Daniel S. Lamont

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Load more

A patriotic and valiant defender of his country, an able and heroic solclier, a spotless axid accomplished gentleman, crowned alike with the laurels of military renown and the highest tribute of his fellow-country- men to his worth as a citizen, he has gone to his reward. It is fitting that every mark of public respect should be paid to his memory. Therefore it is now ordered by the President that the national flag be clisplayed athalf-mast upon al1 the buildings of the Execiitive Depart- niexits in this city iintil after his funeral shall have takeu -place. By directiori of the President: DANIEL S. LAMONT, Iii the exercise of the power vested in the President by the Constitu- tion, and by virtue of the seventeen hundred and fifty-third section of the Revised Statutes and of tlie civil-service act approved January 16, 1883, the following rule for the regulation and improvement of the executive- civil service is hereby ainended and promulgated, as follows: RULli: XXII. Aiiy person in tiie classified departmental service may be transferred and appoirited to aiiy other place therein upon the followiiig conditions: I. Tliat he is riot debarred by clause 2 of Rule XXI. 2. That the head of a Department has, in a written statement tu-brí%d with the Comniission, requested such transfer to a place in said Department, to be designated in tlie statement. 3. That said person is shown in the statement or by other evidence satisfactory to the Corriniission to have been during six coiisecutive months in such service since January 16, 1383. 4. That such person has passed at the required grade one or more examinations under tiie Comrnission which are together equal to that required for the place to which the transfer is to be made. But any person who has for three years last preceding served as a clerk in the office of the President of the United States may be transferred or appoitited to aiiy place in the classified service without exaniin a t'ion. Approved, April I 2, 1886. GROVER CLEVELAND. Utlder the provisions of sectiori 4 of the act approved March 3, 1883, it is lierel~yordered that the several I3xeciitive Departments, the Depart- xnerit of Agriculture, and the Goveriiment Printirig Office be closed on Monday, the 31st instant, to enable the employees to participate in the decoratiou of the graves of the soldiers who fe11 during the rebellion. GROVER CLEVELAND. 494 Messages and Pajers ofthe Pmidents - EXECUTLVEMANSION, JuZy 3, 1886. To iYeads of the Goveri~nzentDepartmenfs: Inasmuch as the 4th of July of the present year falls upon Sunday and the celebration of Independence Day is to be generally observed upon Monday, July 5, it is hereby ordered that the severa1 Executive Depart- ments, the Department of Agriculture, and the Government Printing Office be closed on Monday. the 5th instant. GROVER CLEVELAND. EXECUTIVEMANSION, Washington, Ju& rq, 1886. To fhe Neads ofL3e$arfments i?z the Service of tlte General Government: 1 deem this a proper time to especially warn al1 subordinates in the severa1 Departments and al1 officeholders under the General Government against the use of their official positions in attempts to control political movements in their localities. Officeholders are the agents of the people, no-ir masters. Not only is their time and labor due to the Government, but they should scrupu- loiisly avoid in their political action, as well as itl the discharge of theii official--.- duty, offending by a display of obtrusive partisanship their neigh bors wb-kwerelations with them as public officials. They should also constantly remember that their party friends fron~ whom they have received preferment have not invested them with tht- power of arbitrarily managing their political affairs. They have no right as officeholders to dictate the political action of their party associates or to throttle freedom of action within party lines by methods and practices which pervert every useful and justifiable purpose of party organization. The influence of Federal officeholders should not be felt in the manip- ulation of political primary meetings and nominating conventions. The use by these officials of their positions to compass their selection as dele- gates to political conventions is indecent and unfair; and proper regard for the proprieties and 1-equirements of official place will also prevent their assurniilg the active conduct of political campaigns. Individual iilterest and activity in political affairs are by no means con- demned. Officeholders are neither disfranchised nor forbidden the exer- cise of political privileges, but their privileges are xiot enlarged nor is their duty to party increased to pernicious activity by officeholding. A just discrimination in this regard between the things a citizen inay properly do and the purposes for which a public office should not be used is easy in the light of a correct appreciatioii of the relation between the people and those intrusted with official place and a consideratiotl of the necessity under our form of