Daniel Webster calls for support of the Compromise of 1850 to save the Union. Third of four parts. Transcript of radio broadcast: 01 April 2009
ANNOUNCER:
Welcome
to the MAKING OF A NATION -- American history in VOA Special English.
Daniel Webster
In
eighteen fifty, the United States faced the threat of a split between northern
and southern states. The two sides disagreed strongly over the issue of
slavery. At that time, owning slaves was legal in the southern states. But the
question remained: should slavery be legal in new territories in the western
part of the country?
The issue
needed to be settled. There was a danger of civil war between the North and the
South. Senator Henry Clay of Kentucky offered a compromise. Conservative
southern lawmakers rejected it. Other lawmakers supported it; they believed it
was the only way to save the union of states.
This week
in our series, Warren Scheer and Sarah Long continue our story of the Compromise
of Eighteen Fifty.
VOICE ONE:
One of the
nation's top political leaders, Senator Daniel Webster of Massachusetts,
supported Henry Clay's compromise. Webster believed that slavery was evil. Yet
he believed that national unity was more important. He did not want the nation
to divide. He did not want to see the end of the United States of America.
Daniel
Webster spoke to other members of the Senate. His speech was an appeal to both
sides in the dispute.
"I
speak today," he said, "to save the Union. I speak today out of a
concerned and troubled heart. I speak for the return of a spirit of unity. I
speak for the return of that general feeling of agreement which makes the blessings
of this union so special to us all."
VOICE TWO:
Senator
Webster spoke of how he hated slavery. He spoke of his fight against the spread
of slavery in America. But he disagreed with those who wanted laws making
slavery illegal in new territories. It would not be wise to pass such laws, he said.
They would only make the South angry. They would only push the South away from
the Union.
Then Webster
spoke about the things the North and South had done to make each other angry.
VOICE ONE:
One, he
said, was the failure of the North to return runaway slaves. He said the South
had good reason to protest. It was a matter of law. The law was contained in
article four of the national constitution.
"Every
member of every northern legislature," Webster said, "has sworn to
support the constitution of the United States. And the constitution says that
states must return runaway slaves to their owners. This part of the
constitution has as much power as any other part. It must be obeyed."
VOICE TWO:
Next,
Webster spoke about the Abolition societies. These were organizations that
demanded an end to slavery everywhere in the country.
"I do
not think that Abolition societies are useful," Webster said. "At the
same time, I believe that thousands of their members are honest and good
citizens who feel they must do something for liberty. However, their
interference with the South has produced trouble."
As an
example, Webster spoke about the state of Virginia. Slavery was legal there.
Webster noted that public opinion in Virginia had been turning against slavery
until Abolitionists angered the people. After that, he said, no one would talk
openly against slavery. He said Abolitionists were not ending slavery, but
helping it to continue.
VOICE ONE:
Then
Webster said the North also had a right to protest about some things the South
had done.
He said
the South was wrong to try to take slaves into new American territories. He
said attempts to do this violated earlier agreements to limit slavery to areas
where it already existed.
Webster said
the North also had a right to protest statements by southern leaders about
working conditions in the North. Southerners often said that slaves in the South
lived better lives than free workers in the North.
VOICE TWO:
Webster
appealed to both sides to forgive each other. He urged them to come to an
agreement. He said the South could never leave the Union without violence.
Webster
said the two sides were joined together socially, economically, culturally, and
in many other ways. There was no way to divide them. No Congress, he said,
could establish a border between the North and South that either side would
accept.
VOICE ONE:
In
general, Webster's speech to the Senate was moderate. He wanted to appeal to
reason, not emotion. Yet it was difficult for him to be unemotional. His voice
rose as he finished.
"Secession!"
He called out. "Peaceable secession! Your eyes and mine will never see
that happen. There can be no such thing as peaceable secession. We live under a
great constitution. Is it to be melted away by secession, as the snows of a
mountain are melted away under the sun?
"Let
us not speak of the possibility of secession. Let us not debate an idea so full
of horror. Let us not live with the thought of such darkness. Instead, let us
come out into the light of day. Let us enjoy the fresh air of liberty and
union."
(MUSIC)
VOICE TWO:
Northern
Abolitionists quickly criticized Daniel Webster's speech. They called him a traitor.
Yet most people of the North accepted Webster's appeal for compromise. His
speech cooled the debate that threatened a complete break between the North and
South.
The
dispute about slavery continued in the United States. It would, in time, lead
to civil war. But historians say Webster's support for the compromise of
eighteen fifty probably helped delay that crisis.
VOICE ONE:
Daniel
Webster's speech was not the end of debate on the compromise. Four days later,
Senator William Seward of New York rose to speak.
Seward
said he opposed any compromise with the South. He said he did not want slavery
in the new western territories. And he urged a national policy to start ending
slavery everywhere -- peacefully.
Seward
criticized Daniel Webster for speaking against the Abolition societies. He said
such groups represented a moral movement that could not be stopped. He said the
movement would continue until all the slaves in America were free.
VOICE TWO:
John C. Calhoun
Seward
then criticized another senator, John C. Calhoun of South Carolina. He
denounced Calhoun's demands for a political balance between the North and South.
He said this would change the United States from a united, national democracy
to an alliance of independent states. In such a system, he said, the minority
would be able to veto actions of the majority.
VOICE ONE:
Many
lawmakers seemed to support the idea of Clay's compromise. But they could not
agree on which parts of it to pass first. Southern supporters were afraid that
if a statehood bill for California was passed first, then northerners would
refuse to pass the other parts of the compromise. So, southerners wanted to
include all parts in one bill.
(MUSIC)
VOICE TWO:
Hopes for
the compromise increased after the death of John C. Calhoun on the last day of
March, eighteen-fifty. Calhoun was pro-slavery. He had refused to compromise on
the issue. One newspaper in Calhoun's state of South Carolina said: "The
senator's death is best for the country and his own honor. The slavery question
will now be settled. Calhoun would have blocked a settlement."
VOICE ONE:
A
committee of thirteen men was named to write a bill based on Henry Clay's
compromise. The committee had six members from slave states and six from free
states. Henry Clay was named to lead it.
Three
weeks later, the committee offered its bill. It was much like the compromise
Clay had first proposed. It made California a free state. It created
territorial governments for New Mexico and Utah. It settled the border dispute
between Texas and New Mexico. It ended the slave trade in the District of
Columbia. And it urged approval of a new law dealing with runaway slaves.
VOICE TWO:
For about
a month, the proposed bill seemed to have the support of the administration of
President Zachary Taylor. But then, President Taylor made it clear that he would
do everything he could to defeat it.
That will
be our story next week.
(MUSIC)
ANNOUNCER:
Our program was written by Frank Beardsley. The narrators were Warren
Scheer and Sarah Long. Transcripts, MP3s
and podcasts of our programs are online, along with historical images, at
voaspecialenglish.com. Join us again next week for THE MAKING OF A NATION -- an
American history series in VOA Special English.
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3. The Cause of Conflicts
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12. the conflict between the North and the South of The US.
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