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- Nashville_Convention abstract "The Nashville Convention was a political meeting held in Nashville, Tennessee, on June 3 – 11, 1850. Delegates from nine slave holding states met to consider a possible course of action if the United States Congress decided to ban slavery in the new territories being added to the country as a result of Westward Expansion and the Mexican-American War. The compromises worked out in Nashville paved the way for the Compromise of 1850, and for a time, averted the dissolution of the United States. The previous year, firebrand states rights advocate John C. Calhoun had urged that a preliminary bipartisan Southern convention be held in Mississippi to address the growing issue of the Federal government placing limits on the growth of slavery. The delegates to the October 1, 1849, Mississippi Convention denounced the controversial Wilmot Proviso, and the slaveholding states agreed to send delegates to Nashville to define a resistance strategy in the face of perceived Northern aggression. Mississippi's legislature appropriated $20,000 for the expenses of their Nashville delegates and $200,000 for any "necessary measures for protecting the state ... in the event of the passage of the Wilmot Proviso." One hundred seventy-six delegates from Virginia, South Carolina, Georgia, Alabama, Mississippi, Texas, Arkansas, Florida, and Tennessee convened at the McKendree United Methodist Church in Nashville for nine days in June 1850. All but 75 of these delegates were from Tennessee, where each county had been allowed to send whomever it wished. In the other cases, the delegates were selected by the state legislatures. A small delegation from Louisiana had been blocked from attending by that state's moderate legislature. After heated debate, the Southerners who urged secession if slavery were restricted in any of the new territories were eventually overruled by the moderates, mostly Whigs and Democrats. Speaking for the moderate position, the presiding officer, Judge William L. Sharkey of Mississippi, declared that the convention had not been "called to prevent but to perpetuate the Union." Thus, the Nashville delegates, while they denounced Henry Clay's omnibus bill and reaffirmed the constitutionality of slavery in a series of 28 resolutions passed on June 10, agreed to a "concession" whereby the geographic dividing line designated by the Missouri Compromise of 1820 would be extended to the Pacific Coast. The convention adjourned without taking any action against the Union, and the issue of secession was temporarily tabled.In September, the U.S. Congress enacted the Compromise of 1850, and President Millard Fillmore signed it into law. As a result, in November a smaller group of Southern delegates met in Nashville in a second session of the Nashville Convention, this time dominated by the extremists. They denounced the compromise and affirmed the right of individual states to secede from the Union. This second session had little national impact, but the seeds continued to be sown for the American Civil War.Among the prominent pro-secession delegates at the Nashville Convention was Jefferson Davis of Mississippi, who would a decade later become President of the Confederate States. One delegate who supported the compromise was famed adventurer Sam Houston of Texas.".
- Nashville_Convention wikiPageExternalLink Nashville_Convention_of_1850.
- Nashville_Convention wikiPageExternalLink imagegallery.php?EntryID=N009.
- Nashville_Convention wikiPageExternalLink 1886535.
- Nashville_Convention wikiPageID "5264433".
- Nashville_Convention wikiPageLength "4430".
- Nashville_Convention wikiPageOutDegree "41".
- Nashville_Convention wikiPageRevisionID "671277144".
- Nashville_Convention wikiPageWikiLink Alabama.
- Nashville_Convention wikiPageWikiLink American_Civil_War.
- Nashville_Convention wikiPageWikiLink Arkansas.
- Nashville_Convention wikiPageWikiLink Category:1850_in_American_politics.
- Nashville_Convention wikiPageWikiLink Category:1850_in_Tennessee.
- Nashville_Convention wikiPageWikiLink Category:History_of_Tennessee.
- Nashville_Convention wikiPageWikiLink Category:History_of_United_States_expansionism.
- Nashville_Convention wikiPageWikiLink Category:Slavery_in_the_United_States.
- Nashville_Convention wikiPageWikiLink Compromise_of_1850.
- Nashville_Convention wikiPageWikiLink Democratic_Party_(United_States).
- Nashville_Convention wikiPageWikiLink Florida.