government of political actiou free from official coercion. you are reqiiesteci to communicate the substaiice of tliese views to those for whose guidance they are inteuded. GROVER CLEVELAND. In tl-ie exercise of the power vested in the President by the Constitu- tiori, and by virtue of the seventeen hundred and fifty-tliird section of the Revised Statutes atidof the civil-service act approved January 16, 1883, tlie followiiig rule for the regulation and improvement of the executive civil service is Iiereby ameiided and prouiulgated, as follows: RULE IX. Al1 applications for regular competitive examinations for admission to the classi- fied civil service niust be made on blank forriis to be prescribed by tlie Commission. Kequests for blank fornis of application for competitive examinatioii for admissiori to tlie classified civil service and al1 regular applications for such examination chal1 he riiade- I. If for the classiiie<l dcpartinerital service, to the United States Civil Service Corririiíssioii at T\'ashirigtori, D. C. 2. If for the classified ciistoms service, to ti16 civil-service board of examiriers for the ciistoitis district in which the persoii desiriiig to be exaniined wisl~esto enter the ciistorris service. 3. If for tlie classified postal service, to the civil-service board o£exarniiiers for the post-office at which the persori desiring to be exaniined wishes to eiiter the postal service. Reqiiests for blatik fornis of applicatioil to customs and postal boards of examin- ers rii~istbe made in writing by the persohs desiring examinatiori, and sucli blarik- fortris sliall iiot be furnished to any other persons. Approved, August 13, 1886. GROVER CLEVELAND. DISR: Iti pitrsuance of a joirit resolittion of the Congrcss approvecl Mal-ch 3, 1877, :liitliorizirig the Presicterit to cause suitable regulatiotis to be iriatle for the tnaixlteiiance of the statue of "Liberty 13tiligliterii1igtlie \Vorlcl," now located oii Bedloes Islalid, in the harbor of New York, as n beacoii, 1 hereby direct that said statue be at once placecl under tlie care aiid superiritencieilce o£ the Light-IIoiise Board, arirl that it be frorli heticeforth rriairitained by said board as n beacon, aild that it be so riiairi- taiiied, lighted, and tended iii accorclnrice with such riiles arid regulatioris as now exist applicable thereto, or such otlier and differerit rules and reg- iilatioris as said board xnay deem necessary to carry oitt the design of said joiiit 1-esolutioii aud this order. GROVER CLEVELAND. Grover CZevela'and - 497 The date and hour of the funeral will be communicated to department coinmanders by telegraph, and by them to their subordinate commanders. By command of Lieutenant-General Sheridan: R. C. DRUM, Adjufanf-GeneraZ. The President of theunited States announces the death of ex-President Chester Alati Arthur in the following proclamation [order] : [For order see precedirlg page.] It is hereby ctirected, in pursuance of tlie instructiorls of the President, that on tlie day of the funeral, where this order may be received in time, otherwise on the day after its receipt, the ensign at each naval station and of each of the vessels of the United States Navy in commission be hoisted at half-mast from sunrise to sunset, and that also, at each naval station and on board of flagships and vessels acting singly, a gun be fired at ititervals o£ every lialf hour from sunrise to sunset. Tlie officers of the Navy andmneCorps will wear the usual badge of moiirning attached to the sword hilt and on the left arm for a period of thirty days. WILLIAM C. WHITNEY, Secrefary of fhe Navy. EXECUTIVEMANSION, Washington, Novenzber zo, 1886. It is heve6y o7dereá, That the Department of Agricult~~re,the Govern- ment Printing Office, and al1 other Government offices iii the District of Columbia be closed on Monday, the 22d instant, the day of the funeral of the late Chester Alan Arthur, ex-President of tlie United States. GROVER CLEVELAND. SECOND ANNUAL MESSAGE. WASHINGTON,December 6, 1886. Tu fhe Con~yessof the U?zifedSta fes: In discharge of a constitutional duty, and following a tvell-established prececlerit in the Executive office, I lieren,ith transmit to the Cougress at its reassernbliug certaii~information concerning the state of the Union, together with silch recotrlmendations for legislative consideration as ap- pear necessary arid expedierit. Our Government has consistently maintaíned its relations of friendship nf P-VOL VIII-3s 498 Messages and Pajers of ihe Presz'dents toward al1 other powers and of neighborly interest toward those whose possessions are contiguous to our own. Few questions have arisen dur- ing the past year with other governments, and none of those ar; beyond the reach of settlement in friendly counsel. We are as yet without provision for the settlement of claims of citizens of the United States against Chile for injustice during the late war with Peru and Bolivia.
Recommended publications
  • Anthracite and the Irish: Extricating the Irish Immigrant Mining Community from the Molly Maguire Myth, Schuylkill County, Pennsylvania, 1850-1879

