- Free-Stater (Kansas)
Free-Stater was the name given those settlers in
Kansas Territory during theBleeding Kansas era in the 1850s who opposed the extension of slavery to Kansas.Many Free-Staters were abolitionists from
New England , in part because there was an organized emigration of settlers to Kansas Territory arranged by theNew England Emigrant Aid Company beginning in 1854. Other Free-Staters were abolitionists who came to Kansas Territory fromOhio ,Iowa , and other midwestern states.However, the majority of Free-Staters, regardless of where they were from, did not claim to be abolitionists at the outset. Instead, the official Free-State line supported the idea of excluding "all"
African-American s from the future state ofKansas and did not advocate the abolition of slavery nationwide. What united the Free-Staters was a desire to defeat the proslavery Southern settlers in Kansas Territory on the question of whether Kansas would be admitted to the Union as a slave state. (TheKansas-Nebraska Act of 1854 had left the question open to the settlers in the territory.)Pro-slavery Southerners in Kansas Territory painted all Free-Staters as abolitionists in order to motivate the South's opposition. However,
Eli Thayer and other New England Company leaders denied that they were seeking to abolish slavery, and the failedTopeka Constitution drafted by the Free-Staters in 1855 would have excluded any African-American – slave or free – from settling in Kansas.As time passed and the violence in Bleeding Kansas escalated, abolitionists became ascendent in the Free-State movement. In 1858, the Free-Staters proposed a second constitution, the
Leavenworth Constitution , which banned slavery. (This constitution also failed.)References
* Miner, Craig (2002). "Kansas: The History of the Sunflower State, 1854-2000" (ISBN 0-7006-1215-7).
* Reynolds, David (2005). "John Brown, Abolitionist" (ISBN 0-375-41188-7).
* Thayer, Eli (1889). "History of the Kansas Crusade: Its Friends and its Foes".
Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.