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volume 016 number 2 Format to Print

REPUDIATION OF STATE DEBT IN TEXAS SINCE 1861

E. T. MILLER

On January 28, 1861, at the assembling of the convention which adopted the ordinance of secession, Texas had no bonded debt. As early as January, 1860, however, the State treasury had been experiencing difficulty because of insufficient taxation and increased expenditures for frontier defence; and United States bonds were transferred from the university fund to provide the State revenue account with cash. But despite this transfer State warrants were outstanding and there was no cash to pay them. The State was not responsible for any of the funded debt of the Republic of Texas which may have been outstanding on January 28, 1861, for though the State assumed at annexation the debt of the Republic, the United States government by the acts of September 9, 1850, and February 28, 1855, provided for the payment of all of the funded debt.

The first official statement of the debt incurred during the war was made in October, 1865. A. J. Hamilton was appointed provisional governor of Texas by President Johnson on January 17, 1865, and ex-Governor Pease and Swante Palm were appointed by the provisional governor to report on the finances of the State since secession. Their report was made under date of October 30, 1865. 122 The following analysis of the debt is based on their report and on the State statutes:

Item I. 8 per cent State Bonds. Authorized by the Act of March 20, 1861, entitled “An Act to provide for the funding of the debt contracted for the protection of the frontier 123 $ 16,000.00

Item II. 8 per cent State Bonds. Authorized by the Act of April 8, 1861, entitled “An Act authorizing a loan and imposing a specific tax to meet the principal and interest thereof” 124 $ 899,000.00 125

Item III. 7 per cent State Bonds. Authorized by the Act of December 10, 1863, entitled “An Act to raise two millions of dollars, or so much thereof as may be necessary, by the sale of cotton bonds, to provide for the defence of the State and to repel invasion, and for the purhcase of machinery for manufacturing purposes” 126 211,130.83

Item IV. Treasury Warrants. These were of two classes, 10 per cent interest warrants and noninterest warrants. The interest-bearing warrants were authorized by the Act of February 14, 1860. 127 The amount of 10 per cent interest warrants outstanding, including interest, was given to be about 180,000.00

Non-interest-bearing warrants were authorized by the Act of January 10, 1862. 128 The amount of non-interest warrants outstanding was given to be 1,888,997.90

Item V. Due soldiers and for supplies. Amount estimated at 3,150,000.00

Item VI. Due on account of the Republic of Texas. Amount estimated at 110,613.23

Item VII. Due school fund, university fund, and other special funds of the treasury on account of securities and specie borrowed by the general fund and on account of treasury warrants and Confederate notes received by such funds $1,455,913.86

Item VIII. Unclassified debt 199,176.76

Total $8,110,832.58

An account of the objects for which the above debt was incurred is essential to an understanding of later legislative action on it. The 8 per cent bonds of item I were issued to fund treasury warrants on account of liabilities antedating March 2, 1861. The 8 per cent bonds of item II were issued on account of $92,601.67 of liabilities incurred before March 2, 1861, and of $105,600.38 of civil and $700,797.95 of military liabilities incurred after March 2, 1861. The 7 per cent bonds of item III were issued on account of military expenditures after March 2, 1861. The outstanding treasury warrants of item IV are not classified as to use or date of issue, but it is stated that about $1,150,000.00 were drawn after March 2, 1861, for the support of soldiers' families. The claims estimated under item V were obviously of a war character and dated after March 2, 1861. The amount of item VI represented an estimate of the unfunded, non-interest-bearing debt of the Republic of Texas. There existed an appropriation for the payment of such of this debt as had been audited. 129 Of item VII, the amount due the school fund was $1,137,406.65 and was on account of United States bonds, interest coupons and specie transferred from that fund, and State bonds and treasury warrants held by that fund. All of the transactions occurred after January 28, 1861. The amount due the university fund was $283,514.22, and was on account of United States bonds, interest coupons and specie transferred from that fund, and treasury warrants and Confederate notes received by that fund. Some of the debt to this fund was incurred prior to January 28, 1861. The balance of item VII was due special treasury accounts, such as escheated estates, county tax funds, etc., and was incurred after January 28, 1861. Item VIII, or the debt of miscellaneous character, was not described by the investigators.

