THE DRED SCOTT CASE.
Richmond, Virginia Enquirer
(10 March 1857)
In anticipation of the definitive decision of the Supreme Court of the
United States in the Dred Scott case some months or more
ago, its adjudication was announced through a respectable proportion of the
press, emanating, we do not now recollect precisely, whence or how; but, as the
sequel shows, not from mere conjecture, or without reliable data, for it was
then stated that seven of the nine judges constituting the court, agreed on the
opinion that the Missouri Compromise was unconstitutional, and
consequently, that the rights originating in it and under it, were even
factitious and ineffective. And it will be seen by the authentic annunciation of
the grave and deliberate decision of that august body, in another column, that
what was rumor then is reality now. -- Thus has a politico-legal question,
involving others of deep import, been decided emphatically in favor of the
advocates and supporters of the Constitution and the
Union, the equality of the States and the rights of the
South, in contradistinction to and in repudiation of the diabolical
doctrines inculcated by factionists and fanatics; and that too by a tribunal of
jurists, as learned, impartial and unprejudiced as perhaps the world has ever
seen. A prize, for which the athletes of the nation have often wrestled in the
halls of Congress, has been awarded at last, by the proper umpire,
to those who have justly won it. The nation has achieved a triumph,
sectionalism has been rebuked, and abolitionism has been staggered and stunned. Another
supporting pillar has been added to our institutions; the assailants of the
South and enemies of the Union have been driven from
their point d'appui; a patriotic principle has been pronounced;
a great, national, conservative, union saving sentiment has been proclaimed. An
adjudication of the constitutionality of the Missouri Compromise,
in the Dred Scott case, inseparably embraced collateral questions
of such character, as also to involve incidental issues, not unfrequently
arising in the councils of the country, and which have ever proved, points of
irreconcilable antagonism between the friends and enemies of the institutions of
the South; all of which, it will be seen, have been uneqivocally
established in accordance with the sense of the Southern people. And thus it is,
that reason and right, justice and truth, always triumph over passion and
prejudice, ignorance and envy, when submitted to the deliberations of honest and
able men: that the dross and the genuine metal are separated when the ore is
accurately assayed.