Ohio History Journal

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OHIO'S FUGITIVE SLAVE LAW

OHIO'S FUGITIVE SLAVE LAW

 

 

BY C. B. GALBREATH

 

Recently the writer received a request for informa-

tion on Ohio's Fugitive Slave Law. Our school his-

tories make clear what the national Fugitive Slave Law

was but they rarely give any account of the measures

adopted and enacted by certain northern states, designed

to accomplish the same purpose some years before the

enactment included in the Compromise of 1850 which

aroused a storm of opposition throughout the North.

It is the purpose of this brief introductory contribution

to place before the readers, of the QUARTERLY Ohio's

Fugitive Slave Law of 1839 and the steps leading up to

its enactment.

In the years from 1830 to 1840 public opinion in

Ohio was generally hostile toward slaves escaping into

the state and those seeking to encourage and aid fugi-

tives.  The "Underground Railroad" was unpopular

and in violation of national and state laws. Its activi-

ties were justified by its agents because, as they averred,

slavery and all laws for protecting and perpetuating

it were in violation of the "higher law" and the Declara-

tion of Independence, which vouchsafed "life, liberty

and the pursuit of happiness" to all mankind.

The efforts of the slave states to have the bordering

free states enact new restrictive laws for the return of

fugitive slaves demonstrates not only the effectiveness

of the methods of the "Underground Railroad" but the

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