The debt as above described was, both as to amount and character, that which confronted the delegates to the constitutional convention which convened in Austin on February 7, 1866. This convention was composed of delegates elected by such citizens only as had taken the oath of amnesty or had received special pardon from the President of the United States.

Ordinance No. 2, passed by this convention March 15, 1866, declared all debts created by the State of Texas in the aid of the late war, directly or indirectly, to be null and void, and forbade the Legislature to assume or make any provision for the payment of any portion of the debts contracted or incurred, or warrants issued by the State between January 28, 1861, and August 5, 1865, except warrants issued in payment of services rendered, or liabilities incurred, before January 28, 1861. 130

Ordinance No. 15 of this convention validated all the warrants issued for the payment of troops called into the service of the State by Governor Houston for the protection of the frontier prior to March 2, 1861. 131

Ordinance No. 12 acknowledged the indebtedness of the State to the school fund only for the United States bonds and interest coupons transferred from that fund and which were then in possession of the State or which might be recovered by the State. It also acknowledged the indebtedness of the State to the university fund for the United States bonds and interest coupons transferred from that fund in February, 1860. It directed that the Legislature should issue State bonds to these funds for this indebtedness, and it ordained that the Legislature should have no authority and was forbidden to assume or provide by taxation or otherwise, for the payment of any other claim or pretended liability of the State to the school and university funds. 132

The debt repudiated by ordinance No. 2 included all the war debt incurred on account of civil as well as military expenditures. Some ten members of the convention went on record in protest against the repudiation of the debt for civil purposes, on the ground that it was not required by the President's restoration policy. 133 The convention appears to have acted, however, in accordance with what it conceived to be the President's restoration policy. “We have by ordinance declared the entire debt growing out of, and accruing during, the war null and void, and forbidden the Legislature assuming or providing for the payment of any portion of it. In so complete and full a manner as language can express, we have declared ourselves on these important questions which have been deemed so vital to sustaining your policy.” 134 No record has been found of a suggestion by President Johnson to the provisional governor or to the convention of this repudiative action. He had, however, in the previous year made the suggestion to Provisional Governor Holden of North Carolina that “Every dollar of the debt created to aid the rebellion against the United States should be repudiated finally and forever.” 135

The provisional government of Texas ceased and a restored State government went into effect August 20, 1866. An act of November 9, 1866, entitled “An Act to ascertain the amount of, and adjusting and funding the State debt, and to state any and all accounts between the State and individuals,” created an auditorial board “for the purpose of auditing all claims for money against the State and reauditing all the audited liabilities of the State not inhibited by the Constitution.” 136 The principal work of the board consisted in separating from the debt incurred between January 28, 1861, and August 5, 1865, that part incurred on account of expenditures authorized before January 28, 1861. The action of the board ceased December 1, 1867. 137 An analysis of its report shows the following:

Item I. 8 per cent bonds of March 20, 1861. Amount issued, $16,000. Amount rejected, $86.04. Amount of principal recognized or estimated valid, $15,913.96; interest, $1319.60. Total, $17,233.56. Amount audited, $4133.56. Balance outstanding $ 13,100.00

Item II. 8 per cent bonds of April 8, 1861. Amount issued, $917,000.00. 138 Amount rejected, $855,111.95. Amount of principal recognized or estimated valid, $61,888.05; interest, $13,909. Total, $75,797.05. Amount audited, $30,389.88. Balance outstanding and unaudited 45,407.17

Item III. 10 per cent warrants. Amount issued less amounts funded and received in the collection of revenue, $109,988.69. Interest to December 1, 1867, $69,292.44. Total principal and interest, $179,281.12. Amount rejected and estimated to be invalid, $30,591.29. Amount audited as valid, $72,680.05. Amount outstanding and unaudited and estimated valid, $76,009.79. Total recognized and estimated valid 148,689.84

