Posted on 09/10/2005 4:46:12 AM PDT by Colonel Kangaroo
Lincoln holiday on its way out
By Phil Kabler Staff writer
A bill to combine state holidays for Washington and Lincolns birthdays into a single Presidents Day holiday cleared its first legislative committee Wednesday, over objections from Senate Republicans who said it besmirches Abraham Lincolns role in helping establish West Virginia as a state.
Senate Government Organization Committee members rejected several attempts to retain Lincolns birthday as a state holiday.
State Sen. Russ Weeks, R-Raleigh, introduced an amendment to instead eliminate Columbus Day as a paid state holiday. Columbus didnt have anything to do with making West Virginia a state, he said. If we have to cut one, lets cut Christopher Columbus.
Jim Pitrolo, legislative director for Gov. Joe Manchin, said the proposed merger of the two holidays would bring West Virginia in line with federal holidays, and would effectively save $4.6 million a year the cost of one days pay to state workers.
Government Organization Chairman Ed Bowman, D-Hancock, said the overall savings would be even greater, since by law, county and municipal governments must give their employees the same paid holidays as state government.
To the taxpayers, the savings will be even larger, he said.
The bill technically trades the February holiday for a new holiday on the Friday after Thanksgiving. For years, though, governors have given state employees that day off with pay by proclamation.
Sen. Sarah Minear, R-Tucker, who also objected to eliminating Lincolns birthday as a holiday, argued that it was misleading to suggest that eliminating the holiday will save the state money.
Its not going to save the state a dime, said Minear, who said she isnt giving up on retaining the Lincoln holiday.
Committee members also rejected an amendment by Sen. Steve Harrison, R-Kanawha, to recognize the Friday after Thanksgiving as Lincoln Day.
I do believe President Lincoln has a special place in the history of West Virginia, he said.
Sen. Randy White, D-Webster, said he believed that would create confusion.
Its confusing to me, he said.
Senate Judiciary Chairman Jeff Kessler, D-Marshall, suggested that the state could recognize Lincolns proclamation creating West Virginia as part of the June 20 state holiday observance for the states birthday.
Proponents of the measure to eliminate a state holiday contend that the numerous paid holidays - as many as 14 in election years contribute to inefficiencies in state government.
To contact staff writer Phil Kabler, use e-mail or call 348-1220.
Man, you just can't ever admit that you're wrong, can you? Okay, I choose to define it as Steam Boats, and I've got corroboration from a variety of sources to show that I'm right and that the number of steam boats arriving in New Orleans in any year of the period is much more like 3000 than 300. For instance:
"the first steamboat came downriver in 1812. In 1821, 287 steamboats arrived in New Orleans; by 1826, there were 700 steamboat arrivals. In 1845, 2,500 steamboats were recorded, and during the 1850's an average of 3,000 steamboats a year called at the city."
http://www.madere.com/history.html
" By 1834, the number of steamboat arrivals in New Orleans annually was 2,300, indicative of that port's trade. "
http://www.moah.org/exhibits/archives/steam.html
(are you going to claim that steamboat traffic had declined 90% between the 1830s and 1850s?
Finally, I'd point out that the heading on the table specifies steam boats and I contend that they wouldn't then have a column heading for that labelled "st. ships" and another labelled "s. boats" if the latter wasn't the steam boats of the heading.
Don't have time to wade through 1000 posts, but do the Neo-Confederates not remember the "Wimot Proviso," "36'30," John Brown, "popular sovereignty," the Fugitive Slave Law, Kansas-nebraska act, Dred Scott, the Free Soil party, the annexation of all of Texas while going to war with Mexico with the compromise to take only HALF of Oregon in the North(not slaveholding territory) or the discussions of taking Cuba or land further south, and that one guy(can't recall his name) who actually did rule Guatemala or some C American country for a short time---
The sectional conflict was fueled by slavery and the cultural and economic differences created by the institution.
"Founders, a majority of whom were slaveowners. Or were they the good slaveowners, while their children were the evil slaveowners. Get over yourself, your little hyperbole fools nobody."
Actually, I believe there's a line by Jefferson on slavery, you know the "I tremble for my country when I reflect that God is just and his wrath terrible(or swift, whatever)"
The previous generation had believed slavery a 'necessary evil' and that one day it would be gone. As abolitionist sentiment increased, the slaveowning South became defensive and asserted a positive identity to slaveholding. The idea of the restriction and destruction of the institution was no more in the South. Which happens to be when the sectional conflict really began.
one writer even commented that slavery was the greatest form of "socialism" on earth. the talk of "wage slaves" in the North was also quite common from pro-slavery Southerners.