- Nashville_Convention wikiPageWikiLink Georgia_(U.S._state).
- Nashville_Convention wikiPageWikiLink Henry_Clay.
- Nashville_Convention wikiPageWikiLink Jefferson_Davis.
- Nashville_Convention wikiPageWikiLink John_C._Calhoun.
- Nashville_Convention wikiPageWikiLink Louisiana.
- Nashville_Convention wikiPageWikiLink McKendree_United_Methodist_Church.
- Nashville_Convention wikiPageWikiLink Mexican-American_War.
- Nashville_Convention wikiPageWikiLink Mexican–American_War.
- Nashville_Convention wikiPageWikiLink Millard_Fillmore.
- Nashville_Convention wikiPageWikiLink Mississippi.
- Nashville_Convention wikiPageWikiLink Mississippi_Convention.
- Nashville_Convention wikiPageWikiLink Missouri_Compromise.
- Nashville_Convention wikiPageWikiLink Nashville,_Tennessee.
- Nashville_Convention wikiPageWikiLink Pacific_Coast.
- Nashville_Convention wikiPageWikiLink Pacific_coast.
- Nashville_Convention wikiPageWikiLink President_of_the_Confederate_States.
- Nashville_Convention wikiPageWikiLink President_of_the_Confederate_States_of_America.
- Nashville_Convention wikiPageWikiLink President_of_the_United_States.
- Nashville_Convention wikiPageWikiLink Sam_Houston.
- Nashville_Convention wikiPageWikiLink Secession.
- Nashville_Convention wikiPageWikiLink Slavery.
- Nashville_Convention wikiPageWikiLink South_Carolina.
- Nashville_Convention wikiPageWikiLink States_rights.
- Nashville_Convention wikiPageWikiLink Tennessee.
- Nashville_Convention wikiPageWikiLink Texas.
- Nashville_Convention wikiPageWikiLink U.S._Congress.
- Nashville_Convention wikiPageWikiLink United_States_Congress.
- Nashville_Convention wikiPageWikiLink United_States_territorial_acquisitions.
- Nashville_Convention wikiPageWikiLink Virginia.
- Nashville_Convention wikiPageWikiLink Westward_Expansion.
- Nashville_Convention wikiPageWikiLink Whig_Party_(United_States).
- Nashville_Convention wikiPageWikiLink William_L._Sharkey.
- Nashville_Convention wikiPageWikiLink Wilmot_Proviso.
- Nashville_Convention wikiPageWikiLinkText "1850 convention".
- Nashville_Convention wikiPageWikiLinkText "Nashville Convention".
- Nashville_Convention wikiPageWikiLinkText "convention".
- Nashville_Convention wikiPageWikiLinkText "southern convention".
- Nashville_Convention hasPhotoCollection Nashville_Convention.
- Nashville_Convention wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Events_leading_to_US_Civil_War.
- Nashville_Convention subject Category:1850_in_American_politics.
- Nashville_Convention subject Category:1850_in_Tennessee.
- Nashville_Convention subject Category:History_of_Tennessee.
- Nashville_Convention subject Category:History_of_United_States_expansionism.
- Nashville_Convention subject Category:Slavery_in_the_United_States.
- Nashville_Convention hypernym Meeting.
- Nashville_Convention type OfficeHolder.
- Nashville_Convention comment "The Nashville Convention was a political meeting held in Nashville, Tennessee, on June 3 – 11, 1850. Delegates from nine slave holding states met to consider a possible course of action if the United States Congress decided to ban slavery in the new territories being added to the country as a result of Westward Expansion and the Mexican-American War. The compromises worked out in Nashville paved the way for the Compromise of 1850, and for a time, averted the dissolution of the United States.".
- Nashville_Convention label "Nashville Convention".
- Nashville_Convention sameAs m.0dbknj.
- Nashville_Convention sameAs Q6966963.
- Nashville_Convention sameAs Q6966963.
- Nashville_Convention wasDerivedFrom Nashville_Convention?oldid=671277144.
- Nashville_Convention isPrimaryTopicOf Nashville_Convention.