Lincoln/Douglas Debates Essay, Research Paper
Eric Wheeler
Period 2
December 17, 1996
AP US History
- Lincoln/Douglas Debates -
In 1858, Lincoln challenged Douglas for his seat in the
senate. Lincoln asked him four questions, in which he tried to
make Douglas make a mistake resulting in either the north, or the
south to loose Douglas’s favor. The questions were as follows:
Question 1:
“If the people of Kansas shall, by means entirely
unobjectionable in all other respects, adopt a state
constitution, and ask admission into the Union under it before
they have the requisite number of inhabitants according to the
English Bill –some ninety-three thousand–will you vote to admit
them?”
Question 2:
“Can the people of a United states territory, in any lawful
way, against the wish of any citizen of the United States,
exclude slavery from its limits prior to the formation of a state
constitution?”
Question 3:
“If the Supreme Court of the United States shall decide that
states cannot exclude slavery from their limits, are you in favor
of acquiescing in, adopting, and following such decision as a
rule of political action?”
Question 4:
“First … in reference to Kansas, it is my opinion that as
she has population enough to constitute a slave state, she has
people enough for a free State. I will not make Kansas an
exceptional case to the other States of the Union … Either
Kansas must come in as a free State, with whatever population she
may have or the rule must be applied to all the other Territories
alike …?”
As Douglas answered Lincoln’s questions, the document
implies that Douglas is eith
Lincoln had asked, and replied as follows:
In question number one, Douglas answered emphatically, as he
had several times in Illinois before, that a territory or state
can exclude slavery from its limits without the formation of a
state constitution. Douglas then continues saying that to
continue slavery, even for another hour, there must be sufficient
legal enforcement so that people can ensure that their slaves
will work. If that state would like to be either free or slave,
then the people of the state would elect officials that were for
or against slavery which would in turn make the state free or
slave because of the officials running the state.
In response to question number three, Douglas states that
violating the constitution of the United States would not only be
moral treason, but impossible. Douglas also compares this
question to the simplicity of a question that a school boy could
answer; “A school boy knows better”.
This document constantly brings up slavery several times
throughout. This leads me to conclude that slavery was a large
part in leading up to this. If the need for cheap labor hadn’t
arose in the early colonization period of our country, then
conflicts like the Civil War, fugitive slavery laws, and racial
revolts probably would have been averted. The text book has very
little on this document, and covers just the first question that
Lincoln asked Douglas. Both sources say that it didn’t matter
weather Douglas disavowed popular sovereignty, he would be
defeated for reelection and his political career would be over.
If he agreed, then he would offend the southern democrats and the
nomination of 1860 could possibly never take place.