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NUMBER OF LIVE STOCK IN THE UNITED STATES FOR THE YEARS 1860 AND 1866.

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guide to the speculations on this topic in which the agricultural papers indulged. It was not difficult to approximate nearly to the numbers of live stock in the Northern States east of the Rocky Mountains, and this was attempted from year to year; but the data in regard to the Pacific States were small, and for estimates of the numbers in the Southern States, entirely wanting.

During the summer and autumn of 1866, however, sufficient returns were obtained from the Southern States to enable us to make a very close estimate for the whole country. We give in the foregoing table the numbers of live stock for each of the States and Territories this side the Rocky Mountains, and the estimates

of the Agricultural Department for the whole country, premising that the latter may be too large in horses and mules.

It is a matter of interest to compare these returns with those of the principal countries of Europe at a recent date. We have no very recent statistics of the number of horses in the European states, and the war of 1866 would render them inaccurate, if we had. About 300,000 is to be deducted from the number of cattle reported in the United Kingdom, and 75,000 from those in Holland for loss from cattle plague. The following table gives the number of cattle, sheep, and swine, at the dates mentioned, in the several nationalities of Europe:

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Hanover, Saxony, Wurtem

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5,030,652 8,316,960 25,795,708 3,802,399 25,244,000 45,130,800 10,097,000

626,252 1,799,147 2,279,513| 471,193 803,714 1,916,658 1,644,156 457,981 3,382,703 2,251,797 5,684,500 17,428,017 2,709,709

2,646,051 1,172,895 3,859,728 1,112,944 18,491,220

berg, and Grand Duchies.. 1852 to '63 9,395,738 1,728,224 1,273,029 4,170,275 5,323,223 1,855,114

Austria Bavaria

943,214 390,673

1,333,887 930,136 294,636 1,257,649 583,485 458,418

37,386,313 5,781,465 8,415,895 14,197,360 33,281,592 5,246,403

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1862.

1865.

15,658,531

36,267,648 4,807,440

1863. 1863.

ALABAMA. The recess taken by the Legislature of Alabama, in December, 1865, closed on January 15, 1866. Upon the reassembling of this body, the Governor laid before the members a brief message congratulating them that, during their recess, the Provisional Governor had been relieved, and his authority was exercised by the Governor elect. He recapitulated the condition of the State debt, urged the importance of a law staying judicial proceedings in the collection of debts, the necessity of making the system of education uniform by allowing the proceeds of land-sales to be used in any county without regard to the location of the land sold, called their attention to the great destitution of the people in the northern part of the State, and the immediate necessity of an efficient military organization. He also returned, without his signature, a bill to regulate contracts with freedmen, on the ground that the general laws on contracts were adequate. The Legislature passed a large number of bills chiefly devoted to local affairs; also one to provide for the payment of the land-tax levied by Congress in August, 1861; another, requiring the State banks to resume payment on April 1, 1868. In the Senate, on February 8th, the following resolution was adopted:

Whereas, There is reason to apprehend that unfriendly representations at Washington and in the

2,904,598 22,054,967 4,264,817 6,353,086 7,904,030 14,257,116 16,964,236 8,151,608 1,530,626 1,655,356 3,185,882 2,058,638 926,522

Northern States of the Union, of the disposition of the people of Alabama toward the Government at Washington, will operate injuriously upon the con

dition of our people, and postpone a restoration of the State, in consequence of a misapprehension, upon the part of the Federal authorities, of the disposition of the people for the full and complete establishment of order: Therefore,

ring), That a committee of five be appointed by the Resolved (the House of Representatives concurpresiding officers of each House to inquire, so far as may be, into the dispositions of the people of the different counties in the matter referred to, and report the result of their investigations by resolution or

otherwise.

An act was passed authorizing the issue of twenty-year bonds for the payment of arrears of interest on the State debt; also another, to provide, at the State expense, artificial limbs for every maimed indigent person, a citizen or resident of the State in 1861.

The views of the Legislature on the relation of the State to the Federal Union were expressed by the unanimous adoption, on February 22d, by both Houses, of the following report and resolution, presented by a joint committee:

When the cause, for which the people of Alabama have endured sacrifices without parallel in history, was lost by the surrender of her heroic armies, the result was accepted as final and conclusive. Although compelled, by the verdict of the sword, to abandon an institution which was so thoroughly interwoven with every thread of her social fabric, that

it could not be suddenly torn asunder without leav. ing everywhere deep and painful wounds, the surrender has been made without a murmur. Alabama turned once more to the Government against which she had been arrayed in arms, and in solemn convention obliterated from her records the ordinance of secession, and, as far as in her power, retraced her steps to the point of her departure. Additional guaranties of sincerity were required at her hands, and the General Assembly responded to the call of the President of the United States, by ratifying the Constitutional Amendment prohibiting slavery within her borders forever, and, by legislative enactment, securing protection to the freedman in all his personal rights, and opening the courts of the State in his behalf. Having thus cheerfully complied with all the conditions demanded as a prerequisite for restoration to her rights as a State in the Union, the people of Alabama waited anxiously, yet happily, for the meeting of Congress, and the admission of her Representatives.

