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Dred Scott

Dred Scott (c. 1799 – September 17, 1858) was an enslaved African American man who, along with his wife, Harriet, unsuccessfully sued for the freedom of themselves and their two daughters, Eliza and Lizzie, in the Dred Scott v. Sandford case of 1857, popularly known as the "Dred Scott decision". The Scotts claimed that they should be granted freedom because Dred had lived in Illinois and the Wisconsin Territory for four years, where slavery was illegal, and laws in those jurisdictions said that slaveholders gave up their rights to slaves if they stayed for an extended period.

Dred Scott
Scott c. 1857
Bornc. 1799
DiedSeptember 17, 1858 (aged approximately 59)
Resting placeCalvary Cemetery
Known forDred Scott v. Sandford
Spouse
(m. 1836)
Children4 (2 died during infancy)

In a landmark case, the United States Supreme Court decided 7–2 against Scott, finding that neither he nor any other person of African ancestry could claim citizenship in the United States, and therefore Scott could not bring suit in federal court under diversity of citizenship rules. Moreover, Scott's temporary residence in free territory outside Missouri did not bring about his emancipation, because the Missouri Compromise, which made that territory free by prohibiting slavery north of the 36°30′ parallel, was unconstitutional because it "deprives citizens of their [slave] property without due process of law".

Although Chief Justice Roger B. Taney had hoped to settle issues related to slavery and congressional authority by this decision, it aroused public outrage, deepened sectional tensions between the northern and southern states, and hastened the eventual explosion of their differences into the American Civil War. President Abraham Lincoln's Emancipation Proclamation in 1863 and the post-Civil War Reconstruction Amendments—the Thirteenth, Fourteenth and Fifteenth amendments—nullified the decision.

The Scotts were manumitted by a private arrangement in May 1857. Dred Scott died of tuberculosis a year later.

Life edit

 
Dred and Harriet Scott's restored quarters at Fort Snelling

Dred Scott was born into slavery c. 1799 in Southampton County, Virginia. It is not clear whether Dred was his given name or a shortened form of Etheldred.[1]

In 1818, Dred was taken by Peter Blow and his family, with their five other slaves, to Alabama, where the family ran an unsuccessful farm in a location near Huntsville. This site is now occupied by Oakwood University.[2][3][4] The Blows gave up farming in 1830 and moved to St. Louis, Missouri.[5]

Dred Scott was sold to Dr. John Emerson, a surgeon serving in the United States Army, who planned to move to Rock Island, Illinois. Blow died in 1832, and historians debate whether Scott was sold to Emerson before or after Blow's death. Some believe that Scott was sold in 1831, while others point to a number of enslaved people in Blow's estate who were sold to Emerson after Blow's death, including one with a name given as Sam, who may be the same person as Scott.[6] After Scott learned of this sale, he attempted to run away. His decision to do so was spurred by a distaste he had developed for Emerson. Scott was temporarily successful in his escape as he, much like many other runaway slaves during this time period, "never tried to distance his pursuers, but dodged around among his fellow slaves as long as possible". Eventually, he was captured in the "Lucas Swamps" of Missouri and taken back.[7]

As an army officer, Emerson moved frequently, taking Scott with him to each new army posting. In 1833, Emerson and Scott went to Fort Armstrong, in the free state of Illinois. In 1837, Emerson took Scott to Fort Snelling, in what is now the state of Minnesota and was then in the free territory of Wisconsin. There, Scott met and married Harriet Robinson, a slave owned by Lawrence Taliaferro. The marriage was formalized in a civil ceremony presided over by Taliaferro, who was a justice of the peace. Since slave marriages had no legal sanction, supporters of Scott later noted that this ceremony was evidence that Scott was being treated as a free man. But Taliaferro transferred ownership of Harriet to Emerson, who treated the Scotts as his slaves.[5]

Dr. Emerson was transferred to Fort Jesup in Louisiana in 1837, leaving the Scott family behind at Fort Snelling and leasing them out (also called hiring out) to other officers.[5] In February 1838, Emerson met and married Eliza Irene Sanford in Louisiana, whereupon he sent for the Scotts to join him, only to be reassigned to Fort Snelling later that year.[1][8] While on a steamboat heading north on the Mississippi River, north of Missouri, Harriet Scott gave birth to their first child, whom they named Eliza.[1] They later had a daughter, Lizzie. They also had two sons, but neither survived past infancy.[5]

The Emersons and Scotts returned to Missouri, a slave state, in 1840. In 1842, Emerson left the Army. After he died in the Iowa Territory in 1843, his widow Irene inherited his estate, including the Scotts. For three years after Emerson's death, she continued to lease out the Scotts as hired slaves. In 1846, Scott attempted to purchase his and his family's freedom, offering $300 ($9,771 adjusted for inflation).[9] Irene Emerson refused the offer. Scott and his wife separately filed freedom suits to try to gain their freedom and that of their daughters. The cases were later combined by the courts.[10]

Dred Scott v. Sandford edit

Summary edit

 
 
The case centered on Dred and Harriet Scott (top) and their children, Eliza and Lizzie.

The Scotts' cases were first heard by the Missouri circuit court. The first court upheld the precedent of "once free, always free". That is, because the Scotts had been held voluntarily for an extended period by their owner in a free territory, which provided for slaves to be freed under such conditions, the court ruled, they had gained their freedom. The owner appealed. In 1852 the Missouri supreme court overruled this decision, on the basis that the state did not have to abide by free states' laws, especially given the anti-slavery fervor of the time. It said that Scott should have filed for freedom in the Wisconsin Territory.

Scott ended up filing a freedom suit in federal court (see below for details), in a case that he appealed to the US Supreme Court. The U.S. Supreme Court ruled that African descendants were not U.S. citizens and had no standing to sue for freedom. It also ruled that the Missouri Compromise was unconstitutional. This was the last in a series of freedom suits from 1846 to 1857, that began in Missouri courts, and were heard by lower federal district courts. The US Supreme Court overturned the earlier precedents and established new limitations on African Americans.