    Anthracite and the Irish: Extricating the Irish Immigrant Mining Community from the Molly Maguire Myth, Schuylkill County, Pennsylvania, 1850-1879

    ABSTRACT Title of Thesis: Anthracite and the Irish: Extricating the Irish Immigrant Mining Community from the Molly Maguire Myth, Schuylkill County, Pennsylvania, 1850-1879 William Francis Byron, Master of Arts, 1996 Thesis directed by: Peter H. Argersinger, Professor, History The Molly Maguires were a reputed secret society of Irish immigrant mine workers who allegedly terrorized the anthracite coal fields of Pennsylvania from the Civil War until twenty men convicted as Molly Maguires were hanged in the late 1870s. The sensational nature of the Molly trials and executions has spawned a myth concerning the Molly Maguires which has clouded historical understanding of the episode. One of the unfortunate results of the Molly Maguire myth is that the legacy of the nineteenth-century anthracite Irish mining community has been inextricably and wrongly tied to the legacy of the alleged criminal activities of the Molly Maguires. The thesis seeks to draw a portrait of the Irish mining community of one anthracite county, Schuylkill, with as much depth as possible. The thesis first details Irish demographics and culture within Schuylkill County and proceeds to follow the Irish community through the years of the first regional mine workers' union to the destruction of UMBC the union as a consequence of the bitter ''Long Strike" of 1875 . The thesis demonstrates that negative expectations of the Irish conditioned negative perceptions by Schuylkill County's native population. The mass executions of the alleged Molly Maguires were only possible because of the deep anti-Irish sentiment that existed in Schuylkill among the non Irish, from Anglo-Protestant mine bosses to the large Welsh immigrant mining community.
  • Irish Bonds of Community

    University of Kentucky UKnowledge Irish American Studies Race, Ethnicity, and Post-Colonial Studies 1991 Erin's Heirs: Irish Bonds of Community Dennis Clark Click here to let us know how access to this document benefits ou.y Thanks to the University of Kentucky Libraries and the University Press of Kentucky, this book is freely available to current faculty, students, and staff at the University of Kentucky. Find other University of Kentucky Books at uknowledge.uky.edu/upk. For more information, please contact UKnowledge at [email protected]. Recommended Citation Clark, Dennis, "Erin's Heirs: Irish Bonds of Community" (1991). Irish American Studies. 1. https://uknowledge.uky.edu/upk_irish_american_studies/1 ERIN'S HEIRS This page intentionally left blank ERIN'S HEIRS Irish Bonds of Community DENNIS CLARK THE UNIVERSITY PRESS OF KENTUCKY Copyright © 1991 by The University Press of Kentucky Paperback edition 2009 The University Press of Kentucky Scholarly publisher for the Commonwealth, serving Bellarmine University, Berea College, Centre College of Kentucky, Eastern Kentucky University, The Filson Historical Society, Georgetown College, Kentucky Historical Society, Kentucky State University, Morehead State University, Murray State University, Northern Kentucky University, Transylvania University, University of Kentucky, University of Louisville, and Western Kentucky University. All rights reserved. Editorial and Sales Offices: The University Press of Kentucky 663 South Limestone Street, Lexington, Kentucky 40508-4008 www.kentuckypress.com Cataloging-in-Publication Data is available from the Library of Congress. ISBN 978-0-8131-9294-9 (pbk: acid-free paper) This book is printed on acid-free recycled paper meeting the requirements of the American National Standard for Permanence in Paper for Printed Library Materials.
  • History of Schuylkill County, Pa