Prostrated and impoverished, as she has been, by the war-with her fields devastated and her homes laid waste-and with her relations to a large class of her population radically changed-the people came up manfully to the duties of the hour, and with implicit reliance upon the magnanimity and good faith of the Northern people and the General Government -endeavored to adapt themselves as best they could to this new condition, and were rapidly advancing in the pursuits of peace. But it became, ere long, painfully evident that unknown persons were busily disseminating reports prejudicial to the honor and welfare of our people.

Kindly sympathy is manifested by the whites, with few exceptions, toward the freedmen, and their new relations to each other are being gradually adjusted in a manner satisfactory to both. Contracts have been made for labor, upon just and equitable terms, and the freedmen are generally at work. Nothing more is apparently now required for the restoration of law and order in our midst than the withdrawal

of Federal bayonets from the State.

Believing, then, as your committee must, from the evidences before them, that the falsehoods propagated in the North and in Congress are the offspring of deliberate malice and design, and circulated only for the basest political purposes, it remains only for us, as the representatives of the people, to denounce the authors as wilful culumniators and slanderers, and to solemnly protest against their statements being received and accepted as the truth.

In conclusion, your committee feel this to be the proper occasion for a renewed expression of the sentiments which pervade the public heart toward the President of the United States and his policy. The following resolutions, similar in language and purport to those recently passed by the Legislature of the old Commonwealth of Virginia, are respectfully

submitted, with the recommendation that they be adopted, and that a copy be transmitted to his excellency President Johnson, with the accompanying report. W. GARRET,

Chairman of Com. on the part of the Senate. JOSHUA MORSE, Chairman on the part of the House. Joint Resolutions of the General Assembly of the State of Alabama on the state of the Union.

Resolved by the Senate and House of Representatives of the State of Alabama, in General Assembly convened, That the people of Alabama, and their representatives here assembled, cordially approve the policy pursued by Andrew Johnson, President of the United States, in the reorganization of the Union. We accept the result of the late contest, and do not desire to renew what has been so conclusively determined; nor do we mean to permit any one subject to our control to attempt its renewal, or to violate any of our obligations to the United States Government. We mean to cooperate in the wise, firm, and just

policy adopted by the President, with all the energy and power we can devote to that object.

2. That the above declaration expresses the sentiments and purposes of our people, and we denounce the efforts of those who represent our views and in. tentions to be different, as cruel and criminal assaults on our character and our interests. It is one of the misfortunes of our present political condition that we have among us persons whose interests are temporarily promoted by such false representations; but we rely on the intelligence and integrity of those who wield the power of the United States Government for our safeguard against such malign influences.

3. That involuntary servitude, except for crime, is abolished, and ought not to be reestablished, and that the negro race among us should be treated with justice, humanity, and good faith, and every means that the wisdom of the Legislature can devise should be used to make them useful and intelligent members of society.

4. That Alabama will not voluntarily consent to change the adjustment of political power, as fixed by the Constitution of the United States, and to constrain her to do so in her present prostrate and helpless condition, with no voice in the councils of the nation, would be an unjustifiable breach of faith; and that her earnest thanks are due to the President for the firm stand he has taken against amendments of the Constitution, forced through in the present condition of affairs.

A stay law was also passed at this session, applicable to suits brought since May 1, 1865, to mortgages and deeds of trust, with power of sale when the mortgagor or trustee is in possession. Its operation was so to delay proceedings as to postpone execution, except on debts due the State, for two years, and then to give the party one year longer in which to pay off the debt in three equal instalments. A new penal code was also adopted at this session, making no distinction on account of color, abolishing whipping and branding, and substituting "hard labor." Under the authority of the Legislature, the Governor, on February 12, 1866, issued a proclamation, granting pardon and amnesty to all persons who had been, or were liable to be, indicted for offences 13, 1861, and July 20, 1865, the crimes of against the State, committed between April rape and murder excepted. The session closed about February 20th, by an adjournment to the annual session. This commenced on November to improve the finances of the State had been 12th ensuing. The measures previously devised

very successful. Temporary loans had been contracted and paid, and State bonds had been hypothecated, instead of being sold below par, and ample funds thus secured. This, however, added to the debt $363,572, making, on November 12th, as follows:

Original bonded debt, partly extended
Amount of funded interest on the 5

and 6 per cent. bonds..........
Eight per cent. bonds sold for supplies
and transportation....
Eight per cent. bonds advanced to In-
sane Hospital......