Out of the 21 total declarations, ordinances, and other secession documents only 6 mention slavery in any context beyond a geographical reference (and only 5 of them mention it at substantial length - the sixth is in a single brief clause).
How many mention tariffs? Georgia does. South Carolina does in Rhett's appeal to the other states. Who else? And by "geographical reference" do you mean the constant references in the documents of the regions as either 'slave-holding" and "non-slave-holding". That gives away the game right there.
(interestingly enough half that document is a list of grievances against the north for tax hikes and tariffs).
More like less than a third, but what slavery talk is there is prime stuff. "Experience has proved that slaveholding States cannot be safe in subjection to non-slaveholding States. Indeed, no people can ever expect to preserve its rights and liberties, unless these be in its own custody. To plunder and oppress, where plunder and oppression can be practiced with impunity, seems to be the natural order of things."
Man, talk about irony challenged. Then there's the last line: "We ask you to join us in forming a Confederacy of Slaveholding States." Not a confederacy of low-tariff, foreign-shipper-using states. A confederacy of slave-holding states.
Nonsense. My original contention was there was nothing prohibiting the South from competing with the North for shipping, including geography or having an "established shipping industry" at the time the Navigation laws were enacted. Something you claimed they didn't have.
Using your own sources, I've shown that Charleston was one of the top four seaports in the United States when Congress enacted the navigation laws and tariffs on imports. I've also shown through public records the volume and variety of both products shipped, and international destinations for those products, about the time South Carolina ratified the US Constitution. From the Charleston example alone, a reasonable person would conclude that the South had an "established shipping industry" that could compete with the North at that time.
The fact that the South didn't "own a large shipping industry" had nothing to do with Federal law, warehouses, or their competitors, and everything to do with the planter mentality that infected the decision making of their effete elected officials. Apparently I am not alone in drawing this conclusion either. This is from Debow's Review On Direct Foreign Trade of the South in 1852
"It was in 1837-8, along there-when the British government was about writing Q. E. D. to the practical demonstration which the "Sirius," the "Liverpool," and the " Great Western," were just then giving to the great problem of Ocean Steam Navigation. France, the French, and the King of the French, were burning with the desire not to be outdone by England. They had the money ready, and were looking for a port on this side to which they might start an opposition line of steamers. It was then proposed that the South should offer to take part of the stock, provided the French would select Norfolk as the terminus for their line-and thus get the line into the hands of Americans; for we "felt it in our bones," that, even at that day, we could beat John Bull. We did succeed in impressing one gentleman, at least, with our notions. Him we knew well: he was an enterprising go-ahead fellow. Requiescat! Captivated with the idea of subsidizing the French in the noble enterprise, he petitioned the Virginia legislature to grant him the charter for an Atlantic Steam Navigation Company. He wanted no privileges, no favors, but simply the charter; for he was sure that with the charter and his energies, he could gain the French over as allies, and induce them to select Norfolk for the American terminus of their line. The legislature refused the charter. The French, meeting with no sympathy on this side, receiving no overtures fromn the South to send their boats to Norfolk, proceeded to build their vessels. They selected New-York for their American station..had the legislature of Virginia granted that Ocean Steam Navigation Charter, Norfolk would at this day have been the centre of steamship enterprise for the United States. The French steamers would have been built there; they would have been commanded and controlled by Americans who would never forget their sugar, nor make their passengers sour. This would have established foundries, machine shops, and ship yards at Norfolk, and have placed her ten or fifteen years ahead of New-York in the steamship business. Norfolk would then have been enabled to get the contracts from the Government for establishing those lines of splendid steamers that are now giving such a tremendous impetus to the business, the trade, travel and traffic of NewYork. The lines to the Isthmus would have belonged to Norfolk. Hers would probably have been the Havre and Bremen lines. And the Old Dominion might have claimed also what is now the " Collins' Line." Geographically speaking, Norfolk is in a position to have commanded the business of the Atlantic seaboard. It is midway the coast. It has a back country of surprising fertility-of great capacity and resources; and as far as the approaches from the sea are concerned, its facility of ingress and egress, at all times and in all weathers, there is from Maine to Georgia, from the St. Johns to the Rio Grande, nothing like Norfolk. The waters'which flow past Norfolk into the sea, divide the producing from the conisuming states of the Atlantic slope-the agricultural from the manufacturing-the ice ponds of the North from the cotton fields at the South-the potato patch from the rice plantation the miner from the planter. And these same waters unite at this one place the natural channels that lead from the most famous regions in the country for corn, wheat and tobacco, to the great commercial marts.
