JULY 28, 1865:
“Circular # 15”
specifying new rules for the Bureau of Refugees, Freedmen, And Abandoned Lands (the
Freedmen’s Bureau), is published:
I. Circular No. 13, of
July 28, 1865, from this bureau, and all portions of circulars from this bureau
conflicting with the provisions of this circular, are hereby rescinded.
II. This bureau has
charge of such " tracts of land within the insurrectionary States as shall
have been abandoned, or to which the United States shall have acquired title by
confiscation or sale, or otherwise," and no such lands now in its
possession shall be surrendered to any claimant except as hereinafter provided.
III. Abandoned lands are
defined in section 2 of the act of Congress approved July 2, 1864, as lands,
"the lawful owner whereof shall be voluntarily absent therefrom and
engaged either in arms or otherwise in aiding or encouraging the rebellion."
IV. Land will not be
regarded as confiscated until it has been condemned and sold by decree of the
United States court for the district in which the property may be found, and
the title thereto thus vested in the United States.
V. Upon its appearing
satisfactorily to any assistant commissioner that any property under his
control is not abandoned as above defined, and that the United States has
acquired no title to it by confiscation, sale or otherwise, he will formally
surrender it to the authorized claimant or claimants, promptly reporting his
action to the Commissioner.
VI. Assistant
commissioners will prepare accurate descriptions of all confiscated and
abandoned lands under their control, keeping a record thereof themselves, and
forwarding monthly to the Commissioner copies of these descriptions in the
manner prescribed in circular No. 10, of July 11, 186.5, from this bureau. They
will set apart so much of said lands as is necessary for the immediate use of
loyal refugees and freedmen, being careful to select for this purpose those
lands which most clearly fall under the control of this bureau, which selection
must be submitted to the Commissioner for his approval. The specific division
of lands so set apart into lots, and the rental or sale thereof, according to
section 4, of the law establishing the bureau, will be completed as soon as
practicable, and reported to the Commissioner.
VII. Abandoned lands
held by this bureau may be restored to owners pardoned by the President, by the
assistant commissioners, to whom applications for such restoration should be
forwarded, so far as practicable, through the superintendents of the districts
in which the lands are situated.
Each application must be
accompanied by—
1st. Evidence of special
pardon by the President, or a copy of the oath of amnesty prescribed in the
President's proclamation of May 29, 1865, when the applicant is not included in
any of the classes therein excepted from the benefits of said oath.
2d. Proof of title.
Officers of the bureau
through whom the application passes will endorse thereon such facts as may
assist the assistant commissioner in his decision, stating especially the use
made by the bureau of the land.
VIII. No land under
cultivation by loyal refugees or freedmen will be restored under this circular,
until the crops now growing shall be secured for the benefit of the
cultivators, unless full and just compensation be made for their labor and its
products, and for their expenditures.
No comments:
Post a Comment