Educator Seminar: Slavery, American Development, and the Constitution
The United States Constitution originally served as the governing framework for a nation of both free and slave states that sat in uneasy and awkward coexistence with each other even as the country changed and grew over time. In this seminar, we will examine how the framers of the Constitution lay the groundwork for that coexistence in America’s founding document, and we will then explore the relationship between slavery, American development, and the Constitution over the course of several generations. What did it mean for a national economy to have some states that recognized slavery as a legitimate institution while others barred its existence? How did slavery move across space as new states came into being, and what role did interstate commerce in enslaved people play in that expansion? What were the consequences of enslaved people themselves fleeing slavery, especially when they fled from slave states to free states? How and why did the coexistence and free and slave states break down over time? Ultimately, we will look not only at how slavery shaped the original Constitution and the early United States but also at how the Constitution was remade for an entirely free country in the wake of the Civil War.

Joshua D. Rothman is Professor of History at the University of Alabama, where he specializes in the histories of slavery, the nineteenth-century United States, and the American South. He served as Chair of the Department of History from 2016-2025, and prior to holding that position acted as Director of the Frances S. Summersell Center for the Study of the South. He is the author or editor of five books and co-director of “Freedom on the Move: A Database of Fugitives from North American Slavery,” and he has published widely in both scholarly and popular venues including the Journal of American History, the Journal of Southern History, Slate, The Atlantic, and the New York Times. Professor Rothman is also currently Vice-President of the Montpelier Foundation Board of Directors.