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 No. 1 An Ordinance declaring
the Ordinance of Secession Null and Void.
Be it Ordained by the People of Florida, in Convention
assembled, That the Ordinance adopted by the Convention of the people assembled
on the 10th day of January, A. D. 1861, and known as the Ordinance of Secession,
is hereby declared null and void from the beginning, and of no effect.
Passed in open Convention, February
21, A. D. 1868. HORATIO JENKINS, JR., President. SHERMAN CONANT, Secretary.
| NEW AND
NOTEWORTHY
ON FLORIDA MEMORY |
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Florida Blues Each of our neighboring southern states has placed a unique brand on the music’s form and sound—Florida hasn’t done a bad job of that in its own right. |
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Florida Cigars: Artistry, Labor, and Politics in Florida’s Oldest Industry Commercial cigar rolling first came to Florida in the 1830s and in the decades after the Civil War it became one of the most important industries in the southeastern United States. |
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