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Dred Scott V. Sanford 1858 Julien Mercier and Kendal Kulp
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Background Dred Scott was born a slave in Missouri His owner, John Emerson, moved with him to Illinois and what is now Minnesota. John Emerson dies and Dred Scott sues for his freedom
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First attempt Dred Scott first tried to buy his freedom with abolitionist help He won a suit for his freedom in a Missouri court against Emerson’s widow The decision was then overturned in the Missouri supreme court
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New suit Dred Scott files a second suit in federal district court; Mrs. Emerson’s brother, John Sanford of New York acted as her attorney The federal district court ruled that Scott was still a slave He appealed to the US supreme court
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Supreme Court justices 5 of the justices were slave owners, another 2 supported the south Chief justice Rodger B. Taney was a flaming racist “The African in the United States even when free, are everywhere a degraded class and exercise no political influence. The privileges they are allowed to enjoy are accorded to them as a matter of kindness and benevolence rather than right…”
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The case in SCOTUS Three issues- Whether Scott was a citizen, whether he had gained freedom by moving to free land, whether the Missouri Compromise applied to where he lived First ruling was that Dred Scott was not a citizen because he was black Taney went on to say that congress had no power to regulate slavery anyway
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Aftermath Northerners decided that slavery was not nearly as tolerable now that congress had no power to regulate it The north feared that slavery would expand into all the western territories The case brought both the north and south to the point where they would be willing fight over slavery
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Sources Primary Chief justice Robert B. Taney- Opinion of the court in Dred Scott, plantiff in error v. John F. A. Sanford March 6,1857 Secondary Supreme court case studies by McGraw-hill companies, inc. Cozzens, L. (1999, October 31). Impact of dred scott. Retrieved from http://www.watson.org/~lisa/blackhistory/scott/im pact.html
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