Call Number (LC) | Title | Results |
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Serial set 188 | Private land claims -- Florida. Message from the President of the United States, transmitting information in relation to the execution of the Act of the 23 May last, Supplementary to the Several Acts Providing for the Settlement and Confirmation of Private Land Claims in Florida. Feb. 13, 1829. -- Read, and referred to the Committee on Private Land Claims. Printed by order of the House of Representatives. | 1 |
Serial set 189 | Message from the President of the United States, transmitting, in compliance with a Resolution of the House of Representatives of 13th January, 1825, a statement of convictions, executions, and pardons, under the authority of the government of the United States, since the adoption of the Constitution. February 26, 1829. -- Read, and laid upon the table. | 1 |
Serial set 190 |
Claimants under the first article of the Treaty of Ghent. February 13, 1829. Read, and laid upon the table Slavery -- Dist. Columbia. January 29, 1829 Lands to Alabama, &c. December 22, 1828. Pre-emption to certain persons in Florida. December 19, 1828. Cash duties warehouse system. February 23, 1829. Read, and laid upon the table. Edward Cary. February 15, 1828. -- Read, and laid upon the table. February 19, 1828. -- Committed to a Committee of the Whole House to-morrow. January 6, 1829. -- Reprinted by order of the House of Representatives. Johnson Goodwill. January 28, 1829. Susanna McHugh. January 2, 1829. Read, and committed to a Committee of the Whole House to-morrow. Vessels sunk -- Baltimore harbor. To accompany Bill H.R. No. 412. February 4, 1829. To distribute proceeds of sales of public lands. February 25, 1829. -- Read, and laid upon the table. Remove Indians westward. With Bill No. 449. February 18,1829. Captain John Burnham. February 28, 1829. Henry Eckford. February 17, 1829. Privateer Pension Fund. To accompany Bill H.R. No. 445. February 17, 1829. Retrenchment. February 27, 1829. Debated until the hour elapsed. James Monroe. February 25, 1829. Read, and committed to the Committee of the Whole House to which is committed the Bill [No. 436] for the relief of James Monroe. Jean Baptiste Jerome. February 13, 1829. James Scull. December 16, 1828. -- Read, and laid upon the table. John Long. December 24, 1828. Theophilus Cooksey. December 24, 1828. Thomas Wheatley. December 24, 1828. Merchants of Alexandria -- Dist. Columbia. December 29, 1828. Read, and laid upon the table. Reps. John Ellis, deceased. December 29, 1828. Marcellin Bonnabel. December 29, 1828. Hyacinth Bernard. December 29, 1828. James McCarty. January 21, 1828. Read, and laid upon the table. April 22, 1828. Committed to a Committee of the Whole House to-morrow. December 5, 1828. Committee of the Whole discharged, and re-committed to the Committee of Claims. Jonathan M. Blaisdell. December 16, 1828. Read, and laid upon the table. Southern bend of Lake Michigan. December 10, 1828. Elijah Carr. December 15, 1828. Nathaniel B. Wood. December 17, 1828. Dry docks. January 25, 1828. December 17, 1828. -- Reprinted by order of the House of Representatives. Peter P. M'Cormack. December 22, 1828. Luther Chapin. December 22, 1828. James Mitchell (i.e., Mitchel). December 19, 1828. Read, and committed to a Committee of the Whole House to-morrow. Richard Biddle, administrator of John Wilkins. December 12, 1828. School lands, St. Louis, Missouri. December 22, 1828. Ports of entry -- Florida. December 30, 1828. Read, and laid upon the table. Case of Henry Lee. December 30, 1828. Jno. Thompson, Christ. Adams, and S. Spraggins. December 31, 1828. Read, and laid upon the table. Ebenezer Cooley. December 31, 1828. Tonnage duties -- to repeal. December 31, 1828. Joseph Krittman. January 9, 1829. -- Read, and laid upon the table. James Devereux. December 30, 1828. Read, and laid upon the table. John Brest and al. Heirs of John P. Landerau. December 31, 1828. On Senate Bill No. 30 -- Susan Decatur, et al. March 18, 1828. Read, and, with the bill, committed to a Committee of the Whole House to-morrow. January 5, 1829. Reprinted by order of the House of Representatives. G.T. Beyer. December 30, 1828. Read, and laid upon the table. James Porlier & A. Gardipier, et al. January 9, 1829. Samuel Dubose, administrator of E.D. Dick. December 31, 1828. Orson Sparks and John Watson. December 31, 1828. Supreme Court of the United States. January 2, 1829. David Rogers and son. January 2, 1829. George P. Frost. December 31, 1828. Gen. Winfield Scott. January 27, 1829. -- Read, and postponed until Monday next. Nancy Dolan. January 26, 1829. Alexander Claxton. January 16, 1829. Lewis Neth. January 24, 1829. -- Read, and laid upon the table. Cread [i.e., Creed] Glover. January 19, 1829. Amos Howe, et al. -- with Bill H.R. No. 366. January 14, 1829. Jacob Wilderman. January 12, 1829. Stereotype laws United States. January 16, 1829. Representatives of Joseph Falconer. January 24, 1829. Auction system. With Bill H.R. No. 361. January 12, 1829. Hubert La Croix, et al. (To accompany Bill H.R. 367.) January 14, 1829. Jos. Elliott, Peggy Stephens, & Challenge. To accompany the Bill H.R. No. 363. January 12, 1829. Land to Cumberland Hospital. January 12, 1829. Read, and laid upon the table. Thomas Shiverick. January 21, 1829. Samuel Sitgreaves. January 23, 1829. Heirs of Jean Baptiste Couture. January 19, 1829. Western boundary of Arkansas. To accompany Bill H.R. No. 383. January 20, 1829. Jacob B. Clarke. January 19, 1829. Orleans Navigation Company. Feb. 11, 1828. -- Read, and committed to a Committee of the Whole House to-morrow. January 31, 1829. -- Reprinted by order of the House of Representatives. Appropriation for the public buildings. February 4, 1829. Organization of the militia U.S. (To accompany Bill H.R. No. 414.) February 4, 1829. Thomas Buford. February 9, 1829. Read, and committed to a Committee of the Whole House to-morrow. Sunday mail. February 3, 1829. James D. Cobb. February 3, 1829. Road -- Mobile to New Orleans, &c. January 15, 1829. -- Read, and laid upon the table. February 2, 1829. -- Printed by order of the House of Representatives. Navy Hospital Fund. January 31, 1829. Merchandise transported coastwise. February 3, 1829. Read, and laid upon the table. Alexander Scott. February 10, 1829. Heirs of Robert Fulton, deceased. February 2, 1829. Claims on James Monroe. February 12, 1829 To procure state laws. February 12, 1829. William Jacocks. February 11, 1829. Churchwardens -- Elizabeth City Parish, Virginia. February 11, 1829. On Senate Bill No. 60. February 12, 1829. Read, and with the bill committed to a Committee of the Whole House to-morrow. Gabriel Godfroy. February 13, 1829. Bowie & Kurtz, et al. -- Ship Alleghany. February 11, 1829. Public printing. February 19, 1829. Read, and postponed until Monday next. Erastus Granger. February 17, 1829. James Royal. February 18, 1829. Baltimore and Ohio Rail Road Company. February 21, 1829. Read, and laid upon the table. Lands between Ludlow and Roberts' lines, Ohio. February 18, 1829. Lake Ponchartrain Canal. (To accompany Bill H.R. No. 455.) February 24, 1829. James Soyars [i.e., Soyer]. To accompany Bill H.R. No. 452. February 20, 1829. French spoliations prior to the year 1800. February 16, 1829. Read, and laid upon the table. Josiah Barker, of Louisiana. February 17, 1829. Claims of citizens of Florida. February 26, 1829. Read, and referred to the Committee of the Whole House to which is committed the Bill [H.R. No. 385] for the relief of inhabitants of the Territory of Florida. Army asylum. February 27, 1829. Read, and laid upon the table. Jason Warner, administrator of Ferguson. February 27, 1829. Navy Pension Fund. March 2, 1829. -- Read, and, with the accompanying documents, referred to the Secretary of the Navy. Ellen Dix, Harriet J. Kissam, Gratia Ray, Penelope Denny, Elizabeth Whitehead, Eleanor Wills, Charlotte M.R. Thorn, Susanna Lippencot, and Louisa Booth, widows, and Joseph Sillcock, guardian of the infant children of Caleb Crew, claiming to be placed on the roll of Navy pensioners. March 2, 1829. -- Read, and laid upon the table. Thadeus [i.e., Thaddeus] Laughlin. February 25, 1829. -- Read, and laid upon the table. Thurbur [i.e., Thurber] and King. December 29, 1828. |
104 |
Serial set 191 | Journal of the Senate of the United States of America: Being the first session of the Twenty-first Congress begun and held at the City of Washington, December 7, 1829, and in the fifty-fourth year of the independence of the said United States. | 1 |
Serial set 192 |
In Senate of the United States, February 1, 1830. -- Read. Mr. Rowan made the following report: The Committee on the Judiciary, to whom was referred the petition of William Whitaker, James Wilson, and Joseph D. Hamilton, a portion of the securities of Amos Edwards... In Senate of the United States, January 20, 1830. -- Ordered to be printed. Resolutions of Indiana and Illinois, relative to the repair of the mail road leading to St. Louis, &c. Message from the President of the United States, to the two Houses of Congress, at the commencement of the first session of the Twenty-first Congress. December 8, 1829. Printed by order of the Senate of the United States. Report of the Secretary of the Senate, showing the expenditures from the contingent fund of the Senate, &c. December 10, 1829. Read, and ordered to be printed. Petition of the inhabitants of Lawrence County, Alabama, praying that further relief may be extended to the purchasers of public lands. December 16, 1829. Referred to the Committee on Public Lands, and ordered to be printed. In Senate of the United States, January 20, 1830. Read, and ordered to be printed. Mr. Woodbury made the following report: The Committee on Commerce, to which was referred the memorial of the City Council of Charleston, in South Carolina, ask leave to report... Report from the Secretary of the Treasury, with the final report on private land claims in East Florida, prepared by the Register and Receiver of that district, under the act of 23d May, 1828. January 18, 1830. Read, and ordered to be printed. In Senate of the United States, January 19, 1830. Referred to the Committee on Roads and Canals, and ordered to be printed. Report from the Secretary of War, in compliance with a Resolution of the Senate of the 12th instant, showing the progress made in opening the Cumberland Road continued through Indiana. In Senate of the United States, January 20, 1830. Read, and ordered to be printed. Mr. Barton made the following report: The Committee on Private Land Claims, to which was referred the report of the Commissioner of the General Land Office, of the 22nd December, 1826, have considered the same, and find that the greater part of the claims mentioned therein, have been, heretofore, sufficiently provided for by law... In Senate of the United States, February 1, 1830. Read, and ordered to be printed. Report from the Secretary of the Treasury, in compliance with a Resolution of the Senate, relative to deposites in state banks, and banks in the District of Columbia. In Senate of the United States, January 26, 1830. Laid on the table by the Honorable Mr. Rowan, and ordered to be printed. Fifth Annual Report of the President and directors of the Louisville and Portland Canal Company... Memorial of certain citizens of Philadelphia, praying that the duties on silks imported from various places may be equalized, &c. January 28, 1830. Referred to the Committee on Finance, and ordered to be printed. Report from the Secretary of War, transmitting the annual returns of the militia of the United States for 1829. February 4, 1830. Read, and ordered to be printed. Memorial of the General Assembly of Indiana, approving the system of internal improvements by the government, and praying for an appropriation to continue and construct the Cumberland Road in that state. February 4, 1830. Referred to the Committee on Roads and Canals, and ordered to be printed. Message from the President of the United States, in reply to a resolution of the Senate, and relating to the protection of the trade between Missouri and Mexico. February 8, 1830. Read, and ordered to be referred to the Committee on Military Affairs, and printed. In Senate of the United States, February 4, 1830. Mr. Rowan made the following report: The Committee on the Judiciary, to whom was referred the petition of the executore [sic] of James Roddey, deceased, present the following report... In Senate of the United States, February 8, 1830. -- Prepared in the Office of Secretary of the Senate; laid on the table by Mr. Smith, Chairman Committee on Finance, and ordered to be printed. Statement showing the duties under several of the acts imposing duties on imports, and those proposed to be laid and repealed by the Bill of the Senate, No. 72. In Senate of the United States, February 4, 1830. Read, and ordered to be printed. Report from the Secretary of War, in compliance with a Resolution of the Senate of the 18th ultimo, shewing the result of an examination, made by order of that Department, of the route for a road from Washington to Fredericktown, by way of New Market, and also by Rockville. Memorial of the Legislature of Indiana, praying that relief may be extended to the holders of certificates of forfeited lands in that state. February 4, 1830. Referred to the Committee on Public Lands, and ordered to be printed. In Senate of the United States, February 8, 1830. Read and ordered to be printed. Mr. Barton made the following report: The Committee on Public Lands, in obedience to a Resolution of the Senate, have had under consideration the expediency of modifying the act to aid the State of Ohio in completing the Miami Canal, from Dayton to Lake Erie... Report of the Secretary of War, in compliance to a Resolution of the Senate, relative to the erection of the pier at Kennebunk. December 28, 1829. Read, and ordered to be printed. Memorial of the Baltimore and Ohio Raid Road Company, praying for the aid of the United States, by a subscription to the stock of said company. December 22, 1829. Referred to the Committee on Roads and Canals, and ordered to be printed. In Senate of the United States, January 11, 1830. Read, and ordered to be printed. Mr. Rowan, from the Committee on the Judiciary, made the following report: The Committee on the Judiciary, to whom was referred the petition of John Nicholson, acting executor of the late Abner L. Duncan, of New Orleans, have had that subject under consideration, and report... Report of the Secretary of the Treasury, on the subject of procuring a site for, and building a light-house near the mouth of Duck Creek, adjoining Delaware Bay. January 14, 1830. Referred to the Committee on Commerce, and ordered to be printed. In Senate of the United States, January 12, 1830. Read, and ordered to be printed. Mr. Livingston made the following report: The Committee on Public Lands, to which was referred a Resolution of the Senate, directing them to inquire whether justice, and the interest of the United States, do not require that provision should be made by law, for constructing embankments and bridges, and making roads, on the lands belonging to the United States in the State of Louisiana, report... In Senate of the United States, January 11, 1830. Read, referred to the Committee on the Judiciary, and ordered to be printed. Report of Committee, and resolutions adopted by the Legislature of Georgia, requesting that provision be made by Congress for running and marking the line between that state and Florida. In Senate of the United States, January 11, 1830. Read, and ordered to be printed. Mr. Rowan, from the Committee on the Judiciary... to whom was referred the petition of David Keizer, stating that he had discovered the art of rendering leather impervious to water, or, in his own language, to the aqueous fluid, report... In the Senate of the United States, 11th January, 1830. Read, and ordered to be printed. Mr. Sanford, from the Select Committee appointed to consider the state of the current coins, and to report such amendments of the existing laws concerning coins... In Senate of the United States, January 11, 1830. Referred to the Committee on Roads and Canals, and ordered to be printed. Resolutions of the Legislature of Tennessee, to procure an appropriation by Congress to effect the examination and removal of the Harpeth Shoals, on the Cumberland River. In Senate of the United States, January 11, 1830. Read, and ordered to be printed. Mr. Rowan, from the Committee on the Judiciary, made the following report: The Judiciary Committee, to whom was referred the petition of John S. Stiles, Executor of Col. George Stiles, Esq. deceased... In Senate United States, January 11, 1830. Laid on the table, and ordered to be printed. Preamble and Resolution of the Legislature of Georgia, requesting the members in Congress, from that state, to endeavor to obtain the repeal of the Tariff Law of 1828. Report from the Secretary of the Navy, with a statement of contracts and purchases made by the Commissioners of the Navy Board, for the Navy, in 1829, &c. January 18, 1830. Read, and ordered to be printed. In Senate of the United States, January 25, 1830. Read, laid on the table, and ordered to be printed. Resolutions of the Legislature of Georgia, relative to the amendments to the Constitution of the United States, on the subject of the election and term of service of the President of the United States. In Senate of the United States, January 20, 1830. Read, and ordered to be printed. Mr. Burnet made the following report: The Committee on Private Land Claims, to whom was referred the petition of the heirs and devisees of Andrew Turnbull, deceased... In Senate of the United States, January 21, 1830. Read, and ordered to be printed. Mr. Foot made the following report: The Committee on Pensions, who were instructed by a Resolution of 7th January inst. to inquire into the expediency of providing by law "that, in cases of application for pensions under the statutes of 18th March, 1818, and of 1st May, 1820, in which it shall become material to prove a contract, evidence which would be competent in the highest judicial tribunal of the state in which such contract is alleged to have been made, shall be received as competent by the Secretary of War, who shall judge of its credibility," report... In Senate of the United States, January 25, 1830. Mr. Foot made the following report: On the petition of George L. Murdock, of Indiana, the Committee on Claims report... In Senate of the United States, January 25, 1830. Mr. Rowan made the following report: The Committee on the Judiciary, to which was referred the petition of George Johnston, surety of Benjamin F. Bourne, late