Opponents of the controversial law, including abolitionist Senator Charles Sumner of Massachusetts, said it would turn the territories into “a dreary region of despotism, inhabited by masters and slaves.” The law’s enaction brought both abolitionists and pro-slavery settlers to Kansas, resulting in what came to be called “Bleeding Kansas,” because of the violence that ensued and became a precursor to the Civil War that would soon follow in 1861.
The Lincoln-Douglas Debates
In 1858, Douglas faced a challenge to his third-term Senate seat from Republican nominee Abraham Lincoln, and the two faced off on the issue of slavery over the course of seven debates held between August 21 and October 15, 1858.
Douglas’s call for popular sovereignty was pitted against Lincoln’s arguments opposing slavery’s expansion, and the highly attended debates received widespread news coverage around the nation, gaining notoriety for Lincoln. Although the popular vote was in Lincoln’s favor, it was the state legislature that elected U.S. senators until the 17th Amendment was enacted 1913, and Douglas was voted the victor.
Soon after, however, Lincoln went on to defeat Douglas in the 1860 U.S. presidential election. Ultimately, Douglas, running on a divided Democratic party ticket, was trounced, finishing the last of four candidates.
Death and Legacy
Despite his presidential defeat and their rivalry, Douglas, following the fall of Fort Sumter to the Confederates in April 1861, lent his support to Lincoln and the Union cause.
“You all know that I am a very good partisan fighter in partisan times,” he told the Illinois State Legislature, most of whom were his political foes, for which he received a standing ovation on April 25, 1861. “And I trust you will find me equally a good patriot when the country is in danger.”
A few days later, during a May 1, 1861, speech in Chicago, he echoed that sentiment.
“There are only two sides to this question,” he said in his final address to the public. “Every man must be for the United States or against it. There can be no neutrals in this war; only patriots and traitors.”
Exhausted from the campaign trail and efforts to stop the South from seceding from the North, Douglas suffered worsening health problems. He died in a hotel room from typhoid fever at age 48 on June 3, 1861, just weeks after the start of the Civil War. He is buried in the Bronzeville neighborhood of Chicago at the Douglas Tomb State Historic Site.
In 2020, a statue of Douglas was removed from the lawn of the Illinois Capitol following a unanimous vote by a state board, citing Douglas’s ties to slavery. Lincoln biographer Sidney Blumenthal wrote in a 2019 book that a plantation with slaves was bequeathed to Douglas’s first wife, Martha Martin, whom he married in 1847, and that Douglas had used his 20 percent share of income generated from a hired plantation manager to help with campaign funds.
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