Item IV. Non-interest notes (warrants). Amount issued less amounts funded and received in the collection of revenue, $62,942.82. Interest allowed to December 1, 1867, $27,065.41. Total principal and interest, $90,008.23. Amount of principal and interest audited, $35,047.61. Amount oustanding, of which $11,541.72 was estimated as valid, $54,960.62. Total audited and estimated valid 78,466.51

Item V. Amount of 8 per cent certificates issued in payment of minute companies under Act of November 12, 1866, and audited, $3570.76. Interest and amount unaudited, $354.97. Total 3,925.73

Item VI. Unaudited claims. Amount audited, $3,323.48. Estimated outstanding, $5,000.00 Total 8,323.48

The debt described in items V and VI appears to have been incurred after August 5, 1865.

Omitting these, therefore, for the time being, the total of the debt described in items I-IV, was, with interest, $1,217,517.96; total rejected, $897,331; total valid $320,186.96

Adding the total of items V and VI to the valid, the total valid debt was 332,436.17

Audited 149,145.34

Outstanding and unaudited 183,290.83

The act creating the auditorial board authorized the issue of 6 per cent, ten-year bonds, interest payable semi-annually, for which audited valid claims were exchangeable at the State treasury. The board issued $149,145.34 certificates of valid claims, and $125,100.00 were exchanged for bonds.

The auditorial board confined its action to the debts due individuals and did not audit those due the special funds, such as the school and university funds. The indebtedness of the State to these funds was defined by ordinance No. 12 of the Convention of 1866. Pursuant to this ordinance, the Legislature by Act of November 12, 1866, provided for the issue to the school fund of 5 per cent, twelve-year bonds, interest payable semi-annually, in place of the United States bonds and interest coupons transferred from that fund since January 28, 1861, and which were then in the possession of the State or which might be recovered by the State. 139 Bonds of the State to the amount of $82,168.82, bearing date of January 1, 1867, were accordingly debited to the school fund. 140 This same Act of November 12, 1866, in obedience to the requirements of ordinance No. 12, provided for the issue of similar bonds to the university fund on account of the United States bonds and interest coupons transferred from that fund in February, 1860, and February, 1861. 141 This transfer of the United States bonds was made under authority of the Acts of January 31, 1860, and February 8, 1861. Bonds of the State, bearing date of January 1, 1867, to the amount of $134,472.26, were debited to the university fund in pursuance of the law of 1866. Ordinance No. 12 specifically provided that these were the only liabilities of the State to the school and university funds which the Legislature had any authority to assume or provide for by taxation or otherwise. Despite this prohibition, however, every Comptroller's report from 1866 to 1883 included in the school fund statement 6 per cent State bonds for $320,367.13, dated May 13, 1865, and in the university fund statement, a Comptroller's certificate of indebtedness for $10,300.41, dated June 8, 1865. The 6 per cent bonds were issued to the school fund for the purpose of funding State treasury warrants received by the school fund from railroad companies in payment of interest on their bonds. 142 The warrants funded were received during the period from August 31, 1863, to June 8, 1865. The certificate of indebtedness held by the university fund was on account of treasury warrants received by that fund from land sales which were fundable in the 8 per cent bonds of April 8, 1861. 143 The warrants were received between February, 1861, and June 8, 1865.

The action on the debt of the State taken by the constitutional convention of 1866 and by the Legislature of 1866 was not to be the final one, however; for the civil government which had been inaugurated on August 13, 1866, and under which an orderly ascertainment of, and provisions for, the debt had been made, was short-lived. Under the Reconstruction Acts of Congress of March and July, 1867, Texas was held to be unreconstructed, her civil government was abolished, and a military or provisional government again established. 144 Another constitutional convention was ordered and held in Austin from June 1 to August 31, 1868, and from December 7, 1868, to February 6, 1869. A constitution was framed which was accepted by the people in an election held from November 30, 1869, to December 3, 1869, and this constitution was ratified by the Congress of the United States on March 30, 1870. Between the date of the amending of the constitution by the convention of 1866 and that of the framing of the constitution adopted in 1869, the Fourteenth Amendment to the constitution of the United States had been adopted. This amendment was proposed on June 16, 1866, and was declared by Congress adopted on July 21, 1868. Section 4 of this amendment provided that “neither the United States nor any State shall assume or pay any debt or obligation incurred in aid of insurrection or rebellion against the United States . . .; but all such debts, obligations and claims shall be held illegal and void.” Accordingly, the Texas constitution of 1869, Article 12, Section 34, provided:

(1).