In detail edit

In 1846, having failed to purchase his freedom, Scott filed a freedom suit in St. Louis Circuit Court. Missouri precedent, dating to 1824, had held that slaves freed through prolonged residence in a free state or territory, where the law provided for slaves to gain freedom under such conditions, would remain free if returned to Missouri. The doctrine was known as "Once free, always free". Scott and his wife had resided for two years in free states and free territories, and his eldest daughter had been born on the Mississippi River, between a free state and a free territory.[11]

Dred Scott was listed as the only plaintiff in the case, but his wife, Harriet, had filed separately and their cases were combined. She played a critical role, pushing him to pursue freedom on behalf of their family. She was a frequent churchgoer, and in St. Louis, her church pastor (a well-known abolitionist) connected the Scotts to their first lawyer. The Scott children were around the age of ten when the case was originally filed. The Scotts were worried that their daughters might be sold.[12]

The Scott v. Emerson case was tried by the state in 1847 in the federal-state courthouse in St. Louis. Scott's lawyer was originally Francis B. Murdoch and later Charles D. Drake. As more than a year elapsed from the time of the initial petition filing until the trial, Drake had moved away from St. Louis during that time. Samuel M. Bay tried the case in court.[8] The verdict went against Scott, as testimony that established his ownership by Mrs. Emerson was ruled to be hearsay. But the judge called for a retrial, which was not held until January 1850. This time, direct evidence was introduced that Emerson owned Scott, and the jury ruled in favor of Scott's freedom.

Irene Emerson appealed the verdict. In 1852, the Missouri Supreme Court struck down the lower court ruling, arguing that, because of the free states' anti-slavery fervor was encroaching on Missouri, the state no longer had to defer to the laws of free states.[13] By this decision, the court overturned 28 years of precedent in Missouri. Justice Hamilton R. Gamble, who was later appointed as governor of Missouri, sharply disagreed with the majority decision and wrote a dissenting opinion.

In 1853, Scott again sued for his freedom, this time under federal law. Irene Emerson had moved to Massachusetts, and Scott had been transferred to Irene Emerson's brother, John F. A. Sanford. Because Sanford was a citizen of New York, while Scott would be a citizen of Missouri if he were free, the Federal courts had diversity jurisdiction over the case.[14] After losing again in federal district court, the Scotts appealed to the United States Supreme Court in Dred Scott v. Sandford. (The name is spelled "Sandford" in the court decision due to a clerical error.)

On March 6, 1857, Chief Justice Roger B. Taney delivered the majority opinion. Taney ruled, with three major issues, that:

  1. Any person descended from Africans, whether slave or free, is not a citizen of the United States, according to the U.S. Constitution.
  2. The Ordinance of 1787 could not confer either freedom or citizenship within the Northwest Territory to non-white individuals.
  3. The provisions of the Act of 1820, known as the Missouri Compromise, were voided as a legislative act, since the act exceeded the powers of Congress, insofar as it attempted to exclude slavery and impart freedom and citizenship to non-white persons in the northern part of the Louisiana Purchase.[15]

The Court had ruled that African Americans had no claim to freedom or citizenship. Since they were not citizens, they did not possess the legal standing to bring suit in a federal court. As slaves were private property, Congress did not have the power to regulate slavery in the territories and could not revoke a slave owner's rights based on where he lived. This decision nullified the essence of the Missouri Compromise, which divided territories into jurisdictions either free or slave. Speaking for the majority, Taney ruled that because Scott was considered the private property of his owners, he was subject to the Fifth Amendment to the United States Constitution, prohibiting the taking of property from its owner "without due process".[16]

Rather than settling issues, as Taney had hoped, the court's ruling in the Scott case increased tensions between pro-slavery and anti-slavery factions in both North and South, further pushing the country toward the brink of civil war. Ultimately after the Civil War, on July 9, 1868, the 14th Amendment to the Constitution settled the issue of Black citizenship via Section 1 of that Amendment: "All persons born or naturalized in the United States, and subject to the jurisdiction thereof, are citizens of the United States and of the State wherein they reside ..."[17]

Abolitionist aid to Scott's case edit

 
Dred Scott's grave in Calvary Cemetery, taken before Sep 2023 and was since replaced by a towering monument on Sep 30, 2023.[18]

Scott's freedom suit before the state courts was backed financially by Peter Blow's adult children, who had turned against slavery in the decade since they sold Dred Scott. Henry Taylor Blow was elected as a Republican Congressman after the Civil War, Charlotte Taylor Blow married the son of an abolitionist newspaper editor, and Martha Ella Blow married Charles D. Drake, one of Scott's lawyers who was elected by the state legislature as a Republican US Senator. Members of the Blow family signed as security for Scott's legal fees and secured the services of local lawyers. While the case was pending, the St. Louis County sheriff held these payments in escrow and leased Scott out for fees.

In 1851, Scott was leased by Charles Edmund LaBeaume, whose sister had married into the Blow family.[5] Scott worked as a janitor at LaBeaume's law office, which was shared with lawyer Roswell Field.[19]

After the Missouri Supreme Court decision ruled against the Scotts, the Blow family concluded that the case was hopeless and decided that they could no longer pay Scott's legal fees. Roswell Field agreed to represent Scott pro bono before the federal courts. Scott was represented before the U.S. Supreme Court by Montgomery Blair. (Blair later served in President Abraham Lincoln's cabinet as Postmaster General.) Assisting Blair was attorney George Curtis. His brother Benjamin was an Associate Supreme Court Justice and wrote one of the two dissents in Dred Scott v. Sandford.[5]

In 1850, Irene Emerson remarried and moved to Springfield, Massachusetts. Her new husband, Calvin C. Chaffee, was an abolitionist. He was elected to the U.S. Congress in 1854 and fiercely attacked by pro-slavery newspapers for his apparent hypocrisy in owning slaves.

