Amendments to the Constitution line of 36° 30′ N. separated Missouri from the
Arkansas Territory, but barred slavery from any new states and territories north of this line and west of Missouri, as did the Crittenden Compromise proposed forty years later. (However, this part of the Compromise of 1820 had been largely negated by the
Kansas–Nebraska Act of 1854 and the U.S. Supreme Court's
Dred Scott decision in 1857.) • Slavery would be prohibited in any
territory of the United States "now held, or hereafter acquired", north of latitude
36 degrees, 30 minutes line. In territories south of this line, slavery of the
African race was "hereby recognized" and could not be interfered with by Congress. Furthermore, property in African slaves was to be "protected by all the departments of the territorial government during its continuance". States would be admitted to the Union from any territory with or without slavery as their constitutions provided. • Congress was forbidden to abolish slavery in places under its jurisdiction, such as a military post, within a slave state. • Congress could not abolish slavery in the District of Columbia so long as it existed in the adjoining states of Virginia and Maryland and without the consent of the District's inhabitants. Compensation would be given to owners who refused consent to abolition. • Congress could not prohibit or interfere with the interstate slave trade. • Congress would provide full compensation to owners of rescued fugitive slaves. Congress was empowered to sue the county in which obstruction to the
fugitive slave laws took place to recover payment; the county, in turn, could sue "the wrong doers or rescuers" who prevented the return of the fugitive. • No future amendment of the Constitution could change these amendments or authorize or empower Congress to interfere with slavery within any slave state.
Congressional resolutions • That
fugitive slave laws were constitutional and should be faithfully observed and executed. • That all state laws that impeded the operation of fugitive slave laws, the so-called "
Personal liberty laws", were unconstitutional and should be repealed. • That the
Fugitive Slave Act of 1850 should be amended (and rendered less objectionable to the North) by equalizing the fee schedule for returning or releasing alleged fugitives and limiting the powers of marshals to summon citizens to aid in their capture. • That laws for the suppression of the
African slave trade should be effectively and thoroughly executed. ==Results==