a purser in the Navy, report... Finances, annual report of the Secretary of the Treasury, on the state of the finances. December 15, 1829. -- In Senate of the United States: Read, and ordered that 1,500 additional copies be printed for the use of the Senate. Memorial of the Legislature of Indiana, praying that the title of the Miami Indians, to large tracts of land in that state, may be extinguished, &c. December 24, 1829. Referred to the Committee on Indian Affairs, and ordered to be printed. Letter from the Secretary of War to the Hon. S.A. Foot, Chairman of Committee on Pensions of the Senate, with communications from the principal Clerk of the Pension Bureau, relative to the invalid and Revolutionary pensions under the direction of that Department. January 4, 1830. -- Laid on the table by Mr. Foot, and ordered to be printed. Message from the President of the United States, communicating documents from the Legislature of South Carolina, relating to the claim of that state for advances made during the late war. January 5, 1830. Referred to the Committee on Military Affairs, and ordered to be printed. Letter from the Secretary of the Treasury, to the Hon. S. Smith, Chairman of the Committee on Finance, with statements showing the manner in which the Sinking Fund may be applied to the payment of the public debt. January 7, 1830. -- Laid on the table by Mr. Smith, and ordered to be printed. Message from the President of the United States, transmitting a report from the Secretary of the Treasury, relating to appropriations of money and public land, made to and for the benefit of the states, rendered in compliance with a Resolution of the Senate, of the 24th December, 1828. January 5, 1830. -- Read, January 6 -- Ordered that the message, report of the Secretary of the Treasury, documents marked B, and part of no. 9, of document A, be printed for the use of the Senate. Report from the Secretary of the Treasury, in compliance with a Resolution of the Senate, of 28th February, 1829, shewing the amount of duties or bonds for same, in 1826-7-8, and the amount of compensation to the various officers of the Customs. January 7, 1830. Read, and ordered to be printed, together with a communication from the Secretary of the Treasury to the Hon. S. Smith, Chairman of the Committee on Finance, annexed hereto. Letter from the Secretary of the Treasury, to the Chairman of the Committee on Finance, exhibiting the quantities and value of certain articles imported into the United States during the years ending on the 30th September 1822 and 1829. February 8, 1830. Laid on the table by Mr. Smith, Chairman of the Committee on Finance, and ordered to be printed. List of committees of the Senate of the United States, 1st session, 21st Congress, 1829-30. Report of the Secretary of the Treasury, in compliance with a Resolution of the Senate relative to the affairs of the Potomac Company, at the time of the surrender of its charter; and also, on the subject of the stock of the Chesapeake and Ohio Canal Company. February 1, 1830. Read, and ordered to be printed. In Senate of the United States, January 7, 1830. Read, and ordered to be printed. Mr. White made the following report: The Committee on Indian Affairs, to whom was referred the memorial of the General Assembly of the State of Indiana... In Senate of the United States, January 5, 1830. Mr. Burnett made the following report: The Committee on Private Land Claims, to whom was referred the memorial of John Edgar, report: That the said Edgar alleges, in his memorial, that John Wilkins, a lieutenant colonel, in the service of Great Britain, on the 12th April, 1769, granted to Baynton, Wharton, and Morgan, a tract of land in the Illinois country... |
49 |
Serial set 193 |
Letter from the Secretary of the Navy, to Hon. R.Y. Hayne, Chairman of the Committee on Naval Affairs, covering a plan for a Navy peace establishment. February 18, 1830. Laid on the table by Mr. Hayne, and ordered to be printed. Memorial of the Baptist General Association of Pennsylvania, for missionary purposes, approving the plan of settling the Indians to the west of the Mississippi, &c. February 2, 1830. Read, ordered to be printed, and laid on the table. In Senate of the United States, May 18, 1830. Read, and ordered to be printed. Mr. Dickerson made the following report: The Committee on Manufactures, to whom was referred the petitions of the re-manufacturers of iron, in all branches of smiths' work, in the City and County of Philadelphia... In Senate of the United States, May 24, 1830. Read, and ordered to be printed. Mr. Marks, from the Committee on Agriculture, made the following report: The Committee on Agriculture, to whom was referred the memorial of a number of farmers and graziers of Philadelphia, and some adjoining counties, in Pennsylvania, report... Report from the Secretary of the Treasury (in compliance with a Resolution of the Senate, of the 29th December, 1828) respecting the relative value of gold and silver, &c. May 4, 1830. Read, and ordered to be printed, and that 1000 additional copies be sent to the Senate. In Senate of the United States, April 28, 1830. Read, and ordered to be printed. Mr. Bibb made the following report: The Committee on the Post Office and Post Roads, of the Senate, to whom was referred the petition of Thomas Rhodes, respectfully report: That, on the 17th June, 1828, the Postmaster General advertised for proposals for carrying the mails between Mobile and New Orleans thrice a week for four years. On the 16th August, 1828, Thomas Rhodes made his proposals... In Senate of the United States, May 6, 1830. Read, and ordered to be printed. Mr. Dickerson made the following report: The Committee to whom was referred so much of the President's Message as respects the disposition of the surplus funds of the United States, after our public debt shall be extinguished, beg leave to report... Report from the Secretary of War, in answer to a resolution of the Senate, in relation to desertion in the Army. February 22, 1830. Letter from the Secretary of the Treasury, to the Hon. S. Smith, Chairman of the Committee on Finance, with statements showing the amounts of duties on articles enumerated in Bill of Senate No. 72, "To Modify Certain Duties on Merchandise Imported, and to Repeal the Duties on Others." March 10, 1830. Laid on the table, and ordered to be printed. Report of the Secretary of the Treasury, in reply to a resolution of the Senate, showing the amount received from sales of public land, since 1st January, 1828, and expenses of each Land Office. March 10, 1830. Read, and ordered to be printed. Report from the Secretary of the Treasury, in compliance with a Resolution of the Senate, of the 22d January, 1829, in relation to the "sum of about one million of dollars," described in the annual report on the finances as "funds not considered as effective," &c. March 10, 1830. Read, and ordered to be printed. Petition of sundry remanufacturers of iron, residing in Philadelphia, praying that the duty on certain descriptions of iron may be so modified as to afford to them an adequate protection in their business. March 2, 1830. Referred to the Committee on Manufactures, and ordered to be printed. Memorial of the Chamber of Commerce, and certain importing merchants of Philadelphia, praying that the excess of duty under the Tariff of 1828, beyond that of former tariffs, on such merchandise as was ordered prior to the passage of the Act of 1828, but did not arrive in the United States until after the time limited therein for a continuance of the old duties, be remitted. March 12, 1830. Referred to the Committee on Finance, and ordered to be printed. Memorial of sundry inhabitants of Salem, Massachusetts, praying that duty on imported molasses may be reduced to five cents per gallon, and that a drawback to the same amount may be allowed on the exportation of spirits distilled therefrom. March 15, 1830. Read, ordered to lie on the table, and be printed. Memorial of inhabitants of Sharon, Connecticut, praying that government would extend its protection over certain Indian tribes, &c. March 22, 1830. Ordered to lie on the table and be printed. Memorial of the Chamber of Commerce of New York, praying that the duties on teas and coffee may be reduced after the 31st March, 1832. March 15, 1830. Ordered to lie on the table and be printed. Memorial of Kennebunk, Maine, praying that the Indians may be protected in their rights, and in the possession of their lands, &c. March 17, 1830. Ordered to lie on the table, and be printed. In Senate of the United States, March 11, 1830. Read, and ordered to be printed. Mr. Rowan made the following report: The Judiciary Committee have had under consideration the resolution instructing them to inquire into the expediency of erecting, in Savannah, at the expense of the general government, a suitable building for the accommodation of the District Court of the United States for the District of Georgia... Report from the Postmaster General, in compliance with a Resolution of the Senate, showing the number of deputy postmasters removed by that Department between 4th March, 1829, and 22d March, 1830. March 24, 1830. Read, and ordered to be printed. In Senate of the United States, April 6, 1830. Ordered to be printed. Mr. Chase made the following report: The Committee on Pensions, to whom was referred the petition of Ezekiel Woodworth, report... In Senate of the United States, April 5, 1830. Read, and ordered to be printed. Mr. Burnet made the following report: The committee to whom was referred the memorial of the mayor, aldermen, and inhabitants, of New Orleans, beg leave to report: That it appears from the memorial, that, in laying out the City of New Orleans, a number of lots, or pieces of ground, called quays, were left contiguous to the Mississippi River... In Senate of the United States, March 29, 1830. Read, and ordered to be printed. Mr. Smith, of Maryland, made the following report: The Committee on Finance, to which was referred a Resolution of the 30th December, 1829, directing the committee to inquire into the expediency of establishing an uniform national currency for the United States... In Senate of the United States, March 29, 1830. Read, and ordered to be printed. Mr. White made the following report: The Committee of Indian Affairs, to whom was referred the memorial of Joshua Kennedy, praying indemnity for the destruction of property by the hostile Creek Indians, in the year 1813, ask leave to submit the following report... Report from the Secretary of the Treasury, in reply to two Resolutions of the Senate, with copy, bond, and account, of money advanced to the late Marshal of Key West, and copy of bond, by Collector of that port, with gross amount of revenue in that district for 1828 and 1829. April 1, 1830. Read, and ordered to be printed. Motion by Mr. Barton, concerning appointments and removals by the Executive. March 23, 1830. -- Submitted. March 26, 1830. -- Considered, and postponed to, and made the order of the day for, the 5th of April next. Message from the President of the United States, with a report from the officers detailed to make a survey of the Dry Tortugas, and recommending it as an important station for naval purposes, &c. March 30, 1830. Referred to the Committee on Naval Affairs. April 1, 1830. Ordered to be printed. Report of joint committee and resolution of the Legislature of Maine, on the subject of the claims of that state on account of militia services during the late war. March 29, 1830. Ordered to lie on the table and be printed. In Senate of the United States, April 6, 1830. Ordered to be printed. Mr. Chase made the following report: The Committee on Pensions, to whom was referred the petition of Abraham Brownson, report... In Senate of the United States, April 5, 1830. Ordered to be printed. Mr. Holmes submitted the following motions: Resolved, that the Postmaster General be directed to inform the Senate whether any money has been paid by him to the present printer for Congress in advance for work to be done... In Senate of the United States, April 23, 1830. Read, and ordered to be printed. Mr. King made the following report: The Committee of Finance, to which was referred the petition of Elizabeth Scott, assignee of Alexander Scott, Jr. report... Memorial of the manufacturers of salt, in the County of Kenhawa, Virginia, against the repeal of the duty on imported salt. April 30, 1830. Ordered to be printed. Letter from the President of the Chesapeake and Ohio Canal Company, with proceedings of a meeting of that company, to the Hon. E.F. Chambers, Chairman of the Committee on the District of Columbia. May 24, 1830. Read, laid on the table, and ordered to be printed. Message from the President of the United States, in compliance with a Resolution of the Senate of the 3d March, shewing: 1st, Quantity of public land appropriated to the several states; 2d, Amount of disbursements made within the several states; and, 3d, Amount of exports from 1789 to 1828. May 31, 1830. Read, and ordered to be printed. Report of the Secretary of War, in reply to a Resolution of the Senate of the 24th of February last, relative to the barracks of the United States at Greenbush, New York, and the inexpediency of preserving them, &c. March 8, 1830. Read, and ordered to be printed. In Senate of the United States, March 5, 1830. Read, and ordered to be printed. Mr. Rowan, from the Committee on the Judiciary, made the following report: The Committee on the Judiciary, to whom was referred the petition of the representatives of Simeon Theus... Memorial of a deputation from the Creek Nation of Indians, complaining that certain acts of the State of Alabama are in violation of the acts and ammunities [sic] guarranteed [sic] to their nation by treaty stipulations, with the United States, and praying relief. February 9, 1830. Ordered to lie on the table and be printed. Commerce and navigation of the United States. Letter from the Secretary of the Treasury, transmitting statements respecting the commerce and navigation of the United States, &c. &c. February 5, 1830. Read, and ordered that 1,000 additional copies be printed. In Senate of the United States, February 8, 1830. Read, and ordered to be printed. Mr. Woodbury made the following report: The Committee on Naval Affairs, to which was referred the petition of Charles Yeaton, ask leave to report: That the petitioner appears to have sailed from Portsmouth, New Hampshire, in June, A.D. 1813, as a mariner in a privateer; that said privateer was captured soon after by a British frigate... In Senate of the United States, February 8, 1830. Read, and ordered to be printed. Mr. Foot made the following report: The Committee of Claims, on the petition of Ezra St. John, of Erie, New York, report... Memorial of citizens of Delaware, residing in Wilmington, expressive of the sentiments entertained by them, on the claims of the Indians to certain lands within the territorial limits of the United States. February 15, 1830. Referred to the Committee on Indian Affairs, and ordered to be printed. Letter from the President of the Washington Turnpike Company, in relation to the recent survey of two routes for a road from Washington City to Frederick, in Maryland. February 11, 1830. Read, and ordered to be printed. In Senate of the United States, February 24, 1830. Laid on the table, and ordered to be printed. Mr. Foot made the following report: The Committee on Pensions, to which has been referred the petition of...widows of certain officers who served in the Army of the Revolution... Memorial of the ladies of Burlington, New Jersey, praying that Congress would protect the Indians in their rights, and in the possession of their lands. February 23, 1830. Ordered to lie on the table, and be printed. In Senate of the United States, February 24, 1830. Laid on the table, and ordered to be printed. Mr. Foot made the following report: The Committee on Pensions, on the petition of Celestine T. Wilkinson, widow of the late General James Wilkinson, report: The petitioner states, that her late husband, General James Wilkinson, served in the Revolutionary Army... In Senate of the United States, February 24, 1830. Laid upon the table, and ordered to be printed. Mr. Foot made the following report: The Committee on Pensions have had under consideration a Resolution of the Senate, of 17th instant, instructing them to "inquire into the propriety of continuing to Mrs. Elizabeth Anderson, the pay for life, allowed to her husband, Captain William Anderson..." In Senate of the United States, February 25, 1830. Read, and ordered to be printed. Mr. Smith, of Maryland, made the following report: The Committee on Finance, to which was referred the petition of David Beard... Documents in relation to the continuation of the Cumberland Road in the States of Ohio and Indiana (with Senate Bill No. 100). February 22, 1830. Laid on the table by Mr. Hendricks, and ordered to be printed. In Senate of the United States, March 4, 1830. Read, and ordered to be printed. Mr. Woodbury made the following report: The Committee on Commerce, to which was referred a Resolution on "the expediency of extending the right of debenture to merchandise imported into Key West, from other than foreign ports, but entitled, at the time of importation, to debenture"... Memorial of the General Assembly of Indiana, praying that the Indian title to certain lands within that state be extinguished, and that all the Indians residing therein, be induced to emigrate westward. March 4, 1830. Ordered to lie on the table and be printed. Report and remonstrance of the Legislature of Georgia, in relation to the Indian tribes within that state, and acts of certain states, extending jurisdiction over the Indian tribes within their limits, &c. In Senate of the United States, March 8, 1830. Memorial of the representatives of the yearly meeting of Friends or Quakers of Baltimore, praying that government would extend its protection over certain Indian tribes, &c. March 22, 1830. Ordered to lie on the table and be printed. In Senate of the United States, April 22, 1830. Read, and ordered to be printed. Mr. McKinley made the following report: The Committee on Public Lands, to which was referred the memorial of John Smith T. by his attorney in fact, William Kelley, proposing to release to the United States his claim to a large tract of land... Report from the Secretary of the Treasury (in compliance with a Resolution of the Senate) showing the number of subordinate officers of the Customs removed from office since the fourth of March last, and the numbers increased and diminished in each district. April 8, 1830. Read, and ordered to be printed. In Senate of the United States, April 8, 