Fugitive slave laws in the United States information
Laws passed by the United States Congress in 1793 and 1850
Part of a series on
Slavery
Contemporary
Child labour
Child soldiers
Conscription
Debt
Forced marriage
Bride buying
Child marriage
Wife selling
Forced prostitution
Human trafficking
Peonage
Penal labour
Contemporary Africa
21st-century jihadism
Sexual slavery
Wage slavery
Historical
Antiquity
Egypt
Babylonia
Greece
Rome
Medieval Europe
Ancillae
Black Sea slave trade
Byzantine Empire
Kholop
Prague slave trade
Serfs
History
In Russia
Emancipation
Thrall
Venetian slave trade
Balkan slave trade
Muslim world
Slavery in the Abbasid Caliphate
Slavery in Al-Andalus
Baqt
Contract of manumission
Bukhara slave trade
Crimean slave trade
Khivan slave trade
Ottoman Empire
Avret Esir Pazarları
Barbary Coast
slave trade
pirates
Sack of Baltimore
Slave raid of Suðuroy
Turkish Abductions
Concubinage
history
Ma malakat aymanukum
Avret Esir Pazarları
Harem
Abbasid harem
Ottoman Imperial Harem
Safavid harem
Qajar harem
Jarya/Cariye
Odalisque
Qiyan
Umm walad
Circassian slave trade
Saqaliba
Slavery in the Umayyad Caliphate
21st century
Atlantic slave trade
Bristol
Brazil
Database
Dutch
Middle Passage
Nantes
New France
Panyarring
Spanish Empire
Slave Coast
Thirteen colonies
Topics and practice
Conscription
Ghilman
Mamluk
Devshirme
Blackbirding
Coolie
Corvée labor
Field slaves in the United States
Treatment
House slaves
Saqaliba
Slave market
Slave raiding
Child soldiers
White slavery
Naval
Galley slave
Impressment
Pirates
Shanghaiing
Slave ship
By country or region
Sub-Saharan Africa
Contemporary Africa
Trans-Saharan slave trade
Red Sea slave trade
Indian Ocean slave trade
Zanzibar slave trade
Angola
Chad
Comoros
Ethiopia
Mali
Mauritania
Niger
Nigeria
Seychelles
Somalia
Somali slave trade
South Africa
Sudan
Zanzibar
North and South America
Pre-Columbian America
Aztec
Americas indigenous
U.S. Natives
United States
Field slaves
female
Contemporary
maps
partus
prison labor
Slave codes
Treatment
interregional
Human trafficking
The Bahamas
Canada
Caribbean
Barbados
British Virgin Islands
Trinidad
Code Noir
Latin America
Brazil
Lei Áurea
Colombia
Cuba
Haiti
revolt
Restavek
(Encomienda)
Puerto Rico
East, Southeast, and South Asia
Human trafficking in Southeast Asia
Bhutan
China
Booi Aha
Laogai
penal system
India
Debt bondage
Chukri System
Japan
comfort women
Korea
Kwalliso
Maldives
Slavery in the Mongol Empire
Thailand
Yankee princess
Vietnam
Australia and Oceania
Australia
Human trafficking
Blackbirding
Slave raiding in Easter Island
Human trafficking in Papua New Guinea
Blackbirding in Polynesia
Europe and North Asia
Sex trafficking in Europe
Britain
Denmark
Dutch Republic
Germany in World War II
Malta
Norway
Poland
Portugal
Romania
Russia
Spain
Sweden
North Africa and West Asia
Afghanistan
Algeria
Bahrain
Egypt
Human trafficking in the Middle East
Iran
Iraq
Jordan
Kuwait
Lebanon
Libya
Morocco
Oman
Palestine
Saudi Arabia
Syria
Tunisia
Qatar
Yemen
United Arab Emirates
Religion
Bible
Christianity
Catholicism
Mormonism
Islam
Judaism
Baháʼí Faith
Opposition and resistance
1926 Slavery Convention
Abolitionism
U.K.
U.S.
Abolitionists
Anglo-Egyptian Slave Trade Convention
Anti-Slavery International
Blockade of Africa
U.K.
U.S.