Given the complicated facts of the Dred Scott case, some observers on both sides raised suspicions of collusion to create a test case. Abolitionist newspapers charged that slaveholders colluded to name a New Yorker as defendant, while pro-slavery newspapers charged collusion on the abolitionist side.[20]

About a century later, a historian established that John Sanford never legally owned Dred Scott, nor did he serve as executor of Dr. Emerson's will.[19] It was unnecessary to find a New Yorker to secure diversity jurisdiction of the federal courts, as Irene Emerson Chaffee (still legally the owner) had become a resident of Massachusetts. After the U.S. Supreme Court ruling, Roswell Field advised Dr. Chaffee that Mrs. Chaffee had full powers over Scott.[20] However, Sanford had been involved in the case since the beginning, as he had secured a lawyer to defend Mrs. Emerson in the original state lawsuit before she married Chaffee.[10]

Post-case freedom edit

 
Posthumous painting of Scott, presented to the Missouri Historical Society
 
Plaque on Dred Scott case outside the Old Courthouse, St. Louis, MO

Following the ruling, the Chaffees deeded the Scott family to Republican Congressman Taylor Blow, who manumitted them on May 26, 1857. Scott worked as a porter in a St. Louis hotel, but his freedom was short-lived; he died from tuberculosis[21] in September 1858.[22] He was survived by his wife and his two daughters.

Scott was originally interred in Wesleyan Cemetery in St. Louis. When this cemetery was closed nine years later, Taylor Blow transferred Scott's coffin to an unmarked plot in the nearby Catholic Calvary Cemetery, St. Louis, which permitted burial of non-Catholic slaves by Catholic owners.[23] Some of Scott's family members, however, have claimed that he was in fact a Catholic.[24] A local tradition later developed of placing Lincoln pennies on top of Scott's gravestone for good luck.[23]

Harriet Scott was buried in Greenwood Cemetery in Hillsdale, Missouri. She outlived her husband by 18 years, dying on June 17, 1876.[5] Their daughter, Eliza, married and had two sons. Their other daughter, Lizzie, never married but, following Eliza's early death, helped raise Eliza's sons (Lizzie's nephews). One of Eliza's sons died young, but the other married and has descendants, some of whom still live in St. Louis as of 2023,[25] including Lynne M. Jackson, who's Scott's great-great-granddaughter and led the successful effort to install a new towering memorial at Dred Scott's grave at Calvary Cemetery on September 30, 2023. [18]

Prelude to Emancipation Proclamation edit

The newspaper coverage of the court ruling, and the 10-year legal battle raised awareness of slavery in non-slave states. The arguments for freedom were later used by U.S. President Abraham Lincoln. The words of the decision built popular opinion and voter sentiment for his Emancipation Proclamation and the three constitutional amendments ratified shortly after the Civil War: The Thirteenth, Fourteenth and Fifteenth amendments, abolishing slavery, granting former slaves' citizenship, and conferring citizenship to anyone born in the United States and "subject to the jurisdiction thereof" (excluding subjects to a foreign power such as children of foreign ambassadors).[26]

Legacy edit

  • 1957: Scott's gravesite was rediscovered, and flowers were put on it in a ceremony to mark the centennial of the case.[27]
 
Playfield dedicated to Dred Scott in Bloomington, MN
  • 1971: Bloomington, Minnesota dedicated 48 acres as the Dred Scott Playfield.[28]
  • 1977: The Scotts' great-grandson, John A. Madison, Jr., an attorney, gave the invocation at the ceremony at the Old Courthouse (St. Louis, Missouri) for the dedication of a National Historic Marker commemorating the Scotts' case.[27]
  • 1997: Dred and Harriet Scott were inducted into the St. Louis Walk of Fame.[29]
  • 1999: A cenotaph was installed for Harriet Scott at her husband's grave to commemorate her role in seeking freedom for them and their children.[27]
  • 2001: Harriet and Dred Scott's petition papers were displayed at the main branch of the St. Louis Public Library, following discovery of more than 300 freedom suits in the archives of the circuit court.[27]
  • 2006: Harriet Scott's grave site was proven to be in Hillsdale, Missouri and a biography of her was published in 2009.[27] A new historic plaque was erected at the Old Courthouse to honor the roles of both Dred and Harriet Scott in their freedom suit and its significance in U.S. history.[27]
  • May 9, 2012: Scott was inducted into the Hall of Famous Missourians; a bronze bust by sculptor E. Spencer Schubert is displayed in the Missouri State Capitol Building.[30]
  • June 8, 2012: A bronze statue of Dred and Harriet Scott was erected outside of the Old Courthouse in downtown St. Louis, MO, the site where their case was originally heard.[31]
  • March 6, 2017, the 160th anniversary of the Dred Scott Decision: On the steps of the Maryland State House next to a statue of Supreme Court Chief Justice Roger Taney, his great-great-grandnephew Charlie Taney apologized on his behalf to Scott's great-great-granddaughter Lynne Jackson and all African-Americans "for the terrible injustice of the Dred Scott decision".[32] During the ceremony, Kate Taney Billingsley, Charlie Taney's daughter, read lines regarding the court's decision from the play A Man of His Time.[33]