That “All debts created by the so-called State of Texas, from and after the 28th day of January, 1861, and prior to the 5th day of August, 1865, were and are null and void; and the Legislature is prohibited from making any provision for the acknowledgment or payment of such debts.”

(2).

That “All unpaid balances, whether of salary, per diem, or monthly allowance, due to employes of the State, who were in the service thereof on the said 28th day of January, 1861, civil or military, and who gave their aid, countenance, or support to the rebellion then inaugurated against the government of the United States, or turned their arms against the said government, thereby forfeited the sums annually due them.”

(3).

That “All the 10 per cent warrants issued for military services and exchanged during the rebellion at the treasury for non-interest warrants are hereby declared to have been fully paid and discharged.”

(4).

“Provided, that any loyal person or his or her heirs or legal representatives may, by proper legal proceedings, to be commenced within two years after the acceptance of this Constitution by the Congress of the United States, show proof in avoidance of any contract made, or revise or annul any decree or judgment rendered since the said 28th day of January, when, through fraud practiced, or threats of violence used towards such persons, no adequate consideration for the contract has been received; or when, through absence from the State of such person, or through political prejudice against such person, the decision complained of was not fair and impartial.” 145

Nothing was done by the Legislature about the debt until 1871, when by the Act of May 2, 1871, provision was made for its reauditing. 146 An auditorial board was created by this act whose duty it was made to examine the work of the auditorial board of 1866 and to audit all other claims against the State. The act provided that bonds issued by the board of 1866 for claims void under the constitution should be considered void and should be canceled. A comparison of the provisions of 1866 and of 1869 shows that the only claims interdicted by the constitution of 1869 and not by that of 1866 were: (1) the unpaid balances due those employes of the State on January 28, 1861, who did not remain loyal to the government of the United States, and (2) the 10 per cent warrants issued for military services and exchanged during the war for non-interest-bearing warrants.

The auditorial board created by the Act of May 2, 1871, made its first report under date of September 1, 1871. 147 The report stated that, “upon a careful examination of the transactions of the board of 1866, we have been unable to discover any error in the auditing with the exception of $10,283.12 allowed as interest on non-interest warrants—, but this is a question about which persons may honestly differ.” In regard to the unpaid balances due disloyal persons on January 28, 1861, and the 10 per cent interest warrants exchanged during the war for non-interest warrants, each of which was interdicted by the constitution of 1869, the board stated that the former character of claims would not exceed $10,000, the latter $78,466.51, and that the board of 1866 had funded about $40,000 of these claims in 6 per cent bonds. On account of the higher interest (10 per cent) which the valid portion of the claims would bear if reaudited as compared with the 6 per cent interest which the bonds bore, the board estimated that the State would save only about $25,000 by repudiating the claims. Because of the comparatively small amount involved and because the holders of the bonds refused to submit them for cancellation, on the ground that they were issued in accordance with the constitution and laws of Texas and of the United States, the board, which was composed of the Attorney General, the Comptroller, and the Treasurer of the State, recommended that the action of the board of 1866 in regard to these claims be confirmed. The recommendation of the board in regard to the bonds was adopted by the Legislature and appropriation for the payment of interest on the claims was made in the Act of November 13, 1871. 148

