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Nebraska Bill
- Detroit, Michigan, Free Press [Democratic], (6 January 1854)
- It is no part of the business of Congress to legislate for the
territories.
- New York, Tribune [Whig], (6 January 1854)
- An overt attempt is set on foot in Mr. Douglas's
Nebraska bill to override the Missouri
Compromise.
- New Haven, Connecticut, Register [Democratic], (9 January 1854)
- That not
only the administration, but the Democracy of the
whole country will show their determination to stand
by these measures, and to practically apply them
whenever in the organization of territorial and State
governments, or otherwise, the same principles shall
arise, we feel the fullest confidence.
- Detroit, Michigan, Free Press [Democratic], (10 January 1854)
- all questions pertaining to slavery in the Territories, and in
the new States to be formed therefrom, are to be left to the decision of the
people residing therein
- New York, Tribune [Whig], (10 January 1854)
- We cannot conceive how intelligent and conscientious men, who possess a
real regard for the great doctrines of human freedom, can excuse themselves
for such an abandonment as that which we have been apprised is in
contemplation.
- New York, Tribune [Whig], (11 January 1854)
- Slavery is an Ishmael.
It is malevolent and malignant.
It loves aggression, for when it ceases to be aggressive it stagnates
and decays.
- Detroit, Michigan, Free Press [Democratic], (12 January 1854)
- it takes the right ground essentially, and we have no doubt
that the nation will sustain it.
- Detroit, Michigan, Free Press [Democratic], (13 January 1854)
- The bill for the organization of Nebraska, like the Compromise Measures, is
common ground upon which all sections can meet.
- New York, Tribune [Whig], (13 January 1854)
- The opposition to the Nebraska bill is gaining daily.
- New York, Tribune [Whig], (14 January 1854)
- The honor of the South, therefore, cannot be trusted where the interests
of Slavery are involved, because on such occasions the voice of honor and truth
is always silenced by the clamor of low, brutal and selfish passions.
- New York, Tribune [Whig], (14 January 1854)
- it will probably pass as an Administration measure.
- Washington, D C, Union [Democratic], (15 January 1854)
- his proposition is regarded by abolitionists as a death-blow to
their hope of making the slavery question available for
future political excitement.
- Detroit, Michigan, Free Press [Democratic], (15 January 1854)
- It is simply recognizing, to its proper limit, the great principle of the
right of the people, every where, to self-government.
- New Haven, Connecticut, Register [Democratic], (16 January 1854)
- We commend Mr.
Douglas' report not only for the ability with which it is
prepared, but for the sound, national, Union-loving
sentiments, with which it abounds.
- New York, Tribune [Whig], (16 January 1854)
- Douglas purposes now to bring up the Nebraska bill forthwith, and to "cram
it down,"
- New York, Tribune [Whig], (18 January 1854)
- Some of the Southern members are startled at the discovery that Douglas's
Nebraska bill is a violation of the Compromise of 1850.
- New York, Tribune [Whig], (23 January 1854)
- Is it not time that the Press of the Free States, without distinction of
party, should speak out on this question?
- Charleston, South Carolina, Mercury [Democratic], (23 January 1854)
- the North and the South ought to
unite in sweeping it into the rubbish of extinct legislative anomalies
- New York, Tribune [Whig], (24 January 1854)
- DOUGLAS'S new bill has taken the best friends of the Administration by
surprise.
- New York, Tribune [Whig], (24 January 1854)
- we judge he is after keeping up the equilibrium of things by making a
slave and a free State out of his two proposed territories of Nebraska and
Kansas.
- New York, Tribune [Whig], (25 January 1854)
- The Adminstration is determined to put through DOUGLAS'S Nebraska bill
before public opinion cows the timid.
- Richmond, Virginia, Enquirer [Democratic], (25 January 1854)
- The union of the Democracy on this proposition
will dissipate forever the charges of free soil sympathies so
recklessly and pertinaciously urged against the administration
by our Whig opponents
- New York, Tribune [Whig], (26 January 1854)
- Sober minded men, who have leaned to the side of the
South in the late contests, on the ground that the
Abolitionists were the aggressors, will turn and resist
this movement as a gross outrage and aggression on the part of the
South.