Total present bonded debt..... To which add amount of loan due, including interest and commission...

Total.......

$3,445,000

687,990 48,500

5,000 $4,186,490 $363,572 22

$4,550,062 22

Brought forward.... Should the U. S. agree to accept the 7 per cent. bonds for the real estate tax, amount thereof would be added

This would make the total bonded debt of the State.....

..........

$529,333 33

$4,550,062 22 grants were made by the Federal Congress to aid in the construction of various railroads in the State. The war prevented the companies from taking advantage of these grants, and the time within which they were to be secured expired in June, 1866. All the roads in the State are suffering from the effects of the war. No one has been able to recommence the work of construction which was going on when hostilities commenced.

$5,079,395 55 The effect of the stay law passed at the previous session had been to stimulate creditors to commence suits, so as to secure themselves all the advantages which the law could afford. The constitutionality of the act was also tested in the Supreme Court, and a decision rendered which placed such a construction on the law as to greatly diminish the time for carrying judgments into effect. The law, therefore, did not accomplish all that was anticipated.

Only two of the State banks took advantage of the act to reduce and consolidate their stock. The Bank of Mobile reduced its stock from a million and a half to seven hundred and fifty thousand dollars, and the Southern Bank of Alabama from a million to two hundred and fifty thousand. The capital stock of the other banks, it was believed, had been so reduced by the effects of the war, that they would be unable again to resume business. More than onehalf the capital stock of the banks was drawn out by the State during the war.

The tax of three cents per pound on cotton, ordered to be levied by the Federal Congress, operated in an oppressive manner upon the productive labor of the State. A bale of cotton weighing five hundred pounds was taxed fifteen dollars; to this was added the incometax of five per cent., which, under the estimates of the year, amounted to an additional five dollars on the five hundred pounds.

The public institutions of the State are recovering from the effects of the war. The number of insane persons in the State is estimated at seven hundred. A hospital for this class of persons, established at an expense of $300,000, is in successful operation. The number of patients, near the close of the year, was about seventy-five, although the institution could accommodate three hundred and fifty. An institution for the deaf and dumb is also in successful operation. The arrears due to it from the State have been paid. The number of convicts in the penitentiary increased during the year from fifty-one to one hundred and fifty-eight, of whom thirty-eight were white, and one hundred and twenty colored persons. A large proportion of the colored were sent to the penitentiary from cities and large towns, whither the negroes, on becoming free, flocked in great numbers. The reconstruction of a building for the State University has been commenced, by means of a loan of seventy thousand dollars granted by the State. The common-school system has not yet recovered from the derangement caused by the war. The schools have been suspended for two years, and the public sympathy in them has greatly declined. The interest due to the fund for two years from the State has not been paid. Land

The Legislature at this session elected John A. Winston a Senator to Congress. He had been elected Governor of the State in 1855 and 1857, and was one of the Douglass presidential electors in 1860. In the House, on December 1st, a bill was introduced to extend the privilege of suffrage to all male persons, and thereby establishing qualified negro suffrage. It was regarded as a measure calmly and carefully to be considered, although laid upon the table-yeas 69, nays 19.

In February, 1860, an act was passed to appoint a commissioner to revise the code of the State. The appointment of Turner Reaves was made, and the work of revision commenced, but in December, 1861, it was ordered to be suspended until the close of the war. In May, 1866, the commissioner resigned, and Chief Justice A. J. Walker was appointed to complete the revision. His report was sent to the Legislature on November 15th. The work of revision embraced the statutes enacted during the previous fifteen years, which were condensed and arranged in their proper places, with some other important features. It was approved by a committee of the Legislature, and adopted. In the Senate a series of resolutions were offered, providing for the reference to the people of the Constitutional Amendment proposed by Congress. These were reported upon unfavorably by a committee, and the subject laid over. The Governor, in his annual message, opposed the amendment, saying:

opinion that this amendment should not be ratified. For reasons such as these, I am decidedly of the The first section embodies a principle which I regard as dangerous to the liberties of the people of the whole country. That principle is as applicable to New York and Massachusetts as to Alabama. The second secment which has never been complained of before. tion proposes a change in a feature of our GovernThe question of representation has never been a source of trouble or inconvenience. It contributed in no way to the recent troubles of the country, and ing any part of the results of the war. a change in it cannot be legitimately claimed as formThe third section would bring no possible good to the represented States, while it would reduce those that are unrepresented to utter anarchy and ruin.