Accounts of Scott's life edit

Shelia P. Moses and Bonnie Christensen wrote I, Dred Scott: A Fictional Slave Narrative Based on the Life and Legal Precedent of Dred Scott (2005).[27] Mary E. Neighbour, wrote Speak Right On: Dred Scott: A Novel (2006).[27] Gregory J. Wallance published the novel Two Men Before the Storm: Arba Crane's Recollection of Dred Scott and the Supreme Court Case That Started the Civil War (2006).[27]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b c VanderVelde, Lea (January 20, 2009). Mrs. Dred Scott: A Life on Slavery's Frontier. Oxford University Press, US. pp. 134–136. ISBN 978-0199710645.
  2. ^ "Dred Scott, And Oakwood University". Deepfriedkudzu.com. February 22, 2011. Retrieved July 9, 2018.
  3. ^ "A catalyst for Civil War after suing for freedom, slave Dred Scott once lived in Huntsville". Blog.al.com. April 15, 2011. Retrieved July 9, 2018.
  4. ^ . January 19, 2015. Archived from the original on January 19, 2015.
  5. ^ a b c d e f g "Dred Scott Case, 1846–1857". Missouri Digital Heritage. Retrieved July 16, 2015.
  6. ^ For a longer discussion, see Ehrlich, 1979. chapter 1, or more recently see, Swain, 2004. p. 91
  7. ^ "U-M Weblogin". ProQuest 881879875. {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
  8. ^ a b Ehrlich, Walter (2007). They Have No Rights: Dred Scott's Struggle for Freedom. Applewood Books. pp. 20, 25.
  9. ^ "Dred Scott's fight for freedom: 1846–1857". Africans in America: People & Events. PBS. Retrieved March 26, 2012.
  10. ^ a b Fehrenbacher, Don Edward (2001). The Dred Scott Case: Its Significance in American Law and Politics. Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0195145885.[page needed]
  11. ^ Finkelman, Paul (2007). "Scott v. Sandford: The Court's Most Dreadful Case and How it Changed History" (PDF). Chicago-Kent Law Review. 82 (3): 3–48.
  12. ^ . Gilderlehrman.org. Archived from the original on October 11, 2017. Retrieved March 16, 2017.
  13. ^ Scott v. Emerson, 15 Mo. 576, 586 (Mo. 1852) December 13, 2013, at the Wayback Machine Retrieved August 20, 2012. The Emersons were represented by Hugh A. Garland and Lyman Decatur Norris.
  14. ^ Randall, J. G., and David Donald. A House Divided. The Civil War and Reconstruction. 2nd ed. Boston: D.C. Heath and Company, 1961, pp. 107–114.
  15. ^ "Decision of the Supreme Court in the Dred Scott Case". The New York Daily Times. New York. March 7, 1857. Retrieved May 26, 2011.
  16. ^ Frederic D. Schwarz December 3, 2008, at the Wayback Machine "The Dred Scott Decision", American Heritage, February/March 2007.
  17. ^ Carey, Patrick W. (April 2002). "Political Atheism: Dred Scott, Roger Brooke Taney, and Orestes A. Brownson". The Catholic Historical Review. The Catholic University of America Press. 88 (2): 207–229. doi:10.1353/cat.2002.0072. ISSN 1534-0708. S2CID 153950640.
  18. ^ a b "New memorial at Dred Scott's gravesite in St. Louis is 'honorable' marker of his legacy". September 27, 2023.
  19. ^ a b Ehrlich, Walter (September 1968). "Was the Dred Scott Case Valid?". The Journal of American History. 55 (2): 256–265. doi:10.2307/1899556. JSTOR 1899556.
  20. ^ a b Hardy, David T. (2012). (PDF). Northern Kentucky Law Review. 41 (1). Archived from the original (PDF) on October 10, 2015.
  21. ^ . Shsmo.org. Archived from the original on November 25, 2016. Retrieved February 28, 2019.
  22. ^ Axelrod, Alan (2008). Profiles in Folly: History's Worst Decisions and why They Went Wrong. Sterling Publishing Company, Inc. pp. 192–. ISBN 978-1402747687.
  23. ^ a b O'Neil, Time (March 6, 2007). (PDF). St. Louis Post-Dispatch. Archived from the original (PDF) on July 28, 2011. Retrieved May 26, 2011.
  24. ^ Goldstein, Dawn Eden. "Tweet". Twitter. Retrieved November 4, 2022.
  25. ^ Jonathan M. Pitts, Tribune News Service. "Taney, Dred Scott families reconcile 160 years after decision". The Atlanta Journal-Constitution. Retrieved February 27, 2020.
  26. ^ Paul Finkleman, Dred Scott v. Sandford: A Brief History with Documents, Palgrave Macmillan, 1997, pp. 7–9, Retrieved February 26, 2011
  27. ^ a b c d e f g h i Arenson, Adam (2014). "Dred Scott versus the Dred Scott Case: The History and Memory of a Signal Moment in American Slavery, 1857–2007". In Konig, David Thomas; Finkelman, Paul; Bracey, Christopher Alan (eds.). The Dred Scott Case: Historical and Contemporary Perspectives on Race and Law. Ohio University Press. pp. 25–46. ISBN 978-0821443286.
  28. ^ "Welcome to Dred Scott Playfields" (PDF).
  29. ^ St. Louis Walk of Fame. . stlouiswalkoffame.org. Archived from the original on October 31, 2012. Retrieved April 25, 2013.
  30. ^ Griffin, Marshall. "Dred Scott inducted to Hall of Famous Missourians". Retrieved March 16, 2017.
  31. ^ O'Leary, Madeline. "Dred and Harriet Scott statue ready for debut". stltoday.com. Retrieved March 16, 2017.
  32. ^ "From a descendant of Roger Taney to a descendant of Dred Scott: I'm sorry". Washington Post. Retrieved March 7, 2017.
  33. ^ Billingsley, Kate T. (March 2, 2017). . Kate Taney Billingsley. Archived from the original on March 8, 2017. Retrieved March 7, 2017.

Bibliography edit

External links edit

  • Dred and Harriet Scott in Minnesota in MNopedia, the Minnesota Encyclopedia
  • "St. Louis Circuit Court Records", A collection of images and transcripts of 19th century Circuit Court Cases in St. Louis, particularly freedom suits, including suits brought by Dred and Harriet Scott. A partnership of Washington University and Missouri History Museum, funded by an IMLS grant
  • "Freedom Suits", African-American Life in St. Louis, 1804–1865, from the Records of the St. Louis Courts, Jefferson National Expansion Memorial, National Park Service
  • Revised Dred Scott Case Collection
  • Christyn Elley, "Biography of Dred Scott", Missouri State Archives
  • Full text of the Dred Scott v. Sandford, Supreme Court decision Findlaw
  • Dred Scott v. Sandford and related resources, Library of Congress
  • "Dred Scott Chronology", Washington University in St. Louis
  • Dred Scott Heritage Foundation
  • Dred Scott - Findagrave, including pictures depicting the old gravestone and the new memorial
  • "Scott, Dred" . Appletons' Cyclopædia of American Biography. 1900.
  • Works by Dred Scott at Project Gutenberg
  • Works by or about Dred Scott at Internet Archive