- Charleston, South
Carolina, Mercury [Democratic], (26 January 1854)
- It is perhaps, well for the South that
parties at the North stand thus committed
- Hartford, Connecticut, Courant [Whig], (27 January 1854)
- This is a bold bid of Douglas for the next Presidency.
- Detroit, Michigan, Free Press [Democratic], (27 January 1854)
- But whether slavery would or would not go to Nebraska, is not the
question.
That must be left to the people, whom we must learn to trust.
- New York, Tribune [Whig], (28 January 1854)
- For our own part, we regard this Nebraska movement of Douglas and his
backers as one of measureless treachery and infamy.
- New Haven, Connecticut, Register [Democratic], (30 January 1854)
- The persons who have been busiest in charging the
Administration with favoring Free Soilism, are now
"standing upon the other tack," and assert that the
Administration is doing all it can for the benefit of
slavery!
- Springfield, Illinois, Illinois State Register [Democratic], (31 January 1854)
- Now is the time to give practical effect to the leading principles which
triumphed in the election of Pierce.
- New Haven, Connecticut, Register [Democratic], (1 February 1854)
- The
Compromise of 1850 is well understood to be a "finality" --
superceding all previous action, and designed
to stop all agitation of the slavery question,
in or out of Congress.
- Raleigh, North Carolina, Register [Whig], (1 February 1854)
- we confess
that we somewhat doubt the utility of disturbing the Missouri
Compromise
- Concord, New Hamphire, New Hampshire Patriot [Democratic], (1 February 1854)
- the
selfish schemes of trading politicians who seek
to get up another abolition mania in the hope
of thereby getting into office.
- New Haven, Connecticut, Register [Democratic], (2 February 1854)
- As we are a little oblivious respecting the "loud-mouthed
attacks of the democratic press," which the
Courant alludes to, will the editor be good enough
to produce them?
- Detroit, Michigan, Free Press [Democratic], (2 February 1854)
- We deny to Congress the power to either establish slavery or to prohibit
it, in a Territory or a State.
- Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, Gazette [Whig], (2 February 1854)
- This is Slavery fairly
developed. Like Catholicism, it cannot bear
discussion.
- New Haven, Connecticut, Register [Democratic], (2 February 1854)
- The only mode of relief
we can think of, will be to elect the editor a delegate
to the great "Hen convention
- Little Rock, Arkansas, State Gazette and Democrat [Democratic], (3 February 1854)
- It is predicted that this report and bill will
re-open the slavery agitation, both North and
South
- New Haven, Connecticut, Register [Democratic], (3 February 1854)
- There never was a more needless excitement than
that which the whig press is trying to raise on this
subject.
- Detroit, Michigan, Free Press [Democratic], (3 February 1854)
- no effort at
agitation, either on the part of abolition, whig or "independent" papers, can
move that sentiment from the firm base on which it stands.
- New York, Tribune [Whig], (3 February 1854)
- The Nebraska bill is a Presidential scheme.
- Charleston, South
Carolina, Mercury [Democratic], (3 February 1854)
- distinctly and unequivocally in favor of repealing all
the anti-slavery restrictions of the Missouri Compromise
- New Haven, Connecticut, Register [Democratic], (4 February 1854)
- And
it is this same principle, so eloquently advanced by
Clay and Webster and the Democratic statesmen
who went with them in that movement, that is
incorporated in the new bill for Nebraska
- Detroit, Michigan, Free Press [Democratic], (4 February 1854)
- The principle of Congressional non intervention in the domestic affairs of
the States and Territories is strongly intrenched in the popular heart.
- New York, Tribune [Whig], (4 February 1854)
- the last desperate resort of the burglar to deceive his pursuers, is
embraced.
- Charleston, South
Carolina, Mercury [Democratic], (4 February 1854)
- Senator DOUGLAS made a powerful speech in
vindication of the Nebraska bill
- New Haven, Connecticut, Register [Democratic], (4 February 1854)
- The abolitionists, free soilers, and free soil
whigs, the Boston Post thinks, had better save their
breath to cool their porridge, instead of wasting it
in denunciation of the Nebraska bill.
