Sunday, February 15, 2026

Chicago resistance to ICE echoes opposition to Fugitive Slave Act 175 years ago

“A Ride for Liberty — The Fugitive Slaves” by Eastman Johnson. “The absence of white figures in this liberation subject makes it virtually unique in art of the period — these African Americans are independent agents of their own freedom,” writes the Brooklyn Museum.

     Jim Gray arrived in chains.
     At the railroad station in Ottawa, Illinois, about 80 miles southwest of Chicago.
     Gray wore leg irons, his arms bound to his sides, and was led by a rope.
     It was Oct. 19, 1859.
     The month before he had escaped from slavery in New Madrid, Missouri. Caught by an Illinois sheriff "in sympathy with the slave owners," Gray was being returned to bondage. A crowd awaited him, including a local merchant named John Hossack, an immigrant from Scotland.
     "What crime has he committed?" Hossack shouted. "Has he done anything but want to be free?"
     A question that echoes through the years and across the country today. With federal immigration agents this past year prowling Democratic cities — Los Angeles, Chicago, Minneapolis — kidnapping Latino individuals and dragging them off to exile, and billions being pumped into immigration enforcement, gearing up to grab more people and confine them to enormous facilities now being constructed nationwide, it's impossible not to think of the Fugitive Slave Act, the 1850 law that also created a federal force tasked with snaring people for the crime of wanting to live in freedom.
     There was already a law, the Fugitive Slave Act of 1793, empowering owners to retrieve their chattel from the North. But Southerners were upset that California was being admitted to the union as a free state. The Fugitive Slave Act of 1850 was a sop to them, meting out punishment to anyone helping Blacks escape slavery, and creating monetary incentives for agents bringing escapees back. The law gave bite to the slave drivers' bark.
John Hossack (Ottawa Museum)
     Then as now, local communities fiercely resisted this federal intrusion into their constitutional rights. Then as now, street clashes erupted as national law and human decency faced off against each other. This being February — Black History Month — and with the Trump administration waging war on Black History, scrubbing it from the Smithsonian, from college campuses and federal websites in an attempt to declare the civil rights struggle an unmentionable blot upon enforced patriotic zeal, it seemed important to explore the subject in depth, while we still enjoy the right to do so.
     "All historical analogies are the same," said Matthew Pinsker, a history professor and director of the House Divided Project at Dickinson College. "There's always some similarities and plenty of differences. This is a battle between the national administration and blue state governments. In the Fugitive Slave days, it was a battle between Washington and Northern states, which passed laws called 'personal liberty laws' that were like the sanctuary city laws that Trump is trying to overturn."
     Hundreds of Ottawa residents showed up for Gray's hearing the next day in the courtroom of Justice Dean Caton, who ruled that while Gray had broken no Illinois law, the Fugitive Slave Act demanded he go to Springfield to face charges.
     Gray never got there.
     As a marshal began to lead Gray from the courthouse, local men sprang into action. The officer was restrained, while Hossack grabbed Gray by the elbow.
     "If you want liberty, run!" Hossack urged, dragging Gray from the courthouse. They jumped a fence, climbed into a waiting carriage, and were sped out of town.
     Gray escaped north to Canada. But Hossack was arrested and sent to stand trial at the federal court in Chicago.

Chicago's resistance. Strong then, strong now


     Resistance to the Fugitive Slave Act was particularly strong in Chicago, the city "a sinkhole of abolition" in the words of one downstate editor. A hub of actual railroads, it was also a center for the Underground Railroad, an informal confederation hurrying those escaping slavery north to Canada. When a slave catcher arrived at Chicago in October, 1850, he was informed that his safety could not be guaranteed, and the enslaved servant he had brought with him was helped to escape.
     The same month, the Chicago Common Council — predecessor of the City Council — passed a law condemning the Fugitive Slave Act as "cruel and unjust" and ordering the police force — nine men at the time — "not to render any assistance for the arrest of fugitive slaves."
     Uncannily similar to the challenge Mayor Brandon Johnson would face 175 years later: How much cooperation must local government give to federal authorities enforcing a despised and unjust law? The Council in 1850 minced no words, damning any free-state representatives supporting the bill as "fit only to be ranked with the traitors, Benedict Arnold, and Judas Iscariot who betrayed his Lord and master for 30 pieces of silver."
     Last October, the City Council passed a similar, if less florid, resolution, focused on trying to protect children from traumatic seizure by ICE agents and urging citizens to report the misconduct they witness.
     What was motivating Chicago to push back against the Fugitive Slave Act? While it's tempting to just superimpose Chicago's current sanctuary city liberalism onto the mid-19th century city, that wasn't the case. There were only 323 Black people living in Chicago in 1850 — about 1% of the population. Illinois had passed its own "Black Laws" in 1848, forbidding the immigration of free Blacks into the state and, as amended in 1853, forbidding Black visitors from spending more than 10 nights in the city.
     "These protectors of fugitive slaves raised no objection to the exclusion of Negro testimony against a white person in the courts of law," historian Bessie Louise Pierce noted in 1940. "They seemed to see no inconsistencies in providing a separate section in the theaters for Negroes, and in segregating the races in the common schools."
     To whites, this was more about protecting their own rights than the rights of Black Chicagoans.

