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The Thirteenth Amendment: Opposing Visions
In the wake of the presidential election of 1860 that brought Abraham Lincoln to
the White House, the slaveholding states of the American South, led by South Carolina,
began withdrawing from the nation. In the midst of this constitutional crisis, President
James Buchanan, still in office until Lincoln’s inauguration in March of 1861,
tried to reassure the South that their slave property would remain safe, even under
the incoming Republican administration that some slaveholders believed would be abolitionist.
He asked Congress to draw up what he called an “explanatory amendment”
to the Constitution that would explicitly recognize the right of states to sanction
human bondage and protect the rights of slaveholders to maintain their human property.
In response, the House of Representatives established a thirty-three member committee
under the leadership of Representative Thomas Crown of Ohio to prepare a draft for
the president’s consideration.
Within weeks, the committee delivered to the full House a document that many hoped
would mollify the South. This proposed Thirteenth Amendment (GLC 09040) reflected
the apprehension of all those who in late 1860 believed that they were witnessing
the dissolution of the nation. Without using the word slavery or slave the proposed
amendment would deny “to Congress the power to abolish or interfere, within
any state, with the domestic institutions thereof, including that of persons held
to labor or service by the laws of said state.” Curiously, there was no mention
of the right of Congress to restrict the spread of slavery into national territories
that might, at some future point, become states in the union. This had been the major
point of contention since the Supreme Court’s 1857 decision in the case of Dred
Scott. Scott was a slave who sought his freedom on the grounds that his master had
allowed him to live in a free territory for a number of years. The Court rejected
Scott’s claim of freedom, ruling that, under the Constitution, Congress had
no right to exclude slavery from the territories.
Although president-elect Lincoln had let it be known that he would respect the right
of slaveholders in states that currently sanctioned slavery, he and the Republican
Party had taken a solid stand against the expansion of the institution into the territories.
The South completely rejected any effort to limit slavery, however, arguing that slavery
must expand or die. Slaveholders were so committed to this notion that they proposed
the U.S. annexation of Cuba and parts of Latin America to insure the availability
of regions well-suited to the use of large scale slave labor and thus to the continued
economic and political power of the slaveholding South. However, the proposed Thirteenth
Amendment took no position on this most divisive point of dispute.
Still, the amendment, officially designated Joint Resolution No. 80, passed the House
of Representatives in late February by the convincing vote of more than two-thirds
of the membership. It was delivered to the Senate just days before Lincoln’s
inauguration and although most members of that body supported it, opponents were successful
in blocking the amendment on a parliamentary technicality.
The effort to establish a constitutional guarantee for slavery was not dead however.
Senator John J. Crittenden of Kentucky, committed to calming secessionist tempers,
proposed a broad compromise calculated to appease the slave states. He proposed a
set of constitutional amendments that would not only protect slavery in the South,
but would also allow it to expand into the West. By constitutional amendment, the
old Missouri Compromise that had been struck down by the court in the Dred Scott case
would be reinstated. Further, Crittenden’s plan would extend a line from the
southern border of the state of Missouri to California as the northern boundary of
slavery. All regions south of that line would be open to slaveholder expansion.
President-elect Lincoln and other Republicans were not willing to allow slavery to
move into the West, and the Crittenden compromise, as the plan was called, failed
to gain the required support. This Thirteenth Amendment, originally proposed to appease
the South was then dismissed. In 1865, at the end of the war, a very different constitutional
amendment, bearing the same numerical designation, was proposed and finally passed.
The Thirteenth Amendment that was added to the Constitution outlawed slavery and involuntary
servitude everywhere in the nation. It was the first change made to the Constitution
in over sixty years and the first substantive change to the nation’s conception
of individual freedoms since the Bill of Rights was adopted in 1789. In his Emancipation
Proclamation, Lincoln had declared the abolition of slavery in the states then in
rebellion against the United States. He claimed the right to do this under the war
powers of the president, but he believed that only a constitutional amendment could
end slavery nationally. His reelection to the presidency in 1864 and the gain in Republican
seats in the Congress provided the opportunity to move forward on such an amendment.
The Thirteenth Amendment became a part of the Constitution in December of 1865, eight
months after the surrender of the Confederacy and the assassination of Abraham Lincoln.
