What is the significance of the nashville convention




















The delegates adopted twenty-eight resolutions asserting the South's constitutional rights in the territories and the rights and interests of Texas in the boundary dispute. However, the moderates gained control of the convention and adopted a wait-and-see attitude. The convention also resolved that it would reassemble in Nashville on the sixth Monday after congressional adjournment.

After President Millard Fillmore signed the five bills that constituted the Compromise of , interest in the second session of the convention declined considerably. Nevertheless, more than 50 delegates from seven southern states met at Nashville in November.

Although they rejected united secession, delegates approved measures affirming the right of secession, denouncing the Compromise, and recommending a southern congress. Schedule a tour, request a speaker or learn how you can do business with us below! You are here Home About. In this address Robert Barnwell Rhett of South Carolina argued the unacceptability of the compromise being debated in Congress.

The Texas boundary bill would transfer from the South to the North territory sufficient for two states. The convention's adjournment was conditional. Should Congress fail to meet their demands, the delegates were to reassemble at Nashville. The passage of the compromise measures took away much of the momentum generated by the first session of the Nashville Convention. A majority of Texans accepted the new law, and the legislature approved an act of acceptance on November 25, We will not be governed by the African; neither will we be by the Yankees!

We must secede. Georgia will lead off, South Carolina will go with her, Alabama will soon follow, and Mississippi will not be long behind her. Within eighteen months we will have the whole South with us, and more than that; we will extend our borders, we will have New Mexico, Utah, and California. Utah already has slaves. We will march into California, and we will ask them if they will have slaves, and her people will answer, Ay, we will have slaves.

And what of Mexico? Why, when we are ready for them, and her people are fitted to come among us, we will take her too, or as much of her as we want. Highlighted vocabulary will appear in both printed versions. Our work has evolved in the last 30 years, from reducing prejudice to tackling systemic injustice. This speech was delivered by Robert Rhett at the Nashville Convention on the issue of secession on September 4,



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