    History of Schuylkill County, Pa

    Contributed for use in USGenWeb Archives by R. Steffey. Typing and editing by Jo Garzelloni and Carole Carr. USGENWEB NOTICE: Printing this file by non-commercial individuals and libraries is encouraged, as long as all notices and submitter information is included. Any other use, including copying files to other sites requires permission from the submitters PRIOR to uploading to any other sites. We encourage links to the state and county table of contents. ___________________________________________________________ HISTORY OF SCHUYLKILL COUNTY, PA. with Illustrations and Biographical Sketches of Some of Its Prominent Men and Pioneers. New York: W. W. Munsell & Co., 36 Vesey Street, 1881 Press of George Macnamara, 36 Vesey Street, N.Y. ___________________________________________________________ Acrobat transcriber’s note: The original transcribers of this work are: Josephine Reed Garzelloni and Carole Lyn Carr - January to April, 1998 Everyname Index by R. Steffey - January, 1998 and they deserve our hearty thanks! I have transcribed this work from the many text files I found on the web into one Adobe Acrobat file, so that other researchers will be able to use and print this wonderful resource from their own computers more easily. The pages correspond with their original page numbers, so the Everyname Index which starts on page 391 is useable. However, this made formatting the pages a nightmare, so I did my best and tried not to worry about it. Enjoy! Paul Welcomer - 5/21/2001 1 OUTLINE HISTORY OF PENNSYLVANIA Chapter I Pages 9-11 The
  • Mount Vernon Democratic Banner November 3, 1876

    Mount Vernon Democratic Banner November 3, 1876

    Digital Kenyon: Research, Scholarship, and Creative Exchange Mount Vernon Banner Historic Newspaper 1876 11-3-1876 Mount Vernon Democratic Banner November 3, 1876 Follow this and additional works at: https://digital.kenyon.edu/banner1876 Recommended Citation "Mount Vernon Democratic Banner November 3, 1876" (1876). Mount Vernon Banner Historic Newspaper 1876. 44. https://digital.kenyon.edu/banner1876/44 This Book is brought to you for free and open access by Digital Kenyon: Research, Scholarship, and Creative Exchange. It has been accepted for inclusion in Mount Vernon Banner Historic Newspaper 1876 by an authorized administrator of Digital Kenyon: Research, Scholarship, and Creative Exchange. For more information, please contact [email protected]. L. HARPER, EDITOR AND PROPRIETOR.] A FAMILY NEWSPAPER-DEVOTED TO POLITICS, NEWS, AGRICUJ,TURE, LITERATURE, 'rHE ARTS AND scrn.·cES, EDUCATION, THE UARKETS, &c. 2.00 PER A.'iNUM, IN .\.DTA.NCE, VOLUME XL. MOUNT VERNON, OHIO: FRIDAY, NOVEM.BER 3, 1876. NUMBER 26. COSTS JX STATE CASES. other preceding repttblies. First force, I ceb·cd in good society. i.. The nnked God's OUR XEW YORK LETTEJI . ..:\mount pah.l Justices and Com1tables in State cases ....... : ....................................... 713 50 and then corruption, and then comes mili· J truth is this: ,vashington City is this day • __ RE MOVED EX~IBIT " " witnesses ............................. , ............... ........................ : ................. 349 08 tary despotism. In l,istory this fact a sort !if u political Barataria an island of Corre,pondcnee of the Baru,er.] " H Clerk of the Court ........................... ............. : .. _ .............................. 4J2 52 "l.lAY 16th, 1876. -OF TUE- 139 05 stai1ds out in bold relief. There ha,-e been / pirates and robbers.
  • ^Morton Tmctmichael's North ^American

    ^Morton Tmctmichael's North ^American

    ^Morton tMctMichael's North ^American N November, 1846, Morton McMichael began a connection with the Philadelphia 'North American which lasted for more than I three decades. In the course of time this journal came to be known as "McMichaePs North ^American" much in the same fashion as its contemporaries referred to "Greeley's Tribune" McMichael's fame as a journalist was never as great as that of Greeley or James Gordon Bennett in New York, Joseph Gales in Washington, Samuel Bowles in Springfield, or even his fellow Philadelphians, George W. Childs, William Swain, and A. K. McClure. Nevertheless, a fellow editor described him as "the Master of Philadelphia journalism," and an authoritative chronicler of Philadelphia history deemed him "one of the ablest and most useful journalists which the city has pro- duced."1 It was McMichaePs fate to become one of what Allan Nevins has called "secondary and tertiary personages . whose labors were the main elements of progress." His statue, which adorns a hilltop near the entrance to Philadelphia's Fairmount Park with the in- scription, "Morton McMichael, A Beloved Citizen of Philadelphia," has failed to rescue him from the relative historical obscurity to which the passage of time has relegated him. He was one of those individuals who busied himself with behind-the-scenes activity which looked toward furthering the commercial and industrial interests of his adopted city and state,2 and as the publisher of an important commercial journal in one of the nation's leading marts, he occupied a vitally strategic post in the innermost councils of those shaping public policies.
  • A0289 Clark Family Collection, 1766-1991 14 Boxes; 4 Oversize Boxes; 26 Volumes; 17 Microfilm Reels

