as offered on December 18,
1860, consisted of a preamble, six (proposed) constitutional
amendments, and four (proposed) Congressional resolutions. The
text given here is taken from a photocopy of the Congressional
Globe for December 18, 1860.
A joint resolution (S. No. 50) proposing
certain amendments to the Constitution of the United States. Whereas
serious and alarming dissensions have arisen between the northern
and southern states, concerning the rights and security of the rights
of the slaveholding States, and especially their rights in the common
territory of the United States; and whereas it is eminently desirable
and proper that these dissensions, which now threaten the very
existence of this Union, should be permanently quieted and settled
by constitutional provisions, which shall do equal justice to all sections,
and thereby restore to all the people that peace and good-will which
ought to prevail between all the citizens of the United States:
Therefore, Resolved by the Senate and House of Representatives
of the United States of America in Congress assembled, (two thirds
of both Houses concurring,) That the following articles be, and are
hereby, proposed and submitted as amendments to the Constitution
of the United States, which shall be valid to all intents and purposes,
as part of said Constitution, when ratified by conventions of three-fourths
of the several States:
Article 1: In all the territory of the United States now held, or
hereafter acquired, situate north of 36 degrees 30 minutes, slavery
or involuntary servitude, except as a punishment for crime, is prohibited
while such territory shall remain under territorial government. In all the
territory south of said line of latitude, slavery of the African race is
hereby recognized as existing, and shall not be interfered with by
Congress, but shall be protected as property by all the departments
of the territorial government during its continuance. And when any
territory, north or south of said line, within such boundaries as Congress
may prescribe, shall contain the population requisite for a member
of Congress according to the then Federal ratio of representationof
the people of the United States, it shall, if its form of government be
republican, be admitted into the Union, on an equal footing with the
original States, with or without slavery, as the constitution of such new
State may provide.
Article 2: Congress shall have no power to abolish slavery
in places under its exclusive jurisdiction, and situate within the limits
of States that permit the holding of slaves.
Article 3: Congress shall have no power to abolish slavery
within the District of Columbia, so long as it exists in the adjoining
States of Virginia and Maryland, or either, nor without the consent
of the inhabitants, nor without just compensation first made to such
owners of slaves as do not consent to such abolishment. Nor shall
Congress at any time prohibit officers of the Federal Government,
or members of Congress, whose duties require them to be in said
District, from bringing with them their slaves, and holding them as
such during the time their duties may require them to remain there,
and afterwards taking them from the District.
Article 4: Congress shall have no power to prohibit or hinder
the transportation of slaves from one State to another, or to a Territory,
in which slaves are by law permitted to be held, whether that
transportation be by land, navigable river, or by the sea.
Article 5: That in addition to the provisions of the third
paragraph of the second section of the fourth article of the Constitution
of the United States, Congress shall have power to provide by law,
and it shall be its duty so to provide, that the United States shall pay
to the owner who shall apply for it, the full value of his fugitive slave in
all cases where the marshall or other officer whose duty it was to arrest
said fugitive was prevented from so doing by violence or intimidation,
or when, after arrest, said fugitive was rescued by force, and the owner
thereby prevented and obstructed in the pursuit of his remedy for the
recovery of his fugitive slave under the said clause of the Constitution
and the laws made in pursuance thereof. And in all such cases, when
the United States shall pay for such fugitive, they shall have the right, in
their own name, to sue the county in which said violence, intimidation, or
rescue was committed, and to recover from it, with interest and damages,
the amount paid by them for said fugitive slave. And the said county,
after it has paid said amount to the United States, may, for its indemnity,
sue and recover from the wrong-doers or rescuers by whom the owner
was prevented from the recovery of his fugitive slave, in like manner as
the owner himslef might have sued and recovered.
Article 6: No future amendment of the Constitution shall
affect the five preceding articles; nor the third paragraph of the
second section of the first article of the Constitution; nor the third
paragraph of the second section of the fourth article of said
Constitution; and no amendment will be made to the Constitution
which shall authorize or give to Congress any power to abolish or
interfere with slavery in any of the States by whose laws it is, or may
be, allowed or permitted. And whereas, also, besides those causes
of dissension embraced in the foregoing amendments proposed to
the Constitution of the United States, there are others which come within
the jurisdiction of Congress, and may be remedied by its legislative
power; and whereas it is the desire of Congress, so far as its power will
extend, to remove all just cause for the popular discontent and agitation
which now disturb the peace of the country, and threaten the
stability of its institutions;
Therefore, 1. Resolved by the Senate and House of
Representatives of the United States of America, in Congress
assembled, That the laws now in force for the recovery of fugitive
slaves are in strict pursuance of the plain and mandatory provisions
of the Constitution, and have been sanctioned as valid and
constitutional by the judgement of the Supreme Court of the United
States.; that the slaveholding States are entitled to the faithful
observance and execution of those laws, and that they ought not to
be repealed, or so modified or changed as to impair their efficiency;
and that laws ought to be made for the punishment of those who
attempt by rescue of the slave, or other illegal means, to hinder or
defeat the due execution of said laws.
2. That all State laws which conflict with the fugitive slave
acts of Congress, or any other constitutional acts of Congress, or
which, in their operation, impede, hinder, or delay the free course
and due execution of any of said acts, are null and void by the plain
provisions of the Constitution of the United States; yet those State
laws, void as they are, have given color to practices, and led to
consequences, which have obstructed the due administration and
execution of acts of Congress, and especially the acts for the delivery
of fugitive slaves, and have thereby contributed much to the discord
and commotion now prevailing. Congress, therefore, in the present
perilous juncture, does not deem it improper, respectfully and earnestly
to recommend the repeal of those laws to the several States which
have enacted them, or such legislative corections or explanations of
them as may prevent their being used or perverted to such
mischievous purposes.
3. That the act of the 18th of September, 1850, commonly
called the fugitive slave law, ought to be so amended as to make
the fee of the commissioner, mentioned in the eighth section of the
act, equal in amount in the cases decided by him, whether his
decision be in favor of or against the claimant. And to avoid
misconstruction, the last clause of the fifth section of said act, which
authorizes the person holding a warrent for the arrest or detention
of a fugitive slave, to summon to his aid the posse comitatus, and
which declares it to be the duty of all good citizens to assist him in
its execution, ought to be so amended as to expressly limit the
authority and duty to cases in which there shall be resistance or
danger of resistance or rescue.
4. That the laws for the suppression of the African slave
trade, and especially those prohibiting the importation of slaves
in the United States, ought to be made effectual, and ought to be
thoroughly executed; and all further enactments necessary to
those ends ought to be promptly made.
Sources:
Library of Congress
National Park Service
University of Kansas
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