PROHIBITION OF PEONAGE.
Resolution and Remarks in the Senate, January 3, 1867.
January 3d, in the Senate, Mr. Sumner introduced the following resolution:—
“Resolved, That the Committee on the Judiciary be directed to consider if any further legislation is needed to prevent the enslavement of Indians in New Mexico or any system of peonage there, and especially to prohibit the employment of the army of the United States in the surrender of persons claimed as peons.”
Mr. Sumner then called attention to facts showing the necessity of action. He said:—
I think you will be astonished, when you learn that the evidence is complete, showing in a Territory of the United States the existence of slavery which a proclamation of the President has down to this day been powerless to root out. During the life of President Lincoln, I more than once appealed to him, as head of the Executive, to expel this evil from New Mexico. The result was a proclamation, and also definite orders from the War Department; but, in the face of proclamation and definite orders, the abuse has continued, and, according to official evidence, it seems to have increased.
Mr. Sumner here read from the Report of the Commissioner on Indian Affairs, also from the Report of a Special Agent, containing the correspondence of army officers, including an order from the Assistant Inspector General in New Mexico to aid in the rendition of fugitive peons to their masters, and then remarked:—
The special Indian agent who reports this correspondence very aptly adds:—
“The aid of Congress is invoked to stop the practice.”