NewsInHistory Blog

Daniel Webster’s Famed Oratory Does Not Move Everyone

In his infamous March 7th “Plea for Harmony and Peace” speech before the U.S. Senate, Daniel Webster called upon his great talent as an orator to urge support for the Compromise of 1850. However, his words did not convince everyone that the U.S. Constitution protected the rights of slave owners to capture escaped slaves. Four days later, on March 11, New York Senator William H. Seward sardonically remarked to the Senate the following statement, as published by the Daily Atlas (Boston, Massachusetts) on March 15, 1850: read more...

Seward Answers Webster with His Own Fine Oration

Four days after Daniel Webster’s infamous March 7th “Plea for Harmony and Peace” speech, in which the famed speaker had urged his Senate colleagues to support the Compromise of 1850, New York Senator William H. Seward gave a moving speech of his own on the Senate floor. A committed abolitionist, Seward denounced Webster’s contention that the U.S. Constitution protected the rights of slave owners to capture escaped slaves. read more...

Senator Seward Denies U.S. Constitution Protects Slavery

Debate in the U.S. Senate over the Compromise of 1850 grew heated, as pro-slavery and abolitionist forces clashed repeatedly. Some senators argued that the U.S. Constitution protected slavery. Massachusetts senator and famed orator Daniel Webster went further, insisting in a speech on March 7, 1850, that the Constitution protected the right of slave owners to hunt down, capture, and bring back into bondage any escaped slave—and that all Northerners had a legal obligation to assist Southerners in the capture. read more...

Constitution of the Confederate States of America Adopted

Representatives from six seceding states moved with dizzying speed in the spring of 1861 to establish a new country. The deputies from South Carolina, Mississippi, Florida, Alabama, Georgia and Louisiana (listed in chronological order of secession) convened as the Provisional Confederate Congress in Montgomery, Alabama, on Feb. 4, 1861. Four days after the Congress opened, on February 8, they adopted a provisional constitution to formalize their new country, the Confederate States of America. read more...

Janet Reno: First Female U.S. Attorney General

Janet Wood Reno achieved a historic first when the U.S. Senate unanimously approved her as attorney general on March 11, 1993—earning her the distinction of being the nation’s first female attorney general. President Bill Clinton’s first  two nominees, Zoe Baird and Kimba Wood, both ran into controversies stemming from their use of illegal immigrants as nannies, but the sterling record and career of the Cornell and Harvard-educated Reno, who had been the state attorney for Florida since 1978, secured her the full backing of the Senate. read more...

Wads of Tobacco, Songbooks, and Other Battlefield Tales

Battlefield annals are replete with incredible tales of bravery and cowardice, cool-headed resoluteness and wild, demonic fury, with strong doses of preparation, execution and adaptability. Most astonishing of all, perhaps, are the stories of chance and luck—heightened all the more in the context of life-and-death situations. read more...

International Women’s Day Celebrated

On March 8 the world celebrates International Women’s Day, an opportunity to honor and appreciate women as well as highlight and examine the ongoing struggle for women’s rights. The concept for this celebration came from feminists and political activists Luise Zietz and Clara Zetkin, who proposed it during a 1910 women’s conference held in Copenhagen, Denmark. The first official observance was held in 1911. read more...

Daniel Webster, Abolitionist, Defends the Capture of Fugitive Slaves?

During his eulogy for Senator Ted Kennedy on Aug. 28, 2009, President Obama told this humorous story about the late senator: “A few years ago, his father-in-law told him that he and Daniel Webster just might be the two greatest senators of all time. Without missing a beat, Teddy replied, ‘What did Webster do?’” read more...

Police Attack Civil Rights Marchers on ‘Bloody Sunday’

Racial hatred was horribly on display in Selma, Alabama, when police attacked a peaceful march of African American demonstrators on March 7, 1965. The violent encounter injured dozens of protesters, 17 seriously enough to require hospitalization, earning the infamous day the nickname “Bloody Sunday.” The marchers were protesting both the police slaying of civil rights demonstrator Jimmie Lee Jackson on February 18, as well as the hostile conditions in Selma and the surrounding area that intimidated African Americans to prevent them from voting. read more...

Newspaper Editorials about the Dred Scott Decision

When the U.S. Supreme Court issued its infamous Dred Scott Decision on March 6, 1857, declaring that Blacks cannot be citizens of the United States and have no protections under the U.S. Constitution, the Court hoped to put the slavery controversy to rest. How wrong it was! The slavery issue only became more divisive, and instead of threatening to tear the nation apart it actually did just that four years later, when the Civil War began. read more...