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| Jefferson Davis and his wife |
|
War was in the air. |
Everyone sensed it was coming. Oh, yeah! It was
coming just like a plague of locusts or grasshoppers eating their way across
the prairies. It was inevitable, just as
it was inevitable that some damn fool would propose a plan to prevent it.
Prominent politicians authored two of the schemes that
circulated early in 1861. The first, the Crittenden Compromise, was
the brainchild of Kentucky Congressman John T. Crittenden. Former President
John Tyler promoted the second one, known today as the Washington Peace
Conference.
The
Crittenden Compromise was a little too much for most Northerners. It guaranteed
the rights of the slave states to continue to
own slaves in perpetuity, to extend slavery into the territories north
of latitude 36° 30’, and it ensured the
enforcement of the Fugitive Slave Laws. If the states thwarted slave owners in restoring their property, the federal
government could reimburse them. Union men could
not stomach the Crittenden Compromise.
It
contradicted the entire Chicago platform of the Republican Party. If adopted,
it would reverse the election’s course and the people’s will. At least, that
was the way Abraham Lincoln and his supporters viewed the Crittenden
Compromise.
The
House and Senate quickly rejected it.


