Illinois General Assembly - Full Text of HR1147
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Full Text of HR1147  100th General Assembly

HR1147 100TH GENERAL ASSEMBLY


  

 


 
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1
HOUSE RESOLUTION

 
2    WHEREAS, On May 5, 1868, John A. Logan, commander of the
3Grand Army of the Republic, issued General Order No. 11
4designating the 30th day of May "for the purpose of strewing
5with flowers or otherwise decorating the graves of comrades who
6died in defense of their country ... "; and
 
7    WHEREAS, In so doing, John Logan established the national
8Memorial Day holiday; and
 
9    WHEREAS, This Memorial Day will mark the 150th reading of
10his "Memorial Day Order" at thousands of Memorial Day
11observations across America; and
 
12    WHEREAS, Despite this, John Logan, according to biographer
13Gary Ecelberger "may be the most noteworthy 19th century
14American to escape notice in the 20th and 21st centuries"; and
 
15    WHEREAS, John Alexander Logan was born in Murphysboro in
16Jackson County in 1826, the son of Dr. John and Elizabeth
17(Jenkins) Logan; and
 
18    WHEREAS, John Logan grew up in southernmost Illinois, a
19region derisively called "Egypt", whose residents, according
20to the Boston Liberator, were "mostly poor whites from the

 

 

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1Southern States too poor to own slaves themselves, too ignorant
2to know any better than to indulge the prejudices and ape the
3conduct of those who did."; and
 
4    WHEREAS, In 1853, John Logan succeeded in passing a severe
5"Black Code" prohibiting African-Americans from entering
6Illinois and blocked the passage of a bill to allow
7African-Americans to testify in court; and
 
8    WHEREAS, After returning from the Mexican-American War,
9John Logan entered politics as a Jacksonian Democrat, serving
10as Jackson County Clerk; in 1858, he was elected to represent
11the Ninth Congressional District of Illinois and won reelection
12in 1860; and
 
13    WHEREAS, With the outbreak of the Civil War, John Logan,
14being from "Egypt", had a foot in both the South and the North,
15and for too long sought a compromise; he finally declared his
16support for the Union in June of 1862; and
 
17    WHEREAS, John Logan took part in the First Battle of Bull
18Run as a Congressman and, when he returned home to Marion, told
19his constituents, "The time must come when a man must be for or
20against his country, not for or against his state...I for one
21will stand or fall with the Union."; and
 

 

 

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1    WHEREAS, John Logan then raised the 31st Illinois Infantry,
2telling all who volunteered that should Lincoln free the slaves
3he would bring his men back home; he is credited by Ulysses S.
4Grant for saving Southern Illinois for the Union; and
 
5    WHEREAS, John Logan entered the war as a colonel and rose
6in rank to major general; it was after his victory at Vicksburg
7that he earned the privilege of leading the first troops after
8the cities surrender, and it was after this victory that he
9gave his "Great Union Speech" which brought President Lincoln
10to absolve Logan "in his own mind for all of the wrong he ever
11did and all he will do hereafter"; and
 
12    WHEREAS, As the war progressed, John Logan's longstanding
13racist attitudes changed, and he came to accept the
14Emancipation Proclamation; by the end of the war he supported
15the 13th Amendment; and
 
16    WHEREAS, In 1866, John Logan won election to the U.S. House
17as a Republican, and in 1870 he became a U.S. Senator for the
18State of Illinois; he was the Republican vice-presidential
19candidate in 1884, and it was during this time that he
20supported the adoption of the 14th and 15th Amendments; and
 
21    WHEREAS, The actions of John Logan brought Frederick
22Douglass to endorse him for the Republican presidential

 

 

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1nomination in 1884, however James Blaine would eventually end
2up winning the Republican primary; and
 
3    WHEREAS, Frederick Douglass continued his support for John
4Logan and said of him in a speech, "But what of John A. Logan? I
5will tell you. If there is any statesman on this continent, now
6in public life, to whose courage, justice and fidelity, I would
7more fully and unreservedly trust the cause of the colored
8people of this country, or the cause of any other people, ...
9no man has been bolder and truer to the cause of the cause of
10the colored man and to the country, than has John A. Logan.
11There is no nonsense about him. I endorse him to you with all
12my might, mind, and strength and without a single shadow of a
13doubt"; and
 
14    WHEREAS, Senator John A. Logan died on December 26, 1886 in
15Washington D.C.; and
 
16    WHEREAS, As our state celebrates its bicentennial, few
17Illinoisans remember John Logan, or the fact that just a little
18over a century ago Illinois considered itself the land of
19"Lincoln, Grant and Logan"; the bicentennial seems a perfect
20time to remember this forgotten Illinois hero who put his
21country above party loyalty and who rejected long-held racist
22beliefs to help the nation's former enslaved peoples gain equal
23rights; therefore, be it
 

 

 

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1    RESOLVED, BY THE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES OF THE ONE
2HUNDREDTH GENERAL ASSEMBLY OF THE STATE OF ILLINOIS, that we
3applaud John A. Logan for his sense of duty for country, for
4his dedication to public service, for his work done to promote
5equal rights, and for starting the proud tradition of
6celebrating Memorial Day every year in this country.