Page:Nullification Controversy in South Carolina.djvu/227

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CHAPTER VI

NULLIFICATION ADOPTED (1832)

Immediately after the result of the election was known, Governor Hamilton issued a proclamation for an extra session of the legislature to convene on October 22. The plan was to have the convention meet and act before Congress should meet.[1] Some of the Union papers soon questioned the constitutional right of the governor to call the extra session, and of the newly elected members to attend. The governor took the precaution of getting unofficial advisory opinions of the judges of the court of appeals; they agreed unanimously that the newly elected members might be convened. Since a majority of these judges were of the Union party, the State Rights men concluded that those who raised the objection did so simply to cause as much embarrassment as possible, now that it was ascertained that the state would act.[2]

  1. Messenger, October 10, 1832.
  2. Mercury, October 12, 1832; Courier, October 15; Gazette, October 20; Messenger, October 24.

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