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The Fugitive Slave Act Of 1850: Symbolic Guarantee?

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The Constitution has been viewed by the public as an ultimate defense field for people to protect their rights and equalities. However, there were few laws in the Constitution signed by the government that actually prohibited certain groups of this country’s people from obtaining their justice and denied the moral base. One representative example was the Fugitive Slave Act of 1850, when it was passed by the Congress, the slaves owners were given to the right of capturing escaped slaves even with the help from the local government. This act banned the escaped slaves’ rights and equalities which their entire life was now count as a possession of the slave owners no matter where they were. The unconstitutionality of the Fugitive Slave was criticized by Jeffrey Rogers Hummel and Barry R. …show more content…
By the early nineteenth century, numerous slaves, seeking for liberty and equality, escaped from the southern plantations to the north through underground railroads. As a response to the slave owners’ urging request of finding and taking back the escaped slaves, the Congress established a law so called the Fugitive Slave Act in the year of 1850. In the act, Section 3, it explicitly stated that all citizens who encounter the escaped slaves should have the responsibility to send the slaves back to his or her owners. According this law, no matter where the slaves had fled to, this law was even more supreme than the state government and laws that the act would apply to everybody and every state, including free states where slavery always went against their

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