Report of the Committee On Federal Relations, in Relation to the Erection of a Monument, Made to the House of Delegates 1853
The book Report of the Committee On Federal Relations, in Relation to the Erection of a Monument, Made to the House of Delegates 1853 was written by author Maryland. General Assembly. House of Delegates. Committee On Federal Relations Here you can read free online of Report of the Committee On Federal Relations, in Relation to the Erection of a Monument, Made to the House of Delegates 1853 book, rate and share your impressions in comments. If you don't know what to write, just answer the question: Why is Report of the Committee On Federal Relations, in Relation to the Erection of a Monument, Made to the House of Delegates 1853 a good or bad book?
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These ordinances of the municipal authorities have been endorsed and ratified by an Act of the Pennsylvania Legislature, approved the 2nd of February last, so that the States uniting in the project, have the amplest guarantees that these grounds and the monument erected thereon can never be diverted from the great national purpose sought to be accomplished. Such is a brief outline of the j?!an proposed by the Convention. The Committee cannot suppose that a laboied or lengthened ar- gument will ...be necessary to establish the propriety of our State uniting with her sisters in the construction of the proposed me- morial. Maryland bore no secondary*part in the great events it is proposed to commemorate. Her chivalric sons went forth to bat- tle and to death to maintain the great truths contained in the De- claration of Independence. Her cherished and heroic Carroll was the last survivor of that noble band of patriots who, *' with halters around their necks, subscribed an instrument that consigned them to dungeons nndto death, or to liberty and independence ;" and within the walls of her ancient Capitol, where we, her Representatives are now as- sembled, were consumated the labors, the trials and the glory, incident to that Declaration, by the ratification of a treaty of peace, in which Englands proud Monarch acknowledged the justice of our claim to a place among the Free and Independent Nations of the Earth.
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