    A0289 Clark Family Collection, 1766-1991 14 Boxes; 4 Oversize Boxes; 26 Volumes; 17 Microfilm Reels

    A0289 Clark Family Collection, 1766-1991 14 boxes; 4 oversize boxes; 26 volumes; 17 microfilm reels REPOSITORY Missouri Historical Society Archives P.O. Box 11940 St. Louis, MO 63112-0040 314-746-4510 [email protected] RESTRICTIONS The Missouri Historical Society asks researchers to assist in the preservation of the collection by using either the microfilm or the published versions of documents at all times. Most of the published documents can be found in the following sources: Donald Jackson, ed. Letters of the Lewis and Clark Expedition with Related Documents, 1783-1854. Second Edition. Urbana: University of Illinois Press, 1978. Gary Moulton, ed. The Journals of the Lewis and Clark Expedition. Lincoln: University of Nebraska Press, 1986. Volume 1: Atlas; Volumes 2-11: Journals. All copy orders will be filled by reproductions from the microfilm unless photographic reproductions are requested. Permission to view any of the original documents in the Clark Family Collection must be obtained from a member of the archives staff. Permission to view any one of the five unique Lewis and Clark Expedition journals must be obtained from the archivist and a member of the archives staff must perform the handling of the item. MICROFILM The microfilm of the Clark Family Collection was produced from the Save America’s Treasures grant program of the National Endowment for the Humanities and the National Park Service. Reel 1 Box 1, Folders 1 and 3 Box 3, Folders 1-17 Reel 2 Boxes 4-5 Reel 3 Box 6, Folders 1-13 Reel 4 Box 6, Folders 14-18 Box 7, Folders 1-7 1 Reel 5 Box 7, Folders 8-18 Box 8, Folders 1-7 Reel 6 Box 8, Folders 8-15 Box 9 Reel 7 Box 10 Reel 8 Box 11, Folders 1-18 Reel 9 Box 11, Folders 19-20 Box 12 Box 13, Folder 1 Reel 10 Box 13, Folders 2-17 Reel 11 Box 14 Reel 12 Voorhis Journal No.
  • 'Ml EEGISTER. TOPICS of the DAY

    'Ml EEGISTER. TOPICS of the DAY

    . "was a '?r3;&Ei-- w " m - v ' ' " . " '".' : ' betwcen'Galveston and' Loudon, touchingti at mencand marriage of Miss Nellie Chase, a Return f a Sir Jean Franklin Search A gwnwr Baa Dewn. W THE EEGISTER. New Orleans. The vessel, will bring out im- vounsr ladv hitherto movine In the best cir Ml5 Party te New Bedford. defaulting & , Waite, migrants for Texas, and take back cotton. cles ?oi society, with a negro named Sam SflasM. o, of orattie-bor- Arrangements havcTbeen made for the recep- Monroe, formerly employed as coachman by BosTOir, Mass., September 23. of the First National Bank Published Every Friday. George Mary, Captain Baker, here to-d- by tion and location of the immigrants, and the her brother-in-la- the Rev. G. H. Higgins, The bark and Vt, was arrested has New from Hud- Shields, Texane expect to derive many, Rector ' of the 'Prairie Street Episcopal just arrived at Bedford W. H. H. Llewellvn and W.H. IOLA. KANSAS. advantages, son's Strait, bearing news from the Arctic re- Department of therefrom. Church, with whose family Miss Chase re- special agents of the gions. The Franklin search party, under ut car- Waite absconded-abo- tho sided. The elopement was planned and Lieutenant Frederick Schwatka, U.S. A are Justice. some CRIMES AND CASUALTIES. method so often de- 10th of June last, and it was for TOPICS OF THE DAY. ried out in the orthodox passengers on board the George and Mary, and succeeded Aaron Stevens and Clara E.Trask, scribed in novels, the young lady making her have been the recipients of much kindness time supposed that he had of Beverly, Mass., were struck by a locomo- s out of the country, and was exit through a window at night and joining from Captain Baker and bis subordlnate.offl-cer- in getting w tive while crossing the railroad track in a dusky who took to the resi- and men.
  • Molly Maguireism, Unionism, and the Anthracite Labor Wars, 1860-1880