The Civil War was over and for the first time in history a U.S. president had been
murdered. John Wilkes Booth, a Confederate sympathizer, had assassinated Lincoln because
the president had publicly stated his commitment to freedom and citizenship for the
former slaves. The Thirteenth, Fourteenth and Fifteenth constitutional amendments,
ratified in the decade after the war, wrote Lincoln’s commitment into the Constitution.
Yet Southern state law, Northern apathy, the manipulation of constitutional interpretation
and national racism blunted its practical effect. It would take another century of
civil rights struggle for these protections to become more than constitutional promises.
James Oliver Horton
Benjamin Banneker Professor of American Studies and History
George Washington University
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Click to see the document.
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GLC 09040 Copy of Proposed Amendment to the Constitution of the United
States, 30 April 1861.
For more information or to obtain copies, contact Ana Ramirez-Luhrs at reference@gilderlehrman.com
or call (212) 787-6616 ext. 209.
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Copy of Proposed Amendment to the Constitution of the United States
30 April 1861.
Pamphlet, 4 pages.
[Document C.]
BY THE HOUSE OF DELEGATES.
April 30, 1861.
Read and ordered to be printed. |
COPY
OF
P R O P O S E D A M E N D M E N T
TO THE
CONSTITUTION OF THE UNITED STATES.
|
[2] STATE OF MARYLAND,
EXECUTIVE CHAMBER,
Frederick City, April 30, 1861. |
Gentleman of the House of Delegates:
I herewith transmit to your honorable body a copy of the proposed amendment to
the Constitution of the United States, which was adopted, as a joint resolution,
by Congress, and approved by the President; and which is authenticated under the
Seal of the Department of State at Washington.
|
THOS. H. HICKS. |
[3] COPY OF PROPOSED AMENDMENT
TO THE
CONSTITUTION OF THE UNITED STATES. |
To his Excellency,
The Governor of the State of Maryland,
Annapolis:
WASHINGTON, March 16, 1861.
SIR : — I transmit an authenticated copy of a joint resolution to amend
the Constitution of the United States, adopted by Congress, and approved on the
2nd of March, 1861, by James Buchanan, President.
I have the honor to be,
Your Excellency’s ob’t servant, |
ABRAHAM LINCOLN.
By the President.
WILLIAM H. SEWARD, Secretary of State. |
UNITED STATES OF AMERICA,
DEPARTMENT OF STATE. |
To all whom these presents shall come, Greeting:
I certify that the paper hereunto annexed, has been compared with the original
roll, and is a true copy of the “Joint Resolution to amend the Constitution
of the United States;” approved March 2, 1861.
In testimony whereof, I, William H. Seward, Secretary of
~~ State of the United States, have hereunto subscribed my name and caused the
seal of the
{ L.S.}Department of State to be affixed.
~~
Done at the city of Washington, this 13th day of March, A. D. 1861, and of the
Independence of the United States of America the 85th. |
| WILLIAM H. SEWARD. |
[4] JOINT RESOLUTION. |
| Thirty Sixth Congress of the United States, at the second Session, begun and
held at the city of Washington in the District of Columbia, on Monday, the third
day of December, one thousand eight hundred and sixty. |
JOINT RESOLUTION TO AMEND THE CONSTITUITION
OF THE UNITED STATES.
Resolved, By the Senate and the House of Representatives of the United States,
of America in Congress assembled, that the following article be proposed to the
Legislatures of the several States as an amendment to the Constitution of the
United States, which, when ratified by three-fourths of said Legislatures, shall
be valid, to all intents and purposes, as part of the said Constitution, viz: |
ARTICLE XIII. |
| No amendment shall be made to the Constitution which will authorize or give
to Congress the power to abolish or interfere, within any State, with the domestic
institutions thereof, including that of persons held to labor or service by the
laws of said State. |
WILLIAM PENNINGTON,
Speaker of the House of Representatives.
JOHN C. BRECKINRIDGE,
Vice President of the United States, and
President of the Senate.
Approved March 2, 1861.
JAMES BUCHANAN. |
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Blight, David W. Race and Reunion: The Civil War in American
Memory, 2001.
William Lee Miller, Arguing About Slavery: John Quincy Adams and the Great Battle
in the United States Congress (Vintage Books, 1998).
James Brewer Stewart, Holy Warriors: The Abolitionists and American Slavery (rev.
ed., Hill & Wang, 1997).
Bertram Wyatt-Brown, Lewis Tappan and the Evangelical War Against Slavery
(reprint, Louisiana State University Press, 1997).
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