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HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES

CALIFORNIA.—Thomas B. Shannon, William Higby, Cornelius Cole.
CONNECTICUT.-Henry C. Deming, James E. English, Augustus
Brandegee, John H. Hubbard.
DELAWARE.-Nathaniel B. Smithers.

ILLINOIS.-Isaac N. Arnold, John F. Farnsworth, Elihu B. Washburne, Charles M. Harris, Owen Lovejoy (died Mar. 25, 1864, and was succeeded by Ebon C. Ingersoll), Jesse O. Norton, John R. Eden, John T. Stuart, Lewis W. Ross, Anthony L. Knapp, James C. Robinson, William R. Morrison, William J. Allen, James C. Allen.

INDIANA.-John Law, James A. Cravens, Henry W. Harrington,
William S. Holman, George W. Julian, Ebenezer Dumont, Daniel
W. Voorhees, Godlove S. Orth, Schuyler Colfax, Joseph K. Edger-
ton, James F. McDowell.

IOWA.-James F. Wilson, Hiram Price, William B. Allison, J. B.
Grinnell, John A. Kasson, A. W. Hubbard.
KANSAS.-A. Carter Wilder.

KENTUCKY.-Lucien Anderson, GEORGE H. YEAMAN, HENRY

GRIDER, AARON HARDING, Robert MalloRY, Green Clay Smith, Brutus J. Clay, William H. Randall, WILLIAM H. WADSWORTH. MAINE.-Lorenzo D. M. Sweat, Sidney Perham, James G. Blaine, John H. Rice, Frederick A. Pike.

MARYLAND.-John A. J. Cresswell, Edwin H. Webster, Henry Winter Davis, Francis Thomas, Benjamin G. Harris.

MASSACHUSETTS.-Thomas D. Eliot, Oakes Ames, Alexander H.

Rice, Samuel Hooper, John B. Alley, Daniel W. Gooch, George S. Boutwell, John D. Baldwin, William B. Washburn, Henry L. Dawes. MICHIGAN.-Fernando C. Beaman, Charles Upson, John W. Longyear, Francis W. Kellogg, Augustus C. Baldwin, John F. Driggs. MINNESOTA.-William Windom, Ignatius Donnelly. MISSOURI.-FRANCIS P. BLAIR, jr. (seat successfully contested by Samuel Knox of St. Louis), Henry T. Blow, John G. Scott, Joseph W. McClurg, Sempronius H. Boyd, Austin A. King, Benjamin F. Loan, William A. Hall, James S. Rollins.

NEW HAMPSHIRE.—Daniel Marcy, Edward H. Rollins, James W.

Patterson.

NEW JERSEY.-John F. Starr, George Middleton, William G. Steele, Andrew J. Rogers, Nehemiah Perry.

NEW YORK.-Henry G. Stebbins (resigned in 1864 and was succeeded by Dwight Townsend), Martin Kalbfleisch, Moses F. Odell, Benjamin Wood, Fernando Wood, Elijah Ward, John W. Chanler, James Brooks, Anson Herrick, William Radford, Charles H. Winfield, Homer A. Nelson, John B. Steele, John V. L. Pruyn, John A. Griswold, Orlando Kellogg, Calvin T. Hulburd, James M. Marvin, Samuel F. Miller, Ambrose W. Clark, Francis Kernan, DeWitt C. Littlejohn, Thomas T. Davis, Theodore M. Pomeroy, Daniel Morris, Giles W. Hotchkiss, Robert Van Valkenburg, Freeman Clark,

Augustus Frank, John B. Ganson, Reuben E. Fenton (resigned
Dec. 10, 1864).
OHIO.-George H. Pendleton, Alexander Long, Robert C. Schenck,
J. F. McKinney, Frank C. Le Blond, Chilton A. White, Samuel S
Cox, William Johnson, Warren P. Noble, James M. Ashley, Wells
A. Hutchins, William E. Fink, John O'Neill, George Bliss, James
R. Morris, Joseph W. White, Ephraim R. Eckley, Rufus P.
Spaulding, James A. Garfield.

OREGON.-John R. McBride.
PENNSYLVANIA.-Samuel J. Randall, Charles O'Neill, Leonard
Myers, William D. Kelley, M. Russell Thayer, John D. Stiles,
John M. Broomall, Sydenham E. Ancona, Thaddeus Stevens,
Myer Strouse, Philip Johnson, Charles Dennison, Henry W. Tracy,
William H. Miller, Joseph Bailey, Alexander H. Coffroth, Archi-
bald McAllister, James T. Hale, Glenni W. Scofield, Amos Myers,
John L. Dawson, James K. Moorhead, Thomas Williams, Jesse
Lazear.