- Charleston, South
Carolina, Mercury [Democratic], (4 February 1854)
- we expect to see abolition
attempting now to cloak its head under the mantle of good faith, and cry aloud
for the maintenance of pledges, while it presses forward its own wicked
objects.
- New Haven, Connecticut, Register [Democratic], (6 February 1854)
- its
sole object is to confirm the principles of the
Compromise of 1850, and remove the question of
slavery from the National Councils.
- New York, Tribune [Whig], (6 February 1854)
- contempt for the
juggling doughfaces who are mediating this monstrous treachery
- Charleston, South
Carolina, Mercury [Democratic], (6 February 1854)
- We are able to do only imperfect justice to the speech of this
distinguished Senator in defence of the territorial bill.
- Detroit, Michigan, Free Press [Democratic], (6 February 1854)
- take the whole question out of the hands of Congress, and give
it into the charge of the people interested in it
- Detroit, Michigan, Free Press [Democratic], (7 February 1854)
- We furnish our readers to-day with the first half of Senator Douglas' speech
on the territorial bill.
- Richmond, Virginia, Enquirer [Democratic], (7 February 1854)
- we apprehend before the struggle is over, the majority of the active and aspiring Whigs of the South will be found in opposition to the repeal of the Missouri restriction.
- Concord, New Hamphire, New Hampshire Patriot [Democratic], (1 February 1854)
- We have seldom read an abler or more conclusive
argument in support of any measure
- New York, Tribune [Whig], (8 February 1854)
- We recommend their perusal to the small fry who are just now making a
parade of their great astuteness in the reproduction of Mr.
Calhouns's doctrine of the unconstitutionality of excluding Slavery from the
territories; a doctrine which his ingenious sophistry alone could shield from
contempt.
- Charleston, South Carolina, Mercury [Democratic], (8 February 1854)
- But the position of the Abolitionists on this question is not only
treacherous, but it makes also the legislation of the country absurdly
inconsistent.
- Detroit, Michigan, Free Press [Democratic], (9 February 1854)
- When abolitionism shall be finally crushed out of Congress, no other
question can soon arise whose tendency will be to disturb the relations of
cordiality which naturally subsist between the two great divisions of the
country.
- New York, Tribune [Whig], (9 February 1854)
- We now learn that a body of the representatives of the South, who are
always united in the support of all schemes for the extension of the patriarchal
institution, and who now anticipate a certain victory with the aid of the
northern doughfaces, have still another deception in contemplation.
- Detroit, Michigan, Free Press [Democratic], (10 February 1854)
- The only serious danger to the permanency of our institutions is the
proclivity of the central power to interfere in the rights of the States.
- Detroit, Michigan, Free Press [Democratic], (10 February 1854)
- Let not abolitionists talk to us of the sacredness of compromises!
Nothing is sacred with them.
- Springfield, Illinois, State Register [Democratic], (11 February 1854)
- the able and unanswerable speech of
Judge Douglas upon the Nebraska Territorial bill
- Detroit, Michigan, Free Press [Democratic], (11 February 1854)
- Shall, or shall not, the people of the Territories be permitted to manage
their own affairs in their own way?
- New Haven, Connecticut, Register [Democratic], (14 February 1854)
- Whiggery lives upon such excitements.
- Milledgeville, Georgia, Federal Union [Democratic], (14 February 1854)
- We regret to
learn that several whig papers at the South,
such as the National Intelligencer, the
Louisville Journal, and the New Orleans
Bulletin are out in opposition to the Nebraska
Bill.
- Charleston, South Carolina, Mercury [Democratic], (14 February 1854)
- So far therefore from these governments being empowered to exclude slavery,
any action they may take upon the subject, would be a matter for discussion and
decision, both by Congress and the Supreme Court of the United States.
- Detroit, Michigan, Free Press [Democratic], (15 February 1854)
- Let democratic statesmen, at least, be consistent, and cling to the
republican doctrine of non-intervention.
- New York, Tribune [Whig], (15 February 1854)
- the bill of Douglas, in so far as it
proposes to disturb the Missouri Compromise, involves gross perfidy, and is
bolstered up by the most audacious false pretenses and frauds.