This legislative validation of the action of the board of 1866 extended only to the bonds based upon the certificates of indebtedness issued by that board. But for this validating act some $40,000.00 of the 6 per cent bonds issued under date of January 1, 1867, would have been held null and void, because they represented either debt to disloyal persons or were on account of an exchange of interest warrants for non-interest warrants during the war. It will be remembered that there were some $24,045.34 of unfunded certificates issued by the board of 1866. The Act of November 13, 1871, validated these also, subject to the provisions of the constitution of 1869. The board of 1866 had reported that the estimated valid portion of the outstanding and unaudited debt amounted to $183,290.83. These claims were also subject, in auditing by the boards of 1871 and subsequent years, to the provisions of the constitution of 1869. It will thus be noted that the Act of November 13, 1861, observed the distinction between bonds and unfunded claims. Although some of the bonds issued during the war and based upon liabilities incurred before the war would be included in these unfunded claims, their amount was not known and they could not be properly classed as a part of the bonded debt of the State until they had been audited. The life of the auditorial board was extended by the Act of November 13, 1871, to January 1, 1873, and it was also provided that all interest-bearing claims should be presented on or before March 1, 1872, on pain of not bearing interest after that date.

The Act of May 2, 1871, provided for the issue and sale of 6 per cent, twenty-year bonds to secure the money needed to pay the valid claims ascertained by the auditorial board; it was also provided that holders of claims might exchange their claims for these bonds. The claims subject to payment from the proceeds of the sale of these bonds, or to funding in them, were the valid certificates of indebtedness issued by the board of 1866 and the other valid claims of the same period. The Act of November 13, 1871, not only validated the bonds of 1866, amounting to $125,100.00, but also appropriated $40,269.15 to pay the interest upon them from date of issue. It also appropriated $15,000 to pay the principal and interest of the bonds issued under the Act of March 20, 1861. These amounts were drawn during the fiscal year ending August 31, 1872. 149

All of this legislation of the State and all the acts of the auditorial boards related to the debt of the State to individuals. The 5 per cent bonds, amounting to $82,168.82, issued under the Act of November 12, 1866, to the school fund, and the 5 per cent bonds, amounting to $134,472.26, issued under the same act to the university fund, were issued to those funds because of transfers made from them to the State revenue account. Those held by the school fund were on account of the United States bonds and interest coupons transferred under authority of the Act of January 11, 1862, and which in 1866 were in the possession of the State, or which might be recovered by the State. 150 The Comptroller's reports for 1874 and subsequent years err in describing the State bonds issued to the school fund at this time as indemnity for United States bonds used during the war. They were only transferred from the school fund during the war, but as the ordinance of 1866 and the Comptroller's reports of 1866 and 1867 make clear, they were used for general revenue purposes between August, 1865, and January, 1867. The 5 per cent bonds issued to the university fund were on account of the United States bonds and interest coupons transferred from that fund to State revenue account in February, 1860, and February, 1861. It is highly questionable whether one should regard the bonds of the State held by its special funds as binding State obligations, subject, like the State debt to individuals, to all debt conditions against non-payment of interest and failure to pay principal at the contracted date. It is certainly questionable in the case of the State obligations held at this time by the school and university funds. Neither the constitution of 1846 nor the amended constitution of 1861 protected the educational funds against the transfer of the funds authorized by the acts of January 31, 1860, and January 11, 1862. 151 Legislative action alone was responsible for the possession of the 5 per cent United States bonds by these funds and legislative action was unrestrained by any constitutional provision against recalling them at any time. But even if they should be regarded at the time of issue as a binding, bonded obligation, the failure of the State to acknowledge their validity, as it did the other debt authorized in 1866, throws doubt on their validity after the overthrow of civil government in 1867. Neither the Legislature nor the auditorial board of 1871 took any cognizance of these 5 per cent State bonds, and this appears to have been fatal to their position, for they were in every Comptroller's report after 1870, except that of 1881-2, classed as doubtful or worthless. The passage of the Reconstruction Acts of Congress in 1867 and the consequent overthrow of civil government and the establishment of military government in Texas, threw the State back exactly to where it was at the close of the war in 1865. As the bonded debt due individuals and authorized by the Act of 1866 had to be reviewed to be valid, so it would seem any other bonded debt authorized in 1866 should have been reviewed and validated to be a binding obligation. This was not done for the 5 per cent bonds held by the school and university funds, and they remained of doubtful validity, no interest being paid on them and their date of maturity passing without payment, until 1883. By the Act of February 23, 1883, they were validated and were ordered paid with accrued interest. 152

