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Three Behind the Curtain Where Great Men Relax: Capital Social Life and the Compromise of 1850
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Published:December 2013
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Abstract
This chapter examines Kentucky Whig Henry Clay's speech—a welcome break from the anger that had roiled the Capitol over the previous two months, stemming in large part from disputes over the Mexican Cession. Dealing with the new territory proved tricky for a number of reasons. First, since David Wilmot introduced his initial proviso in 1846, the proposal had continued to frustrate congressional efforts to effectively organize the territories. Wilmot's amendment had become even more problematic by the opening of the Thirty- First Congress, however. A second issue concerned Texas. Any congressional settlement over the Mexican Cession would have to include a defined boundary line between the Lone Star State and the new territory known as New Mexico. Yet, leaders from Texas and the New Mexico territory disagreed about where this line should be.
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