We are sincerely desirous for a complete restoration of the Union. We want conciliation, harmony, and national tranquillity. We feel that we have given every evidence which human action can furnish, of an honest purpose to conform in good faith to the condition of things surrounding us. Alabama is today as true to the Constitution and laws of the Genthe internal revenue law, and the tax on cotton, the eral Government as any State in the Union. Under people of this State are now paying revenue to the General Government at the rate of nearly ten millions

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At a later day the views of the Governor relative to this amendment were changed, and on December 6th he addressed a message to both Houses in its favor. He expresses apprehension of the future, saying:

There is an unmistakable purpose on the part of those who control the National Legislature to enforce at all hazards their own terms of restoration. The measures they propose threaten to at once reverse our progress toward the establishment of that permanent tranquillity which is so much desired by all. To do so is to immediately augment the distress which now exists, and inaugurate confusion, the end of which no human prescience can foresee.

To-day the cardinal principle of restoration seems to be favorable action upon the proposed amendment to the Constitution, which I transmitted to you in my annual message.

Upon the merits of the amendment my views are already known. They are founded upon principle, and are unchanged. The necessity of the case, I am now constrained to think, is different. We should look our true condition full in the face.

The amendment was finally rejected by an overwhelming majority in both Houses. The amount of the Federal tax of 1861, assigned to Alabama, was $529,313. Nothing had been collected at the close of the year.

The amount of destitution in the State exceeded that of any other Southern State, and continued through the year. Supplies were furnished liberally by the Federal Government; charitable associations and private individuals made large contributions, and the State granted all the assistance practicable, notwithstanding which the supply fell short. During the eleven months ending September 13, 1866, the Federal Government issued 3,789,788 rations, which was an average of 11,500 rations per day. The number of persons receiving supplies averaged monthly 21,700. The whites exceeded the blacks two to one. On February 23, 1866, the Legislature authorized the Governor to dispose of six per cent. bonds to the amount of $500,000, for the benefit of indigent families. Sufficient provision had not been made for the payment of the bonds, and they were unsalable. The Governor says:

"In consequence of the inability to use these bonds, it was not in the power of the State to extend that amount of relief to our suffering people which was desired. In some counties the destitution was so extreme, that I authorized the judges of probate, in conjunction with two other reliable citizens, to purchase corn on the State's credit, pledging payment on the 1st of January next. The amount authorized for each of such counties was one thousand bushels. In addition to this, I found it necessary to draw funds from the treasury to pay for the transportation, and other incidental expenses.

"In the month of June last I made a visit to the Northwest, with a view, if possible, of purchasing supplies on the State account. I there learned, as before observed, that the six per cent. bonds authorized were unavailable. It was ascertained, however, that the eight per cent. bonds could be used for the purpose. In view, therefore, of the necessity of the case, I deemed it a duty to appropriate a portion of them to the purchase of supplies. Accordingly, a lot of corn was purchased, brought to the State, and distributed. The corn was bought at a low rate, and the banks of St. Louis purchased readily, and at par, a sufficient amount of bonds to pay therefor. The amount of bonds used in this way, including payment for transportation, was $48,500. The corn thus obtained was distributed in such localities, and in such quantities, as were deemed most suitable, and afforded much relief, which would not otherwise have been found."

The hope was indulged that the crop of 1866 would save the people from any further destituThe season was exceedingly unfavorable, and tion. But this unfortunately was not the case. the crop short. In the opinion of the Commissioner for the Destitute, not half enough grain was raised to subsist the inhabitants. The opinion was confirmed by the reports of probate judges. The War Department, therefore, authorized General Swayne, the Federal commander, to distribute, during the winter months of 1866-'67, supplies to the value of $120,000. This money was applied to the purchase of corn and bacon, as likely to be much more useful than the regular rations heretofore issued.

A census of the State was take in 1866, the returns of which were nearly completed during the year. The results, as compared with the census of 1860, are shown in the following table.

It will be seen by an examination of these returns, that the effect of the war has been to neutralize the increase from all sources which, for the ten years previous, have been about 25 per cent. White and black fare apparently alike, although perhaps a disproportionate decrease among the blacks has been compensated by importations from time to time in order to avoid the converging theatre of the war. The census of white males in Alabama, which in 1860 gave an aggregate of 270,271, in 1866 presents a decrease of 9,267. The total of black males, in 1860, was returned at 217,766, and has diminished in the interval 3,523; about one-half the ratio of the former. The movement of freed people to the towns is shown by a marked percentage of increase in the counties of Mobile (25), Montgomery (23), and Dallas (Selma) (13), with a proportionate decrease in other counties. A northward movement of the freedmen into Tennessee is shown in the returns from Northern Alabama. The citizens of Randolph claim that their county sent 3,000 men to help the armies of the Union.

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