Browsing named entities in The Daily Dispatch: January 21, 1861., [Electronic resource]. You can also browse the collection for A. H. H. Stuart or search for A. H. H. Stuart in all documents.

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ty to raise money for arming the county. A resolution was introduced for amending the laws so as to regulate the issues of Bank notes by the amount of coin in their vaults; also, one declaring that, in the opinion of the General Assembly, every consideration of honor and interest demands that Virginia shall unite her destinies with her sister slaveholding States of the South. It had previously been adopted in the House, and passed the Senate unanimously. A resolution was offered by Hon. A. H. H. Stuart, and ordered to be printed, the last clause of which declares in favor of amending the Constitution so as to withdraw the trust in regard to the Territories entirely from the hands of Congress, and to provide for an equitable partition of the same, by assigning to the South all now held, or hereafter to be acquired, South of the parallel of 36 30 North latitude, and to the non-slave-holding States all territory North of said parallel — the States created out of said territory to be ad
orne, Coghill, Critcher, Day, John Dickenson, Asa D. Dickinson, Douglas, French, Gatewood, Greever, Hubbard, Isbell, Johnson, Layne, Logan, Lynch, Marshall, McKenney, Nash, Neal, Neeson, Newlon, Newman, Pate, Paxton, Quesenberry, Richmond, Rives, Stuart, Henry W. Thomas, Christopher Y. Thomas, Townes and Wickham--40. Nays.--Messrs, August, Early, Finney, Pennybacker and Thompson--5. Mr. August and others, in voting against the resolutions, explained their reasons for so doing. Bilortive, then, in the opinion of the General Assembly, every consideration of honor and interest demands that Virginia shall unite her destinies with her sister slaveholding States of the South. The resolution was adopted unanimously. Mr. Stuart offered the following resolution, which was ordered to be printed: Resolved, That, in the opinion of the General Assembly of Virginia, the following would constitute a satisfactory basis of adjustment of the unhappy controversies which no