1830. Read, and ordered to be printed. Mr. Chase made the following report: The Committee on Revolutionary Pensions, to which was referred the Resolution of the Senate of the 18th ultimo, instructing the Committee to inquire into the expediency of granting a pension to Isaac Pinney, a Revolutionary soldier... Memorial of a committee appointed by the corporation, remonstrating against the grant of any of the public grounds in Washington for the endowment of any institution within or without its limits. April 20, 1830. Laid on the table, and ordered to be printed. In Senate of the United States, April 21, 1830. Read, and ordered to be printed. Mr. Barton made the following report: The Committee on Public Lands have considered the application of N.B. Tucker, Esq. on behalf of several citizens of Saline County, in Missouri, for a grant of a township of private land... Report from the Secretary of the Treasury, in compliance with a Resolution of the Senate of the 17th instant, in relation to the expenditures of the government in 1828 and 1829. April 21, 1830. Read, and ordered to be printed. In Senate of the United States, May 5, 1830. Read, and ordered to be printed. Mr. Hendricks made the following report: The Committee on Roads and Canals, to whom were referred a Resolution of the Senate, and a memorial of many citizens of Allen County, in the State of Indiana, asking a donation of land for the construction of a road from Lawrenceburg, by way of Fort Wayne, to the southern bend of the St. Joseph's of Lake Michigan, report... In Senate of the United States, May 14, 1830. Read, and ordered to be printed. Mr. Iredell made the following report: The Committee to Audit and Control the Contingent Fund, to whom was referred a resolution instructing them "to inquire if any, and what, provision is necessary to prevent unnecessary expense for printing documents ordered to be printed by the two Houses of Congress," respectfully report... Report from the Secretary of the Treasury, in compliance with a Resolution of the Senate of the 26th March, relative to land returned as "Swamp Land," in Florida, &c. May 5, 1830, Read, and ordered to be printed. In Senate of the United States, May 8, 1830. Ordered to be printed. Mr. Woodbury made the following report: The Committee on Commerce, to whom were referred two letters from the Engineer Department on the subject of a survey of the Wabash River, ask leave to report... Report from the Secretary of the Treasury, in compliance with a Resolution of the Senate of 23d of April; with statements shewing the amount of expenditures for 1828 and 1829, incurred for outfits of ministers, charge d'affaires, treaties with Indians, &c. for which no appropriations were made. May 31, 1830. Read, and ordered to be printed. In Senate of the United States, February 17, 1830. Read, and ordered to be printed. Mr. Tazewell made the following report: The Committee on Foreign Relations, to which was referred a bill that passed the House of Representatives on the sixth of January, 1830, for the relief of Alexander Scott... In Senate of the United States, February 12, 1830. Mr. McKinley made the following report: The Committee on Public Lands, to which was referred the memorial of the Legislature of the State of Alabama, asking a grant of land for the purpose of improving the navigation of the Coosa River... Memorial of the Board of Managers of the New York Baptist Missionary Society, in favor of colonizing the Indians, East of the Rocky Mountains, &c. February 19, 1830. Referred to the Committee on Indian Affairs, and ordered to be printed. Memorial of the inhabitants of Rahway, Woodbridge, &c., New Jersey, praying that the government would extend its protection to the southern Indians, &c. February 26, 1830. Laid on the table, and ordered to be printed. Memorial of William Kelly, of Alabama, attorney of John Smith T. in relation to the claim of the said John Smith T. for land from the United States. February 23, 1830. Referred to the Committee on Public Lands, and ordered to be printed. In Senate of the United States, February 23, 1830. Read, and ordered to be printed. Mr. Woodbury made the following report: The Joint Library Committee, to whom was referred a resolution "to postpone the subscription, on the part of the Senate, to the compilation of the public documents proposed to be printed by Gales & Seaton, until an appropriation shall be made by Congress for that purpose"... Senate of the United States, February 22, 1830. Read, and ordered to be printed. Mr. White made the following report: The Committee on Indian Affairs, to whom was referred that part of the President's Message, dated the eighth day of December last, which relates to Indian affairs... Memorial of sundry citizens of Farmington, Connecticut, praying that the Indians may be protected in their just rights, &c. February 27, 1830. Referred to the Committee on Indian Affairs, and ordered to be printed. Report and resolves of the Legislature of Massachusetts, relative to the claims of that state for militia services during the late war. February 22d, 1830. Read, and referred to the Committee on Military Affairs, and ordered to be printed. Report of the Secretary of the Treasury, in reply to a Resolution of the Senate relative to procuring a site for, and building a custom house and warehouse at Mobile. March 9, 1830. Read, and referred to the Committee of Commerce, and ordered to be printed. Memorial of inhabitants of Burlington County, New Jersey, praying that the Indians may be protected in their rights by the government: March 3, 1830. Ordered to lie on the table and to be printed. In Senate of the United States, March 11, 1830. Read, and ordered to be printed. Mr. Rowan made the following report: The Judiciary Committee, to whom was referred the petition of J.N. Cardozo, praying that he may be released from a contract with the United States... Memorial of ladies, inhabitants of Pennsylvania, praying that the Indians may be protected in their rights, and in the possession of their lands. March 3, 1830. Ordered to lie on the table and be printed. Resolution of the General Assembly of Ohio, declaring the tariff law of 1828 to be constitutional, and calculated to protect the industry of the country against the policy and legislation of foreign nations, and concurring with the resolution of Pennsylvania on the same subject. March 15, 1830. Ordered to lie on the table and be printed. Memorial of Mrs. Anne M. Pinkney, widow and administratrix of the late William Pinkney, dec'd, praying that a balance due her late husband as foreign minister may be paid to her, &c. March 22, 1830. Referred to the Committee on Foreign Relations, and ordered to be printed. Resolution of the Legislature of Indiana, stating that certain alternate sections of land on the margin of the Wabash and Erie Canal fell within Indian reservations, and praying that a law be passed granting other sections in lieu thereof. March 1, 1830. Referred to the Committee on Roads and Canals. March 17, 1830. Bill reported [No. 135] and resolutions ordered to be printed. Memorial of Joshua Kennedy, of Mobile, praying Congress to indemnify him for losses sustained during the Creek War. March 15, 1830. Referred to the Committee on Indian Affairs, and ordered to be printed. Memorial of inhabitants of Brunswick, Maine, praying that the southern Indians may not be removed from their present places of abode, without their free consent. March 15, 1830. Ordered to lie on the table and be printed. In Senate of the United States, March 15, 1830. Read, and ordered to be printed. Mr. Barton made the following report: The Committee on Public Lands, to whom was referred the petition of John Reily, report: That, by an act of the State of Georgia, passed February 25, 1784, any citizen of Georgia, or of the United States, was authorized to obtain a warrant of survey, for any quantity of unlocated land... In Senate of the United States, March 29, 1830. Ordered, that the report made to the House of Representatives on 22d May, 1826, by a select committee, on the subject of re-organizing the Executive Departments, be printed. In Senate of the United States, April 6, 1830. Read, and ordered to be printed. Mr. Hayne made the following report: The Committee of Naval Affairs, to whom was referred the petition of Benjamin Pendleton, report... In Senate of the United States, April 6, 1830. Ordered to be printed. Mr. Chase made the following report: The Committee on Pensions, to whom was referred the petition of Joseph Chamberlain, report... In Senate of the United States, March 31, 1830. Read, and ordered to be printed. Mr. Tazewell made the following report: The Committee on Foreign Relations, to whom was referred a bill for the relief of Don Carlos Dehault Delassus... Report from the Secretary of the Navy, in compliance with a Resolution of the Senate, concerning the subject dispensing with the Marine Corps in the naval service of the United States. March 24, 1830. Read, referred to the Committee on Naval Affairs, and ordered to be printed. Report from the Secretary of War, in reply to a Resolution of the Senate of the 25th of January last, showing the progress made in civilizing the Indians for the last eight years, and their present condition. 1830, March 26. -- Read. 1830, March 30. -- Ordered to be printed, with the accompanying documents, and two letters from Abram A. Heard and Caleb Starr, which were laid on the table the 29th inst. by Mr. White. Report from the Secretary of the Treasury, in part compliance with a Resolution of the Senate, showing the expenditures for 1828 and 1829, under each head of appropriation, &c. April 13, 1830. Read, and ordered to be printed. Letter from the Secretary of War to the Chairman of the Committee on Internal Improvements, with the result of the examination of Back Creek, &c. April 26, 1830. Laid on the table by Mr. Barnard, and ordered to be printed. Memorial of sundry persons engaged in ship building at Philadelphia, praying that a drawback be granted on the exportation of materials used in ship building. April 20, 1830. Referred to the Committee on Commerce, and ordered to be printed. Letter from the Secretary of the Treasury, with statements showing the appropriations, receipts, and expenditures, and balances, for each year, from 1789 to 1829, inclusive. April 13, 1830. Laid on the table by the Chairman of the Committee on Finance, and ordered to be printed. Memorial of sundry inhabitants of Boston, Massachusetts, that so much of the Post Office laws as require the mail to be transported on the Sabbath day, may be repealed. April 13, 1830. Referred to the Committee on the Post Office and Post Roads and ordered to be printed. Letter from the Postmaster General, relative to the case of John Fitzgerald, late Postmaster at Pensacola, removed, &c. April 30, 1830. Read, and ordered to be printed. Report from the Postmaster General, in reply to certain resolutions of the Senate of the 10th April, relating to that Department. May 5, 1830. Read, and ordered to be printed. In Senate of the United States, February 22, 1830. Mr. Livingston, from the select committee appointed on 22d December last, made the following report: The committee to whom was referred the petition of Francis R. Glavery and others, sufferers by French spoliations, prior to the 30th September, 1800, report... In Senate of the United States, February 9, 1830. Read, and ordered to be printed. Mr. Rowan made the following report: The Committee on the Judiciary, to whom was referred the petition of Thomas L. Winthrop and others, directors of an association called the New England Mississippi Land Company, &c. report... Protest of North Carolina against the Hopewell Treaty with the Cherokees, &c. March 29, 1830. Laid on the table by Mr. White, and ordered to be printed. |
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Serial set 194 | Journal of the House of Representatives of the United States: Being the first session of the Twenty-first Congress, begun and held at the City of Washington, December 7, 1829, and in the fifty-fourth year of the independence of the United States. | 1 |
Serial set 195 |
Clerks -- Navy Department. Letter from the Secretary of the Navy, transmitting statements of the names of the clerks employed in the Navy Department during the year 1829, and the compensation allowed to each. January 11, 1830. Read, and laid upon the table. Contingent expenses Ho. Reps., 2d session 20th Congress. Annual report of the Clerk of the House of Representatives of the United States. December 21, 1829. -- Read, and laid upon the table. list of reports to be made to the House of Representatives, at the first session of the Twenty-first Congress, by the Executive Departments. Prepared by the Clerk, in obedience to a standing order of the House of Representatives. December 7, 1829. Message from the President of the United States, to the two Houses of Congress, at the commencement of the first session of the Twenty-first Congress. December 8, 1829. Read, and committed to a Committee of the Whole House on the State of the Union. Balances on the books of the Register of the Treasury. December 10, 1829. Read, and laid upon the table. Balances, &c. on the books of the Second Auditor. December 14, 1829. Read, and laid upon the table. List of balances on the books of the Third Auditor. December 10, 1829. Read, and laid upon the table. Ardent spirits -- midshipmen. Letter from the Secretary of the Navy, transmitting opinions of surgeons of the Navy, in relation to allowing to the midshipmen of the Navy of the United States, ardent spirits as a part of their rations. January 14, 1830. Read, and laid upon the table. Finances. Annual report of the Secretary of the Treasury, on the state of the finances. December 15, 1829. -- Read, and referred to the Committee of Ways and Means, and 10,000 copies ordered to be printed. Fourth Auditor's balances. List of officers who have failed to render their accounts. December 22, 1829. Read, and laid upon the table. Estimate of appropriations for 1830. Letter from the Secretary of the Treasury, transmitting an estimate of appropriations for the year 1830. December 28, 1829. Read, and referred to the Committee of Ways and Means. Lands in Alabama, reverted for non-payment, &c. December 28, 1829. Read, and referred to the Committee on the Public Lands. Monthly statements Bank United States. Letter from the Secretary of the Treasury, transmitting the monthly statements of the Bank of the United States for the year 1829. December 28, 1829. -- Read, and laid on the table. Lands for military post at Green Bay, &c. December 28, 1829. -- Read, and laid upon the table. Survey -- Narraganset Bay, &c. &c. Letter from the Secretary of War, transmitting surveys and reports of the waters of Narraganset Bay and the harbor of Newport, Rhode Island, with a view to the establishment of a naval depot. January 14, 1830. Read, and laid upon the table. Ardent spirits -- Army and Navy. Letter from the Secretary of War, in reply to a resolution of the House of Representatives of the 28th ultimo, in relation to allowing to the soldiers and seamen of the United States an equivalent, in money, in lieu of the present allowance for ardent spirits. January 14, 1830. Read, and laid upon the table. Message from the President of the United States, transmitting copies of surveys made in pursuance of Acts of Congress, of 30th April, 1824, and 2d March, 1829. December 16, 1829. Read, and laid upon the table. Thomas Crown. Report of the Secretary of War, in the case of Thomas Crown. December 21, 1829. -- Read, and laid on the table. Public buildings. January 4, 1830. Read, and laid upon the table. Lands of U.S. in Tennessee. Letter from the Secretary of the Treasury, transmitting information in relation to the vacant lands belonging to the United States in Tennessee. January 7, 1830. -- Read, and referred to a select committee. Letter from the Secretary of State, transmitting a list of the names of persons to whom patents have been granted for the invention of any new and useful art or machine, manufacture, or composition of matter, or improvement thereon, from the 1st day of Jan., 1829, to the 1st day of Jan., 1830. January 3, 1830. -- Read, and laid upon the table. Frontiers of Arkansas. Letter from the Secretary of War, in reply to a Resolution of the House of Representatives, of the 17th ultimo, relative to the protection of the frontier of Arkansas. January 6, 1830. Read, and referred to the Committee on Military Affairs. Contingent expenses -- military establishment, 1829. January 7, 1830. Read, and laid upon the table. |
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Serial set 196 |