dred, scott, other, uses, disambiguation, 1799, september, 1858, enslaved, african, american, along, with, wife, harriet, unsuccessfully, sued, freedom, themselves, their, daughters, eliza, lizzie, sandford, case, 1857, popularly, known, decision, scotts, clai. For other uses see Dred Scott disambiguation Dred Scott c 1799 September 17 1858 was an enslaved African American man who along with his wife Harriet unsuccessfully sued for the freedom of themselves and their two daughters Eliza and Lizzie in the Dred Scott v Sandford case of 1857 popularly known as the Dred Scott decision The Scotts claimed that they should be granted freedom because Dred had lived in Illinois and the Wisconsin Territory for four years where slavery was illegal and laws in those jurisdictions said that slaveholders gave up their rights to slaves if they stayed for an extended period Dred ScottScott c 1857Bornc 1799 Southampton County Virginia U S DiedSeptember 17 1858 aged approximately 59 St Louis Missouri U S Resting placeCalvary CemeteryKnown forDred Scott v SandfordSpouseHarriet Robinson m 1836 wbr Children4 2 died during infancy In a landmark case the United States Supreme Court decided 7 2 against Scott finding that neither he nor any other person of African ancestry could claim citizenship in the United States and therefore Scott could not bring suit in federal court under diversity of citizenship rules Moreover Scott s temporary residence in free territory outside Missouri did not bring about his emancipation because the Missouri Compromise which made that territory free by prohibiting slavery north of the 36 30 parallel was unconstitutional because it deprives citizens of their slave property without due process of law Although Chief Justice Roger B Taney had hoped to settle issues related to slavery and congressional authority by this decision it aroused public outrage deepened sectional tensions between the northern and southern states and hastened the eventual explosion of their differences into the American Civil War President Abraham Lincoln s Emancipation Proclamation in 1863 and the post Civil War Reconstruction Amendments the Thirteenth Fourteenth and Fifteenth amendments nullified the decision The Scotts were manumitted by a private arrangement in May 1857 Dred Scott died of tuberculosis a year later Contents 1 Life 2 Dred Scott v Sandford 2 1 Summary 2 2 In detail 3 Abolitionist aid to Scott s case 4 Post case freedom 5 Prelude to Emancipation Proclamation 6 Legacy 7 Accounts of Scott s life 8 See also 9 References 10 Bibliography 11 External linksLife edit nbsp Dred and Harriet Scott s restored quarters at Fort SnellingDred Scott was born into slavery c 1799 in Southampton County Virginia It is not clear whether Dred was his given name or a shortened form of Etheldred 1 In 1818 Dred was taken by Peter Blow and his family with their five other slaves to Alabama where the family ran an unsuccessful farm in a location near Huntsville This site is now occupied by Oakwood University 2 3 4 The Blows gave up farming in 1830 and moved to St Louis Missouri 5 Dred Scott was sold to Dr John Emerson a surgeon serving in the United States Army who planned to move to Rock Island Illinois Blow died in 1832 and historians debate whether Scott was sold to Emerson before or after Blow s death Some believe that Scott was sold in 1831 while others point to a number of enslaved people in Blow s estate who were sold to Emerson after Blow s death including one with a name given as Sam who may be the same person as Scott 6 After Scott learned of this sale he attempted to run away His decision to do so was spurred by a distaste he had developed for Emerson Scott was temporarily successful in his escape as he much like many other runaway slaves during this time period never tried to distance his pursuers but dodged around among his fellow slaves as long as possible Eventually he was captured in the Lucas Swamps of Missouri and taken back 7 As an army officer Emerson moved frequently taking Scott with him to each new army posting In 1833 Emerson and Scott went to Fort Armstrong in the free state of Illinois In 1837 Emerson took Scott to Fort Snelling in what is now the state of Minnesota and was then in the free territory of Wisconsin There Scott met and married Harriet Robinson a slave owned by Lawrence Taliaferro The marriage was formalized in a civil ceremony presided over by Taliaferro who was a justice of the peace Since slave marriages had no legal sanction supporters of Scott later noted that this ceremony was evidence that Scott was being treated as a free man But Taliaferro transferred ownership of Harriet to Emerson who treated the Scotts as his slaves 5 Dr Emerson was transferred to Fort Jesup in Louisiana in 1837 leaving the Scott family behind at Fort Snelling and leasing them out also called hiring out to other officers 5 In February 1838 Emerson met and married Eliza Irene Sanford in Louisiana whereupon he sent for the Scotts to join him only to be reassigned to Fort Snelling later that year 1 8 While on a steamboat heading north on the Mississippi River north of Missouri Harriet Scott gave birth to their first child whom they named Eliza 1 They later had a daughter Lizzie They also had two sons but neither survived past infancy 5 The Emersons and Scotts returned to Missouri a slave state in 1840 In 1842 Emerson left the Army After he died in the Iowa Territory in 1843 his widow Irene inherited his estate including the Scotts For three years after Emerson s death she continued to lease out the Scotts as hired slaves In 1846 Scott attempted to purchase his and his family s freedom offering 300 9 771 adjusted for inflation 9 Irene Emerson refused the offer Scott and his wife separately filed freedom suits to try to gain their freedom and that of their daughters The cases were later combined by the courts 10 Dred Scott v Sandford editMain article Dred Scott v Sandford Summary edit nbsp nbsp The case centered on Dred and Harriet Scott top and their children Eliza and Lizzie The Scotts cases were first heard by the Missouri circuit court The first court upheld the precedent of once free always free That is because the Scotts had been held voluntarily for an extended period by their owner in a free territory which provided for slaves to be freed under such conditions the court ruled they had gained their freedom The owner appealed In 1852 the Missouri supreme court overruled this decision on the basis that the state did not have to abide by free states laws especially given the anti slavery fervor of the time It said that Scott should have filed for