Now, therefore, I, James Madison, President of the United States, have thought proper to issue my proclamation commanding and strictly enjoining all persons who have unlawfully taken possession of or made any settlement on the public lands as aforesaid forthwith to remove therefrom; and I do hereby further command and enjoin the marshal, or officer acting as marshal, in any State or Territory where such possession shall have been taken or settlement made to remove, from and after the 10th day of March, 1816, all or any of the said unlawful occupants; and to effect the said service I do hereby authorize the employment of such military force as may become necessary in pursuance of the provisions of the act of Congress aforesaid, warning the offenders, moreover, that they will be prosecuted in all such other ways as the law directs.
In testimony whereof I have caused the seal of the United States of America to be affixed to these presents, and signed the same with my hand.
[SEAL.]
Done at the city of Washington, the 12th day of December, A.D. 1815, and of the Independence of the said United States of America the fortieth.
JAMES MADISON.
By the President:
JAMES MONROE,
Secretary of State.
[From Niles’s Weekly Register, vol. 10, p. 208.]
BY THE PRESIDENT OF THE UNITED STATES.
A PROCLAMATION.
Whereas by the act entitled “An act granting bounties in land and extra pay to certain Canadian volunteers,” passed the 5th March, 1816, it was enacted that the locations of the land warrants of the said volunteers should “be subject to such regulations as to priority of choice and manner of location as the President of the United States shall direct:”
Wherefore I, James Madison, President of the United States, in conformity with the provisions of the act before recited, do hereby make known that the land warrants of the said Canadian volunteers may be located agreeably to the said act at the land offices at Vincennes or Jeffersonville, in the Indiana Territory, on the first Monday in June next, with the registers of the said land offices; that the warrantees may, in person or by their attorneys or other legal representatives, in the presence of the register and receiver of the said land district, draw lots for the priority of location; and that should any of the warrants not appear for location on that day they may be located afterwards, according to their priority of presentation, the locations in the district of Vincennes to be made at Vincennes and the locations in the district of Jeffersonville to be made at Jeffersonville.
Given under my hand the 1st day of May, 1816.
JAMES MADISON.
By the President:
JOSIAH MEIGS,
Commissioner of the General
Land Office.