Cumberland Road. January 27, 1830. Read, and referred to the Committee on Internal Improvements. Letter from the Secretary of War, transmitting a report relative to the repairs of the Cumberland Road. To accompany Bill H.R. No. 54. January 14, 1830. -- Printed by order of the House of Representatives. Duties on imports, &c. Letter from the Secretary of the Treasury, transmitting a statement shewing the amount of duties accruing on goods imported, and drawbacks payable, during the years 1826, 1827, and 1828. January 19, 1830. Read, and laid upon the table. Intercourse with foreign nations. January 27, 1830. Referred to the Committee on Foreign Affairs. Message from the President of the United States, recommending to Congress a revision of the laws relating to the direct and contingent expenses in our intercourse with foreign nations. Unexpended balances. Mr. M'Duffie, from the Committee of Ways and Means, laid before the House the following statement of unexpended balances of appropriations, on the 31st of December, 1829. January 30, 1829 [i.e., 1830]. Printed by order of the House of Representatives. Society of Christian Indians. Message from the President of the United States, on the subject of an appropriation to pay the annuity due by the United States to the Society of Christian Indians. January 22, 1830. Referred to the Committee on Indian Affairs. Banks in the District of Columbia. January 22, 1830. Read, and laid upon the table. Letter from the Secretary of the Treasury, transmitting returns of the incorporated banks in the District of Columbia. United States and Colombia. Message from the President of the United States, transmitting information on the subject of the relations between the government of the United States and Colombia. January 19, 1830. Referred to the Committee on Foreign Affairs. Letter from the Secretary of the Navy, transmitting a statement of contracts made by the Commissioner of the Navy during the year 1829. January 19, 1830. Read, and laid upon the table. Contingent expenses Navy Department. January 25, 1830. Read, and laid upon the table. Officers and soldiers of the Revolution. Letter from the Secretary of War, in reply to a resolution of the House of Representatives of the 14th instant, in relation to the number of the surviving Revolutionary officers, &c. &c. January 19, 1830. Read, and laid upon the table. Ministerial duties -- Navy Department. (To accompany Bill H.R. No. 169.) Letter from the Secretary of the Navy, to the Chairman of the Committee on Naval Affairs, in relation to the ministerial duties of the officers of the Navy Department. January 28, 1830. Laid before the House by the Chairman of the Committee, and ordered to be printed. Canal, Atlantic to Gulf of Mexico. Letter from the Secretary of War, transmitting an estimate of the cost of completing a survey, &c. of a canal to connect the waters of the Atlantic and the Gulf of Mexico. January 28, 1830. Referred to the Committee of Ways and Means. Patent Office. January 27, 1830. Referred to the Committee on the Judiciary. Message from the President of the United States, transmitting a communication from the Secretary of State in relation to the Patent Office. Penitentiary -- Washington City. Message from the President of the United States, transmitting the annual report of the inspectors of the penitentiary in the District of Columbia. February 1, 1830. Read, and laid upon the table. Militia of the United States. Letter from the Secretary of War, transmitting abstract of the returns of the militia of the United States. February 5, 1830. Read, and laid upon the table. Assays -- gold coins -- Mint of the United States. Letter from the Secretary of the Treasury, transmitting a report of assays, made at the Mint of the United States, of foreign gold coins, during the year 1829. February 8, 1830. Read, and laid on the table. Commerce and navigation of the United States. Letter from the Secretary of the Treasury, transmitting statements respecting the commerce and navigation of the United States, &c. &c. February 5, 1830. Read, and laid upon the table. Pensacola bar. February 5, 1830. Ordered to be printed. Reservation -- Seneca Tribe of Indians. Letter from the Secretary of War, transmitting information, in relation to the wishes of the Seneca Tribe of Indians to sell a reservation of land, called the Seneca Reservation, in the State of Ohio. February 3, 1830. Referred to the Committee on Indian Affairs. Indian depredations in Georgia. Letter from the Secretary of War, transmitting the correspondence between that Department and the Executive of Georgia, relative to depredations committed by the Creek Indians on the frontier inhabitants of that state. January 11, 1830. -- Read, and laid upon the table. January 14, 1830. -- Referred to the Committee on Indian Affairs. Clerks in the Treasury Department. Letter from the Secretary of the Treasury, transmitting a list of the names of the clerks employed in the Treasury Department, during the year 1829, and the compensation allowed to each. January 19, 1830. Read, and laid upon the table. Indian treaties. Message from the President of the United States, transmitting copies of three treaties with Indian tribes, which have been duly ratified. January 14, 1830. Referred to the Committee of Ways and Means. Upon the subject of navy yards. Letter from the Secretary of the Navy, transmitting a report of the Commissioners of the Navy, upon the subject of navy yards. February 1, 1830. Referred to the Committee on Naval Affairs. Cape Fear River. Letter from the Secretary of War, transmitting a report in relation to the works on Cape Fear River. February 1, 1830. Referred to the Committee on Commerce. Attorney General of the U.S. and Attorney of the U.S. for the Territory of Arkansas. Letter from the Attorney General of the United States, transmitting copies of correspondence between the Attorney of the United States for the Territory of Arkansas, and the Attorney General of the United States, relative to cases decided by the Superior Court of the Territory of Arkansas, &c. &c. February 1, 1830. Read, and laid upon the table. Private land claims -- Florida. Letter from the Secretary of the Treasury, transmitting a report (final) on private land claims in East Florida. January 15, 1830. -- Read and referred to the Committee on Public Lands. February 5, 1830. -- Printed by order of the House of Representatives. Navy hospital, Norfolk, and asylum, Philadelphia. Documents to accompany Bill H.R. No. 170. Clerks in the War Department. Letter from the Secretary of War, transmitting a list of the names of the clerks employed in the War Department, during the year 1829, and the compensation allowed to each. January 19, 1830. Read, and laid upon the table. |
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Serial set 197 |
Armories and arms. Letter from the Secretary of War, transmitting a statement of expenditures at the United States' armories, and the arms manufactured therein, during the year 1829. March 26, 1830. Read, and laid upon the table. Salt works -- United States. Letter from the Secretary of the Treasury, transmitting a report of the number and nature of the salt works established in the United States, &c. &c. February 8, 1830. Read, and laid upon the table. Defence of northern frontier. Letter from the Secretary of War, in reply to a resolution of the House of Representatives, relative to plans for the defence of the northern frontier of the United States, &c. &c. March 2, 1830. Read, and laid upon the table Letter from the Secretary of War, transmitting a survey and estimate for the improvement of the harbor of Chicago, on Lake Michigan. March 2, 1830. Read, and referred to the Committee of the Whole House to which is committed the Bill H.R. No. 304. Warehouses. (To accompany Bill H.R. No. 329.) Letter from the Secretary of the Treasury, on the subject of public warehouses. March 6, 1830. Laid before the House by the Chairman of the Committee on Commerce, and ordered to be printed. Emoluments of officers of the Customs, &c. March 2, 1830. Referred to the Committee on Commerce. Appropriations -- War Department, &c. for 1829. Letter from the Secretary of War, transmitting a statement of appropriations from the War Department for the year 1829, the expenditure of the same, &c. &c. March 15, 1830. Read, and laid upon the table. Holders of Revolutionary land warrants. March 22, 1830. (To accompany Bill H.R. No. 370.) Intrusions on Cherokee lands. Message from the President of the United States, transmitting the information required by a Resolution of the House of Representatives of the 22d ultimo, in relation to intrusions on lands claimed by the Cherokee tribe of Indians, &c. &c. April 2, 1830. Read, and laid upon the table. Amount of postages for one year prior to 31st March, 1829. Letter from the Postmaster General, transmitting a statement of the amount of postages accruing in the United States for one year prior to 31st March, 1829. February 11, 1830. Read, and laid upon the table. Jean Marie Trahaud. January 18, 1830. Canal -- Boston Harbor to Narragansett Bay. February 5, 1830. Read, laid on the table, and ordered to be printed. Annual report of the Commissioners of the Sinking Fund. February 8, 1830. Read, and laid upon the table. Buzzard and Barnstable Bay Canal. Report and estimate on the Buzzard and Barnstable Bay Canal, Massachusetts. February 8, 1830. Printed by order of the House of Representatives. Treasury statements. 1st. Contracts made in 1829; 2d. Payments, miscellaneous claims; 3d. Payments, &c. collectors Revenue; 4th. Payments, sick and disabled seamen. February 9, 1830. Read, and laid upon the table. William B. Lawrence. Message from the President of the United States, transmitting the information required by a Resolution of the House of Representatives, of the 9th instant, in relation to the accounts of William B. Lawrence, as Charge des Affaires of the United States to Great Britain. February 19, 1830. Referred to the Committee on Foreign Affairs. Continuation of the Cumberland Road. Message from the President of the United States, transmitting a letter from the Chief of the Engineers, with surveys of two routes, for the continuation of the Cumberland Road. February 12, 1830. Read, and referred to the Committee of Ways and Means. Balances on the books of the revenue. Letter from the Comptroller of the Treasury, transmitting a list of the Register, of balances standing on the books of the revenue, which have remained unsettled by collectors of the Customs, and others, more than three years, prior to the 30th September last. February 11, 1830. Read, and laid upon the table. Expenditure of appropriation -- naval, 1829. Letter from the Secretary of the Navy, transmitting a statement shewing the appropriations for the naval service for the year 1829; the expenditure of the same, &c. &c. February 18, 1830. Referred to the Committee of Ways and Means. Military and invalid pensioners. Letter from the Secretary of War, in reply to a Resolution of the House of Representatives, respecting military and invalid pensioners. February 10, 1830. Read, and laid upon the table. Sunday mail. Letter from the Postmaster General, transmitting (in obedience to a Resolution of the House of Representatives of the 24th ultimo) a statement of the post routes within the United States, on which the mail is transported on Sunday. March 4, 1830. Read, and laid upon the table. Sick and disabled seamen -- Marine Hospital, &c. &c. March 2, 1830. Read, and referred to the Committee on Commerce. Fortifications. Letter from the Secretary of War, transmitting the information required by a resolution of the House of Representatives of the 27th ultimo, in relation to the appropriations for fortifications since 1815, &c. &c. March 9, 1830. Referred to the Committee on Military Affairs. Cadets -- Military Academy. Letter from the Secretary of War, transmitting the information required by a resolution of the House of Representatives of the 26th January last, on the subject of the Military Academy. March 15, 1830. Read, and laid upon the table. Survey -- Penobscot River. Message from the President of the United States, transmitting a copy of the report on survey made of the ship channel of Penobscot River, &c. &c. March 19, 1830. Read, and laid upon the table. Contracts General Post Office, 1829. Letter from the Postmaster General, transmitting a statement of contracts for transporting the mail of the United States, made during the year 1829. March 12, 1830. Read, and laid upon the table. Contracts -- War Department, 1829. Letter from the Secretary of War, transmitting statements of contracts made by the War Department during the year 1829. January 27, 1830. -- Read, and laid upon the table. March 30, 1830. -- Ordered to be printed. Annual report -- Navy Pension Fund. February 15, 1830. Printed by order of the House of Representatives. Light-house -- Point Lookout. Letter from the Secretary of the Treasury, transmitting the information required, in relation to the erection of a beacon-light or small light-house on Point Lookout. February 16, 1830. Read, and laid upon the table. Disbursements to the Indians. Letter from the Secretary of War, transmitting copies of accounts of persons charged or trusted with the disbursement of money, goods, or effects, for the benefit of the Indians, from the 1st September, 1828, to 1st September, 1829, &c. &c. February 23, 1830. Read, and laid upon the table. Mail route from Zanesville to Florence. Letter from the Postmaster General, communicating the information required by a Resolution of the House of Representatives of the 24th ultimo, respecting the transportation of the United States' mail from Zanesville, Ohio, to Florence, in Alabama. March 9, 1830. Read, and laid upon the table. Unproductive post roads. Letter from the Postmaster General, transmitting a list of unproductive post roads, &c. March 2, 1830. Read, and referred to the Committee on the Post Office and Post Roads. Arming and organizing the militia of the U.S. March 3, 1830. Laid before the House by the Chairman of the Committee on the Militia, and committed to the Committee of the Whole House to which is committed the Bill H.R. No. 168. Florida boundary. Message from the President of the United States, transmitting the information required by a Resolution of the House of Representatives of the 27th ultimo, respecting the report of the Commissioners for running the line between the United States and Florida, under the treaty of 1795. March 16, 1830. Read, and laid upon the table. Survey -- Flat Beach. Letter from the Secretary of War, transmitting a copy of a report of the engineer appointed to survey Flat Beach, or Tucker's Island, at Egg Harbor, in New Jersey, with an estimate of the expense of securing the harbor. March 16, 1830. Referred to the Committee on Commerce. Fortifications -- Pea Patch Island. Message from the President of the United States, transmitting a report from the War Department, in relation to the fortifications at Pea Patch Island, &c. &c. March 31, 1830. Referred to the Committee on Military Affairs. Operations of the Mint -- 1829. Message from the President of the United States, transmitting a report of the Director of the Mint, for the year 1829. February 9, 1830. Read, and laid upon the table. Accountability of public agents abroad, &c. (To accompany Bill H.R. No. 398.) March 30, 1830. Printed by order of the House of Representatives. |
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Farrow and Harris. Letter from the Secretary of War, transmitting the information required by a Resolution of the House of Representatives of the 10th instant, in relation to the settlement of the accounts of Farrow and Harris. May 14, 1830. Read, and laid upon the table Remove Indians -- west of the Mississippi. Message of the President of the United States, transmitting, in compliance with a Resolution of the House of Representatives, of the 18th ultimo, a report in relation to the expenses of removing and supporting the Indians west of the Mississippi. April 14, 1830. Read, and laid upon the table. Adjutant General Jones. Letter from the Secretary of War, transmitting a copy of the proceedings of the general court martial in the case of Adjutant General Roger Jones. May 14, 1830. Read, and laid upon the table. Delinquent clerks -- District Courts U. S. Letter from the Secretary of the Treasury, transmitting the information required by a Resolution of the House of Representatives of the 10th instant, in relation to moneys lost by the government, or by individuals who have paid moneys into court, &c. &c. May 13, 1830. Read, and referred to the Committee on the Judiciary. Savannah River. Letter from the Secretary of the Treasury, transmitting the information required by a Resolution of the House of Representatives of the 6th ultimo, in relation to disbursements which have been made in removing obstructions in the Savannah River, under authority of the Act of 18th May, 1826, &c. &c. May 20, 1830. Read, and laid upon the table. Report from the Secretary of the Treasury (in compliance with a Resolution of the Senate, of the 29th of December, 1828) respecting the relative value of gold and silver, &c. May 29, 1830. Printed by order of the House of Representatives. Miles King. Letter from the Secretary of the Navy, transmitting the information required by a resolution of the House of Representatives, of the 15th instant, in relation to the accounts of Miles King. May 28, 1830. Read, and laid upon the table. Compensation to officers of the Army of the U.S. Letter from the Secretary of War, transmitting the information required by a Resolution of the House of Representatives, of the 4th February last, in relation to the compensation of the officers of the Army of the United States. May 6, 1830. Read, and laid upon the table. Clerks -- General Post Office. Letter from the Postmaster General, transmitting a statement of the names of the clerks in the Post Office Department during the year 1829, and the compensation of each. May 20, 1830. Read, and laid upon the table. John B. Timberlake and Robert B. Randolph. Letter from the Secretary of the Navy, transmitting the information required by a resolution of the House of Representatives in relation to the accounts of John B. Timberlake and Robert B. Randolph. May 28, 1830. Read, and laid upon the table. Settlements on public lands, &c. Letter from the Secretary of the Treasury, transmitting the information required by a Resolution of the House of Representatives, in relation to settlements on the public lands, &c. May 26, 1830. Read, and laid upon the table. Articles, diminished importation of. Letter from the Secretary of the Treasury, transmitting the information required by a Resolution of the House of Representatives on the 30th January, 1829, in relation to articles upon which imposts are laid so high as to diminish or lessen the importation thereof, &c. January 29, 1830. Read, and laid upon the table. Harbor of Westbrook -- Connecticut. Letter from the Secretary of War, transmitting a survey and estimate for the improvement of the harbor of Westbrook, in the State of Connecticut. February 16, 1830. Referred to the Committee on Commerce. American canvass, cables, and cordage. In the House of Representatives, April 22, 1830. Mr. Spencer, of New York, from the Committee on Agriculture, reported the following resolution: Resolved, that six thousand copies of the Message of the President of the United States, of the 5th January, 1825, transmitting a report from the Secretary of the Navy, in relation to American canvass, cables, and cordage, be printed for the use of the House. This Resolution was adopted by the House. Survey of Sandy Bay, Massachusetts. Message from the President of the United States, transmitting a report of a survey of Sandy Bay, in the State of Massachusetts. April 24, 1830. Read, and laid upon the table. Receipts and expenditures -- 1789 to 1829. Letter from the Secretary of the Treasury, to the Chairman of the Committee on Retrenchment, transmitting a statement of the receipts and expenditures of the United States, from 4th March 1789, to 31st December, 1829, with a statement of the annual appropriations during the same period. April 12, 1830. Laid before the House by the Chairman of the Committee on Retrenchment, and ordered to be printed. Survey of the harbor of St. Augustine. Message from the President of the United States, transmitting a copy of the report of a survey of the harbor of St. Augustine. April 22, 1830. Read, and laid upon the table. Acts of Virginia -- Chesapeake and Ohio Canal. Message from the President of the United States, transmitting two acts of the Legislature of Virginia, respecting the Chesapeake and Ohio Canal