Tallmadge amendment , the author of the antislavery amendment to Missouri statehood When the Missouri statehood bill was opened for debate in the House of Representatives on February 13, 1819, early exchanges on the floor proceeded without serious incident. In the course of the proceedings, however, Representative
James Tallmadge Jr. of New York "tossed a bombshell into the Era of Good Feelings" with the following amendments: A political outsider, the 41-year-old Tallmadge conceived his amendment based on a strong personal aversion to slavery. He had played a leading role in accelerating the emancipation of the remaining slaves in New York in 1817 and had campaigned against Illinois's
Black Codes. Though ostensibly free-soil, the new state had a constitution that permitted indentured servitude and a limited form of slavery. As a New York Democratic-Republican, Tallmadge maintained an uneasy association with
New York Governor DeWitt Clinton, a Democratic-Republican who depended on support from ex-Federalists. Clinton's faction was hostile to Tallmadge for his spirited defense of General
Andrew Jackson's contentious
invasion of Florida. After proposing the amendment, Tallmadge fell ill, and Representative
John W. Taylor, a fellow New York Democratic-Republican, stepped in to fill the void. Taylor also had antislavery credentials since in February 1819, he had proposed a similar slave restriction for
Arkansas Territory in the House, which was defeated 89–87. In a speech before the House during the debate on the Tallmadge Amendment, Taylor was highly critical of southern lawmakers, who frequently voiced their dismay that slavery was entrenched and necessary to their existence, and he warned that Missouri's fate would "decide the destiny of millions" in future states in the
American West. The controversy on the amendment and the future of slavery in the nation created much dissension among Democratic-Republicans and polarized the party. Northern Democratic-Republicans formed a coalition across factional lines with remnants of the Federalists. Southern Democratic-Republicans united in almost unanimous opposition. The ensuing debates pitted the northern "restrictionists", antislavery legislators who wished to bar slavery from the Louisiana Territory and all future states and territories, and southern "anti-restrictionists", proslavery legislators who rejected any interference by Congress that inhibited slavery expansion. The sectional "rupture" over slavery among Democratic-Republicans, first exposed in the Missouri Crisis, had its roots in the Revolutionary generation. Five Representatives in Maine were opposed to spreading slavery into new territories. Dr. Brian Purnell, a professor of Africana Studies and US history at
Bowdoin College, writes in
Portland Magazine, "
Martin Kinsley,
Joshua Cushman,
Ezekiel Whitman,
Enoch Lincoln, and
James Parker—wanted to prohibit slavery's spread into new territories. In 1820, they voted against the Missouri Compromise and against Maine's independence. In their defense, they wrote that, if the North, and the nation, embarked upon this Compromise—and ignored what experiences proved, namely that southern slaveholders were determined to dominate the nation through ironclad unity and perpetual pressure to demand more land, and more slaves—then these five Mainers declared Americans "shall deserve to be considered a besotted and stupid race, fit, only, to be led blindfold; and worthy, only, to be treated with sovereign contempt".
Stalemate On February 16, 1819, the House
Committee of the Whole voted to link Tallmadge's provisions with the Missouri statehood legislation by 79–67. After the committee vote, debates resumed over the merits of each of Tallmadge's provisions in the enabling act. The debates in the House's 2nd session in 1819 lasted only three days. They have been characterized as "rancorous", "fiery", "bitter", "blistering", "furious" and "bloodthirsty". Representatives from the North outnumbered those from the South in House membership 105 to 81. When each of the restrictionist provisions was put to the vote, they passed along sectional lines: 87 to 76 for prohibition on further slave migration into Missouri and 82 to 78 for emancipating the offspring of slaves at 25. The enabling bill was passed to the Senate, and both parts of it were rejected: 22–16 against the restriction of new slaves in Missouri (supported by five northerners, two of whom were the proslavery legislators from the free state of Illinois) and 31–7 against the gradual emancipation for slave children born after statehood. House antislavery restrictionists refused to concur with the Senate proslavery anti-restrictionists, and Missouri statehood would devolve upon the 16th Congress in December 1819.
Development and passage Because it no longer wanted to be part of non-contiguous Massachusetts after the War of 1812, the northern region of
Massachusetts, the
District of Maine, sought and ultimately gained
admission into the United States as a free state to become the separate state of
Maine. That occurred only as a result of a compromise involving slavery in Missouri and in the federal territories of the
American West. The admission of another slave state would increase southern power when northern politicians had already begun to regret the Constitution's
Three-Fifths Compromise. Although more than 60 percent of
white Americans lived in the North, northern representatives held only a slim majority of congressional seats by 1818. The additional political representation allotted to the South as a result of the Three-Fifths Compromise gave southerners more seats in the
House of Representatives than they would have had if the number was based on the free population alone. Moreover, since each state had two Senate seats, Missouri's admission as a slave state would result in more southern than northern senators. A bill to enable the people of the
Missouri Territory to draft a constitution and form a government preliminary to admission into the Union came before the House of Representatives in
Committee of the Whole, on February 13, 1819.
James Tallmadge of
New York offered the
Tallmadge Amendment, which forbade further introduction of slaves into Missouri and mandated that all children of slave parents born in the state after its admission to be free at the age of 25. The committee adopted the measure and incorporated it into the bill as finally passed on February 17, 1819, by the House. The Senate refused to concur with the amendment, and the whole measure was lost. During the following session (1819–1820), the House passed a similar bill with an amendment, introduced on January 26, 1820, by
John W. Taylor of
New York, allowing Missouri into the union as a slave state. The question had been complicated by the admission in December of
Alabama, a
slave state, which made the number of slave and free states equal. In addition, there was a bill in passage through the House (January 3, 1820) to admit
Maine as a
free state. The Senate decided to connect the two measures. It passed a bill for the admission of Maine with an amendment enabling the people of Missouri to form a state constitution. Before the bill was returned to the House, a second amendment was adopted, on the motion of
Jesse B. Thomas of
Illinois, to exclude slavery from the
Louisiana Territory north of the latitude
36°30' north, the southern boundary of Missouri, except within the limits of the proposed state of Missouri. The vote in the Senate was 24-20 for the compromise. The amendment and the bill passed in the Senate on February 17 and February 18, 1820. The House then approved the Senate compromise amendment, 90–87, with all of the opposition coming from representatives from the free states. The House then approved the whole bill 134–42 with opposition from the southern states. ==Aftermath==