    Molly Maguireism, Unionism, and the Anthracite Labor Wars, 1860-1880

    Old Dominion University ODU Digital Commons History Theses & Dissertations History Spring 2017 Black Gold: Molly Maguireism, Unionism, and the Anthracite Labor Wars, 1860-1880 Samantha Edmiston Old Dominion University, [email protected] Follow this and additional works at: https://digitalcommons.odu.edu/history_etds Part of the Labor History Commons, and the United States History Commons Recommended Citation Edmiston, Samantha. "Black Gold: Molly Maguireism, Unionism, and the Anthracite Labor Wars, 1860-1880" (2017). Master of Arts (MA), Thesis, History, Old Dominion University, DOI: 10.25777/ ekb5-cx34 https://digitalcommons.odu.edu/history_etds/8 This Thesis is brought to you for free and open access by the History at ODU Digital Commons. It has been accepted for inclusion in History Theses & Dissertations by an authorized administrator of ODU Digital Commons. For more information, please contact [email protected]. BLACK GOLD: MOLLY MAGUIREISM, UNIONISM, AND THE ANTHRACITE LABOR WARS, 1860-1880 by Samantha Edmiston B.A. May 2012, Millersville University A Thesis Submitted to the Faculty of Old Dominion University in Partial Fulfillment of the Requirements for the Degree of MASTER OF ARTS HISTORY OLD DOMINION UNIVERSITY May 2017 Approved by: Elizabeth Zanoni (Director) Brett Bebber (Member) Timothy Orr (Member) ABSTRACT BLACK GOLD: MOLLY MAGUIREISM, UNIONISM, AND THE ANTHRACITE LABOR WARS, 1860-1880 Samantha Edmiston Old Dominion University, 2017 Director: Elizabeth Zanoni The class an ethnic tensions that manifested in the anthracite coal fields of Pennsylvania were a microcosm of the broader, nation-wide labor wars of the late-nineteenth century. These labor wars, violent and sometimes bloody, shaped workingmen’s condition and the larger history of unionism.
  • Tgie SALT LAKEDAILY HERALD P

    Tgie SALT LAKEDAILY HERALD P

    ii- p 1 SALT LAKE DAILY HERALD 1 i TgIE j 3 = = = YQ1L XL SALT LAKE CITY EEIDAY MOBBING JUNE 25 iSSO NO 16 j I people Demy 12 California Hancock 6 Field 5 Illinois and Indiana if they culd carry nor would he now tfhe wo Id Ccha FAeeybacht tro TELEGRAPHICWIN- Hendricks 1 absent 1 Colorado Field ths ticket in triumph and each repon cast her vote fer English 6 Connection Bayard 1 English 11 ded affirmatively mid applause In Iowa being ofthat state- LLQO4 Delaware Bayard 9j Florida Uayard 8 conclusion ho invoked the gcd of battles- on behalf of that delpgatio TO t make- HENRY GOHlf GO t Bayard D to give the democratic party a trium- ¬ a nominiiion the accepta irv of which- 9W Georgia Field 10 Hancock 7 Having bought out the entiio busine SCOTT HANCOCK Illinois Hancock 42 immense cheers phant victory Gre t npphuse The he thought he could show wiu almost an of FIELD 1 canfused absolute Finally he seated Indiana Hendricks 30 Iowa Bayard exe tement contkutd several necessity pit 33 IB CTIM1 Randall 12 cheers and hisses HancOck minutes before it could bo quelled the name of Governor Bishop of Ohio TJ X A CO Will Lead the Democratic iO Kentucky Han- Kelly proceeded the which greeted with 9 Kansap Hancock to platform and wa cheer hiie Are now prepared to purchase Hosts to Victory cock 8 Bayard 7 Field 4 Ti den 3 was greeted with a lively Irish air by the and cries of no from the galleries Thurman 2 Louisiana Hancock 16 band and great calls forhiu A telegram from Allen O Thurman William H English Nominated Maine Hancock 14 Maryland Bayard The chair