Company. March 9, 1830. Referred to the Committee on Internal Improvements. April 24, 1830. Bill reported, No. 441. Seamen of the United States. Letter from the Secretary of State, transmitting an abstract of American seamen in the several districts of the United States, for 1829. April 15, 1830. Read, and laid upon the table. Receipts and expenditures -- Post Office Dept. Letter from the Postmaster General, transmitting, in compliance with a Resolution of the House of Representatives of the 26th instant, a statement showing the receipts and expenditures of the Post Office Department for the last two quarters of 1829 [i.e., 1828] and the first quarter of 1829. May 29, 1830. Read, and laid upon the table. Mint of the United States. Letter from the Secretary of the Treasury, transmitting statements showing the operations of the Mint, during the year 1829. May 26, 1830. Referred to the Committee of Ways and Means. Pay, &c. of naval officers and agents. Letter from the Secretary of the Navy, transmitting the information required by a Resolution of the House of Representatives, of the 4th of February last, respecting the pay, emoluments, and allowances, to officers and agents in the naval service of the United States. May 29, 1830. Read, and laid upon the table. Appropriations for examinations and surveys, &c. Message from the President of the United States, approving of the "Act Making Appropriations for Examinations and Surveys, and Also for Certain Works of Internal Improvement." May 31, 1830. Read, and laid upon the table. Expenditure -- Army proper. Letter from the Secretary of War, transmitting the information required by a Resolution of the House of Representatives, in relation to the annual amount expended upon the Army proper, from the 3d March, 1821, to the present time, &c. &c. May 29, 1830. Read, and laid upon the table. Appropriations -- first session Twenty-first Congress. Statement of appropriations made during the first session of the Twenty-first Congress of the United States of America; specifying the amount and object of each. May 31, 1830. Printed by order of the House of Representatives. Bank of Missouri. Letter from the Secretary of the Treasury, transmitting the information required by a Resolution of the House of Representatives, in relation to the claim of the United States on the Bank of Missouri, &c. &c. May 26, 1830. Read, and laid upon the table. Survey -- River Thames, Conn. Letter from the Secretary of War, transmitting a copy of a report of the engineer appointed to make a survey of the River Thames in the State of Connecticut. March 9, 1830. Referred to the Committee on Commerce. Sick and disabled seamen -- Providence, R. Island. Letter from the Secretary of the Treasury, in reply to a Resolution of the House of Representatives of the 6th instant, in relation to providing for sick and disabled seamen in Providence, Rhode Island, and providing for the erection of a marine hospital in said district, &c. &c. &c. April 27, 1830. Read, and laid upon the table. Assistant Secretary of State. (To accompany Bill H.R. No. 438.) Letter from the Secretary of State, to the Chairman of the Committee on Foreign Affairs, in relation to the appointment of an Assistant Secretary of State. April 23, 1830. Laid before the House by the Chairman of the Committee on Foreign Affairs, and ordered to be printed. Clerks -- Department of State. Letter from the Secretary of State, transmitting a list of the names of the clerks employed in the State Department during the last year, and the compensation of each. May 3, 1830. Read, and laid upon the table. Marine rail-way, &c. Message from the President of the United States, in reply to a Resolution of the House of Representatives, in relation to the erection of a marine rail-way at the Navy yard at Pensacola, &c. &c. May 13, 1830. Read, and referred to the Committee on Naval Affairs. Surveyors of public lands. Message from the President of the United States, recommending that provision be made by law for the punishment of persons guilty of interrupting the surveyors of the public lands, when engaged in the performance of the duties of their office. May 13, 1830. Referred to the Committee on the Judiciary. May 17, 1830. Printed by order of the House of Representatives. D'Homergue upon American silk. Report of the Committee on Agriculture on the growth and manufacture of silk; to which is annexed, "Essays on American Silk," with directions to farmers for raising silk worms. By John D'Homergue, silk manufacturer; and Peter Stephen Duponceau, member of the A. Philosophical Society, held at Philadelphia, for promoting useful knowledge. May 24, 1830. Printed by order of the House of Representatives. Navy yard -- Portsmouth, Virginia. Letter from the Secretary of the Navy, in reply to a Resolution of the House of Representatives of the 29th ultimo, requiring information of the probable loss of property to the United States, by changing the site of the Navy yard at Portsmouth, Virginia for one more eligible. May 6, 1830. Read, and laid upon the table. Passengers arriving in the U.S. in 1829. Letter from the Secretary of State, transmitting the annual statement of the number and description of passengers arriving in the United States on ship board, during the year ending on the 30th September, 1829. May 28, 1830. Read, and laid upon the table. Pay, &c., officers Marine Corps. May 25, 1830. Printed by order of the House of Representatives. Assignees of Comfort Sands. Letter from the Secretary of the Treasury, in reply to a Resolution of the House of Representatives, in relation to the claim of the assignees of Comfort Sands, et al. May 25, 1830. Read, and laid upon the table. Colonial trade. Message from the President of the United States, upon the subject of providing by law for carrying into effect any provision which may be effected by the minister of the United States with the British Government, relating to colonial trade, should the same be made known during the recess of Congress. May 26, 1830. Referred to the Committee on Commerce. Maysville Road. Message from the President of the United States, returning to the House of Representatives the enrolled bill, entitled "An Act Authorizing a Subscription of Stock in the Maysville, Washington, Paris, and Lexington Turnpike Road Company," with his objections thereto. May 27, 1830. Read, and to-morrow at 12 o'clock assigned for the re-consideration of the bill. |
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Manuel del Barco. January 4, 1830. Read, and laid upon the table Resolution of the Legislature of Pennsylvania. December 24, 1829. Read, and laid upon the table. Colonization Society. Additional land -- Fort Washington. February 4, 1830. Heirs of John Ellis, deceased. January 7, 1830. Elizabeth Mays. December 21, 1829. Ludlow's and Roberts' lines. To accompany Bill House of Representatives No. 141. January 20, 1830. Reprinted by order of the House of Representatives. Richard W. Eppes. December 28, 1829. Territory of Huron. January 6, 1830. Case of Stephen Olney. January 5, 1830. -- Printed by order of the House of Representatives. Orson Sparks and John Watson. December 21, 1829. Gabriel Godfroy. December 30, 1829. Retrenchment. March 22, 1830. Read, and laid upon the table. Nathaniel B. Wood. December 21, 1829. Richard Biddle, administrator of John Wilkins. December 21, 1829. Appeals and writs of error courts United States, in Florida. January 4, 1830. Read, and laid upon the table. Joel Byington. December 21, 1829. John Pierre Landerau. December 23, 1829. Heirs of Ulrich Reeser. January 20, 1830. Joseph Falconer. January 18, 1830. John Glass. January 18, 1830. Silas Wright, Jr. vs. George Fisher. Contested election. January 19, 1830. Read, and committed to a Committee of the Whole House on Tuesday next. Isaiah Townsend et al. Sureties of Dox. January 25, 1830. Henry Williams. January 25, 1830. Heirs of John Tuillier. January 18, 1830. Sale of public lands -- Alabama. Memorial of the Legislature of Alabama, praying for a postponement of the sales of public lands in the County of Jackson, in said state. January 18, 1830. Read, and referred to the Committee of the Whole House to which is committed the Bill (No. 79) to amend an act, entitled "An Act for the Relief of Purchasers of Public Lands that have Reverted for Non-Payment of the Purchase Money," approved May 23, 1828. Jean Marie Trahaud. January 18, 1830. Wilkins Tannehill. January 22, 1830. John Moffitt [i.e., Moffett]. January 18, 1830. Captain John Wood [i.e., Woods]. January 15, 1830. Memorial of Charles Bulfinch, on the subject of the hall of the House of Representatives. January 25, 1830. Referred to the Committee on the Public Buildings. Lewis Rouse. January 25, 1830. Hall of the House of Representatives, U.S. Memorial of Robert Mills, of South Carolina. January 14, 1830. Referred to the Committee on the Public Buildings, and ordered to be printed. Thomas Blackwell. January 29, 1830. Thomas Cooper. Petition of Thomas Cooper, President of the South Carolina College, praying that he may be refunded the amount of a fine which he paid to the United States, by reason of a conviction under the sedition law. February 1, 1830. Referred to the Committee on the Judiciary. January 25, 1830. Read, and postponed until Thursday next, 28 instant. Mr. De Witt, from the Committee on Retrenchment, submitted the following resolution: Resolved, that the annual allowance of fifteen hundred dollars, heretofore made, in the disbursements of the House of Representatives, for the service of a draughtsman, be, and the same hereby, discontinued. Claims of citizens of Georgia. January 26, 1830. Ratio of representation, &c. To accompany Bill H.R. No. 167. January 27, 1830. Organizing militia. January 27, 1830. With Bill No. 167 [i.e., 168]. David Rogers and sons. January 26, 1830. Nathaniel Childers. January 26, 1830. Read, and committed to a Committee of the Whole House to-morrow. Jotham Lincoln, administrator of Samuel B. February 1, 1830. Stafford and Yates, sureties of Southwick. January 25, 1830. Read, and committed to a Committee of the Whole House to-morrow. Elisha Ives. February 1, 1830. Jonathan M. Blaisdell. January 26, 1830. -- Read, and laid upon the table. January 29, 1830. -- Committed to a Committee of the Whole House to-morrow. Fielding L. White. February 1, 1830. James Barnett. January 26, 1830. John H. Wendal [i.e., Wendell]. January 26, 1830. Alexander Love. January 27, 1830. John Teel. January 29, 1830. Georgia Legislature -- election of President. February 1, 1830. Read, and laid upon the table. John Robinson. January 29, 1830. Sarah Easton and Dorothy Storer. January 29, 1830. Samuel Demarest. February 1, 1830. Read, and committed to a Committee of the Whole House, to-morrow. Michael Lewis. January 26, 1830. Mesheck Browning. February 5, 1830. Ardent spirits to soldiers. February 8, 1830. Medal of the President Liberator of Colombia. February 9, 1830. Read, considered, and concurred in by the House. Creek Nation of Indians. Memorial of certain chiefs of the Creek Nation of Indians. February 8, 1830. Read, and laid upon the table for one day. Jeremiah Walker. February 5, 1830. Specific appropriations. February 3, 1830. Read, and referred to the Committee of the Whole House on the State of the Union to which is committed the Bill (No. 102) making appropriations for the support of government for the year 1830. Commerce and navigation. February 8, 1830. Read, and referred to the Committee of the Whole House on the State of the Union. Marine Hospital -- Charleston, S.C. February 4, 1830. Cumberland Road in Indiana. Memorial of the Legislature of Indiana, in relation to the Cumberland Road in that state. February 8, 1830. Read, and referred to the Committee on Internal Improvements. Privateer Pension Fund. February 9, 1830. Jasper Parish. February 5, 1830. Water for the Capitol. February 2, 1830. Referred to the Committee on the Public Buildings. Aaron Reynolds. February 4, 1830. Aaron Snow. February 9, 1830. The heirs of William Treadwell. February 5, 1830. Mail route -- Louisville, Kentucky, to St. Louis. Resolution of the General Assembly of the State of Indiana, relative to the western mail stage route, from Louisville, in Kentucky, to St. Louis, in Missouri. February 8, 1830. Read, and referred to the Committee on Internal Improvements. James L. Ridgeley, Adm'r of Edward Moore. To accompany Bill H.R. No. 203. February 5, 1830. Printed by order of the House of Representatives. Pre-emption to certain persons in Florida. To accompany Bill H.R. No. 206. February 5, 1830. -- Re-printed by order of the House of Representatives. Richard Livingston. February 9, 1830. Charles Josslyn's bail. February 8, 1830. Joseph Young. February 5, 1830. Benjamin Gibbs. Nancy Dolan. December 21, 1829. Lewis Schrack. December 21, 1829. Creed Glover. December 28, 1829. Abigail Appleton. December 21, 1829. -- Reprinted. With Bill No. 12. Documents accompanying Bill No. 12, for the relief of Elijah Carr. Dec. 21, 1829. -- Referred, with the bill, to a Committee of the Whole House, to-morrow. Representatives of Benjamin Clarke. December 23, 1829. Peter Ford. December 21, 1829. John H. Watts. December 22, 1829. Administrators of John Wilson. December 22, 1829. Churchwardens Elizabeth City Parish, Virginia. December 23, 1829. Reprinted by order of the House of Representatives. John Burnham. December 23, 1829. Francis Comparet. December 30, 1829. William Jacocks. December 22, 1829. Marigny D'Auterive. December 28, 1829. King and Thurber. December 23, 1829. Antoine Prudhomme et al. December 29, 1829. Alexander Fridge. January 13, 1830. Samuel Sitgreaves. January 11, 1830. Heirs of Widow Dupre. January 13, 1830. James Smith. January 8, 1830. John P. Cox. January 4, 1830. Read, and, with the bill, committed to a Committee of the Whole House to-morrow. Benjamin Homans. January 13, 1830. William Morrisson [i.e., Morrison]. January 8, 1830. William Saunders, et al. January 11, 1830. Allowance to jurors -- courts, U.S. January 4, 1830. Read, and laid upon the table. Alexander Claxton. January 7, 1830. Lobster fishery. January 13, 1830. Read, and laid upon the table. Wallace Robinson. January 11, 1830. Conaleskee, or Challenge, James Ore, Giles M'Anulty, and George Stiggins. (With Bill No. 97.) January 11, 1830. Francois Isidore Tuillier. January 13, 1830. Brevet officers, paymaster general, and surgeon general. January 4, 1830. Read, and laid upon the table. Thomas Park. January 12, 1830. Heirs of Le Gendre. January 13, 1830. John McDonogh. January 11, 1830. James Linsey. January 4, 1830. Read, and laid upon the table. Alexander Boyd. January 11, 1830. Peter Gasney. January 8, 1830. South Carolina claims. January 11, 1830. Samuel Holgate. January 13, 1830. Read, and committed to a Committee of the Whole House to-morrow. Heirs of Peter Cabet. January 20, 1830. Bowie, Kurtz, et al. January 20, 1830. Ann Brashears. January 20, 1830. Judge Superior Court -- Arkansas. (With Bill H.R. No. 112.) January 14, 1830. Legislature of Georgia -- Tariff of 1828. January 18, 1830. -- Read, and laid upon the table. Military peace establishment. January 18, 1830. Job Alvord. January 20, 1830. Charles Brown. January 18, 1830. Judah Alden. January 18, 1830. James Porliers [i.e., Porlier] et al. January 15, 1830. School lands, salines, &c. in Missouri. (With Bill H.R. 131.) January 19, 1830. Printed by order of the House of Representatives. Washburn vs. Ripley. To be annexed to the report of the Committee of Elections in the case of Reuel Washburn vs. James W. Ripley. January 22, 1830. Printed by order of the House of Representatives. Walter Livingston. January 18, 1830. Samuel Sprigg. January 27, 1830. George Ermatinger. January 29, 1830. Richard Wall. January 25, 1830. Read, and committed to a Committee of the Whole House to-morrow. Tennessee to issue grants. To accompany Bill H.R. 185. January 29, 1830. Ephraim Whitaker. January 26, 1830. Public buildings -- Arkansas. January 26, 1830. Henry Bull. Debenture on rum exported. February 1, 1830. Referred to the Committee of Ways and Means. Vessels sunk for defence of Baltimore. (To accompany Bill H.R. No. 191.) February 1, 1830. Printed by order of the House of Representatives. Sale of U. States' lands in Ohio to that state. January 28, 1830. Additional clerks in the Post Office Department. January 26, 1830. Tariff of 1828. February 1, 1830. Read, and referred to the Committee of the Whole House to which is committed the report of the Committee on Manufactures upon the subject of the tariff. Jonathan Taylor and others. January 29, 1830. Charles Collins. January 29, 1830. John Hayner. January 29, 1830. Memorial of the Legislative Council of the Territory of Michigan, asking for an additional body to the Territorial Legislature. December 16, 1829. Referred to the Committee on the Territories. February 1, 1830. Bill reported, No. 189. Alter organization Marine Corps. Report, in part, upon so much of the President's message, referred to the Military Committee, as relates to the expediency of merging the marines in the United States' artillery or infantry. February 5, 1830. Lewis Marks and Alexander O. Brodie. February 5, 1830. James Fisk. February 5, 1830. To be annexed to the report of the Committee of Claims in the case of Moritz Furst. William Tipton. December 30, 1829. Memorial of the Baltimore and Ohio Rail Road Company. December 23, 1829. Referred to the Committee on Internal Improvement. James D. Cobb. December 23, 1829. Alexander Scott. December 23, 1829. Alexander Montgomery. December 22, 1829. Jean Baptiste Jerome. December 30, 1829. Jean Baptiste Conture [i.e, Couture]. December 30, 1829. Arund Rutgers. December 23, 1829. Arnold vs. Lea. Contested election. December 29, 1829. Read, and committed to a Committee of the Whole House on Thursday next. John Rodriguez. December 28, 1829. Hubert La Croix, et al. December 30, 1829. Jacob Wilderman. January 4, 1830. George and William Bangs. January 4, 1830. Increase of the Corps of Engineers. (See document No. 36, of the first session of the Nineteenth Congress.) January 4, 1830. Document to accompany Bill No. 56, for the gradual increase of the Engineer Corps. Frederick Raymer. January 4, 1830. Memorial of Farnifold Green. January 6, 1830. -- Referred to the Committee on Naval Affairs. Printed by order of the House of Representatives. Francis Tennill. December 31, 1829. Tariff. January 5, 1830. -- Read, and laid on the table. James Abbot. January 6, 1830. John Wells. December 28, 1829. Read, and committed to a Committee of the Whole House to-morrow. Martha Yeomans. February 4, 1830. Case of Susan Decatur, et al. To accompany Bill H.R. No. 82. January 7, 1830. Printed by order of the House of Representatives of the United States. Luther Chapin. December 31, 1829. Thomas Buford. January 4, 1830. Bank of Chillicothe. January 4, 1830. Daniel M'Duff. January 6, 1830. The case of Nathaniel Patten. January 6, 1830. Erastus Granger. December 28, 1829. |