- New York, Tribune [Whig], (16 February 1854)
- the daily misrepresentations of the paid organs of the
Government in regard to every other point in the existing controversy.
- Richmond, Virginia, Enquirer [Democratic], (16 February 1854)
- On our side we have the whole power
of the Federal government and the moral support of a
sound public sentiment
- Detroit, Michigan, Free Press [Democratic], (18 February 1854)
- The battle is between popular constitutional rights on the one hand, and the
encroachments of the central power on the other.
- New York, Tribune [Whig], (20 February 1854)
- The Satanic Press audaciously asserts that the public opinion of this City is
in favor of Douglas's Nebraska bill
- New Haven, Connecticut, Register [Democratic], (21 February 1854)
- it must be apparent to every one
who looks upon the Congressional proceedings, that
the whig organization, as a National party is ended
- Raleigh, North Carolina, Register [Whig], (22 February 1854)
- let the principle of non-
intervention be presented in a distinct resolution, which shall fix the doctrine
upon our statute book
- New York, Tribune [Whig], (23 February 1854)
- Cowardice is thought a great stain at the South, yet political cowardice has
of late years become nest to universal there
- New York, Tribune [Whig], (24 February 1854)
- where is the man brazen enough to avow that we need any more slave-
breeding districts?
- Richmond, Virginia, Enquirer [Democratic], (2 March 1854)
- Northern journals betray a gross misrepresentation of the
temper of the public mind of the South
- Raleigh, North Carolina, Register [Whig], (8 March 1854)
- the locofoco party, in Convention assembled, gave their solemn
sanction and recommendation to a measure which they must have believed, -- if
what they had said was to be relied upon, -- surrendered the rights of the
South
- Springfield, Illinois, Illinois State Register [Democratic], (13 March 1854)
- Since the introduction of a Nebraska bill Greely has been busily engaged in
fabricating public opinion against it.
- Milledgeville, Georgia, Federal Union [Democratic], (14 March 1854)
- With such a showing as this, the Whig
paper at the South, that raises its voice
against Northern Democrats, should call up
on the mountains and the rocks to fall on
them and hide them forever from the
gaze of honest and patriotic men.
- Springfield, Illinois, Illinois State Register [Democratic], (13 March 1854)
- Its daily conglomerate, hashed up from Greely's mint of festering
misrepresentation, calumny, and impotent malice, finds no response with the
people of Illinois.
- Charleston, South Carolina, Mercury [Democratic], (21 March 1854)
- it places the
claims of the bill to Southern support on the true ground of the equal
constitutional rights of all the States in the Territories
- Raleigh, North Carolina, Register [Whig], (22 March 1854)
- It is an attempt to prove the locofoco party the
national party, and the Whig party a mere
faction.
- Charleston, South Carolina, Mercury [Democratic], (23 March 1854)
- Whether time and consultation, and the various influences that work on the
minds of Members of Congress, will increase the number of supporters of the
bill, remains to be seen.
- Milledgeville, Georgia, Federal Union [Democratic], (28 March 1854)
- We have too much confidence in the
magnanimity, good sense and prudence of many
Northern Democratic Statesmen, to despair
of National Parties at this time.
- Springfield, Illinois, Illinois State Register [Democratic], (30 March 1854)
- If the Journal editor would not be classed as an abolitionist, he should
not fulminate abolition doctrines.
- Jackson,Mississippi, Mississippian [Democratic], (31 March 1854)
- we
have no fanatical women roving over the country and
bringing reproach upon the community in which they
live, by mingling in affairs which pertain to the sterner
sex, we have no preachers who convert the sacred desk
into an arena of sectional strife, and whose blasphemies
make the very angels weep.
- Raleigh, North Carolina, Register [Whig], (31 May 1854)
- by a sneaking and covert insinuation, it would leave the impression
that they were co-operating with abolitionists!
- Raleigh, North Carolina, Register [Whig], (15 April 1854)
- If their defeat is
not on the ground of opposition to the Nebraska Bill, then it must be on the
ground of opposition to the general course of the Administration!
