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to Thomas Rutter
February 23, 1813
Monroe, James, 1758-1831
Secretary of State Monroe transmits a printed copy of a notice to foreign nationals living near coastal areas. Rutter was marshal of Maryland from 1804 to 1817.
GLC00043.04
March 12, 1813
Secretary of State Monroe elaborates on what course of action is to be taken involving "peculiar and extraordinary cases of hardship, and where the character and deportment of the parties entitle them to peculiar consideration..." Rutter was marshal...
GLC00043.05
November 13, 1816
Secretary of State Monroe asks the Marshal of Maryland for details of the cases against Joseph Hollingsworth, William Ellicott Jr. and Sr., Thomas Hartley, Levi Hartley, Samuel Hartley Jr., Seneca Parry. These men were Quakers who had refused to bear...
GLC00043.06
[Transmittal letter for blank pardon form].
November 20, 1816
Possibly for a group of Quakers arrested for refusing to bear arms. Writing as secretary of state.
GLC00043.07
December 7, 1816
President Monroe urges U.S. Marshal Rutter to promptly list the names of the customs officers who must appear as trial witnesses in Richmond in the case of the Brig Romp.
GLC00043.08
[Presidential appointment of Thomas Rutter as Marshal for the District of Maryland].
November 22, 1816
Madison, James, 1751-1836
Countersigned by Secretary of State James Monroe. Appointment is from 22 November 1816 until the end of the next session of the Senate of the United States.
GLC00043.09
[Pardon of Joseph Richmond for embezzlement]
October 30, 1835
Jackson, Andrew, 1767-1845
Countersigned by Secretary of State John Forsyth. Deputy postmaster of Middletown, Maryland, Richmond was convicted of embezzling the U.S. Mail in November 1834 and was sentenced to ten years in prison. Richmond, young and of previous good...
GLC00043.10
[Pardon of Robert Baker for engaging in the slave trade].
March 30,1846
Polk, James K. (James Knox), 1795-1849
Countersigned by James Buchanan. Baker, 1st mate on the Brig "Montivedio", was convicted of engaging in the slave trade between Africa and Brazil and sentenced to serve 6 months in prison and pay a $500 fine and court costs. Pardoned after serving...
GLC00043.11
Pardon of George Miles, convicted of mutiny aboard the Barque "Agnes." Also, includes petitions and receipts.
July 13, 1847
Miles, "...convicted of a revolt on board of the barque 'Agnes'..."; sentenced to pay a $1 fine and courts costs [$25], and be imprisoned for ten days. Pardoned after serving his prison sentence since he was too poor to pay his fine. (c/s James...
GLC00043.12
Pardon of Lewis Huskey alias Edward Cairns, convicted of mutiny aboard the Barque "Agnes." Also, includes petitions and receipts.
Huskey [a.k.a. Cairns], "...convicted of a revolt on board of the barque 'Agnes'..."; sentenced to pay a $1 fine and courts costs [$25], and be imprisoned for ten days. Pardoned after serving his prison sentence since he was too poor to pay his fine...
GLC00043.13
Pardon of William Jenkins alias William Ryall, convicted of counterfeiting. Includes petitions and transmission letters.
September 24, 1850
Fillmore, Millard, 1800-1874
Convicted of passing counterfeit coin; sentenced to 10 years imprisonment. Pardoned for "...divers good and other sufficient reasons...". (c/s Daniel Webster)
GLC00043.14
Pardon of Daniel Brown, convicted of counterfeiting.
April 5, 1851
Convicted of passing counterfeit coin; sentenced to 10 years imprisonment. Pardoned for "...divers other good and suffiecient reasons...". (c/s W.S. Derrick)
GLC00043.15
Pardon of John Alguner, convicted of counterfeiting.
November 17, 1851
John Alguner convicted of passing counterfeit coin. Executive clemency granted by Millard Fillmore, pardoned for "...divers other good and sufficient reasons...". Countersigned by Daniel Webster, Acting Secretary of State. Accompanied by a paper seal...
GLC00043.16
Pardon of August Kesling, alias August Kesting/Kestenger, convicted of transmitting forged federal documents.
