Dred Scott v. Sanford, 60 US 393 (1857)
Answer
Dred Scott sued for his freedom.
The US Supreme Court ruled 7-2 in defendant John Sanford's favor, returning Dred Scott and his family to slavery. Chief Justice Roger B. Taney delivered the Opinion of the Court that held slaves, former slaves and descendants of slaves could never be US citizens.
Answer
That was Dred Scott. He should have claimed his freedom while he was on free soil, but he was brought back into slave country, and tried to claim his freedom when his status was subject to debate. This caused immense trouble - and arguably started the Civil War.
For more information, see Related Questions, below.
cos dey lost dey mind yo
The confederacy won the war but ( lost) the battle.
The very technical ruling in this case was that Dred Scott, a slave, was not a full citizen of the United States under the Constitution, therefore he did not have any right to access to the federal courts.
North
North
Dred Scott
That was Dred Scott, whose owner had taken him into free soil and then back again to slave territory. This complicated his slave-status, and the matter was referred to the Supreme Court. The court's verdict seemed to indicate that States' Rights were unconstitutional, and this intensified the argument between the two sides.
Dred Scott is famous for the start of the civil war between the union army of the north and the south.
harry plopper is a pig aslo known as spider pig
Lost Freedom was created in 2010.
The duration of Lost Freedom is 1.52 hours.
There were some "Barbarian Slaves", which were usually victims of war, and debt-slaves, who were people who lost their freedom because they could not pay loans.
Dred Scott was the famous slave who sued to gain his freedom and was denied by the US Supreme Court in Dred Scott v. Sandford, 60 U.S. 393 (1857). The decision in this case is considered one of the catalysts of the US Civil War.
Dred Scott was the name of a slave that was born in 1795. He was known as the slave who tried to sue for his freedom and lost. His life came to an end in September 1858 when he died from tuberculosis. He is buried in St. Louis.
This was quite a sticky issue before the Civil War. The most famous legal battle over this was the Supreme Court case Dred Scott v. Sandford (1857). Dred Scott was a slave who traveled with his master into Illinois, where slavery was illegal. Upon returning to Missouri, where it was legal, Scott sued his master for his freedom. The case eventually made it to SCOTUS, where Scott lost in a 7-2 decision, ultimately meaning that a slave could not be declared free if moved into a free territory. The case is considered by some to be the worst decision ever made by SCOTUS.
No, but they had lost WW1 about twenty years before WW2 started
Nat Turner led a slave revolt during this revolt he and his accomplices killed 60 white people in 1831 women, children, and males were all included in this deadly revolt.