RHODE ISLAND.-Thomas A. Jenckes, Nathan F. Dixon.
VERMONT.-Frederick E. Woodbridge, Justin S. Morrill, Portus
Baxter.

VIRGINIA. Had Senators but no Representatives. JOSEPH SEGAR, LUCIUS H. CHANDLER and BENJAMIN M. KITCHEN, claimants for seats, were not admitted.

WEST VIRGINIA.-Jacob B. Blair, William G. Brown, Killian V. Whaley.*

WISCONSIN.-James S. Brown, Ithamar C. Sloan, Amasa Cobb, Charles A. Eldridge, Ezra Wheeler, Walter D. McIndoe.

DELEGATES FROM TERRITORIES

ARIZONA.-Charles D. Poston.

COLORADO.-Hiram P. Bennett.

DAKOTA.-William Jayne (seat successfully contested by John B. S.

Todd).

IDAHO.-William H. Wallace.

MONTANA.-Samuel McLean.

NEBRASKA.-Samuel G. Daily.

NEVADA (admitted as a State).—Gordon N. Mott (Henry G. Worthington was elected Representative when Nevada became a State). NEW MEXICO.-Francisco Perea.

UTAH.-John F. Kenney.
WASHINGTON.-George E. Cole.

* The West Virginia Representatives took their seats Dec. 7, 1863.

INDEX

A

BOLITION

A

INDEX

societies,
Southern, ended by new
industrial era, 5

Adams, Charles Francis,

50
Alabama, in Federal control, 50;
Arkansas Legislature addressed
by commissioner from, 77; in-
surrection in, 314; injury sus-
tained by, 437
Alabama, The, 50, 288
Albemarle, The, destruction of,
288

Alexandria, capital of loyal Vir-

ginia, 129; convention meets at,
130; blockade of, rescinded,
133; Legislature assembles at,
137; ceases to be capital, 446;
recognition of government of,
marks no distinct Executive
policy, 448

Alleghany Mountains, Virginia di-
vided by, 96

Allegiance, oath of, 24; Governor

Johnson's modification of, 27;
registration of, 28; required of
Louisiana voters, 45; value of,
487

Allen, Henry Watkins, end of ad-
ministration of, 418; mentioned
for governor of Louisiana, 422
Amendment, Thirteenth, Hamp-

ton Roads conference refers to,
399; adoption of, by Georgia
Legislature, 466

Amnesty and Reconstruction, Lin-
coln's proclamation of, 23, 24,
25, 224; authority for, 24;
classes excepted from benefits
of, 25; explanation of, 28; ap-
plied in Louisiana, 61; How-
ard's reference to, 365; John-
son's proclamation of, 450;
Seward's approval of, 451; all

insurgent States affected by,
452. See Reconstruction
Anthony, Lieutenant-Colonel, ar-
rest of, 169

Antietam, Md., Lee defeated at,
186

Arkansas, effect of Union vic-

tories in, 10; enrolling agent
sent to, 27; loyal part of, 77;
Alabama commissioner ad-
dresses Legislature of, 77; po-
sition of, 77; interests of, 77;
opposition to separate State
action in, 77; convention bill
passed by, 77; conditional se-
cession defeated in, 78; influ-
ence of President's inaugural
in, 78; secession of, 78; seces-
sion favored by Governor of,
78; military preparations in, 78;
confiscation ordinance of, 78;
Confederate Congress admit
delegates from, 79; convention
conflicts with government of,
79; military division of, 79; dis-
satisfaction among soldiers of,
80; troops of, in Confederate
army, 80; indifference of Ger-
mans and Irish, 80; bonds of,
81; Union sentiment in, 81;
menaced by Federal troops, 81;
flight of Governor, 82; troops
sent to Corinth from, 82; John
S. Phelps, military governor
of, 82; regiments furnished
Union army by, 83; return of
leading secessionists, 83; Fed-
eral reverses in, 84; reconstruc-
tion of, 85; amended constitu-
tion of, 88; Confederate debt
repudiated by, 88; division
among Union men of, 88; Lin-
coln's letter on reconstruction
in, 89; Gen. Steele's address
to people of, 90; election in,
90; adoption of amended con-

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