Exclusion Laws - by Clackamas Heritage
Partners
In June,
1844, the Provisional
Government
of Oregon enacted its first laws regarding the
status of slaves, and
therefore
blacks, in the Oregon Country. Slavery was
declared to be illegal, and
settlers
who currently owned slaves were required to
free them within three
years.
Any free blacks age 18 or older had to leave
the area, men within two
years
and women within three. Black children were
permitted to stay in the
Oregon
Country until they reached age 18.
The original exclusion law was the infamous
"Lash Law" which subjected
blacks
found guilty of violating the law to whippings
-- no less than 20 and
no
more than 39 strokes of the lash -- every six
months "until he or she
shall
quit the territory." It was soon recognized
that this punishment was
far
too severe, and the law was modified before it
went into effect.
The new version, enacted in December, 1844,
replaced the whippings with
forced
labor. If a black person was tried and found
guilty of being in the
Oregon
Country illegally, he or she was to be hired
out publicly to whomever
would
employ them for the shortest amount of time.
After the period of forced
labor
expired, the "employer" had six months to get
the black individual out
of
Oregon. Failure to do so was punishable by a
fine of $1000. This law
was
to go into effect in 1846, by which time those
who wrote it doubtless
hoped
that most blacks would have left Oregon, but
it was repealed in the
1845
session of the Provisional Legislature.
Another exclusion law was passed in September,
1849, which simply
forbade
blacks from settling in the newly-declared
Oregon Territory. Any
already
in residence were permitted to stay. In 1851,
Jacob Vanderpool, a Salem
boarding
house and saloon owner, became the only person
known to have been
exiled
from the Territory under Oregon's exclusion
laws. The law under which
he
was charged and sentenced was repealed in
1854.
Oregon ratified its state constitution in
November, 1857. On the
popular
ballot for the constitution, there were also
two other referendum
issues
on which citizens were asked to vote.
Oregonians rejected slavery but
approved
adding a new exclusion law to the
constitution. This law became part of
Oregon's
original Bill of Rights.
When Oregon's constitution was submitted to
Congress for approval, some
Northern
legislators complained about the exclusion
law. However, others saw it
as
a structured way to avoid bloodshed over
racial issues and the spread
of
slavery. Thus, in February, 1859, Oregon
became the only state admitted
to
the Union with an exclusion law in its
constitution. After several
unsuccessful
attempts, the state constitution was finally
amended in 1926 to remove
the
exclusion law from the state Bill of Rights.
Over 60,000 voters
declined
to vote on the issue when casting their
ballots. A separate clause in
Oregon's
constitution banning black suffrage was
repealed the following year. Of
course,
these laws had long since been superseded by
federal laws and
amendments
to the US Constitution following the Civil
War, but they remained
enshrined
in the state constitution for 60 years.
Exclusion laws seem bizarre and reprehensible
today, but they were not
uncommon
in the Nineteenth Century. Settlers in the
Oregon Country brought the
idea
with them from their old homes in Missouri,
Illinois, Indiana, and
Ohio.
Both Illinois and Indiana had exclusion laws
on the books in the
Nineteenth
Century, and all four states denied free
blacks the right to vote and
restricted
their ability to testify in court. Some state
and local laws required
blacks
to post a bond to guarantee their good
behavior or to produce proof of
their
freedom upon the demand of any white person.
The fact that exclusion laws were enacted in
Oregon was attractive to
some
prospective emigrants. Oregon seemed so far
away from the United States
in
the 1840s that some of the settlers probably
thought that they really
did
have a chance to avoid the issues of race and
slavery by simply
legislating
away people of African descent. Some
Oregonians supported the laws
because
they feared the violence that surrounded the
politics of slavery in the
East;
others feared that enslaved blacks would take
their jobs if they were
brought
West in significant numbers; still others were
simply out-and-out
racists.
Following the killings at the Whitman Mission
in 1847, a wave of racial
paranoia
swept through the Willamette Valley. Many
Oregonians convinced
themselves
that blacks and Indians might collaborate,
joining forces to wipe out
all
the whites in the Oregon Country. Some went so
far as to argue that
without
the exclusion laws, African Americans and
Native Americans might
intermarry
and eventually reduce the white population to
a threatened minority. As
noted,
the modified "Lash Law" was repealed in 1845;
the fear following the
Whitman
Massacre led to the exclusion law of 1848.
There was no organized abolitionist movement
in Oregon the way there
was
in the East, but many white friends of black
settlers submitted
petitions
to the Provisional and Territorial
Legislatures asking for exemptions
for
their friends. In addition, there were many
petitions to repeal the
exclusion
laws submitted through the years. They even
succeeded once or twice,
but
the laws were never out of force for long.
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