July 28, 1854
Pierce, Franklin, 1804-1869
Convicted of transmitting forged federal documents; sentenced to 10 years imprisonment. Pardoned for "...divers other good and sufficient reasons..." (c/s William L. Marcy)
GLC00043.17
Pardon of the owners of the Steamer "Osiris," convicted of endangering lives of passengers by not having sufficient amount of life preservers.
July 12, 1855
Convicted of endangering lives of passengers by not having sufficient amount of life preservers; sentenced to pay $500 fine and additional $71.30 for violation of U.S. transportation safety law of 30 August 1852 [5th Section]. Conditionally pardoned...
GLC00043.18
Pardon of George Kirk, Edward Burr, & George Carroll, convicted of defrauding the revenue.
May 3, 1858
Buchanan, James, 1791-1868
Convicted of defrauding the revenue; each sentenced to pay a $400 fine and court costs and to be confined until paid. All pardoned due to their inability to pay fine. Signed by James Buchanan. Countersigned by Lewis Cass. Accompanied by a paper seal.
GLC00043.19
Pardon of Thomas Wilson, convicted of 2 counts of assault weapon against crewmen on the Schooner "Exchange."
December 30, 1859
Convicted of 2 counts of assault [one with a dangerous weapon] aboard the Schooner "Exchange" while at sea; in one case, sentenced to 1 year and 3 months imprisonment and in the case involving weapon, sentenced to 2 years hard labor and to pay $1...
GLC00043.20
[Presidential pardon of Rasmus Benson who in Maryland in September 1862 was convicted of inflicting cruel and unusual punishment on a seaman].
December 16, 1862
Lincoln, Abraham, 1809-1865
Pardoned by Abraham Lincoln because Benson had been imprisoned for failure to pay the fine, because Benson's offense against the Criminalizing Mutiny on the High Seas Act (March 3, 1835, c. 40, sec. 1 and 2) was of a technical nature, and because the...
GLC00043.21
Pardon of William B. Philips, convicted of embezzling money from the post office.
October 19, 1870
Grant, Ulysses S. (Ulysses Simpson), 1822-1885
Convicted of embezzling money from the post office; sentenced to 6 months imprisonment and to pay a $3454.78 fine. Pardoned for his "...good character, pliable nature, poverty, the punishment already suffered, and the fact that his bondsmen have paid...
GLC00043.22
Pardon of Justus J. Gude, convicted of stuffing the ballot box.
June 30, 1879
Hayes, Rutherford B., 1822-1893
Convicted of putting tickets in ballot box (stuffing it), while serving as an election judge in a Baltimore congressional election; sentenced to 1 year imprisonment and a $5 fine. Pardoned since further imprisonment would endanger his life. (c/s...
GLC00043.24
Presidential Pardon collection no. 2. [Decimalized .01-.07]
1862-1865
Various
[Lincoln and Johnson] [decimalized 00044.01-00044.07]
GLC00044
[Presidential pardon of Felix Mullen, who had been convicted in February 1862 in the District of Columbia of burglary].
July 24, 1862
Felix Mullen was pardoned by Abraham Lincoln because Lincoln had been petitioned by the jury who had tried the case, who told him that they rendered their verdict upon a misconception of the law. Also his conduct while incarcerated had been good. In...
GLC00044.01
[Presidential pardon of Henry Buschrae, who had been convicted in the District of Columbia of larceny in June 1861].
January 13, 1863
Buschrae was pardoned by Abraham Lincoln because he had served nearly all of his sentence, because he had been well behaved in prison, because he had been of good character and was drunk when he committed the larceny, because he had "served...
GLC00044.02
[Presidential pardon of Albert Horn, who had been convicted in New York in October 1862 of fitting out the ship, City of Norfolk, for trade in slaves]
May 21, 1863
Horn was pardoned by Abraham Lincoln because, on the testimony of the physician of the county jail of New York and that of Dr. A. Jacobi, professor in the New York Medical College, and by Dr. T. S. Edwards of New York that Horn was suffering from...
GLC00044.03
[Presidential pardon of James Dillion, who in New York City had been convicted in June 1860 of mutiny on board the William F. Storer].
November 9, 1863
James Dillion was pardoned by Abraham Lincoln near the end of his sentence because of his good behavior while incarcerated in Sing Sing Prison, on the petition of citizens, and on the recommendation of the U. S. District Attorney for the Southern...
GLC00044.04
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