The reports of the Comptroller after 1865 carried also among the debt of doubtful validity the 6 per cent State bonds dated May 13, 1865, and the Comptroller's certificate of indebtedness dated June 8, 1865, the bonds being held by the school fund, and the certificate by the university fund. As has been explained these were specifically declared void as war debts in 1866, and they were not validated until 1883. Their validation and payment under the Act of February 23, 1883, was, so far as legal obligation was concerned, a pure gift under the guise of payment of a debt. The failure of the State up to 1883 to pay the interest or the principal of the above obligations held by the school and university funds was therefore legally justifiable in the light of the history of the obligations.

A question pertinent in the consideration of the charge of repudiation is this: Did the State pay promptly during war time the interest on the bonded indebtedness which the auditorial boards of 1866 and 1871 found to be valid? Since the State had no bonded debt on January 28, 1861, this question is more specifically: Did the State during war time pay the interest on the 8 per cent bonds of March 20, 1861, and the 8 per cent bonds of April 8, 1861? It appears from the report of the auditorial board of 1866 that the interest on the 8 per cent bonds of March 20, 1861, had been paid up to January 1, 1867, and that the interest on the 8 per cent bonds of April 8, 1861, had been paid up to July 1, 1865. The interest on the bonds of April 8, 1861, was payable in specie, and evidence of the payment of it in specie is to be found in the special loan tax accounts. 153

Also pertinent is the question: Was the interest on the bonded indebtedness found to be valid by the auditorial boards of 1866 and 1871 paid after the war? It appears from the report of the auditorial board of 1866 that interest on the bonds of March 20, 1861, was paid to January 1, 1867, and that no interest was paid on the bonds of April 8, 1861, from January 1, 1865, to January 1, 1867. Such of this debt as was found to be valid by the board of 1866 and was funded in the bonds authorized by the Act of November 9, 1866, had no interest paid on it until the passage of the Act of November 13, 1871. The failure to pay interest as it fell due is not chargeable to the dereliction of the State of Texas but to the Congress of the United States. If there had been any bonded debt which antedated the war, there would have been no question as to the obligation of the State to pay interest on it at the time stipulated; but all of the bonded debt of the State was authorized during the war or after January 28, 1861. Therefore, the question as to payment of interest on the valid debt subsequent to the war depends on the date of the establishment of the validity of the debt. Because of the abolition of the civil government and the re-establishment of the military government by the Reconstruction Acts of Congress in March and July of 1867 the action of Texas in 1866 providing for its ascertainment was nullified, and Texas may be said not to have had any known valid debt until 1871. As soon as the valid debt was determined, payment of accrued interest was promptly made, and interest thereafter on it and on all other debt was always promptly paid.

It may be asked, finally: Was the principal of the valid debt promptly paid at maturity? The bonds issued under the Act of March 20, 1861, were payable July 1, 1871. Because these bonds were issued during the war period, though to fund floating liabilities incurred before the war, they were subject to auditing before their validity could be established. In view of the Reconstruction Acts of Congress, there was no legally constituted body that could finally determine their validity until 1871. By the Act of November 13, 1871, appropriation was made for the audited and valid portion of this debt. The bonds issued under the Act of April 8, 1861, were due sixteen years from their date. Such of these as were valid and were exchanged for the bonds issued in 1866 were paid at maturity; those valid and which were not exchanged for the bonds of 1866 were either exchanged for bonds authorized by the Act of May 2, 1871, or were paid before their maturity. The principal of the bonds issued under the Act of November 9, 1866, and which were due January 1, 1877, was also paid at maturity. Except in the cases described above; namely, the repudiation of the debt incurred in aid of the war, and the delayed payment of the interest and principal of the bonds authorized in 1866 and of the bonds issued to the school and university funds, the State of Texas has always since January 1, 1861, either paid or refunded its bonded debt at maturity, and met the interest charges on the date stipulated in the bonds.