freedom in the Wisconsin Territory Scott ended up filing a freedom suit in federal court see below for details in a case that he appealed to the US Supreme Court The U S Supreme Court ruled that African descendants were not U S citizens and had no standing to sue for freedom It also ruled that the Missouri Compromise was unconstitutional This was the last in a series of freedom suits from 1846 to 1857 that began in Missouri courts and were heard by lower federal district courts The US Supreme Court overturned the earlier precedents and established new limitations on African Americans In detail edit In 1846 having failed to purchase his freedom Scott filed a freedom suit in St Louis Circuit Court Missouri precedent dating to 1824 had held that slaves freed through prolonged residence in a free state or territory where the law provided for slaves to gain freedom under such conditions would remain free if returned to Missouri The doctrine was known as Once free always free Scott and his wife had resided for two years in free states and free territories and his eldest daughter had been born on the Mississippi River between a free state and a free territory 11 Dred Scott was listed as the only plaintiff in the case but his wife Harriet had filed separately and their cases were combined She played a critical role pushing him to pursue freedom on behalf of their family She was a frequent churchgoer and in St Louis her church pastor a well known abolitionist connected the Scotts to their first lawyer The Scott children were around the age of ten when the case was originally filed The Scotts were worried that their daughters might be sold 12 The Scott v Emerson case was tried by the state in 1847 in the federal state courthouse in St Louis Scott s lawyer was originally Francis B Murdoch and later Charles D Drake As more than a year elapsed from the time of the initial petition filing until the trial Drake had moved away from St Louis during that time Samuel M Bay tried the case in court 8 The verdict went against Scott as testimony that established his ownership by Mrs Emerson was ruled to be hearsay But the judge called for a retrial which was not held until January 1850 This time direct evidence was introduced that Emerson owned Scott and the jury ruled in favor of Scott s freedom Irene Emerson appealed the verdict In 1852 the Missouri Supreme Court struck down the lower court ruling arguing that because of the free states anti slavery fervor was encroaching on Missouri the state no longer had to defer to the laws of free states 13 By this decision the court overturned 28 years of precedent in Missouri Justice Hamilton R Gamble who was later appointed as governor of Missouri sharply disagreed with the majority decision and wrote a dissenting opinion In 1853 Scott again sued for his freedom this time under federal law Irene Emerson had moved to Massachusetts and Scott had been transferred to Irene Emerson s brother John F A Sanford Because Sanford was a citizen of New York while Scott would be a citizen of Missouri if he were free the Federal courts had diversity jurisdiction over the case 14 After losing again in federal district court the Scotts appealed to the United States Supreme Court in Dred Scott v Sandford The name is spelled Sandford in the court decision due to a clerical error On March 6 1857 Chief Justice Roger B Taney delivered the majority opinion Taney ruled with three major issues that Any person descended from Africans whether slave or free is not a citizen of the United States according to the U S Constitution The Ordinance of 1787 could not confer either freedom or citizenship within the Northwest Territory to non white individuals The provisions of the Act of 1820 known as the Missouri Compromise were voided as a legislative act since the act exceeded the powers of Congress insofar as it attempted to exclude slavery and impart freedom and citizenship to non white persons in the northern part of the Louisiana Purchase 15 The Court had ruled that African Americans had no claim to freedom or citizenship Since they were not citizens they did not possess the legal standing to bring suit in a federal court As slaves were private property Congress did not have the power to regulate slavery in the territories and could not revoke a slave owner s rights based on where he lived This decision nullified the essence of the Missouri Compromise which divided territories into jurisdictions either free or slave Speaking for the majority Taney ruled that because Scott was considered the private property of his owners he was subject to the Fifth Amendment to the United States Constitution prohibiting the taking of property from its owner without due process 16 Rather than settling issues as Taney had hoped the court s ruling in the Scott case increased tensions between pro slavery and anti slavery factions in both North and South further pushing the country toward the brink of civil war Ultimately after the Civil War on July 9 1868 the 14th Amendment to the Constitution settled the issue of Black citizenship via Section 1 of that Amendment All persons born or naturalized in the United States and subject to the jurisdiction thereof are citizens of the United States and of the State wherein they reside 17 Abolitionist aid to Scott s case edit nbsp Dred Scott s grave in Calvary Cemetery taken before Sep 2023 and was since replaced by a towering monument on Sep 30 2023 18 Scott s freedom suit before the state courts was backed financially by Peter Blow s adult children who had turned against slavery in the decade since they sold Dred Scott Henry Taylor Blow was elected as a Republican Congressman after the Civil War Charlotte Taylor Blow married the son of an abolitionist newspaper editor and Martha Ella Blow married Charles D Drake one of Scott s lawyers who was elected by the state legislature as a Republican US Senator Members of the Blow family signed as security for Scott s legal fees and secured the services of local lawyers While the case was pending the St Louis County sheriff held these payments in escrow and leased Scott out for fees In 1851 Scott was leased by Charles Edmund LaBeaume whose sister had married into the Blow family 5 Scott worked as a janitor at LaBeaume s law office which was shared with lawyer Roswell Field 19 After the Missouri Supreme Court decision ruled against the Scotts the Blow family concluded that the case was hopeless and decided that they could no longer pay Scott s legal fees Roswell Field agreed to represent Scott pro bono before the federal courts Scott was represented before the U S Supreme Court by