4 resultados para Squatter sovereignty.

em South Carolina State Documents Depository


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Governor Hayne speaks of the superiority of individual state sovereignty and states’ rights over mandates by the federal government. Hayne’s speech comes after President Andrew Jackson’s Nullification Proclamation that disputed a state’s right to nullify a federal law, in response to South Carolina’s ordinances declaring the tariff acts of 1828 and 1832 unconstitutional.

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The speech is a response by Hon. James H. Hammond as to whether or not the territorial governments established by Congress have the power to define and declare what shall be and what shall not be property within the territorial boundaries. The speech goes on to discuss colonists who went to newly purchased territory and claimed land as their own. He argues whether or not these people have sovereignty of the land over the government.

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Annually, the association publishes a journal, The Proceedings, which consists of papers presented at the annual meeting. Writing and Research in Southern History by Fletcher Melvin Green – University of North Carolina The South Carolina Constitution of 1865 as a Democratic Document by John Harold Wolfe – Appalachian State Teachers College William Porcher Miles, Progressive Mayor of Charleston, 1855-1857 by Clarence McKittrick Smith Jr. – Newberry College Salient Attributes of Bodin’s Theory of Sovereignty by Charles N. Sisson – Coker College Sources for South Carolina History in the Nation’s Capital by Maxcy Robson Dickson – The National Archives

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Annually, the association publishes a journal, The Proceedings, which consists of papers presented at the annual meeting. Writing and Research in Southern History by Fletcher Melvin Green – University of North Carolina The South Carolina Constitution of 1865 as a Democratic Document by John Harold Wolfe – Appalachian State Teachers College William Porcher Miles, Progressive Mayor of Charleston, 1855-1857 by Clarence McKittrick Smith Jr. – Newberry College Salient Attributes of Bodin’s Theory of Sovereignty by Charles N. Sission – Coker College Sources for South Carolina History in the Nation’s Capital by Maxcy Robson Dickson – The National Archives