What ‘subject to the jurisdiction thereof’ really meant
To really understand the 14th Amendment, we must examine a little-known but crucial aspect of Civil War history.
Larry Moore | April 21, 2026 www.americanthinker.com
The Supreme Court is now considering a fundamental question: Is a person born in the United States automatically a citizen? The answer turns on a single phrase in the 14th Amendment: that a person born in the United States and “subject to the jurisdiction thereof” is a citizen. The language appears simple. The history behind it is anything but.
To understand what that phrase meant, we must revisit a part of American history that is often overlooked if not outright hidden. The conventional narrative portrays the Civil War–era North as uniformly noble and anti-slavery. And it is true that many Northern states abolished slavery well before the Civil War. But now, the rest of the story.
After ending slavery, several Northern states enacted laws that made it extremely difficult, if not impossible, for free black people to remain within their borders. These laws required proof of freedom; registration with authorities; and, in some cases, the posting of substantial financial bonds.
Consider Ohio. After abolishing slavery, it required free black individuals entering the state to present proof of freedom, something a runaway slave could not produce, and they had to post a bond, typically $500. In today’s terms, that is roughly $14,000. For a family of six, that would amount to approximately $84,000. The practical effect was obvious: Most newly freed individuals could not afford to stay.
Other states followed similar paths. Indiana imposed registration and bonding requirements and ultimately prohibited black immigration altogether. Illinois required proof of freedom and later barred black settlement entirely. Iowa imposed bond requirements. Oregon enacted laws ordering free black residents to leave and prohibiting future settlement. Michigan required registration and bonding.
These were not isolated policies. They formed a broader pattern: the legal exclusion of free black people from most of the North. This context also sheds light on the origins of the Underground Railroad. Whereas it is commonly associated with escaped slaves fleeing the South, the reality was that early migrants were freed black individuals who had been effectively driven out of Northern states. With few viable options, many went north to Canada, where such restrictions did not apply, while slaves escaping from the South were not welcome to stay and had to keep moving to Canada.
At the same time, other Union-aligned states were still slave states. Maryland, Kentucky, Missouri, West Virginia, New Jersey, and Delaware all permitted slavery until the end of the Civil War. The division between “free” and “slave” states was more complex than modern accounts often suggest. New England states abolished slavery early but did not free those in bondage, so there were older blacks still enslaved. In reality, the Northern states were not as sympathetic to black freedom as portrayed by history. There were even national proposals, such as the colonization movement, that sought to resolve the issue of slavery by relocating black Americans abroad, most notably to Liberia. These efforts, though supported by some political leaders, were largely rejected by black Americans themselves.
Against this backdrop, the 14th Amendment emerges with greater clarity. The amendment’s Citizenship Clause was designed to resolve a specific problem: the legal status of formerly enslaved people, almost all of whom had been born in the United States by 1860 and lived under its laws, and were unquestionably subject to its jurisdiction. Yet prior to this amendment, they could have been denied citizenship and deported, as was done in many Northern states.
The phrase “subject to the jurisdiction thereof” was not incidental. It was intended to confirm that those who were born in a state but were not citizens, nor owed allegiance to any other sovereign, and were fully subject to U.S. law, were in fact citizens. In the context of its adoption, that meant ensuring that black Americans could not be excluded, displaced, or denied citizenship, as had been done in many Northern states.
The 14th Amendment was, at its core, a preventive measure. It would not allow the United States as a nation to do as the Northern states had done: to free black residents, then push them out, whether through bond requirements, exclusion laws, or financial barriers.