Montgomery Blair Blair later served in President Abraham Lincoln s cabinet as Postmaster General Assisting Blair was attorney George Curtis His brother Benjamin was an Associate Supreme Court Justice and wrote one of the two dissents in Dred Scott v Sandford 5 In 1850 Irene Emerson remarried and moved to Springfield Massachusetts Her new husband Calvin C Chaffee was an abolitionist He was elected to the U S Congress in 1854 and fiercely attacked by pro slavery newspapers for his apparent hypocrisy in owning slaves Given the complicated facts of the Dred Scott case some observers on both sides raised suspicions of collusion to create a test case Abolitionist newspapers charged that slaveholders colluded to name a New Yorker as defendant while pro slavery newspapers charged collusion on the abolitionist side 20 About a century later a historian established that John Sanford never legally owned Dred Scott nor did he serve as executor of Dr Emerson s will 19 It was unnecessary to find a New Yorker to secure diversity jurisdiction of the federal courts as Irene Emerson Chaffee still legally the owner had become a resident of Massachusetts After the U S Supreme Court ruling Roswell Field advised Dr Chaffee that Mrs Chaffee had full powers over Scott 20 However Sanford had been involved in the case since the beginning as he had secured a lawyer to defend Mrs Emerson in the original state lawsuit before she married Chaffee 10 Post case freedom edit nbsp Posthumous painting of Scott presented to the Missouri Historical Society nbsp Plaque on Dred Scott case outside the Old Courthouse St Louis MOFollowing the ruling the Chaffees deeded the Scott family to Republican Congressman Taylor Blow who manumitted them on May 26 1857 Scott worked as a porter in a St Louis hotel but his freedom was short lived he died from tuberculosis 21 in September 1858 22 He was survived by his wife and his two daughters Scott was originally interred in Wesleyan Cemetery in St Louis When this cemetery was closed nine years later Taylor Blow transferred Scott s coffin to an unmarked plot in the nearby Catholic Calvary Cemetery St Louis which permitted burial of non Catholic slaves by Catholic owners 23 Some of Scott s family members however have claimed that he was in fact a Catholic 24 A local tradition later developed of placing Lincoln pennies on top of Scott s gravestone for good luck 23 Harriet Scott was buried in Greenwood Cemetery in Hillsdale Missouri She outlived her husband by 18 years dying on June 17 1876 5 Their daughter Eliza married and had two sons Their other daughter Lizzie never married but following Eliza s early death helped raise Eliza s sons Lizzie s nephews One of Eliza s sons died young but the other married and has descendants some of whom still live in St Louis as of 2023 25 including Lynne M Jackson who s Scott s great great granddaughter and led the successful effort to install a new towering memorial at Dred Scott s grave at Calvary Cemetery on September 30 2023 18 Prelude to Emancipation Proclamation editThe newspaper coverage of the court ruling and the 10 year legal battle raised awareness of slavery in non slave states The arguments for freedom were later used by U S President Abraham Lincoln The words of the decision built popular opinion and voter sentiment for his Emancipation Proclamation and the three constitutional amendments ratified shortly after the Civil War The Thirteenth Fourteenth and Fifteenth amendments abolishing slavery granting former slaves citizenship and conferring citizenship to anyone born in the United States and subject to the jurisdiction thereof excluding subjects to a foreign power such as children of foreign ambassadors 26 Legacy edit1957 Scott s gravesite was rediscovered and flowers were put on it in a ceremony to mark the centennial of the case 27 nbsp Playfield dedicated to Dred Scott in Bloomington MN1971 Bloomington Minnesota dedicated 48 acres as the Dred Scott Playfield 28 1977 The Scotts great grandson John A Madison Jr an attorney gave the invocation at the ceremony at the Old Courthouse St Louis Missouri for the dedication of a National Historic Marker commemorating the Scotts case 27 1997 Dred and Harriet Scott were inducted into the St Louis Walk of Fame 29 1999 A cenotaph was installed for Harriet Scott at her husband s grave to commemorate her role in seeking freedom for them and their children 27 2001 Harriet and Dred Scott s petition papers were displayed at the main branch of the St Louis Public Library following discovery of more than 300 freedom suits in the archives of the circuit court 27 2006 Harriet Scott s grave site was proven to be in Hillsdale Missouri and a biography of her was published in 2009 27 A new historic plaque was erected at the Old Courthouse to honor the roles of both Dred and Harriet Scott in their freedom suit and its significance in U S history 27 May 9 2012 Scott was inducted into the Hall of Famous Missourians a bronze bust by sculptor E Spencer Schubert is displayed in the Missouri State Capitol Building 30 June 8 2012 A bronze statue of Dred and Harriet Scott was erected outside of the Old Courthouse in downtown St Louis MO the site where their case was originally heard 31 March 6 2017 the 160th anniversary of the Dred Scott Decision On the steps of the Maryland State House next to a statue of Supreme Court Chief Justice Roger Taney his great great grandnephew Charlie Taney apologized on his behalf to Scott s great great granddaughter Lynne Jackson and all African Americans for the terrible injustice of the Dred Scott decision 32 During the ceremony Kate Taney Billingsley Charlie Taney s daughter read lines regarding the court s decision from the play A Man of His Time 33 Accounts of Scott s life editShelia P Moses and Bonnie Christensen wrote I Dred Scott A Fictional Slave Narrative Based on the Life and Legal Precedent of Dred Scott 2005 27 Mary E Neighbour wrote Speak Right On Dred Scott A Novel 2006 27 Gregory J Wallance published the novel Two Men Before the Storm Arba Crane s Recollection of Dred Scott and the Supreme Court Case That Started the Civil War 2006 27 See also editPolly Berry Charlotte DupuyReferences edit a b c VanderVelde Lea January 20 2009 Mrs Dred Scott A Life on Slavery s Frontier Oxford University Press US pp 134 136 ISBN 978 0199710645 Dred Scott And Oakwood University Deepfriedkudzu com February 22 2011 Retrieved July 9 2018 A catalyst for Civil War after suing for freedom slave Dred Scott once lived in Huntsville Blog al com April 15 2011 Retrieved July 9 2018 Huntsville Alabama G I S Division Historic Markers Site January 19 