Hillsborough Recorder
Sept. 11, 1861
Page 2
FROM
KENTUCKY
Louisville, Sept. 6—Capt. Garnett, of the
State Guard, has been arrested for removing the guns of his company Southward.
Gov. Harris, of Tennessee, has telegraphed Gov. Magoffin, of Kentucky, that Tennesseans
have occupied and are fortifying Hickman and Chalk Bluffs, and that he
disapproves of the proceeding. His
message on the subject has been submitted to the Senate, and a special
committee appointed to consider the subject and report to-morrow.
There are rumors
in town that the Lincoln gun-boats had shelled Columbus, but it can be
traced to no reliable source.
Gov. Magoffin’s
message to the Legislature is merely retrospective, showing neutrality to have
been thrice ratified at the ballot box, and that his own course in refusing men
to Lincoln, and his efforts to keep belligerents
off Kentucky
soil, have received the nearly unanimous approval of Kentuckians. He says:
“And now,
addressing myself to the representatives of the people of Kentucky, I protest
in their name and in their presence, in the name of constitutional liberty, and
in presence of Heaven and earth, against all and every of the President’s usurpations
and unconstitutional and illegal acts, and I protest, furthermore, against the
prosecution of a war professedly for the object of restoring the Government, an
object utterly impossible of attainment by such insane means as a war of
coercion, and I protest, moreover, against Kentucky being made the camping
ground or the pathway for the movement of forces by either of the belligerents,
and recommend earnestly to the General Assembly the prompt passage of
resolutions requiring both belligerents to keep off our soil, and respect in
good faith the neutrality which the people of Kentucky with unexampled
unanimity desire to preserve.”
[Transcribed by Sharon Strout]