- Milledgeville, Georgia, Federal Union [Democratic], (18 April 1854)
- We see a disposition in some quarters of
the Democratic party to discuss the
question of Squatter Sovereignty as applied to
the Nebraska Bill.
- Jackson, Mississippi, Mississippian [Democratic], (21 April 1854)
- The condition on which
the Democracy of the slave-holding States co-operate
with their brethren of the North, is that of non-interference
with the rights of slave-holding States, and
opposition to Congressional legislation, which discriminates
in any form against the property of one section
of the Union
- New Orleans, Louisiana, Bee [Whig], (6 May 1854)
- The Washington correspondent
of the New York Express says:
- New York, Tribune [Whig], (12 May 1854)
- the contest has begun on that infamous measure.
- Richmond, Virginia, Enquirer [Democratic], (15 May 1854)
- The
principle of the power of the majority is essential to
the authority of government, and should not be
sacrificed to those technical rules which are ordained for
the protection of the rights of a minority.
- Hartford, Connecticut, Daily Courant [Whig], (16 May 1854)
- the whole slavery
agitation has been reopened by the South themselves
- New Orleans, Louisiana, Bee [Whig], (16 May 1854)
- Our Congressional
news of to-day, although it occupies but little space owing
to the rule of condensation that invariably prevails in this
office, will be found extremely interesting and important.
- Raleigh, North Carolina, Register [Whig], (17 May 1854)
- Will the people of the old States, on whom this measure will fall most
ruinously, suffer themselves to be humbugged by the basely cunning and false
representations of the lackeys of the Administration?
- Springfield, Illinois, Illinois State Register [Democratic], (19 May 1854)
- The opponents of the Nebraska bill failed in their disorganizing efforts to
defeat this measure by legislative trickery
- New Orleans, Louisiana, Bee [Whig], (19 May 1854)
- "If a Democratic Member of Congress is led by his
judgment and his conscience to vote for the bill, as we
hope all Democrats will be led to do, and he returns to his
constituents to encounter the clamor of Whigs and Abolitionists,
together with disaffected men of his own party,
no sensible man who understands and appreciates the
character of the Executive, will believe that the President will
allow such factious men to wield public patronage to
overthrow any man at home who has given to the principles
of the bill a cordial and conscientious support."
- Hartford,
Connecticut, Daily Courant [Whig], (20 May 1854)
- it is a solemn question for the freemen of the Free
States to ask themselves, how far they intend to follow the beck of the
slave power and to fulfil their plans for supremacy.
- New Orleans, Louisiana, Bee [Whig], (20 May 1854)
- There is a great deal of truth
in the following article, which we extract from the New York
Tribune, of the 14th inst., and right angry are we at
being compelled to admit it.
- Harrisburg, Pennsylvania, Morning Herald [Whig], (20 May 1854)
- It is now reduced to a certainty that the Nebraska
bill, which is repudiated by every honest man, and
whose author's name is execrated from Canada
to Cuba, will pass Congress.
- Harrisburg, Morning Herald [Whig], (22 May 1854)
- The time approaches for the final vote on the
Nebraska bill in the House of Representatives.
- Harrisburg, Pennsylvania, Morning Herald [Whig], (22 May 1854)
- We give below the names of the eleven traitors
to Pennsylvania and the North, who voted to take
up the Nebraska bill, with a view to its immediate
passage.
- Hartford,
Connecticut, Daily Courant [Whig], (23 May 1854)
- let the public see where the truth is.
- Albany, New York, Evening Journal [Whig], (23 May 1854)
- Slavery crawls, like a slimy reptile
over the ruins, to defile a second eden.
- Harrisburg, Pennsylvania, Morning Herald [Whig], (23 November 1854)
- The debate on the Nebraska-Kansas bill
terminated in the House on Saturday at 12 o'clock, prior
to which as arrangement was agreed upon for
gentlemen who had not spoken on the subject to be
permitted to print their speeches.
- Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, Gazette [Whig], (23 May 1854)
- The infamous act
has been forced upon the country by
the power of an oligarchy
- Hartford,
Connecticut, Daily Courant [Whig], (24 May 1854)
- the South may depend upon it that
the confidence in their honor has been woefully shaken by this repeal of a
solemn compact.
