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Mr. English and Mr. Florence present resolutions on the Crittenden Compromise. The Committee of Thirty-Three reports.
The Select Committee of One Member from Each State, met at 11 o'clock a.m of Tuesday the 11th day of Dec 1866, and was called to order by the chairman [...] Corwin of Ohio. On motion Mr. Windom of Minnesota was appointed [...]. The Following members of Comm. were present [...], announced [...] their names, by:
Charles F. Adams — of Massachusetts
Warren Winslow — of North Carolina
James H. Campbell — of Pennsylvania
Orris S. Ferry — of Connecticut
Christopher Robinson — of Rhode Island
William G. Whitely — of Delaware
Mason W. Tappan — of New Hampshire
John L. N. Stratton — of New Jersey
Francis M. Bristow — of Kentucky
Justin S. Morrill — of Vermont
Thomas A. R. Nelson — of Tennessee
William McKee Dunn — of Indiana
George S. Houston — of Alabama
Freeman H. Morse — of [...] Maine
John S. Phelps — of [...] Missouri
William A. Howard — of [...] Michigan
Andrew G. Hamilton — of [...] Texas
Cadwallader C. Washburn — of [...] Wisconsin
Samuel R. Curtis — of [...] Iowa
John C. Burch — of [...] California
William Windom — of [...] Minnesota
Lansing Stout — of [...] Oregon
The following members of this Committee [...]
Albert Rust — of [...] Alabama
George S. Hawkins — of [...] Florida
William W. Boyce — of [...] South Carolina
On motion the Comm. ordered that the [...] of the House [...].
On motion of Hon Reuben Davis’ [...] that [...] ordered at 11 o’clock a.m After ordered that [...] chairman [...] of the [...] of the House.
Joint Resolutions declaratory of the opinion of Congress in regard to certain questions now agitating the Country, and of measures calculated to reconcile existing differences.
Resolved, That, in the opinion of this committee, the existing discontents among the southern people, and the grow-ing hostility among them to the federal government, are greatly to be regretted; and that whether such discontents and hostility are without just cause or not, any reasonable, proper, and constitutional remedies, and additional and more specific and effectual guarantees of their peculiar rights and interests and recognized by the Constitution, necessary to pre-serve the peace of the country and the perpetuity of the Union, should be promptly and cheerfully granted. [Struck out]
Resolved by the Senate and House of Representatives of the United States of America in Congress assembled,
Joint Resolution to amend the Constitution of the United States.
ARTICLE XIII No amendment of this Constitution having
An Act for the admission of New Mexico into the United States of America.
The said State shall be entitled to one member of the House of Representatives of the
United States of America, held until the apportionment under the next census.
An Act Amendatory of the act for the rendition of fugitives from labor.
HR 1110 An Act Amendatory of the act for the rendition of fugitives from justice.