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John Heard, assignee of Amasa Davis. March 4, 1830 Loomis & Bassett. February 12, 1830 Major M.M. Payne. February 8, 1830 Pennsylvania. Memorial of the inhabitants of Pittsburgh, relative to protecting Indians in Georgia. February 22, 1830. Read, and laid upon the table for one day. Skinner's grand basin -- water for public buildings, &c. March 8, 1830. Read, and so much thereof as relates to the system of internal improvements referred to the Committee on Internal Improvements; the residue, to the Committee for the District of Columbia. Thomas F. Cornell. February 17, 1830. Charter of Georgetown. February 11, 1830. William Henry. March 2, 1830. Read, and laid upon the table. David M. Lewis. December 28, 1829. Read, and laid upon the table. February 15, 1830. Committed to a Committee of the Whole House to-morrow. Turnpike road in Tennessee. Resolutions of the Legislature of the State of Tennessee, in relation to the construction of a turnpike road from the Virginia line to the Mississippi River. February 25, 1830. Read, and referred to the Committee of the Whole House on the State of the Union, to which is committed the Bill (H.R. No. 285) authorizing a subscription of stock in the Maysville, Washington, Paris, and Lexington Turnpike Road Company. Ephraim F. Gilbert. February 24, 1830. Pennsylvania. Memorial of the Baptist General Association of Pennsylvania for missionary purposes. (With Bill H.R. No. 287.] March 2, 1830. Read, and committed to the Committee on the Whole House on the State of the Union. James Soyer. Chesapeake and Ohio Canal west of the Alleghany [i.e., Allegheny]. March 8, 1830. Read, and laid upon the table. Simeon Theus. March 2, 1830. Col. John Laurens -- representatives of. March 2, 1830. William D. King, et al. March 2, 1830. New York. Memorial of the Board of Managers of the New York Babtist [i.e., Baptist] Missionary Society. March 2, 1830. Referred to the Committee of the Whole House on the State of the Union on Bill No. 287. James Gibbon. March 2, 1830. James Monroe. March 6, 1830. Re-manufacture of iron. Petition of inhabitants of the City and County of Philadelphia, concerned in the re-manufacture of iron. March 2, 1830. Referred to the Committee of the Whole House on the State of the Union. John F. Girod. March 2, 1830. Growth and manufacture of silk. March 12, 1830. R.S. Hackley. March 16, 1830. Coleman Fisher. March 16, 1830. Sylvester Havens. March 12, 1830. Columbian College. March 12, 1830. Road -- Memphis and Tuscumbia. (With Bill H.R. No. 354.) March 15, 1830. Elizabeth Dandridge. February 10, 1830. James McCarty. February 20, 1830. John A. Parker. December 23, 1829. Read, and laid upon the table. February 15, 1830. Committed to a Committee of the Whole House to-morrow. Matilda B. Dunn. February 19, 1830. Read, and laid upon the table. February 20, 1830. Committed to a Committee of the Whole House to-morrow. Certificates to issue for lands in Louisiana, in certain cases. To accompany Bill House of Representatives No. 260. February 18, 1830. Printed by order of the House of Representatives. Colin M'Lachlan. February 15, 1830. Baldwin M. Leland. December 28, 1829. Read, and laid upon the table. February 15, 1830. Committed to a Committee of the Whole House to-morrow. Geo. Loyall vs. Tho. Newton -- contested election. February 19, 1830. Read, and committed to a Committee of the Whole House Tuesday next. Road -- Uniontown, Pittsburg, Presque Isle. February 15, 1830. Read, and laid upon the table. Memorial of the ladies of Steubenville, Ohio, against the forcible removal of the Indians without the limits of the United States. February 15, 1830. Read: -- Ordered that it lie one day upon the table. Children of Charles Comb, &c. February 11, 1830. George Innes. February 15, 1830. David Kilbourn. February 12, 1830 John Sapp. February 15, 1830. Survey -- Cumberland River. February 10, 1830. Read, and laid upon the table. Fire companies, District Columbia. February 17, 1830. John Buhler. February 15, 1830. George E. Tingle. February 17, 1830. James Gordon. February 10, 1830. Gates Hoit. February 20, 1830. Baltimore and Ohio Rail Road Company. February 19, 1830. Street -- Capitol to executive offices. To accompany Bill H.R. No. 224. February 10, 1830. John Lord. February 10, 1830. Eugene Borell. February 15, 1830. Canal -- Tennessee and Coosa Rivers. February 10, 1830. Read, and laid upon the table. F.M. Arredondo. (With Bill H.R. No. 221.) February 9, 1830. Eleanor Courts. February 26, 1830. Benjamin Wells. February 26, 1830. Massachusetts claim. February 22, 1830. Read, laid upon the table, and ordered to be printed. Ohio. Petition of inhabitants of Greene, Trumbull County, Ohio, on behalf of the Indians. February 22, 1830. Read, and laid upon the table. Indians. Memorial of the Indian Board for the Emigration, Preservation, and Improvement, of the Aborigines of America. February 22, 1830. Read, and laid upon the table. John Bruce. February 27, 1830. Indigent deaf and dumb. February 23, 1830 Samuel Ward. February 27, 1830. Stephen Hook. February 22, 1830. Ann D. Baylor. February 26, 1830. Farmington, and Hampshire and Hampden, canals. Statement on the petition of the Farmington, and Hampshire and Hampden, canals. (To accompany Bill H.R. No. 276.) February 22, 1830. Printed by order of the House of Representatives. Francis Preston. February 25, 1830. Re-printed by order of the House of Representatives. Timothy Risley. February 26, 1830. Edmund Brooke. February 26, 1830. Removal of Indians. February 24, 1830. Accompanied by a Bill (No. 287) which was twice read, and committed to a Committee of the Whole House on the State of the Union -- and ten thousand copies of report and bill ordered to be printed. Samuel Meeker. February 19, 1830. Read, and laid upon the table. February 25, 1830. Committed to a Committee of the Whole House to-morrow. Canal -- Tennessee River to Mobile Bay. February 25, 1830. Printed by order of the House of Representatives. Memorial of the General Assembly of the State of Tennessee, upon the subject of a canal or rail road to connect the waters of Tennessee River and Mobile Bay. Samuel Watson and George Hoppas. February 25, 1830. Road -- Chicot County to Little Rock. February 22, 1830. John Campbell -- heirs of. March 5, 1830. Antoine Dequindre, et al. March 3, 1830. Memorial of Charles Cramer, et al. March 8, 1830. Referred to the Committee of Ways and Means. Pennsylvania -- Chamber of Commerce, Philadelphia. Reduction of duties on tea and coffee. March 8, 1830. Referred to the Committee of the Whole House on the State of the Union. Robert A. Forsythe. March 10, 1830. Peter Bargy, Jr. et al. March 2, 1830. Memorial of the American Colonization Society. The Committee to whom was referred the memorial of the American Colonization Society, have instructed their Chairman to request the House to cause the memorial, and its accompanying documents, to be printed. March 6, 1830. Printed by order of the House of Representatives Peter Bonnefit. March 9, 1830. Read, and laid upon the table. George Brown -- sureties of. March 2, 1830. Senate amendments to Bill H.R. No. 116. March 15, 1830. Read, and committed to the Committee of the Whole House on the State of the Union. Survey of Connecticut River, &c. March 15, 1830. Read, and laid upon the table. Eber Hubbard. March 12, 1830. Doctor Eliakim Crosby. May 8, 1828 [i.e., 1830]. Printed by order of the House of Representatives. March 3, 1830. Levy Court -- Calvert County. February 8, 1830. Read, and committed to a Committee of the Whole House tomorrow. Dorothy Wells. February 15, 1830. Susanna McHugh. February 15, 1830. Boundary line -- Florida and Georgia. (To accompany Bill House of Representatives No. 243.) February 13, 1830. Elizabeth Williams. February 11, 1830. Garret [i.e., Garrett] Fountain. February 19, 1830. Read, and committed to a Committee of the Whole House to-morrow. Claim of Delaware. February 11, 1830. Legislature of Alabama. Memorial of the Legislature of the State of Alabama, for relief to purchasers of public lands. February 15, 1830. Read, and referred to the Committee of the Whole House to which is committed the Bill (No. 49) to dispose of reverted and relinquished lands. Josiah H. Webb. February 10, 1830. John Donnell. February 17, 1830. -- Read, and laid upon the table. Pennsylvania. Memorial of inhabitants of Montgomery County, in relation to the Cherokees and other Indians. February 22, 1830. Read, and laid upon the table. Ohio. Memorial of inhabitants of Brown County, in the State of Ohio, in relation to the Cherokee Indians. February 22, 1830. Read, and laid upon the table. Matthews Flournoy and R.J. Ward. February 24, 1830. Pennsylvania. Memorial of inhabitants of Montgomery County, in relation to the Cherokee Indians. March 1, 1830. Referred to the Committee of the Whole House on Bill No. 287. New Jersey. Petition of inhabitants of Rahway and Woodbridge &c. &c. in relation to the Cherokee and other Indians. March 1, 1830. Referred to the Committee of the Whole on Bill No. 287. Governor and judges of Arkansas. February 26, 1830. Public ministers and consuls. [To accompany Bills House of Representatives Nos. 274 and 275.] February 22, 1830. Pennsylvania. Memorial of inhabitants of Lower Dublin, Philadelphia County, in relation to the southern Indians. March 1, 1830. Referred to the Committee of the Whole House on the State of the Union on Bill No. 287. Edward Lee. February 22, 1830. Southern Indians. Petition of the yearly meeting of Friends in New England. March 1, 1830. Read, and committed to the Committee of the Whole House to which is committed the Bill (No. 287) to provide for the removal of the Indian tribes within any of the states and territories, and for their permanent settlement west of the River Mississippi. Widow and heirs of Joseph Hulse. February 25, 1830. Cherokee and other Indians. Memorial of inhabitants of the State of Massachusetts, in relation to the Cherokee and other Indian tribes. March 1, 1830. Read, and committed to the Committee of the Whole House on the State of the Union. Captain Thomas Paine. February 24, 1830. John Fruge, of Louisiana. March 2, 1830. Richard G. Morriss. March 6, 1830. Heirs of Robert Fulton. March 3, 1830. Laws for the District of Columbia. March 3, 1830. Read, and laid upon the table. Mint United States. March 5, 1830. Pennsylvania -- dealers in tea and coffee, Philadelphia. March 8, 1830. Referred to the Committee of the Whole House on the State of the Union. John O. Lay. March 8, 1830. Read, and committed to a Committee of the Whole House to-morrow. Sunday mail. March 4, 1830. Read, and committed to the Committee of the Whole House on the State of the Union. March 5, 1830. Printed by order of the House of Representatives. James Bradford. March 16, 1830. Nathaniel Bird. March 11, 1830. Patents to issue to foreigners, not residents. March 15, 1830. Read, and committed to a Committee of the Whole House to-morrow. Memorial of the General Assembly of Indiana, respecting the removal of the Indians beyond the Mississippi. March 8, 1830. Read, and committed to the Committee of the Whole House on the State of the Union. Philip Slaughter. February 26, 1830. |
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Francis Larche. May 11, 1830. Read, and, with the bill, committed to a Committee of the Whole House to-morrow Anthony Foreman and John G. Ross. April 16, 1830 Slave trade. (To accompany Bill H.R. No. 412.) April 7, 1830 Transylvania University. March 17, 1830. Soldiers of the Revolution. January 8, 1830. -- Read, and laid upon the table. James W. Brannin, Chas. Hughes, and Nath. Ford. May 24, 1830. Nathaniel Standish. May 25, 1830. Expenditures -- State Department. April 27, 1830. Read, and laid upon the table. Canal -- Lake Michigan to Illinois River. Illinois to relinquish land and issued scrip. April 22, 1830. (To accompany Bill H.R. No. 255.) William Clower. April 19, 1830. Farmington and Hampshire Canal Company. April 2, 1830. Printed by order of the House of Representatives. Robert Eaton. March 18, 1830. Skinner's grand central basin. April 22, 1830. Read, and laid upon the table. Robert Smart. April 15, 1830. John Conard. March 22, 1830. Heirs of John Dauphin. March 16, 1830. Read, and laid upon the table. Print rules -- Jefferson's Manual, &c. April 15, 1830. Read, and laid upon the table. Navigation Ohio and Mississippi Rivers. (To accompany Bill H.R. No. 440.) April 23, 1830. Elisha Tracy. April 10, 1830. Read, and with the bill, committed to a Committee of the Whole House to-morrow. John Boone. May 3, 1830. Wheeling and Belmont Bridge Company. May 11, 1830. William Stewart. May 11, 1830. Richard Hardesty. May 12, 1830. Read, and committed to a Committee of the Whole House to-morrow. Cumberland Road. May 24, 1830. (To accompany Bill No. 483.) Amos Binney. May 24, 1830. Read, and referred to the Committee of the Whole House to which is committed the Bill H.R. No. 441, confirming certain acts of the Legislature of Virginia, relating to the Chesapeake and Ohio Canal Company. Public lands. Mr. Clay's resolutions, December 18, 1829. Read, and concurred in by the House. Jane Muir. March 17, 1830. Retrenchment. March 18, 1830. Read, and laid upon the table. Joshua Kennedy. March 25, 1830. Retrenchment. March 22, 1830. Read, and laid upon the table. Nathaniel Childers. March 29, 1830. William Carter -- heirs of. March 26, 1830. Maison Rouge and De Bastrop's claims. April 6, 1830. Reprinted by order of the House of Representatives. John H. Thomas. March 30, 1830. Percia Tupper. March 22, 1830. Draughtsman to the House of Representatives. March 30, 1830. Read, and laid upon the table. Judge Peck. March 23, 1830. Read, and committed to the Committee of the Whole House on the State of the Union. Richard W. Steele. March 23, 1830. Pennsylvania. Memorial of ship carpenters, smiths, rope makers, and others, employed or connected in ship building, in the City of Philadelphia. April 19, 1830. Referred to the Committee of the Whole House on the State of the Union to which is committed the Bill H.R. No. 164 to amend An Act in Alteration of the Several Acts Imposing Duties on Imports. William Tharp. April 19, 1830. Timothy D. and Robert A. Pettigrew. April 16, 1830. Read, and committed to a Committee of the Whole House to-morrow. Bartholomew Delapierre. May 3, 1830. Parker McCobb. May 7, 1830. Moses Adams. May 11, 1830. Read, and committed to a Committee of the Whole House to-morrow. John F. Ohl. May 14, 1830. John Brunson. May 17, 1830. Read, and, with the bill, committed to a Committee of the Whole House to-morrow. Jonathan Walton and John J. [i.e., I.] De Graff. April 27, 1830. Stockholders, &c. Bank United States. May 26, 1830. Read, and ordered to lie upon the table for one day. Mississippi. Resolution of the Legislature of the State of Mississippi upon the subject of the tariff, colonization society, and internal improvements. March 15, 1830. Read, and laid upon the table. James H. Peck. April 29, 1830. Read, and laid upon the table. Samuel Wagstaff. May 5, 1830. Andrew H. Richardson. May 3, 1830. Expenditures -- Navy Department. May 5, 1830. Read, and laid upon the table. Steam boats and steam vessels. May 4, 1830. Indians. Laws of the colonial and state governments, relating [to] the Indian inhabitants. March 19, 1830. Printed by order of the House of Representatives, and under the direction of the Committee on Indian Affairs. Roanoke Inlet. March 19, 1830. Read, and referred to the Committee on Commerce. Lands for education. March 18, 1830. Salaries -- judges of Michigan. March 17, 1830. J.N. Cardozo. March 17, 1830. Alfred Conkling. April 3, 1830. Read, and laid upon the table. Joint rules. April 6, 1830. Read, and laid upon the table. John Good. March 29, 1830. Read, and committed to a Committee of the Whole House to-morrow. Jared E. Groce. March 25, 1830. James H. Peck. Memorial of James H. Peck, Judge of the District Court of the United States for the District of Missouri. April 5, 1830. Read, and laid upon the table. Expenditure -- Treasury Department, 1829. April 6, 1830. Read, and laid upon the table. Post Office establishment. April 14, 1830. Committed to the Committee of the Whole House on the State of the Union. Sandy and Beaver Canal. April 12, 1830. Read, and laid upon the table. Joseph Eaton. To accompany Bill H.R. No. 430. April 19, 1830. Philip and Eliphalet Greely. April 26, 1830. Miami Exporting Company. April 19, 1830. Joseph Jeans. April 14, 1830. James H. Peck. Letter from James H. Peck to the Speaker of the House of Representatives of the United States, transmitting an explanation in answer to the charges preferred against him, as Judge of the District Court of the United States for the District of Missouri, by Luke E. Lawless. April 14, 1830. Read, and committed to the Committee of the Whole House on the State of the Union. Skinner's grand central basin. April 20, 1830. Read, and referred to the Committee on Internal Improvements. Heirs of Doctor Kennedy. April 9, 1830. Cherokee Indians. Memorial of a delegation of the Cherokee Nation of Indians. May 10, 1830. Read, and laid upon the table. Charles Cassedy. May 7, 1830. Ohio. Titles to sec. 8, 11, 26, 29: Thirteenth Township, &c. &c. May 24, 1830. Read, and laid upon the table. W.C. Daniell vs. Bargy, Norton, and Wolverton. May 26, 1830. Referred to the Committee of the Whole House to which is committed the Bill (H.R. No. 307) for the relief of Peter Bargy, Jr., Stephen Norton, and Hiram Wolverton. Benjamin Pendleton. May 31, 1830. Thomas F. Hunt. May 29, 1830. Read, and laid upon the table. Sugar cane. January 13, 1830. Read, and laid upon the table. Oppressive duties. January 27, 1830. Read, and committed to a Committee of the Whole House on the State of the Union. Index to public documents. February 10, 1830. Read, and postponed until the 20th February, instant. West Point Academy. February 25, 1830. Read, and laid upon the table. Journals of Congress, 1774 to 1788. February 25, 1830. Read, and laid upon the table. Amend the rules. February 23, 1830. Read, and laid upon the table. February 24, 1830. Considered, and postponed until Monday, 1st March. Entombment and statue of Washington. In the House of Representatives of the United States, February 22, 1830. Ohio. Resolution of the Ohio Legislature, on the subject of domestic manufactures. March 15, 1830. Read, and laid upon the table. William Gallop. March 17, 1830. Ohio. Memorial of citizens of the County of Miami, in the State of