- New Haven, Connecticut, Register [Democratic], (24 May 1854)
- At sunrise this morning, one hundred guns were
fired from the Public Square, by order of the Democratic
Town Committee, in honor of the passage
of the bill
- New Orleans, Louisiana, Bee [Whig], (24 May 1854)
- We verily believe that if the struggle on the Nebraska bill
could be continued two or three months longer, the real
sentiment of the Southern people would become so
unmistakably known that most of their representatives would
drop the demagoguical abortion as a thing not fit to be
touched.
- Cincinnati, Ohio, Daily Enquirer [Democratic], (24 May 1854)
- Those who desire to keep the disturbing
and distracting subject of slavery in Congress,
as an eternal bone of contention between the North
and the South, instead of referring its decision to
those to whom it legitimately belongs, will, of course,
send up a howl of rage over the result, which, to
them, is so calamitous.
- New Orleans, Louisiana, Bee [Whig], (25 May 1854)
- According to a telegraphic dispatch
from Washington, which appeared in yesterday's
Evening Picayune, the Nebraska bill, divested of the
Clayton amendment, passed the House of Representatives,
late on Tuesday evening, by a vote of 113 yeas to
100 nays.
- Harrisburg, Pennsylvania, Morning Herald [Whig], (25 May 1854)
- A Washington correspondent writing in reference
to the change of front by a number of Northern
members, says,
- Richmond, Virginia, Enquirer [Democratic], (26 May 1854)
- It has not been our opinion that the South would
gain any very decisive advantage by the passage of
the Nebraska bill in its present shape
- Hartford, Connecticut, Daily Courant [Whig], (27 May 1854)
- It is time that minor differences should be forgotten or laid aside
- Charleston, South Carolina, Mercury [Democratic], (27 May 1854)
- As Mr. CALHOUN observed, governments were formed to protect minorities -- majorities can take care of themselves.
- New Orleans, Louisiana, Bee [Whig], (29 May 1854)
-
To those who, through ignorance or obstinacy, still insist
that the passage of the Nebraska bill will extend slavery,
we commend the following remarks from the late speech
of Col.Benton in Congress:
- Harrisburg, Pennsylvania, Morning Herald [Whig], (25 May 1854)
- The struggle on the Nebraska-Kansas bill has
finally terminated by its passage by both Houses.
- Charleston, South Carolina, Mercury [Democratic], (29 May 1854)
- We are glad to get rid of it.
- Milledgeville, Georgia, Federal Union [Democratic], (30 May 1854)
- the South has
learned that she has many friends at the
North upon whom she may rely for justice
in the hour of need.
- New Orleans, Louisiana, Bee [Whig], (31 May 1854)
- The substitute adopted is the Senate (Nebraska) bill,
without the Clayton amendment.
- Raleigh, North Carolina, Register [Whig], (31 May 1854)
- Not only the balance of power broken down,
between the slave and the free States, with a
large preponderance in the Senate in favor of
the latter, but that very section which is now
held out as open to the slaveholder, by this very
measure, filled up by a foreign population
violently hostile to our interests!
- Concord, New Hamphire, New Hampshire Patriot [Democratic], (31 May 1854)
- it will tend to remove
from the halls of Congress the slavery controversy,
and to transfer it to the people
- New Orleans, Louisiana, Bee [Whig], (1 June 1854)
- This important amendment, which was omitted by the
House of Representatives, reads as follows:
- Jackson, Mississippi, Mississippian [Democratic], (2 June 1854)
- it
achieves the great object of removing from Congressional
interference the slavery question
- Charleston, South Carolina, Mercury [Democratic], (3 June 1854)
- the passage of the Nebraska
Bill is the renewal of agitation of the subject of slavery, under circumstances,
too, of unprecedented intensity and bitterness.
- Hartford, Connecticut, Courant [Whig], (6 June 1854)
- The transition
from a compliance with this demand to the universal toleration
of slavery at the North, is but a step and an easy one.
- Little Rock, Arkansas, Arkansas State Gazette and Democrat [Democratic], (6 September 1854)
- The final passage of the Nebraska bill, through
the Senate, was publicly announced by the roaring
cannon
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