The Kansas Nebraska Act: the "Little Giant" becomes Judas the Betrayer
Congressional passage of the
Kansas-Nebraska Act in March 1854 set into motion a national furor that would
alter the political landscape and dash any hopes the bill’s author, Stephen A.
Douglass of Illinois,
had for being nominated to the presidency by a united Democratic Party. In late
1859, Douglas admitted that the
Kansas-Nebraska Act, “revolutionized political parties…and formed the issues
upon which the Democratic and Republican parties are now arrayed against each
other.” Far from “imparting peace to the country and stability to the Union,”
as Douglas wrote in 1854, the Act brought
anger and discord.
Formation of the
Kansas-Nebraska Act
The Kansas-Nebraska Act was
forwarded out of the Senate Committee on Territories, chaired by Douglas, in early January 1854. Organization of the
territory had been advocated by leaders in Iowa
and Missouri,
notably former Senator Thomas Benton. The Platte Country featured fertile land
and timber for homes.
Douglas may also have been motivated by the proposed transcontinental
railroad. Although the South favored a southern route advocated by Jefferson
Davis, a member of the Franklin Pierce cabinet, Douglas was keenly aware that a
central route would benefit southern Illinois.
Further, Douglas had land holdings in Chicago
which would increase in value with a line connecting the city to the central
route. He would need southern support to achieve this goal.
The Act resolved to open up
the Kansas-Nebraska lands as two distinct territories. The slavery question
would be decided by popular sovereignty, Douglas’
signature issue. Southern support, however, was lukewarm until Douglas agreed
to include the Dixon Amendment, crafted by Senator Archie Dixon of Kentucky, that would
effectively repeal the 1820 Missouri Compromise. The Badger Amendment, offered
by North Carolina’s
George Badger, ensured that no prior laws restricting slavery would be revived
upon the repeal of the Missouri Compromise. The Act passed both house of
Congress and was signed into law by President Pierce after receiving assurances
from Jefferson Davis that the South supported the measure.
Reaction and Results
Members of the Whig Party
deplored the Act and Douglas’ role in
fashioning it. The “Little Giant” was subjected to intense criticism and scorn.
William Cullom, a Tennessee Whig, suggested that the title of the bill should
be amended to read: “A bill to make great men out of small ones and to
sacrifice the public peace and prosperity upon the altar of political
ambition.” That Douglas hoped to be the 1856
Democratic candidate was no secret. Douglas’
defense was that, “the Democratic Party is committed in the most solemn manner
to the principle of Congressional non-interference with slavery in the States
and Territories.” (February, 1854)
The Kansas-Nebraska Act led
to “Bleeding Kansas,” a period of open warfare and bloodshed in Kansas between pro and
anti-slavery parties that was only mitigated when federal troops intervened to
restore order. The Act split political allegiances as Anti-Nebraska Democrats
sought a new home in the emerging Republican Party, a movement that gathered
disenchanted Whigs, Free Soilers, and “Known Nothings”. By 1856, the Republican
Party offered its first national candidate, John C. Fremont, frontier hero of “Bear Flag
Republic” fame.
Stephen Douglas continued to
champion popular sovereignty even after the 1857 Dred Scott Decision made his
position untenable. It was his undoing at the party convention in Charleston 1860 and remained his final solution in January
1861 during last minute emergency negotiations in the Congress failed to keep
the Union intact.
Published in Suite 101 November 21,2008 by M.Streich. copyright
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