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Nashville Convention

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22: 474: 509:. and the slaveholding states agreed to send delegates to Nashville to define a resistance strategy in the face of perceived Northern aggression. Mississippi's legislature appropriated $ 20,000 for the expenses of their Nashville delegates and $ 200,000 for any "necessary measures for protecting the state ... in the event of the passage of the Wilmot Proviso." 598:
signed it into law. As a result, in November a smaller group of Southern delegates met in Nashville in a second session of the Nashville Convention, this time dominated by the extremists. They denounced the compromise and affirmed the right of individual states to secede from the Union. This second
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in Nashville for nine days in June 1850. 101 of these delegates were from Tennessee, where each county had been allowed to send whomever it wished. In the other cases, the delegates were selected by the state legislatures. A small delegation from
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if slavery were restricted in any of the new territories were eventually overruled by the moderates. Speaking for the moderate position, the presiding officer, Judge
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of Mississippi, declared that the convention had not been "called to prevent but to perpetuate the Union." Thus, the Nashville delegates, while they denounced
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to address the growing issue of the Federal government placing limits on the growth of slavery. The delegates to the October 1, 1849,
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decided to ban slavery in the new territories being added to the country as a result of the
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George L. Sioussat, "Tennessee, the Compromise of 1850, and the Nashville Convention."
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Texas, New Mexico, and the Compromise of 1850: Boundary Dispute and Sectional Crisis
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session had little national impact, but the seeds continued to be sown for the
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Among the prominent pro-secession delegates at the Nashville Convention was
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had urged that a preliminary bipartisan Southern convention be held in
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had been blocked from attending by that state's moderate legislature.
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The Nashville Convention: Southern Movement for Unity, 1848–1850
462:. The compromises worked out in Nashville paved the way for the 533: 470:, and for a time, preserved the union of the United States. 628:The Tennessee Encyclopedia of History and Culture 667: 610:of Mississippi, who would a decade later become 43:but its sources remain unclear because it lacks 564:After heated debate, the Southerners who urged 505:, the land taken from Mexico at the end of the 711:Millard Fillmore administration controversies 415: 501:, a failed proposal to ban slavery in the 442:, on June 3–11, 1850. Delegates from nine 422: 408: 74:Learn how and when to remove this message 472: 477:Proceedings of the Nashville Convention 668: 686:History of United States expansionism 394:President Lincoln's 75,000 volunteers 657:Mississippi Valley Historical Review 636:, Kent State University Press, 1996. 591:enacted the Compromise of 1850, and 15: 612:President of the Confederate States 13: 642: 304:John Brown's raid on Harpers Ferry 160:End of slavery in British colonies 14: 722: 706:Origins of the American Civil War 580:of 1820 would be extended to the 554:McKendree United Methodist Church 293:The Impending Crisis of the South 135:Kentucky and Virginia Resolutions 438:was a political meeting held in 20: 1: 621: 481:The previous year, firebrand 691:Slavery in the United States 497:denounced the controversial 268:Burning of Pennsylvania Hall 230:Secession of Southern states 7: 263:Martyrdom of Elijah Lovejoy 107:End of Atlantic slave trade 10: 727: 659:2, no. 3 (1915): 313–347. 468:Fugitive Slave Act of 1850 350:Recapture of Anthony Burns 220:1860 presidential election 195:Fugitive Slave Act of 1850 676:1850 in American politics 299:Oberlin–Wellington Rescue 274:American Slavery As It Is 322:Trial of Reuben Crandall 235:Peace Conference of 1861 210:Caning of Charles Sumner 29:This article includes a 215:Lincoln–Douglas debates 58:more precise citations. 495:Mississippi Convention 478: 452:United States Congress 363:Virginia v. John Brown 356:Dred Scott v. Sandford 258:Nat Turner's Rebellion 476: 389:Battle of Fort Sumter 344:Prigg v. Pennsylvania 225:Crittenden Compromise 681:History of Tennessee 507:Mexican–American War 460:Mexican–American War 440:Nashville, Tennessee 436:Nashville Convention 328:Commonwealth v. Aves 185:Nashville Convention 175:Mexican–American War 145:Nullification crisis 632:Mark J. Stegmaier, 578:Missouri Compromise 512:176 delegates from 200:Kansas–Nebraska Act 140:Missouri Compromise 130:Northwest Ordinance 95: 601:American Civil War 587:In September, the 570:William L. Sharkey 479: 464:Compromise of 1850 456:Louisiana Purchase 190:Compromise of 1850 93:American Civil War 86: 31:list of references 696:1850 in Tennessee 648:Thelma Jennings, 432: 431: 281:Uncle Tom's Cabin 88:Events leading to 84: 83: 76: 718: 701:1850 conferences 596:Millard Fillmore 552:convened at the 466:, including the 446:met to consider 424: 417: 410: 383:Star of the West 240:Corwin Amendment 205:Ostend Manifesto 170:Texas annexation 165:Texas Revolution 96: 85: 79: 72: 68: 65: 59: 54:this article by 45:inline citations 24: 23: 16: 726: 725: 721: 720: 719: 717: 716: 715: 666: 665: 645: 643:Further reading 624: 608:Jefferson Davis 503:Mexican Cession 487:John C. 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Index

list of references
related reading
external links
inline citations
improve
introducing
Learn how and when to remove this message
Events leading to
American Civil War
End of Atlantic slave trade
Panic of 1857
Northwest Ordinance
Kentucky and Virginia Resolutions
Missouri Compromise
Nullification crisis
Gag rule
Tariff of 1828
End of slavery in British colonies
Texas Revolution
Texas annexation
Mexican–American War
Wilmot Proviso
Nashville Convention
Compromise of 1850
Fugitive Slave Act of 1850
Kansas–Nebraska Act
Ostend Manifesto
Caning of Charles Sumner
Lincoln–Douglas debates
1860 presidential election

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