FOOTNOTES

122. Executive Record, No. 281, Archives of the State Department of Texas. The report is abridged and printed as an appendix to the House Journal, 1866.

123. General Laws, 8th Leg., Extra Session, Chap. 28; repealing Act of January 11, 1862. General Laws, 9th Leg., Chap. 63.
124. General Laws, 8th Leg., Extra Session, Chap. 51; amendatory Act of January 11, 1862. General Laws, 9th Leg., Regular Session, Chap. 56; Act of January 13, 1862. General Laws, 9th Leg., Regular Session, Chap. 54, Act of March 3, 1863. General Laws, 9th Leg., Extra Session, Chap. 10.
125. There were $917,000 of these bonds issued, but $17,000 were unused and $1000.00 mutilated, leaving net amount $899,000.
126. General Laws, 10th Leg., Chap. 15; supplementary Act of December 16, 1863, Chap. 44.
127. General Laws, 8th Leg., Chap. 82. Repealed by Act of January 10, 1862. General Laws, 9th Leg., Chap. 40. See also the funding Act of March 20, 1861. General Laws, 8th Leg., Extra Session, Chap. 28, and the Act of January 11, 1862. General Laws, 9th Leg., Chap. 63.
128. General Laws, 9th Leg., Chap. 40. The Act of January 13, 1862, General Laws, 9th Leg., Chap. 54, authorized funding in 8 per cent loan bonds. See also Act of May 28, 1864, General Laws, 10th Leg., Called Session, Chap. 19.
129. Comptroller's Report, 1860-1.
130. Gammel, Laws of Texas, V, 887.
131. Ibid., V, 900.
132. Ibid., V, 899.
133. Journal of the Convention of 1866, p. 356.
134. Report of Select Committee to prepare an address to President Andrew Johnson, Journal of the Convention of 1866, p. 317.
135. W. L. Fleming, Documentary History of Reconstruction, I, 180.
136. General Laws, 11th Leg., Chap. 122.
137. The report of the board is to be found in the Comptroller's Report, 1868-9, pp. 32-37; also in the Reconstruction Convention Journal, 1869, Vol. 1, pp. 364-8.
138. This figure includes the $17,000.00 unused and the $1000.00 mutilated.
139. General Laws, 11th Leg., Chap. 167.
140. Comptroller's Report, 1868-9; General Laws, 18th Leg., Regular Session, Chap. 27.
141. House Journal, 17th Leg., Called Session, p. 27.
142. For acts, see Gammel, Laws of Texas, V, 691, 767, 820.
143. Ibid., V, 355, 486.
144. Ibid., VI, 3-12; for the history of this period, see Texas v. White, 7 Wallace, pp. 700-743.
145. The paragraphing is that of the present writer.
146. General Laws, 12th Leg., 1st Sess., Chap. 66; supplementary act, Chap. 113; supplementary act, General Laws, 12th Leg., 2d Sess., Chap. 32.
147. House Journal, 12th Leg., Adjourned Sess., 66.
148. General Laws, 12th Leg., 2d Sess., Chap. 32.
149. Comptroller's Report, 1872, pp. 29-30.
150. For Act of January 11, 1862, see Gammel, Laws of Texas, V, 55. For Act of November 12, 1866, see Ibid., V, 1126.
151. See Article 10 of the Constitutlon of 1846 and the amended Constitution of 1861, Gammel, Laws of Texas, V, 24.
152. Gammel, Laws of Texas, IX, 321.
153. See Comptroller's ledger, 1861-5, pp. 437-441.


How to cite:
Miller, E. T., "REPUDIATION OF STATE DEBT IN TEXAS SINCE 1861 ", Volume 016, Number 2, Southwestern Historical Quarterly Online, Page 169 - 183. http://www.tsha.utexas.edu/publications/journals/shq/online/v016/n2/article_3.html
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