The compromise proposed sixconstitutional amendments and four congressional resolutions. Crittenden introduced the package on December 18.[1] It wastabled on December 31.
It guaranteed the permanent existence of slavery in the slave states and addressed Southern demands in regard to fugitive slaves and slavery in theDistrict of Columbia. It proposed re-instating theMissouri Compromise (which had been functionally repealed in 1854 by theKansas–Nebraska Act and struck down entirely in 1857 by theDred Scott decision) and extending the compromise line to the west, with slavery prohibited north of the 36° 30′ parallel and guaranteed south of it. The compromise included aclause that it could not be repealed or amended.
The compromise was popular among most Southern members of the Senate, but it was generally unacceptable to the Republicans, who opposed the expansion of slavery beyond the states where it already existed, into the territories. The opposition of their party's leader, President-electAbraham Lincoln, was crucial.[2][3] Republicans said the compromise "would amount to a perpetual covenant of war against every people, tribe, and state owning a foot of land between here andTierra del Fuego".[4] The only territories south of the line were parts ofNew Mexico Territory andIndian Territory. There was considerable understanding on both sides that slavery would never flourish in New Mexico due mainly to its climate. The South refused the House Republicans' proposal, approved by committee on December 29, to admit New Mexico as a state immediately.[5] However, not all opponents of the Crittenden Compromise also opposed furtherterritorial expansion of the United States.The New York Times referred to "the whole future growth of the Republic" and "all the Territory that can ever belong to the United States—the whole of Mexico and Central America".[6]
Slave and free states & territories in 1858. The 1820Missouri Compromise line of 36° 30′ N. separated Missouri from theArkansas Territory, but barred slavery from any new states and territories north of this line and west of Missouri, as did the Crittenden Compromise proposed forty years later. (However, this part of the Compromise of 1820 had been largely negated by theKansas–Nebraska Act of 1854 and the U.S. Supreme Court'sDred Scott decision in 1857.)
Slavery would be prohibited in anyterritory of the United States "now held, or hereafter acquired", north of latitude36 degrees, 30 minutes line. In territories south of this line, slavery of theAfrican race was "hereby recognized" and could not be interfered with by Congress. Furthermore, property in African slaves was to be "protected by all the departments of the territorial government during its continuance". States would be admitted to the Union from any territory with or without slavery as their constitutions provided.
Congress was forbidden to abolish slavery in places under its jurisdiction, such as a military post, within a slave state.
Congress could not abolish slavery in the District of Columbia so long as it existed in the adjoining states of Virginia and Maryland and without the consent of the District's inhabitants. Compensation would be given to owners who refused consent to abolition.
Congress could not prohibit or interfere with the interstate slave trade.
Congress would provide full compensation to owners of rescued fugitive slaves. Congress was empowered to sue the county in which obstruction to thefugitive slave laws took place to recover payment; the county, in turn, could sue "the wrong doers or rescuers" who prevented the return of the fugitive.
No future amendment of the Constitution could change these amendments or authorize or empower Congress to interfere with slavery within any slave state.[7]
Thatfugitive slave laws were constitutional and should be faithfully observed and executed.
That all state laws that impeded the operation of fugitive slave laws, the so-called "Personal liberty laws", were unconstitutional and should be repealed.
That theFugitive Slave Act of 1850 should be amended (and rendered less objectionable to the North) by equalizing the fee schedule for returning or releasing alleged fugitives and limiting the powers of marshals to summon citizens to aid in their capture.
That laws for the suppression of theAfrican slave trade should be effectively and thoroughly executed.[7]
Senator Crittenden (1855); photo byMathew BradySouthern cartoon depicting critically the Crittenden Compromise as "legislative quackery" by "Doctor North" (1860s)
President-electAbraham Lincoln vehemently opposed the Crittenden compromise on grounds that he opposed any policy permitting the continued expansion of slavery.[8] Both theHouse of Representatives and theSenate rejected Crittenden's proposal. It was part of a series of last-ditch efforts to provide the Southern states with sufficient reassurances to forestall their secession during the final session of Congress prior to the Lincoln administration taking office.
The Crittenden proposals were also discussed at thePeace Conference of 1861, a meeting of more than 100 of the nation's leading politicians, held February 8–27, 1861, inWashington, D.C. The conference, led by former PresidentJohn Tyler, was the final formal effort of the states to avert the start of war. There too, the Compromise proposals failed, as the provision guaranteeing slave ownership throughout all Western territories and future acquisitions again proved unpalatable.
A February 1861 editorial in theCharleston Courier (Charleston, Missouri) summed up the mood prevalent in Southern-leaning border counties as the Crittenden proposals went down in defeat: "Men at Washington think there is no chance for peace, and indeed we can see but little, everything looks gloomy. The Crittenden resolutions have been voted down again and again. Is there any other proposition which will win, that the South can accept? If not—there comes war—and woe to the wives and daughters of our land; beauty will be but an incentive to crime, and plunder but pay forJohn Brown raids. Let our citizens be prepared for the worst, it may come."[9] This statement by editor George Whitcomb came in response to a fiery "letter to the editor" excoriating "disunion", from US RepresentativeJohn William Noell, whose district included Charleston.
The novelUnderground Airlines (2016) byBen Winters is set in analternate history where the Crittenden Compromise was accepted following the assassination of President-elect Abraham Lincoln.[10] By the twenty-first century, slavery had been retained in the "Hard Four" states of Carolina, Alabama, Mississippi and Louisiana.
^"Lincoln could not countenance this. 'Entertain no proposition for a compromise in regard to theextension of slavery,' he wrote to key Republican leaders includingSeward. Crittenden's compromise 'would lose us everything we gained by the election.'"James M. McPherson, "The Hedgehog and the Foxes,"Journal of the Abraham Lincoln Association, vol. 12, issue 1 (1991), pp. 49-65, quotation at p. 53; reprinted in James M. McPherson,Abraham Lincoln and the Second American Revolution, Oxford University Press (1991), pp. 113-130, quotation at p. 118.
^Lincoln did, however, support theCorwin Amendment, which would have barred any constitutional amendment "which will authorize or give to Congress the power to abolish or interfere [with slavery], within any State." In hisfirst inaugural address, he said, "holding such a provision to now be implied constitutional law, I have no objection to its being made express and irrevocable."
^Whitcomb, George (February 1, 1861)."Editorial".Charleston Courier. Charleston, Missouri. p. 2. RetrievedFebruary 16, 2012.
^Ben Winters (March 14, 2019)."What Do the Make-Believe Bureaucracies of Sci-Fi Novels Say About Us?".The New York Times. p. 14 of the Sunday Book Review. RetrievedMay 24, 2019.I performed a similar maneuver when I was working on my novel'Underground Airlines' and seeking a historical event that would sweep the Civil War from American history. In the end I needed only to resurrect the Crittenden Compromise, a set of statutes that was really proposed, really debated and really voted down by Congress, thank God, late in 1860.