Dred Scott
Biography
Dred Scott (c. 1799 – September 17, 1858) was an enslaved African-American man who, along with his wife, Harriet Robinson Scott, unsuccessfully sued for the freedom of themselves and their two daughters, Eliza and Lizzie, in the Dred Scott v. Sandford case of 1857, popularly known as the "Dred Scott decision". The Scotts claimed they should be granted freedom because Dred had lived in Illinois and the Wisconsin Territory for four years, where slavery was illegal, and laws in those jurisdictions said that slaveholders gave up their rights to slaves if they stayed for an extended period. In a landmark case, the United States Supreme Court decided 7–2 against Scott, finding that neither he nor any other person of African ancestry could claim citizenship in the United States, and therefore Scott could not sue in federal court under the diversity of citizenship rules. Scott's temporary residence in free territory outside Missouri did not bring about his emancipation because the Missouri Compromise, which made that territory free by prohibiting slavery north of the 36°30′ parallel, was unconstitutional because it "deprives citizens of their [slave] property without due process of law". Although Chief Justice Roger B. Taney had hoped to settle issues related to slavery and congressional authority by this decision, it aroused public outrage, deepened sectional tensions between the northern and southern states, and hastened the eventual explosion of their differences into the American Civil War. President Abraham Lincoln's Emancipation Proclamation in 1863 and the post-Civil War Reconstruction Amendments—the Thirteenth and Fourteenth amendments—respectively nullified and abrogated the decision. Private arrangement manumitted the Scotts in May 1857, and Scott died of tuberculosis a year later.
Bio from Wikipedia
Discography
Records they worked on — most-collected first.
Credited work
125 releases · 21 albums · active 1991–2023
- Performance · 107
- Production · 102
- Engineering · 29
- Other credits · 20
Studios: Hollywood Sound Recorders · Westlake Studios · Red Zone Studios · Sonora Recorders
Frequent collaborators
- Adriana Evans
- Various
- Sway & King Tech
- Monday Michiru
- Front Page (4)
- Marxman
- Beastie Boys
- Richard Julian





