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Crisfield, John Woodland (1808-1897), United States. Congress. House Committee On Public Lands.

COLORADO DESERT. [To accompany bill H.R. No. 417]. Report. 37th Congress, 2d Session House. Report No. 87.

(Government Printing Office, Washington, DC: )., 1862

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Detalles

Año de publicación
1862
Autor
Crisfield, John Woodland (1808-1897), United States. Congress. House Committee On Public Lands.
Editores
(Government Printing Office, Washington, DC: ).
Materia
AMERICANA GOVERNMENT WEST COLORADO CALIFORNIA MEXICO, AMERICANA LAW, GOVERNMENT, POLITICS WESTERN AMERICANA
Idiomas
Inlgés

Descripción

26 p. 8vo. 225 mm. Disbound. Removed. Very Good. In 1861, Crisfield was elected as a Unionist from the 1st Congressional district of Maryland, serving one term from March 4, 1861 until March 3, 1863. Although Maryland remained loyal to the Union at the outbreak of the American Civil War, the state was divided on the question of slavery and the emancipation of Maryland slaves. On December 16, 1861 a bill was presented to Congress to emancipate slaves in Washington DC, and in March 1862 Lincoln held talks with Crisfield on the subject of emancipation. Crisfield however argued that freedom would be worse for the slaves than slavery, especially in time of war, but such arguments could no longer hold back the abolitionist tide. By summer, Congress passed the Confiscation Act of 1862, which permitted the Union army to enlist African-American soldiers, and barred the army from recapturing runaway slaves. In July 1862 Lincoln offered to buy out Maryland slaveholders, offering $300 for each emancipated slave, but Crisfield rejected the offer. In 1862 Congress passed the Emancipation Proclamation which declared all slaves in Southern states to be free, but Maryland, like other border states, was exempted since she had remained loyal to the Union at the outbreak of war. In 1863 Crisfield was defeated in local elections by the abolitionist candidate John Creswell, amid allegations of vote-rigging by the army. After being defeated at the polls, Crisfield resumed the practice of law. It is interesting here that he distracted immersed himself with the early disputes over waters from the Colorado River, and the rich (but dry) lands in Southern California. GEOLOGY 2