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CHAP. XXI.

THE STRUGGLE BEGUN IN KANSAS.

1391 it was bordered on the east by a slave-labor State, and it was easy of access from the South. On the surface of society they saw only insignificant ripples of opposition. They began to colonize the Territory; and, flushed with what seemed to be well-assured success, they cast down the gauntlet of defiance at the feet of the friends of free-labor in the nation.

That gauntlet was quickly taken up by their opponents, and champions of freedom seemed to spring from the ground like the harvest from the seedsowing of dragons' teeth. Enterprising men and women swarmed out of New England to people the virgin soil of Kansas with the hardy children of toil. They were joined by those of other free-labor States in the North and West. The then dominant party in the Union were astonished at the sudden uprising, and clearly perceived that the opponents of slavery would speedily outvote its supporters. Combinations were formed under various names, such as "Blue Lodges," "Friends' Society," "Social Band," "Sons of the South," etc., to counteract the efforts of the "Emigrant Aid Society" of Massachusetts, to gain numerical supremacy in Kansas—a society which had been organized immediately after the passage of the Kansas-Nebraska bill. The supporters of slavery, conscious that their votes could not secure supremacy in Kansas, where the question of slavery or no slavery was to be decided at the ballot-box, organized physical force in Missouri to oppose this moral force. Associations were formed in Missouri, whose members were pledged to be ready, at all times, to assist, when called upon by the friends of slavery in Kansas, in removing from that Territory by force every person who should attempt to settle there "under the auspices of the Northern Emigrant Aid Society."

In the autumn of 1854, A. H. Reeder was sent to govern the Territory of Kansas. He immediately ordered an election of a Territorial legislature, and with that election the struggle for supremacy there was finally begun. Missourians went into Kansas to assist the supporters of slavery there in carrying the election. They went with tents, artillery and other weapons. There were then eight hundred and thirty-one legal voters in the Territory, but there were more than six thousand votes polled. The members of the Legislature were all supporters of slavery; and when they met at Shawnee, on the borders of Missouri, they proceeded to enact laws for upholding slavery in Kansas. These laws were regularly vetoed by Governor Reeder, who became so obnoxious that President Pierce was asked to recall him. The President did so, and sent Wilson Shannon of Ohio, who was an avowed supporter of slavery, to fill Reeder's place.

The actual settlers in Kansas, who were chiefly from the free-labor States, met in mass convention in September, 1855, and resolved not to recognize

the laws passed by the illegally elected legislature, as binding upon them. They called a delegate convention to assemble at Topeka on the 19th of October, at which time and place the convention framed a State constitution which was approved by the legal voters of the Territory, and which con tained an article making provision for constituting Kansas a free-labor State. Under this constitution they asked Congress to admit that Territory into the Union as a State. By this action the contest between Freedom and Slavery was transferred from Kansas to Washington, for awhile. The prospect of success for the opponents of slavery, in Kansas, was beginning to appear bright, when President Pierce gave the supporters of the institution much comfort by a message to Congress in January, 1856, in which he declared the action of the legal voters, in adopting a State constitution, to be open rebellion.

Throughout the spring and summer of 1856, armed men from other States roamed over Kansas, committing many excesses under pretext of compelling obedience to the laws of the illegal legislature. There was much violence and bloodshed; but during the autumn, the Presidential election absorbed so much of the public attention, that Kansas was allowed a season of rest. At that election there were three parties in the field, each of which had a candidate for the Presidency. One was a party composed of men of all political creeds, who were opposed to slavery. It was called the Republican party, and it assumed powerful proportions at the outset. Another powerful political organization was known as the American or KnowNothing party, whose chief bond of union was opposition to foreign influence and Roman Catholicism. The Democratic party, dating its organization at the period of the election of President Jackson in 1828, was then the dominant party in the Union. The Democratic candidate for the Presidency was James Buchanan of Pennsylvania; of the Republican party, John C. Fremont of California, and of the American party, Ex-President Fillmore. After an exciting canvass, James Buchanan was elected President, with John C. Breckenridge of Kentucky, as Vice-President.

END OF BOOK V.

BOOK VI.

THE CIVIL WAR;

OR,

THE SOCIAL REVOLUTION.

FROM 1856 TO 1876.

CHAPTER I.

A NEW ERA-SKIRMISHES BEFORE THE CIVIL WAR-THE DEMOCRATIC PARTY-THE DRED SCOTT DECISION-ACTION OF THE SUPREME COURT OF THE UNITED STATES-EARLY EFFORTS TO RESTRICT SLAVERY-SLAVES IN ENGLAND-THE STATUS OF SLAVERY HERE-PRESIDENT BU. CHANAN'S COURSE FORESHADOWED-CIVIL WAR IN KANSAS AND CIVIL GOVERNMENT THERELECOMPTON CONSTITUTION ADOPTED AND REJECTED-ADMISSION OF KANSAS AS A STATE-A JUDICIAL DECISION PRACTICALLY REVERSED-REOPENING OF THE AFRICAN SLAVE-TRADE AND ACTION CONCERNING IT-WORKING OF THE FUGITIVE SLAVE LAW-ACTION OF STATE LEGISLATURES TROUBLES WITH THE MORMONS.

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HEN James Buchanan, of Pennsylvania, was inau-
gurated the fifteenth President of the United
States on the 4th of March, 1857, and chose, for
his constitutional advisers, Lewis Cass, Secre
tary of State; Howell Cobb, Secretary of the
Treasury; John B. Floyd, Secretary of War;
Isaac Toucey, Secretary of the Navy; Jacob

Thompson, Secretary of the Interior;
Aaron V. Brown, Postmaster-General,

and Jeremiah S. Black, Attor-
ney-General, a new era in the
history of Our Country was
begun. It was the beginning of
a great political and social rev
'olution in our republic which

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