Ohio, in relation to the Indian tribes. March 17, 1830. Referred to the Committee of the Whole House on the State of the Union. Jeremiah Buckley -- heirs of. March 19, 1830. Massachusetts. Memorial of inhabitants of Hampshire County, Massachusetts, in relation to the Indian tribes. March 17, 1830. Referred to the Committee of the Whole House on the State of the Union. William Vawters [i.e., Vawter]. March 19, 1830. Memorials of the Cherokee Indians, signed by their representatives, and by 3,085 individuals of the Nation. February 15, 1830. Presented, and laid on the table. March 15, 1830. Committed to the Committee of the Whole House on the State of the Union to which is committed the Bill No. 287, to provide for the removal of the Indian tribes in any of the states and territories west of the River Mississippi, and for their permanent location. Daniel Goodwin. March 19, 1830. Farrow and Harris. March 19, 1830. Read, and committed to a Committee of the Whole House to-morrow. Virginia. Memorial of the Wheeling Bridge Company. March 12, 1830. Referred to the Committee on Internal Improvements. Ohio and Mississippi River. Memorial of sundry citizens of Louisville, Kentucky, praying for the improvement of the navigation of the Ohio and Mississippi Rivers. March 29, 1830. Read, and referred to a select committee, consisting of Messrs. Wickliffe, Bell, Findlay, Hinds, Denny, Duncan, and Overton. Nancy Davis. March 22, 1830. Roger Enos. April 5, 1830. Robert Kaine, of Buffalo, N.Y. March 31, 1830. William Forsythe. March 22, 1830. Ichabod Ward. March 22, 1830. Thomas W. Newton, assignee of Robert Crittenden. March 31, 1830. Henry Kilbourn. March 26, 1830. John Wilson -- heirs of. March 27, 1830. Denison & Ely. March 26, 1830. Daniel Johnson. March 26, 1830. Water for the Capitol. Letter from Robert Mills to the Chairman of the Committee on the Public Buildings, upon the subject of providing a supply of water for the use of the Capitol. April 5, 1830. Printed by order of the House of Representatives. Bank of the United States. April 13, 1830. Read, and laid upon the table Judicial terms -- southern district, New York, &c. April 12, 1830. Read, and committed to a Committee of the Whole House to-morrow. Mounted force. April 8, 1830. Printed by order of the House of Representatives. Patrick Green. April 19, 1830. Whitford Gill. April 15, 1830. David Brooks. April 9, 1830. John M'Iver. April 14, 1830. Read, and laid upon the table. Surveys for roads. April 12, 1830. Read, and laid upon the table. William H. Harrison. April 23, 1830. William Price. April 9, 1830. Alfred Conkling. April 8, 1830. Read, and laid upon the table. Samuel Keep. April 15, 1830. Governor Blount's claim. April 14, 1830. George Johnson [i.e., Johnston]. April 12, 1830. Read, and committed, with the bill, to a Committee of the Whole House to-morrow. Peter Yarnell and Samuel Mitchell. May 11, 1830. Read, and committed to the Committee of the Whole House to which is committed the report of the Committee of Claims, on the petition of John O. Lay. William Gibbs. May 7, 1830. Read, and, with the bill, committed to a Committee of the Whole House to-morrow. Lands to officers, &c. -- Virginia state line. May 13, 1830. Printed by order of the House of Representatives. Duty on salt. May 13, 1830. Read, and laid upon the table. Ariel Ensign. April 29, 1830. Bridge across the Ohio. April 29, 1830. Read, and laid upon the table. David Kennard. May 14, 1830. Stafford and Yates. April 29, 1830. Read, and laid upon the table. Peter Peck. May 19, 1830. Read, and with an accompanying bill for his relief, committed to the Committee of the Whole House to which is committed the bill for the relief of John Sapp. Elisha James. May 25, 1830. B.H. Reeves, G.O. Sibley, and Thomas Mather. May 26, 1830. Read, and committed to the Committee of the Whole House to-morrow. Lieutenant Charles Wilkes, Jr. March 17, 1830. |
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Serial set 202 | Journal of the Senate of the United States of America: being the second session of the Twenty-first Congress, begun and held at the City of Washington, December 6, 1830, and in the fifty-fifth year of the independence of the said United States. | 1 |
Serial set 203 |
In Senate of the United States, December 16, 1830. Read, and ordered to be printed. Mr. Holmes made the following report: The Committee on Pensions, to which was referred the petition of Aaron Fitzgerald, report: That the petitioner was a soldier in the last war... In Senate of the United States, January 24, 1831. Ordered, that the following report, made on the 2d March, 1829, be printed. The Committee on the Judiciary, to whom was referred the petition of Eleanor Worthington, executrix, and James T. Worthington, executor, on the estate of the late Thomas Worthington, deceased... List of committees of the Senate of the United States for the second session, Twenty-first Congress, 1830-'31. December 31, 1830. Message from the President of the United States, with copies of correspondence between the Secretary of State and the minister from Denmark, concerning the commercial intercourse between the United States and the Danish possessions in the West Indies. January 4, 1831. Read, and ordered to be printed, and referred to the Committee on Foreign Relations. Report of the Secretary of the Navy, in reply to a resolution of the Senate, relative to the mode of relieving United States' vessels on foreign stations, and the means taken for the return to the United States of seamen whose terms of service expire abroad, &c. December 29, 1830. Read, and ordered to be printed. Message from the President of the United States, with papers relating to the recent arrangement with Great Britain, with respect to the trade between the United States and her colonial possessions. January 4, 1831. Ordered to be printed, and referred to the Committee on Commerce. In Senate of the United States, January 4, 1831. Read, and ordered to be printed. Mr. White made the following report: The Committee on Indian Affairs, to whom was referred a Resolution of the Senate, instructing a inquiry into the expediency of extinguishing the Indian title... Memorial of inhabitants of Vassalborough, Maine, praying that protection may be extended to the Indian tribes by Congress, &c. January 3, 1831. Referred to Committee on Indian Affairs, and ordered to be printed. George Johnson. In Senate of the United States, January 5, 1831. Mr. Hayne laid on the table the following documents relating to Senate Bill No. 11. Memorial of inhabitants of Woodbridge, New Jersey, for protection to the Indians and repeal of the act of last session on the subject. January 14, 1831. Referred to the Committee on Indian Affairs, and ordered to be printed. Memorial of sundry inhabitants of Pennsylvania, praying that the Indians may be protected in their rights, &c. January 19, 1831. Referred to the Committee on Indian Affairs, and ordered to be printed. Memorial of inhabitants of Andover, Essex Co., Massachusetts, that the Indians be protected in their rights, &c. January 21, 1831. Referred to Committee on Indian Affairs, and ordered to be printed. Resolution of the Legislature of Alabama, in opposition to any measure for stopping the mail on Sunday. January 22, 1831. Referred to Committee on the Post Office and Post Roads, and ordered to be printed. Report of the Secretary of the Treasury, on the state of the finances, for 1830. December 16, 1830. Read, and ordered to be printed, and that fifteen hundred additional copies be printed for the use of the Senate. Memorial of the Baltimore and Ohio Rail Road Company, for permission to extend a lateral branch of their road to some point within the District of Columbia. December 14, 1830. -- Referred to the Committee on Roads and Canals. December 15, 1830. -- Ordered to be printed. In Senate of the United States, December 16, 1830. Read, and ordered to be printed. Mr. Johnston made the following report: The Committee of Finance, to which was referred the petition of Simeon C. Whittier, report: The petitioner, on the 7th day of December, A.D. 1813, became one of the sureties of Daniel Evans, collector of direct taxes and internal duties... In Senate of the United States, December 24, 1830. Read, and ordered to be printed. Mr. Poindexter, from the Committee on Private Land Claims, made the following report: The Committee on Private Land Claims, to which was referred the petition of Joseph Walker and Eliza Ann Griffith, formerly Eliza Ann Walker, surviving children and heirs of Peter Walker... Case of James H. Peck. Substance of an argument delivered before the District Court of the United States, at the first session thereof, held at St. Louis, on the fourth Monday in November, 1824, pursuant to an act of Congress, entitled "An Act Enabling Claimants to Lands within the Limits of the State of Missouri and Territory of Arkansas to Institute Proceedings to Try the Validity of Their Claims." -- By L.E. Lawless, Counsellor at Law. December 22, 1830. Ordered, that the following documents be printed for the use of the Senate. Letter from the Secretary of the Treasury to the honorable S. Smith, Chairman of the Committee on Finance, relative to passports and clearances. January 3, 1831. Laid on the table by Mr. Smith, of Maryland, and relates to Senate bill. Memorial of the inhabitants of Chester County, Pennsylvania, praying that the act passed at the last session, for the removal of the Indians beyond the Mississippi, may be repealed, and that no treaty made under that law be confirmed. December 31, 1830. Referred to the Committee on Indian Affairs, and ordered to be printed. Report from the Secretary of War, in compliance with a Resolution of Senate, transmitting reports from the Superintendent of the Cumberland Road, for 1829 and 1830. December 31, 1830. -- Read. January 3, 1831. -- Ordered to be printed. Report of a committee, and resolution of the Legislature of Georgia, relative to the settlement of the boundary line between that state and Florida. January 11, 1831. Laid on the table, and ordered to be printed. In Senate of the United States, December 21, 1830. January 14, 1831. Ordered to be printed. Mr. Livingston, from the select committee appointed on the subject, made the following report: The committee to which was referred the petition of George F. Laroche and others, report... Memorial of sundry inhabitants of Pittsburgh, Penn. praying that the navigation of the Ohio River, from its mouth to Pittsburgh, may be improved, &c. January 21, 1831. Referred to the Committee on Commerce, and ordered to be printed. Petition of the Mayor, aldermen, and citizens of St. Louis, Missouri, for aid in the erection of a public hospital at that place. January 24, 1831. Referred to Committee on Commerce, and ordered to be printed. Message from the President of the United States, in answer to a Resolution of the Senate relative to the British establishment on the Columbia, and the state of the fur trade, &c. January 25, 1831. Referred to the Committee on Military Affairs. January 26, 1831. Ordered to be printed, and that 1500 additional copies be furnished for the use of the Senate. In Senate of the United States, 15th December, 1830. Read, and ordered to be printed, and that 1,000 additional copies be furnished for the use of the Senate. Mr. Sanford, from the Select Committee appointed to consider the state of the current coins, and to report such amendments of the existing laws concerning coins, as may be deemed expedient, made the following report... Report from the Secretary of the Treasury, with statements of the amount that would be returnable, should the bill to refund, in certain cases, the difference between the Tariff of 1828 and that previously existing, become a law. December 20, 1830. Read, and ordered to be printed. Case of James H. Peck. In Senate of the United States, December 21, 1830. The following documents were ordered to be printed for the use of the Senate. (Vide reports of committees of the House of Representatives United States, 1st session 21st Congress, no. 325, pages 4 and 25 to 28.) In Senate of the United States, January 7, 1831. Read, and ordered to be printed. Mr. Foot made the following report: On the petition of the heirs of Barent J. Staats, the Committee on Claims report... In Senate of the United States, January 7, 1831. Ordered, that the following opinions of James H. Peck, Judge of the District Court of the United States for the District of Missouri, be printed. In Senate of the United States, January 11, 1831. Read, and ordered to be printed. The Committee on Finance, to which was referred the petition of Peters and Pond, of Boston, report: That the Committee on Commerce... In Senate of the United States, January 11, 1831. Read, and ordered to be printed. Mr. Chase made the following report: The Committee on Claims, to whom was referred the petition of John Daly... Petition of the heirs of James Caldwell, deceased, who was a chaplain in the Army of the Revolution, praying that indemnity may be made for the losses sustained during the Revolutionary War. January 7, 1831. Referred to the Committee of Claims, and ordered to be printed. In Senate of the United States, January 26, 1831. Read, and ordered to be printed. Mr. Poindexter made the following report: The Committee on Private Land Claims, to whom were referred the petition and accompanying documents of Joseph Vidal, have had the same under consideration, and report... In Senate of the United States, December 17, 1830. Mr. Foot made the following report: On the petition of John Brunson... In Senate of the United States, December 15, 1830. Read, and ordered to be printed. Mr. Bell, from the Committee of Claims, made the following report: The Committee of Claims, to which was referred the petition of Moses White, executor of the will of Gen. Moses Hazen, deceased, report... Annual report of the Secretary of the Senate, showing the expenditures from the contingent fund, &c. December 8, 1830. Referred to the Committee on the Contingent Fund, and ordered to be printed. Memorial of certain inhabitants of Pennsylvania, praying that the Indians may be protected in their rights, &c. January 7, 1830. Referred to the Committee on Indian Affairs, and ordered to be printed. Message from the President of the United States to the two Houses of Congress, at the commencement of the second session of the Twenty-first Congress. December 7, 1830. Printed by order of the Senate of the United States. |
40 |
Serial set 204 |
Report from the Postmaster General, in compliance with a Resolution of the Senate, showing the postage received at the office in Washington City for two years, ending on the 1st May, 1830. May 20, 1830. -- Read. February 1, 1831. -- Ordered to be printed. Report from the Secretary of the Treasury, with a statement of all lands acquired by the United States in satisfaction of debts due them, showing where those lands lie, the sums allowed for them, and their probable value; made in compliance with a Resolution of the Senate. February 14, 1831. Read, and ordered to be printed. In Senate of the United States, March 3, 1831. Read, and ordered to be printed. Mr. Clayton made the following report: The Committee appointed, in pursuance of the Resolution of the 15th December last, "to examine and report the present condition of the Post Office Department..." In Senate of the United States, February 14, 1831. Read, and ordered to be printed. Mr. Woodbury made the following report: The Committee on Commerce, to whom were referred sundry memorials for a drawback on exported nails, when made from foreign iron, ask leave to report... Memorial of the inhabitants of Milford, Delaware, praying that an appropriation be made for improving Mispillion Creek navigation, &c. February 7, 1831. Referred to the Committee on Commerce, and ordered to be printed. In Senate of the United States, February 28, 1831. Report on the blacksmiths' petition. In Senate of the United States, February 23, 1831. Read, agreed to, and ordered to be printed. Mr. Naudain made the following report: The Committee on Military Affairs, which, by a Resolution of the Senate of January the 4th, 1831, was "instructed to inquire into the justice and expediency of extending to Henry B. Livingston, late a colonel in the service of the United States... In Senate of the United States, February 16, 1831. Mr. Dickerson made the following report: The Committee on Manufactures, to whom was referred the Bill (S. 147) to reduce and fix the duties on sugars imported into the United States... In Senate of the United States, February 16, 1831. Read, concurred in, and ordered that it be printed, and that 1000 additional copies be furnished for the use of the Senate. Mr. Woodbury, from the Committee on Commerce made the following report: The Committee on Commerce, to whom was referred a resolution concerning our present consular system... Message from the President of the United States, in compliance with a Resolution of the Senate, relative to the execution of the Act to Regulate Trade and Intercourse with the Indian Tribes, and to Preserve Peace on the Frontiers, passed the 30th March, 1802. February 23, 1831. Read, and ordered to be printed, and that 3,000 additional copies be furnished for the use of the Senate. In Senate of the United States, February 26, 1831. Mr. Benton submitted the following resolutions, which were read, and ordered to be printed, and laid on the table: Resolved, that the powers conferred on Congress by the states to lay and collect duties, and to regulate commerce... Memorial of the General Assembly of the State of Missouri, that the French and Spanish land claims may be speedily and equitably decided. February 28, 1831. Read, and ordered to be laid on the table, and printed. In Senate of the United States, February 22, 1831. Read, and ordered to be printed. Mr. Chase made the following report: The Committee on Pensions, who were directed by a Resolution of the Senate of the 11th instant to inquire into the expediency of allowing to Edward S. Meeder, a soldier in the late war with Great Britain, for arrearages of pension... Memorial of the General Assembly of Missouri, that public lands may be sold in forty acre tracts, and that quarter sections may be divided by east and west as well as by north and south lines. February 28, 1831. Read, and ordered to be laid on the table, and printed. In Senate of the United States, February 15, 1831. Mr. Knight made the following report; which was read, and concurred in. The Committee on the Contingent Fund of the Senate, to whom was referred the memorial of S. & W. Meeteer, praying for an alteration of the mode of procuring paper used in the printing for Congress, report... Memorial