2015 Archived from the original on January 19 2015 a b c d e f g Dred Scott Case 1846 1857 Missouri Digital Heritage Retrieved July 16 2015 For a longer discussion see Ehrlich 1979 chapter 1 or more recently see Swain 2004 p 91 U M Weblogin ProQuest 881879875 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help a b Ehrlich Walter 2007 They Have No Rights Dred Scott s Struggle for Freedom Applewood Books pp 20 25 Dred Scott s fight for freedom 1846 1857 Africans in America People amp Events PBS Retrieved March 26 2012 a b Fehrenbacher Don Edward 2001 The Dred Scott Case Its Significance in American Law and Politics Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0195145885 page needed Finkelman Paul 2007 Scott v Sandford The Court s Most Dreadful Case and How it Changed History PDF Chicago Kent Law Review 82 3 3 48 Multimedia The Gilder Lehrman Institute of American History Gilderlehrman org Archived from the original on October 11 2017 Retrieved March 16 2017 Scott v Emerson 15 Mo 576 586 Mo 1852 Archived December 13 2013 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved August 20 2012 The Emersons were represented by Hugh A Garland and Lyman Decatur Norris Randall J G and David Donald A House Divided The Civil War and Reconstruction 2nd ed Boston D C Heath and Company 1961 pp 107 114 Decision of the Supreme Court in the Dred Scott Case The New York Daily Times New York March 7 1857 Retrieved May 26 2011 Frederic D Schwarz Archived December 3 2008 at the Wayback Machine The Dred Scott Decision American Heritage February March 2007 Carey Patrick W April 2002 Political Atheism Dred Scott Roger Brooke Taney and Orestes A Brownson The Catholic Historical Review The Catholic University of America Press 88 2 207 229 doi 10 1353 cat 2002 0072 ISSN 1534 0708 S2CID 153950640 a b New memorial at Dred Scott s gravesite in St Louis is honorable marker of his legacy September 27 2023 a b Ehrlich Walter September 1968 Was the Dred Scott Case Valid The Journal of American History 55 2 256 265 doi 10 2307 1899556 JSTOR 1899556 a b Hardy David T 2012 Dred Scott John San d ford and the Case for Collusion PDF Northern Kentucky Law Review 41 1 Archived from the original PDF on October 10 2015 Harriet Robinson Scott Historic Missourians The State Historical Society of Missouri Shsmo org Archived from the original on November 25 2016 Retrieved February 28 2019 Axelrod Alan 2008 Profiles in Folly History s Worst Decisions and why They Went Wrong Sterling Publishing Company Inc pp 192 ISBN 978 1402747687 a b O Neil Time March 6 2007 Dred Scott Heirs to History PDF St Louis Post Dispatch Archived from the original PDF on July 28 2011 Retrieved May 26 2011 Goldstein Dawn Eden Tweet Twitter Retrieved November 4 2022 Jonathan M Pitts Tribune News Service Taney Dred Scott families reconcile 160 years after decision The Atlanta Journal Constitution Retrieved February 27 2020 Paul Finkleman Dred Scott v Sandford A Brief History with Documents Palgrave Macmillan 1997 pp 7 9 Retrieved February 26 2011 a b c d e f g h i Arenson Adam 2014 Dred Scott versus the Dred Scott Case The History and Memory of a Signal Moment in American Slavery 1857 2007 In Konig David Thomas Finkelman Paul Bracey Christopher Alan eds The Dred Scott Case Historical and Contemporary Perspectives on Race and Law Ohio University Press pp 25 46 ISBN 978 0821443286 Welcome to Dred Scott Playfields PDF St Louis Walk of Fame St Louis Walk of Fame Inductees stlouiswalkoffame org Archived from the original on October 31 2012 Retrieved April 25 2013 Griffin Marshall Dred Scott inducted to Hall of Famous Missourians Retrieved March 16 2017 O Leary Madeline Dred and Harriet Scott statue ready for debut stltoday com Retrieved March 16 2017 From a descendant of Roger Taney to a descendant of Dred Scott I m sorry Washington Post Retrieved March 7 2017 Billingsley Kate T March 2 2017 Historic Healing amp Reconciliation 160th Annversary sic Of Dred Scott Decision Monday March 6 2017 Kate Taney Billingsley Archived from the original on March 8 2017 Retrieved March 7 2017 Bibliography editAllen Austin 2006 Origins of the Dred Scott Case Jacksonian Jurisprudence and the Supreme Court 1837 1857 Athens GA University of Georgia Press ISBN 978 0820326535 Ehrlich Walter They have no rights Dred Scott s struggle for freedom No 9 Praeger Pub Text 1979 Fehrenbacher Don E 1978 The Dred Scott Case Its Significance in American Law and Politics New York Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0195024036 Napolitano Andrew 2009 Dred Scott s Revenge A Legal History of Race and Freedom in America Thomas Nelson p 288 ISBN 978 1418575571 Shurtleff Mark 2009 Am I Not a Man The Dred Scott Story Orem UT Valor Publishing Group ISBN 978 1935546009 Swain Gwenyth 2004 Dred and Harriet Scott A Family s Struggle for Freedom Saint Paul MN Borealis Books ISBN 978 0873514835 Tsesis Alexander 2008 We Shall Overcome A History of Civil Rights and the Law New Haven CT Yale University Press ISBN 978 0300118377 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Dred Scott This article s use of external links may not follow Wikipedia s policies or guidelines Please improve this article by removing excessive or inappropriate external links and converting useful links where appropriate into footnote references January 2019 Learn how and when to remove this template message Dred and Harriet Scott in Minnesota in MNopedia the Minnesota Encyclopedia St Louis Circuit Court Records A collection of images and transcripts of 19th century Circuit Court Cases in St Louis particularly freedom suits including suits brought by Dred and Harriet Scott A partnership of Washington University and Missouri History Museum funded by an IMLS grant Freedom Suits African American Life in St Louis 1804 1865 from the Records of the St Louis Courts Jefferson National Expansion Memorial National Park Service Revised Dred Scott Case Collection Christyn Elley Biography of Dred Scott Missouri State Archives Full text of the Dred Scott v Sandford Supreme Court decision Findlaw Dred Scott v Sandford and related resources Library of Congress Dred Scott Chronology Washington University in St Louis Dred Scott Heritage Foundation Dred Scott Findagrave including pictures depicting the old gravestone and the new memorial Scott Dred Appletons Cyclopaedia of American Biography 1900 Works by Dred Scott at Project Gutenberg Works by or about Dred Scott at Internet Archive Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Dred Scott amp oldid 1196925924, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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