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Perspectives on the Fugitive Slave Law

Perspectives on the Fugitive Slave Law. The Case of Sara Lucy Bagby. “Slave Auction at Richmond, Virginia.” Courtesy of the Library of Congress. What was the Fugitive Slave Act? . From "The Last Race of the Rail-Splitter," Broadside, ca. 1861, Library of Virginia. .

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Perspectives on the Fugitive Slave Law

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  1. Perspectives on the Fugitive Slave Law The Case of Sara Lucy Bagby “Slave Auction at Richmond, Virginia.” Courtesy of the Library of Congress.

  2. What was the Fugitive Slave Act? From "The Last Race of the Rail-Splitter," Broadside, ca. 1861, Library of Virginia. How did the situation of Sara Lucy Bagby serve as a test case for the Fugitive Slave Act?

  3. Think About It • Would you follow the rules and turn in your friend? • Or protect your friend and break the rules yourself?

  4. What does “fugitive” mean?

  5. What does “fugitive” mean? • Adjective. Fleeing, running away • Noun. A person who runs away or eludes capture

  6. Fugitive Slave Act • Strengthened as part of the Compromise of 1850 • Required citizens to assist in returning escaped slaves • Made it easier for slaveholders to make claims against escaped slaves • Made it harder for escaped slaves or legally free African Americans to avoid capture

  7. Sara Lucy Bagby Picture Taken in 1904, Forty-three Years after Her Arrest. Image Source: Mrs. Lucinda Johnson, printed in Annals of the Early Settler's Association of Cuyahoga County, Ohio 5, no. 1 (1904): 32.

  8. Abraham Lincoln Image:Library of Congress William Lloyd Garrison Image: Library of Congress Sara Lucy Bagby Image: Annals of the Early Settler's Association of Cuyahoga County, Ohio James Coles Bruce

  9. Abraham Lincoln Speech Excerpt • What is happening now will not hurt those who are farther away from here. Have they not all their rights now as they ever have had? Do they not have their fugitive slaves returned now as ever? Have they not the same Constitution that they have lived under for seventy-odd years? Have they not a position as citizens of this common country—and have we any power to change that position?

  10. James Coles Bruce Speech Excerpt . . . the surrender of fugitive slaves as guaranteed was honestly, and fairly and justly carried out by the first Congress in 1789. . . . And fugitives were surrendered to their masters, until, in an evil hour, a case came before the judiciary of the United States in which a decision was given which says, it is not the duty of State officers to execute the law of Congress. . . . we lost all chance of recovering the fugitive for years; and when a slave escaped, his master looked upon him as much beyond his reach as if he were dead. That, sir, was a distinct and solemn violation of the Constitution.

  11. “To the Cleveland Union Savers” But when she a hunted sister Stretched her hands that ye may save Colder far then Zembla’s regions Was the answer that ye gave. On your Union’s bloody altar, Was your helpless victim laid, Mercy, truth, and justice shuddered, But your hands would give no aid. And ye sent her back to torture, Stripped of freedom, robbed of right, Thrust the wretched, captive stranger, Back to Slavery’s gloomy night. Zembla: Nova Zembla is a uninhabited island in the Canadian Arctic.

  12. Dear Commissioner White • U.S. commissioner Bushnell White was the man who decided Sara Lucy Bagby’s fate

  13. The Fate of Sara Lucy Bagby • Bagby was sent back to slavery in Virginia. • Just a few months later, in June 1861, when Federal troops captured Wheeling, she was freed. • She moved North, married and eventually settled in Cleveland.

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