Inscription
On July 6, 1854, a state convention of antislavery men was held in Jackson to found a new political party. Uncle Tom’s Cabin had been published two years earlier, causing increased resentment against slavery, and the Kansas-Nebraska Act of May 1854, threatened to make slave states out of previously free territories.
Since the convention day was hot and the huge crowd could not be accommodated in the hall, the meeting adjourned to an oak grove on “Morgan’s Forty” on the outskirts of the town. Here a statewide slate of candidates was selected, and the Republican Party was born. Winning an overwhelming victory in the elections of 1854, the Republican Party went on to dominate national politics throughout the nineteenth century.
Location
Sources
More markers in Jackson
Mc Cain School
Jackson, MI
This typical one-room schoolhouse was built for School District No. 2 of Summit Township in the 1880s.
Huron Potawatomi Village
Spring Arbor Township, MI
As early as 1825 large numbers of Potawatomi encamped at this location.
First State Prison
Jackson, MI
This was the original site of Michigan’s first state prison, approved by the legislature in 1838.
Meridian-Base Line Initial Point
Pleasant Lake, MI
The 1785 Land Ordinance organized the system of surveying land in regular square six-mile units called townships and square one-mile...
Brooklyn's Founder
Brooklyn, MI
This village was founded by the Reverend Calvin Swain who filed the first land claim on June 16, 1832.
