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Armstrong v. United States U.S. 154 (1872)

handle is hein.slavery/ussccases0360 and id is 1 raw text is: . Statement of the case.
ARMSTRONG V. UNITED STATES.
1. The President's proclamation of the 25th December, 1868, granting
'unconditionally and without reservation to all and every person who directly
or indirectly participated in the late insurrection or rebellion, a full pardon and
amnesty for the offence of treason against the United States, &c., with restora-
tion of all rights, privileges, and immunities under the Constitution, and the
laws which have been made in pursuance thereof, granted pardon uncon-
ditionally and without reserve; and enables persons otherwise entitled
to recover from the United States, the proceeds of captured and aban-
doned property, under the Abandoned and Captured Property Act, to
recover it though no proof be made, as was required by that act, that
the claimant never gave any aid or comfort to the rebellion.
2. The proclamation referred to, is a public act, of which all courts of the
United States are bound to take notice, and to which all courts are bound
to give effect.
APPEAL from the Court of Claims.
Mrs. Armstrong filed a claim in the court below for the
proceeds of certain cotton under the Abandoned and Cap-
tured Property Act, the provisions of which are quoted in
the preceding, case, page 151. The Court of Claims found
that the cotton was raised by the claimant; that in the latter
part of 1863, or early in 1864, there were on her plantation
one hundred and twenty bales of cotton, which were taken
possession of by the United States military forces and re-
moved to Little Rock, Arkansas; that, prior to July, 1864,
one hundred and two bales of this cotton were in the hands
of the treasury agents, and were taken and used by the
military forces in the works of defence around the city of
Little Rock; that sixty bales, when taken out of the de-
fences, were identified as belonging to the claimant; and
with other cotton identified as belonging to other parties,
and one hundred and seventeen sacks of loose cotton which
came out of the fortifications and not identified, were shipped
to the treasury agent at Cincinnati, sold, and the proceeds
paid into the treasury. The claimant was proved to have
given no active aid to the rebellion, except that on the ap-
proach of the Union army she fled south with thirty or forty
of her slaves to avoid emancipation. This was in Septem-

A!RMSTRONG V). UNITED STATES.

[Sup. Ct.

154

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