History
During
1857 this building was one of the busiest and most important in Kansas
Territory. Thousands of settlers and speculators filed claims in the
United States land office on the first floor. They sometimes fought
hand-to-hand for their share of the rich lands that were opening for
settlement. The government was removing the Native Americans from Kansas
to make their lands available to whites.
Upstairs the district court periodically met to try
to enforce the territorial laws. Most free-state people refused to obey
these laws because they had been passed by the proslavery territorial
legislature. This resistance made law enforcement nearly impossible
for territorial officials. Time after time the territorial governors
called out federal troops from Fort Leavenworth or Fort Riley to maintain
order.
In January 1857 the second territorial legislative
assembly met on the upper floor. Although still firmly proslavery, this
group removed some of the earlier laws that their antislavery neighbors
opposed.
The
Lecompton Constitutional Convention met that fall in this same second-floor
assembly room. The purpose of the convention was to draft a constitution
to gain statehood for Kansas. Newspaper correspondents from across the
country gathered to report on the meetings. Many Americans feared a
national civil war if the convention could not satisfy both proslavery
and antislavery forces. Regrettably, compromise proved impossible because
proslavery men dominated the convention. They created a document that
protected slavery no matter how the people of Kansas Territory voted.
This was intolerable for their antislavery opponents, who refused to
participate in what they considered to be an illegal government. Eventually
the Lecompton Constitution was defeated at the national level. It never
went into effect.
Instead, free-state forces rallied their supporters.
They gained control of the territorial legislature in the October 1857
election. Two months later this new legislature was called into special
session to deal with critical territorial problems. They met in the
same Lecompton assembly hall that their political enemies had controlled
only a few weeks before. Here they began to reform the laws of Kansas
Territory according to their own beliefs. That work continued during
later legislative sessions. In 1858 the assembly was moved from the
proslavery capital of Lecompton to the free-state town of Lawrence.
Constitution Hall
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