Resolutions
------passed by the------
Convention of the
people of
Traditionally, only four
states are held to have issued "declarations of causes:" South Carolina, Mississippi, Georgia, and Texas. In addition, Alabama, Virginia, and Tennessee issued legislative
resolutions touching on the issue of secession, and there is a "lost"
declaration from Florida.
However, buried within the journals of the Arkansas Secession
Convention are the details of this resolution, proposed by Delegate
H.F. Thomason of Crawford County on March 11, 1861 and passed by
a vote of 37--29. The image is of a published broadside of
the resolutions, held here
by the Library of Congress. |
We, the people of the State of Arkansas, in convention assembled, in view of the unfortunate and distracted condition of our once happy and prosperous country, and of the alarming distentions existing between the northern and southern sections thereof; and desiring that a fair and equitable adjustment of the same may be made; do hereby declare the following to be just causes of complaint on the part of the people of the southern states, against their brethren of the northern, or non-slaveholding states. 1. The people of the northern States have organized a political party, purely sectional in its character, the central and controlling idea of which is, hostility to the institution of African slavery, as it exists in the southern States, and that party has elected a President and Vice President of the United States, pledged to administer the government upon principles inconsistent with the rights, and subversive of the interests of the people of the southern States. 2. They have
denied to the
people of the southern States the right to an equal participation in
the
benefits of the common territories of the Union, by refusing them the
same
protection to their slave property therein that is afforded to other
property,
and by declaring that no more slave states shall be admitted into the 3. They have
declared that
Congress possesses, under the constitution, and ought to exercise, the
power to
abolish slavery in the territories, in the 4. They have, in disregard of their constitutional obligations, obstructed the faithful execution of the fugitive slave laws by enactments of their State legislatures. 5. They have denied the citizens of southern States the right of transit through non-slaveholding States with their slaves, and the right to hold them while temporarily sojourning therein. 6. They have degraded American citizens by placing them upon an equality with negroes at the ballot-box. To redress
the grievances
hereinbefore complained of, and as a means of restoring harmony and
fraternal
good will between the people of all the states, the following
amendments to the
constitution of the 1. The President and Vice President of the United States shall each be chosen alternately from a slaveholding and non-slaveholding state---but, in no case, shall both be chosen from slaveholding or non-slaveholding states, 2. In all
the territory of
the 3. Congress shall have no power to legislate upon the subject of slavery, except to protect the citizen in his right of property in slaves. 4. That in
addition to the
provisions of the third paragraph of the second section of the fourth
article of
the constitution of the United States, Congress shall have power to
provide, by
law, and it shall be its duty so to provide, that the United States
shall pay
to the owner, who shall apply for it, the full value of his fugitive
slave, in
all cases, when the marshal, or other officer, whose duty it was to
arrest said
fugitive, was prevented from so doing by violence; or when, after
arrest, said
fugitive was rescued by force, and the owner thereby prevented and
obstructed
in the pursuit of his remedy for the recovery of his fugitive slave
under the said
clause of the constitution and the laws made in pursuance thereof. And
in all
such cases, when the 5. The third paragraph, of the second section of the fourth article of the constitution, shall not be construed to prevent any of the States from having concurrent jurisdiction with the United States, by appropriate legislation, and through the action of their judicial and ministerial officers, from enforcing the delivery of fugitives from labor to the person to whom such service or labor is due. 6. Citizens of slaveholding States when traveling through, or temporarily sojourning with their slaves in non-slaveholding States, shall be protected in their right of property in such slaves. 7. The elective franchise, and the right to hold office, whether federal, State, territorial or municipal, shall not be exercised by persons of the African race, in whole or in part. 8. These amendments, and the third paragraph of the second section of the first article of the constitution, and the third paragraph of the second section of the fourth article thereof, shall not be amended or abolished, without the consent of all the States. That the
sense of the
people of the Resolved,
By the people of Arkansas in Convention assembled, That we
recommend the calling of a convention of the States of the federal
Union, at
the earliest practicable day, in accordance with the provisions of the
fifth
article of the constitution of the United States. 2. Resolved
further. That the President of this convention transmit to
the President and Congress of the 3. Resolved further, That looking to the call of a national
convention, as recommended in the first resolution above, this
convention elect
five delegates to represent the State of 4. Resolved further, That a committee of five delegates of this convention be appointed to prepare an address to the people of the United States, urging upon them the importance of a united effort on the part of the patriotic citizens of all sections and parties to save the country from the dangers which impend it, and which threaten its destruction---and especially to arrest the reckless and fanatical spirit of sectionalism north and south, which, if not arrested, will inevitably involve us in a bloody civil war.
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