Colonization
Liberia
Sierra Leone
Compensated emancipation
Freedman
manumission
Freedom suit
Slave Power
Underground Railroad
songs
Slave rebellion
Slave Trade Acts
International law
Third Servile War
13th Amendment to the United States Constitution
Timeline of abolition of slavery and serfdom
Abolition of slave trade in Persian gulf [fa]
Related
Common law
Indentured servitude
Unfree labour
Fugitive slaves
laws
Great Dismal Swamp maroons
List of slaves
owners
last survivors of American slavery
Marriage of enslaved people (United States)
Slave narrative
films
songs
Slave name
Slave catcher
Slave patrol
Slave Route Project
breeding
court cases
Washington
Jefferson
J.Q. Adams
Lincoln
Emancipation Proclamation
40 acres
Freedmen's Bureau
Iron bit
Emancipation Day
v
t
e
The fugitive slave laws were laws passed by the United States Congress in 1793 and 1850 to provide for the return of enslaved people who escaped from one state into another state or territory. The idea of the fugitive slave law was derived from the Fugitive Slave Clause which is in the United States Constitution (Article IV, Section 2, Paragraph 3). It was thought that forcing states to deliver fugitive slaves back to enslavement violated states' rights due to state sovereignty and was believed that seizing state property should not be left up to the states. The Fugitive Slave Clause states that fugitive slaves "shall be delivered up on Claim of the Party to whom such Service or Labour may be due", which abridged state rights because forcing people back into slavery was a form of retrieving private property.[1] The Compromise of 1850 entailed a series of laws that allowed slavery in the new territories and forced officials in free states to give a hearing to slave-owners without a jury.[2]
^Baker, Robert (2014). "A Better Story in Prigg v. Pennsylvania?". Journal of Supreme Court History. 39 (2): 171. doi:10.1111/j.1540-5818.2014.12040.x. S2CID 143259317.
^Finkelman, Paul (2012). "State Rights, Southern hypocrisy, and the crisis of the Union". Akron Law Review: 453.
and 25 Related for: Fugitive slave laws in the United States information
Thefugitiveslavelaws were laws passed by theUnitedStates Congress in 1793 and 1850 to provide for the return of enslaved people who escaped from one...
TheFugitiveSlave Act or FugitiveSlaveLaw was a law passed by the 31st UnitedStates Congress on September 18, 1850, as part of the Compromise of 1850...
IntheUnitedStates, fugitiveslaves or runaway slaves were terms used inthe 18th and 19th centuries to describe people who fled slavery. The term also...
Fugitiveslave advertisements intheUnitedStates, or runaway slave ads, were paid classified advertisements describing a missing person and usually offering...
free states up to the 1840 census, and theFugitiveSlave Clause of the U.S. Constitution, as implemented by theFugitiveSlave Act of 1793 and the Fugitive...
slaveholding states. TheFugitiveSlave Clause of the Constitution—Article IV, Section 2, Clause 3—provided that, if a slave escaped to another state, the other...
Torture of slavesintheUnitedStates was fairly common, as part of what many slavers claimed was necessary discipline. SlavesintheUnitedStates were considered...
of fugitives. TheFugitiveSlave Clause requires the return of fugitiveslaves; this clause has not been repealed, but it was rendered moot by the Thirteenth...
those slavesin Confederate states to be free. TheUnitedStates Colored Troops began operations in 1863. TheFugitiveSlave Act of 1850 was repealed in June...
abolitionism Lists of UnitedStates public officials who owned slaves Slavery inthe District of Columbia Treatment of slavesintheUnitedStates Polk Taylor,...
Theslave codes were laws relating to slavery and enslaved people, specifically regarding the Atlantic slave trade and chattel slavery inthe Americas...
Most Wanted FugitivesFugitive peasants Fugitiveslaves List of fugitives from justice who disappeared The Hunt with John Walsh I Am a Fugitive from a Chain...
the 1787 U.S. Constitution and the 1793 FugitiveSlave Act were the only national UnitedStateslaws on slavery. Individual states had enacted laws authorizing...
TheFugitiveSlave Convention was held in Cazenovia, New York, on August 21 and 22, 1850. It was a fugitiveslave meeting, the biggest ever held in the...
Although theUnitedStates Constitution has never contained the words "slave" or "slavery" within its text, it dealt directly with American slavery in at least...
of the continental colonies. Immediately following the abolition of slavery intheUnitedStates (and ratification of the 13th amendment), theslave labor-dependent...