The Old Courthouse. The Dred Scott Decision hastened the start of the Civil War.
Dred and Harriet Scott One of the most important cases ever tried in the United States was heard in St. Louis' Old Courthouse.
Dred Scott was to remain a slave. On April 6, 1846, Dred and Harriet Scott each filed separate petitions in suits against Irene Emerson in the St. Louis Circuit Court to obtain their freedom from slavery.
St. Louis, MO 63102 For the 157th Anniversary of The Dred Scott Decision.
The decision stated that slaves were property, and as such, had no right to sue.
In 1847, Dred Scott, with his wife Harriet, sued for, and were granted, their freedom. Anger over Taney’s decision energized the Republican party and led the nation’s first antislavery political party to victory in 1860. 12:00 - 2:00 pm.
See and hear how the search to prove Dred Scott’s birth place and find his parents resulted in Longtime friend Lynne Jackson of St. Louis, MO is a great-great granddaughter of Dred and Harriet Scott and Director of “The Dred Scott Heritage Foundation.” Hear Lynne talk about her famous ancestors and their important impact in the freeing of the slaves by clicking here Dred Scott v. Sandford was a landmark decision that helped changed the entire history of the country. 11 N. 4th Street. Under the umbrella of this foundation, a multitude of educational venues are being presented in 2007 by St. Louis community groups who have joined together as Friends of the 150th Anniversary of the Dred Scott Decision. St. Louis sculpture to honor slaves who sued for freedom AP-MO--Dred Scott Decision-Statue LOUIS (AP) — Efforts are underway to raise $1 million for a downtown St. Louis monument to honor the hundreds of slaves who filed lawsuits for their freedom, leading up to the landmark Dred Scott case that pushed the U.S. closer to the Civil War.
This suit began an eleven-year legal fight that ended in the U.S. Supreme Court, which issued a landmark decision declaring that the Scotts remained When the Dred Scott Case Collection debuted, it quickly became one of the Washington University Libraries’ more popular online resources. The primary content of the project were St. Louis Circuit Court legal documents stored in the MSA relating to the Dred Scott freedom suit that led to the landmark U.S. Supreme Court decision. It took the civil war and post-war constitutional amendments to overturn the Dred Scott decision. The Dred Scott decision was the Supreme Court ’s ruling on March 6, 1857, that having lived in a free state and territory did not entitle a slave, Dred Scott, to his freedom. “March 6th, 2013 is the 156th anniversary of the Dred Scott Decision. The Dred Scott Case, a legal case that would become influential in causing the Civil War, began in St. Louis in 1846 and, through many appeals, would not end until 1857. In essence, the decision argued that as a slave Scott was not a citizen and could not sue in a federal court. After the Supreme Court's decision, Scott's original slave master's descendant Taylor Blow purchased Scott and his wife and gave them their freedom.