of the workers in iron of Philadelphia, praying that the present duty on imported iron may be repealed, &c. January 27, 1831. Read, and ordered to be printed. Ordered, that the aforesaid memorial be referred to a select committee, to consist of Messrs. Hayne, Dickerson, King, Bell, Tyler, to consider and report thereon. Letter from John J. Astor to honorable Mr. Benton, in relation to blankets for the Indian trade. January 31, 1831. Laid on the table by Mr. Benton, and ordered to be printed. Document relating to blankets for the Indian trade; being questions to, and answers by, Adam D. Steuart, collector of the port of Mackinaw. February 3, 1831. Laid on the table by Mr. Benton, and ordered to be printed. Report from the Secretary of the Treasury, in compliance with a Resolution of the Senate, relative to drawbacks on refined sugar, and attempts fraudulently to obtain the same. February 19, 1831. Read, and ordered to be printed. Memorial of citizens of Philadelphia, engaged in the manufacture of iron, and others, praying that the duties on imported iron may not be reduced or rescinded. February 19, 1831. Read, and ordered to be printed, and referred to the select committee appointed on the subject of duty on iron. In Senate of the United States, January 27, 1831. Read, and ordered to be printed. Mr. Hendricks made the following report: The Committee on Roads and Canals, to whom were referred numerously signed memorials, asking a donation of land for the construction of a road from Lawrenceburg, by way of Fort Wayne, to the southern bend of the St. Joseph's of Lake Michigan, report... In Senate of the United States, February 4, 1831. Read, and ordered to printed. Mr. Woodbury made the following report: The Committee on Commerce, to whom were referred the memorials from the city authorities of St. Louis and the Legislature of Illinois, on the subject of erecting a hospital near the junction of the Ohio and Mississippi Rivers, report... Report from the Commissioner of the General Land Office, in compliance with a Resolution of the Senate, showing the quantity of public land surveyed in each state since 1826, the quantity of land surveyed and not brought into market, and the amount received for sales made. February 9, 1831. Referred to the Committee on Public Lands, and ordered to be printed. Memorial of the Prudential Committee of the American Board of Commissioners for Foreign Missions of Massachusetts, praying that all treaty stipulations with the Indians within the United States may be faithfully observed, &c. February 9, 1831. To lie on the table, and be printed. In Senate of the United States, February 4, 1831. Read, and ordered to be printed. Mr. McKinley made the following report: The Committee on the Judiciary, to which was referred the "joint resolution relative to the pay of the members of Congress" from the House of Representatives... Commerce and navigation of the United States. Letter from the Secretary of the Treasury, transmitting statements respecting the commerce and navigation of the United States, &c. &c. Printed by order of the Senate of the United States. Letter from the Commissioner of the General Land Office, relative to creating the office of Surveyor General of Louisiana, &c. February 8, 1831. Laid on the table by Mr. Ellis, and ordered to be printed. Memorial of a number of citizens of Pittsburg, Pennsylvania, praying that the treaties with the Indians may be preserved inviolable, and that they be protected in their rights. February 14, 1831. Read, and ordered to be printed. Memorial from the General Assembly of the State of Missouri, that the Western Road, commonly called the Cumberland Road, may cross the Mississippi at St. Louis. February 28, 1831. Read, and ordered to be laid on the table, and printed. Memorial of the General Assembly of Missouri, that the N. and N. W. boundary may be enlarged, and a mounted force granted for the protection of the frontier of the state, and its trade with Mexico and the Indians. February 28, 1831. Read, and ordered to be laid upon the table and printed. In Senate of the United States, February 19, 1831. Read, and ordered to be printed. Mr. Benton made the following report: The Committee on Military Affairs, to which was referred the bill for the relief of the officers and soldiers of Ford Delaware, report... Memorial of officers of the Massachusetts militia, praying that an efficient and uniform system be adopted for the regulation and government of the militia of the United States. February 23, 1831. Referred to the Committee on Military Affairs, and ordered to be printed. Remarks on the expediency of abolishing the punishment of death, by Edward Livingston. March 3, 1831. Laid on the table by Mr. Robbins, and ordered to be printed. Message from the President of the United States, in answer to a Resolution of the Senate, relative to the application of the appropriations for the improvement of the Ohio and Mississippi Rivers. February 28, 1831. Read, and ordered to be printed, and referred to the Committee on Roads and Canals. Report from the Secretary of the Treasury, relative to a comparison of weights and measures as used at the several Custom-houses of the United States, which was required by a Resolution of the Senate of May 29, 1830. March 1, 1831. Read, and ordered to be printed. In Senate of the United States, February 23, 1831. Read, and ordered to be printed. Mr. Hayne made the following report: The Committee on the Judiciary, to whom was referred the petition of John H. Harrison, praying to be released from a judgment obtained against him as one of the sureties of Francis Adams, report... |
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Serial set 205 | Journal of the House of Representatives of the United States; being the second session of the Twenty-first Congress, begun and held at the City of Washington, December 6, 1830, and in the fifty-fourth [i.e., fifty-fifth] year of the independence of the United States. | 1 |
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James Monroe. Letter from James Monroe, late President of the United States, upon the subject of his claim upon the general government. December 13, 1830. Read, and referred to the Committee of the Whole House to which is committed the Bill (H.R. No. 330) for his relief. Letter from the Secretary of the Treasury, transmitting his annual report on the finances. December 16, 1830. Read, and referred to the Committee of Ways and Means. Disbursements for certain specific purposes. Letter from the Secretary of the Treasury, transmitting, in compliance with a Resolution of the House of Representatives of the 26th of May last, a statement of disbursements made, since the year 1789, for fortifications, light-houses, public debt, Revolutionary and other pensions, and internal improvements, &c. December 21, 1830. Read, and laid upon the table. Message from the President of the United States to the two Houses of Congress, at the commencement of the second session of the Twenty-first Congress. December 7, 1830. Read, and committed to a Committee of the Whole House on the State of the Union. Contingent expenses -- military, 1830. Letter from the Secretary of War, transmitting a statement of the expenditure of the appropriation for the contingent expenses of the military establishment for the year 1830. January 5, 1831. Read, and laid upon the table. Letter from the Secretary of War to the Chairman of the Committee on Internal Improvements, with the result of the examination of Back Creek, &c. In Senate, April 26, 1830. Laid on the table by Mr. Barnard, and ordered to be printed. December 21, 1830. Printed by order of the House of Representatives. Report on the survey of North River, Massachusetts. December 23, 1830. Printed by order of the House of Representatives. Internal improvements. Message from the President of the United States, transmitting the information required by a Resolution of the House of Representatives of 17th December last, upon the subject of internal improvements. January 5, 1831. Read, and laid upon the table. Fifth census. Message from the President of the United States, suggesting the expediency of extending the time allowed by law for completing the fifth census. December 16, 1830. Read, and referred to a select committee, consisting of Messrs. Storrs, of New York, Coulter, Bates, Gurley, Martindale, Grennell, and Holland. Army U.S. -- officers of the late war. Memorial of sundry officers of the United States' Army in the late war, praying for a grant of land in consideration of their services. January 4, 1831. Referred to the Committee on the Public Lands. Balances on the books of the Fourth Auditor. Letter from the Comptroller of the Treasury, transmitting an abstract of balances on the books of the Fourth Auditor, which appear to have been due more than three years prior to the 30th September, 1830. December 24, 1830. Read, and laid upon the table. Public land sold during the year ending on 30th September, 1830. December 31, 1830. Read, and laid upon the table. Cumberland Road. Letter from the Secretary of War, transmitting, in pursuance of a Resolution of the House of Representatives of the 16th instant, a report of the progress which has been made in the construction of the Cumberland Road, &c. &c. December 21, 1830. Read, and laid upon the table. Sugar imported. Letter from the Secretary of the Treasury, communicating the information required by a Resolution of the House of Representatives of the 14th inst., in relation to brown sugars imported into the United States, from 30th September, 1815, &c. &c. December 31, 1830. Read, and laid upon the table. Contingent expenses Ho. Reps. 1830. Letter from the Clerk of the House of Representatives U.S. submitting a report of the expenditure of the appropriation for contingent expenses of the House for the year 1831. December 13, 1830. Read, and laid upon the table. Letter from the Secretary of War, transmitting copies of the reports of H.M. Shreve and R. Delafield, on the improvement of the navigation of the Mississippi and Ohio Rivers. December 16, 1830. Read, and referred to the Committee of the Whole House to which is referred the "Bill (H.R. No. 458) to Amend the Several Acts Authorizing the Registering and Granting Licenses to Steamboats, and to Provide for the Better Security of the Lives of Passengers on Board of Vessels Propelled, in Whole or in Part, by Steam." list of reports to be made to the House of Representatives, at the second session of the Twenty-first Congress, by the Executive Departments. Prepared by the Clerk, in obedience to a standing order of the House of Representatives. December 6, 1830. Treaty with Denmark. Message from the President of the United States, transmitting copies of a convention between the United States and Denmark, concluded the 28th of March, 1830. December 13, 1830. Referred to the Committee on Foreign Affairs. Correspondence -- Danish Minister & Sec'y of State. January 3, 1831. Read, and referred to the Committee on Commerce. Message from the President of the United States, transmitting copies of a correspondence between the Secretary of State and the Minister of Denmark, in relation to the commercial intercourse between the said States and the Danish West India Islands, &c. Land claims -- St. Helena District. Letter from the Commissioner of the General Land Office, transmitting a report of the Register and Receiver of the St. Helena Land District upon certain claims to land therein mentioned. January 4, 1831. Read, and referred to the Committee on the Public Lands. Trade with British colonies. Message from the President of the United States, transmitting the papers relating to the recent arrangement in relation to the trade between the United States and the British colonies, &c. January 3, 1831. Read, and referred to the Committee on Commerce. Surveys -- naval depots. Letter from the Secretary of the Navy, in reply to a resolution of the House of Representatives of the 14th instant, in relation to the reports of the survey of certain ports and harbors, with a view to the establishment of naval depots. December 23, 1830. Read, and laid upon the table. Mediterranean passports. Letter from the Secretary of the Treasury, transmitting a statement of the amount of payments made by the owners of vessels for papers called Mediterranean passports, during the years 1826, 1827, 1828, and 1829. January 5, 1831. Read, and laid upon the table. Contingent expenses -- Navy U.S. Letter from the Secretary of the Navy, transmitting a statement of the disbursements on account of the contingent expenses of the Navy, for the year ending 30th September, 1830. January 5, 1831. Read, and laid upon the table. Navy United States -- three schooners. (To accompany Bill H.R. No. 507.) December 22, 1830. Printed by order of the House of Representatives. New England Asylum for the Blind. Memorial of the Trustees of the New England Asylum for the Blind. January 3, 1831. Referred to a select committee, consisting of Messrs. Everett of Mass., Lea, Davis of Mass., Beekman, Crawford, Davis of S.C., Evans of Maine. Indians -- chiefs, &c. of the Creek Nation. January 4, 1831. Referred to the Committee on Indian Affairs. Falls of the Ohio. Letter from the Secretary of War, transmitting a report of the Board of Engineers on the improvement of the navigation of the Ohio at the falls of Louisville. January 5, 1831. Referred to the Committee on Internal Improvements. Balances on the books of the Treasury. Letter from the Comptroller of the Treasury, transmitting a list of balances on the books of the Register and of the Second and Third Auditors; a list of officers who have not rendered their accounts within the year; and an abstract of money advanced prior to 3d March, 1809, unaccounted for. December 13, 1830. Read, and laid upon the table. Estimate of appropriations for 1831. Letter from the Secretary of the Treasury, transmitting an estimate of appropriations for the year 1831. December 21, 1830. Referred to the Committee of Ways and Means. |
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Serial set 207 |
Accounts in suit. Report of the Solicitor of the Treasury, of the accounts in suit on 4th July, 1830. January 7, 1831. Read, and laid upon the table. Mint U.S. -- operations, 1830. Message from the President of the United States, transmitting a report of the operations of the Mint of the United States during the year 1830. January 13, 1831. Read, and laid upon the table. Boundary -- Georgia and Florida. Resolutions of the Legislature of Georgia on the subject of the Florida boundary. January 10, 1831. Referred to the Committee of the Whole House to which is committed the Bill [H.R. No. 243] supplementary to the act to authorize the President of the United States to run and mark a line dividing the Territory of Florida from the State of Georgia. Letter from the Secretary of State transmitting a list of all patents granted by the United States, the acts of Congress relating thereto, and the decisions of courts of the United States under the same. January 13, 1831. Read, and laid upon the table. Navy contracts, &c. for 1830. Letter from the Secretary of the Navy, transmitting a statement of purchases and contracts made by the Commissioners of the Navy during the year 1830. January 11, 1831. Read, and laid upon the table. National road in Indiana. Letter from the Secretary of War, transmitting the information required by a Resolution of the House of Representatives, in relation to the expenditures on the Cumberland Road, &c. &c. January 10, 1831. Read, and laid upon the table. Clerks -- Treasury Department -- 1830. Letter from the Secretary of the Treasury, transmitting statements, showing the names of the clerks employed in the Treasury Department during the year 1830, and the compensation of each. January 10, 1831. Read, and laid upon the table. Roads constructed by the Army. Letter from the Secretary of War, in reply to a Resolution of the House of Representatives of the 15th ultimo, in relation to roads constructed by the Army of the United States, &c. &c. January 13, 1831. Read, and laid upon the table. Rejected applications for pensions, &c. Letter from the Secretary of War, transmitting a report respecting rejected applications for pensions. January 6, 1831. Read, and laid upon the table. Ocracock bar. Letter from the Secretary of War, transmitting communications from the local engineer, in relation to the progress which has been made in removing obstructions near the Ocracock bar. January 10, 1831. Referred to the Committee on Commerce. Clerks -- Navy Department, 1830. Letter from the Secretary of the Navy, transmitting statements of the names of the clerks employed in the Navy Department during the year 1830, and the compensation of each. January 10, 1831. Read, and laid upon the table. Patents for useful inventions. Letter from the Secretary of State, transmitting a list of patents granted for useful inventions during the year 1830. January 13, 1831. Read, and laid upon the table. Accounts, Navy Dept. -- Office Fourth Auditor. Message from the President of the United States, transmitting a report of the state of the accounts of the Navy in the Office of the Fourth Auditor, &c. &c. January 7, 1831. Read, and referred to the Committee on Naval Affairs. Licenses to trade with the Indians. Letter from the Secretary of War, transmitting an abstract of licenses granted to trade with the Indians, in the year ending on the 30th September, 1830. January 10, 1831. Read, and laid upon the table. Memorial of Joshau [Joshua] Winslow, et al. January 10, 1831. Referred to the Committee on Commerce. Cumberland Road and Chesapeake and Ohio Canal. Resolutions adopted at a meeting of citizens of Fayette County, Pennsylvania, on the subject of the Cumberland Road and Chesapeake and Ohio Canal. January 12, 1831. Read, and referred to the Committee on Internal Improvements. Georgia resolutions -- internal improvements. January 10, 1831. Read, and laid upon the table. Infantry tactics -- distribution of. Letter from the Secretary of War, transmitting a statement showing the apportionment and distribution of 60,000 copies of Infantry Tactics, &c. &c. January 13, 1831. Read, and laid upon the table. Clerks -- War Department -- 1830. Letter from the Secretary of War, transmitting a list of the names of the clerks employed in the Department of War during the year 1830, and the compensation of each. January 13, 1831. Read, and laid upon the table. Statements exhibiting the amount of internal duties which accrued in the United States in 1814 - '15 - '16 - '17. Prepared in obedience to a Resolution of the House of Representatives of the 29th May, 1830. |
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