I believe the man's name was William Walker, the country in question was Nicaragua, and one of the first things he did after installing himself in power was to establish slavery in the country with an eye on having the United States annex Nicaragua as a slaveholding state. A typical design that Southern plantation owners had for much of Central America and the Carribean in the 1850s.
Not sure what this post is saying.
I missed this earlier [lol].
more to the point, lincoln was willing to protect slavery FOREVER, if the south would remain in the union.
the WBTS had just ONE major cause = the south wanted & WANTS our freedom from the DY elites & our own FREE REPUBLIC.
that was true in 1861 & TODAY.
every other "cause of the war" were irritants and/or minor causes.
free dixie,sw
Hey, did you learn that from the professor at Tulane? Or was it Grambling? Or was it Tuskegee?
So, you are left with an assumption, not fact.
And like Gianni pointed out, you and yours have apparently forgotten the point that started this discussion.
No one except you mentioned steam boats or their relevancy.
So it's your contention that New Orleans only saw three hundred-some steamboat arrivals a year, when multiple sources refer to thousands?
"the first steamboat came downriver in 1812. In 1821, 287 steamboats arrived in New Orleans; by 1826, there were 700 steamboat arrivals. In 1845, 2,500 steamboats were recorded, and during the 1850's an average of 3,000 steamboats a year called at the city."
Down-what?
The steamboats look like another red herring.
Try to follow along, Gianni. The discussion is how busy was the port of New Orleans, which is relevant because you guys keep trying to claim that New York so dominated shipping that the south just HAD to secede. I presented some data that showed numbers for the arrival of ships to New Orleans. Pea said that the number included steam boats/river traffic, implying that ocean shipping out of N.O. was less. For that to be correct, though, and for the column Pea says represents steam boats to actually be that (as opposed to ocean-going steam ships: st. ships vs. s. boats on the table) it would have to mean that only 300-some steam boats docked at New Orleans in the years in question, as opposed to 3000-some, a number on the chart corroborated by the other sources I presented. Pea's position is that, although the chart's title includes the word "steam boats" and includes a column headed "s. boats", that it's actually the "st.ships" column which includes steam boats, and the "s. boats" column is something unknowable.
Nobody said this.
Anywhere.
Ever.
Sorry, you don't get to make stuff up.
And for the record, I'm not questioning that those concerns did cause some sectional friction. The Nullification Crisis shows that. But it wasn't enough to cause secession. Those tensions had been around for decades and the south was still getting richer. No, the overwhelming documentation of the time shows that protecting slavery after the election of LIncoln was the proximate cause of secession.
[Gianni] Nobody said this. Anywhere. Ever. Sorry, you don't get to make stuff up.
[Pearidge] Post 803 New York shipping interests, using the Navigation Laws and in collaboration with the US Congress, effectively closed the market off from competitive shipping, and in spite of the inefficiencies, was able to control the movement of Southern goods.
[Pearidge] Post 823 With the control of the transportation trade business being dominated by Northern interests, and now being vastly aided by the Warehousing Act, southern planters began to complain. Many estimated that New York merchants were making 40 cents on every dollar, but being constantly in debt to the New Yorkers, they were hardly in a position to change this state of affairs. The Northerners were in full control of the market. This would eventually turn out to be a major cause of the secession.
Thats right Gianni YOU don't get to make stuff up. So please stop disrupting this debate by distracting attention away from the core subject. Pearidge made those absurd comments [among others]on this thread and both Heyworth and I challenged him on the issue. Heyworth from the New Orleans perspective and me from the Charleston perspective. Faced with a preponderance of sourced evidence to the contrary, Pearidge is now unable to competently defend his previous assertions. Hence your distracting presence..
You're starting to remind me of a rodeo clown Gianni, albeit a lousy one...
The core subject was whether or not Northerners feared establishment of Southern commerce and international trade, thus circumventing what had become (effectively) an abusive monopoly.
Outlined from Pearidge:
1. New York was the center for international trade.
2. Their position was strengthened by federal restrictions.
3. Their domination of shipping led to extortionate rates (40 cents/dollar).
4. The South intended to make necessary improvments to compete (Charleston Harbor).
Non and Heyworth attempted to discredit the argument by claiming that Southern participation was well established prior to secession (the point currently engaged).
Mac_truck, in addition to cheerleading and sniping, has emphasized that laws favorable to trade did not exclude Southerners, thus could not have strengthened the position of an established giant such as New York (a non-sequitur).
Heyworth (1076) argues that "busy" is somehow a measure of international trade, to the point where it requires inclusion of intra-continental shipping of goods upriver from New Orleans - also a non-sequitur.
Odd that the only argument that has not been a non-sequitur came from, yes, non-sequitur.
BTW, what have you got against rodeo clowns?
Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.