“If, by your legislation, you seek to drive us from the territories of California and New Mexico,” thundered Toombs, “I am for disunion.” “We have calculated the value of the Union,” warned Albert Gallatin Brown of Mississippi. “We ask you to give us our rights” in California; “if you refuse, I am for taking them by armed occupation.” The South’s liberty was at stake as much now as in 1776, for “it is clear,” according to an Alabama congressman, “that the power to dictate what sort of property the State may allow a citizen to own and work—whether oxen, horses, or negroes . . . is alike
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