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28 comments:

  1. Great research!! Thank you.

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  2. This is one of your best! Well done and thanks!

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  3. Great job, Neil.
    You've given voice to a silent newspaper, whose editors should be shouting messages every day. We only have a few short decades to leave a mark. Now is not the time for silence.

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    1. Tony G makes good points in response to an excellent, timely and informative column. Thank you, both.

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  4. Thanks for the historical research that led you to the story of John Hossack and for your discussion of its relevance in the light of current events!

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  5. I pray the Supreme Court still views this the same way now.

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    1. Six of them are outright fascists, so I doubt they view it that way!

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    2. right you are, Clark

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  6. I wonder if any of the Southern slavers, or their advocates/apologists, were all about the law the law the law the law the law we must respect and follow the law what part of ILLEGAL don't you understand?! They loved the law right up until someone they didn't like was elected president, and then they committed literal treason.

    That also sounds familiar.

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    1. What about the Constitution, the Constitution, the Constitution? Just because there is a law does not make it right ( or humane or , dare I say it, “ Christian “

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    2. Yes, and the South didn't like the law during the Civil Rights movement either.

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  7. I was not a history major and never considered myself *into* history as a go-to choice for books or movies. But now I realize that, with this great piece you've done here, and what Heather Cox Richardson does with her columns, I do love learning history when it is explained well and shown how it inevitably informs current circumstances.
    Thank you.

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  8. We "encouraged" people to come here without following the rules so that we could take advantage of them and profit off of them

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    1. Many Americans concern for the plight of undocumented residents is that they will lose their cheap source of Labor. You hear it I go to Austin who's going to pick the produce who's going to slaughter the chickens who's going to do the construction work who's going to landscape?

      All the jobs that Americans supposedly don't want to do

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  9. John Hossack was incredibly eloquent, especially considering English may have been his second language.

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    1. Probably was not his second language, as he emigrated from Scotland.

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    2. I could be wrong, but I don't believe the average working class person in Scotland at that time was speaking English.

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    3. The union of England and Scotland into Great Britain was formalized in 1707, through the Act of Union, which established a single monarch and Parliament for both nations. Prior to this, England and Scotland were independent kingdoms.

      Beginning in the early 1700s, English supplanted Gaelic as the primary language of Scotland. By the time John Hossack emigrated to Canada, around 1820, Scotland had been English-speaking for nearly a century.

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  10. On your piece about John Hossack, who some would describe as an immigrant ditch digger. Who today in public life or private life matches the knowledge and elegant vocabulary of this man? Has our society become so coarse and flighty that we would cut off a speech like this and click on something else to feed our attention-spanless brains?

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  11. Thank you Neil for another excellent article and history lesson. I have forwarded it to my Indiana senators. I asked them to please take the time to read it. I don’t know if they will. Senator Banks doesn’t even have the decency to acknowledge receiving any of my emails. Senator Young does acknowledge and reply.

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  12. The other day you demurred when theobaldart called you "the best goddamn writer in Chicago today" in a comment, but here you've gone and promptly demonstrated the accuracy of his opinion, anyway. At a minimum, nobody so cogently informs a general readership by tying history to present events the way you do. Just excellent. Accompanied by a marvelous painting and caption atop the post.

    Mr. Hossack, evidently an immigrant lumber and grain merchant, was so much more eloquent and patriotic than the despicable orange felon-in-chief that one weeps anew for the predicament this benighted nation finds itself in.

    Aside from that, Stefano Esposito has a fine, Steinbergesque 2-page article about the city's icebreaker, the James J. Versluis a few pages before yours in the S-T today. I'll just note that one detail seemed to be missing. He didn't mention how the water intakes were actually kept clear of ice. In 1997, you wrote: "Ice is kept from the intake ports with the same technology used 100 years ago: one-third sticks of dynamite, lowered on a chain." I wonder if that's still the case.

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    1. Ice is still ice. It hasn't changed.
      And the method for clearing the intake ports probably hasn't, either.

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  13. Superb comparisons, NS. And good History plus the FS Act being part of the Great Compromise that Henry Clay put out to hold the Union together with a bandage. The North catered to the South from Day 1 with that 3/5's Compromise and did that for too long. Southerners had more representation than they deservedl.

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  14. As a half Scot & half Irish…of course the Scots were speaking the common language English with a Scots brogue. Ditto the Irish. Very often better than the English. They have a rich vocabulary. Today for instance, globally we now all share our own versions of English whether American English or anywhere else.

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    1. I propose the stretch of Wabash Avenue where Trump Tower is located, 401 N. Wabash Avenue, should, by City of Chicago ordinance be renamed John Hossack Avenue. This would include a plaque permanently installed memorializing this man's most eloquent words; forever.
      Mark S.

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    2. I rather like this idea, and have already sent it, along with this superb column, to my alderman.

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