. The photographic history of the Civil War : in ten volumes . s. The act was renewedon the 13th of October, 1862, and the period was extended untilthe 12th of February, 1863. The writ was not again sus-pended until February, 18(>4, when the Confederate Congressdid so in the case of prisoners whose arrest was authorized bythe President or the Secretary of War. This act expired onthe 2d of August, 186-1, and was never reenacted, though Presi-dent Davis recommended its continuance. Xo complete lists of arbitrary arrests in the Confederacyare in existence, and we are able only to find a name h


. The photographic history of the Civil War : in ten volumes . s. The act was renewedon the 13th of October, 1862, and the period was extended untilthe 12th of February, 1863. The writ was not again sus-pended until February, 18(>4, when the Confederate Congressdid so in the case of prisoners whose arrest was authorized bythe President or the Secretary of War. This act expired onthe 2d of August, 186-1, and was never reenacted, though Presi-dent Davis recommended its continuance. Xo complete lists of arbitrary arrests in the Confederacyare in existence, and we are able only to find a name here andthere in the records. From the excitement caused by the ar-rests under the act for the suspension of the writ of habeascorpus, it would appear that they were comparatively of the governors, as Governor Vance, of North Carolina,and Governor Brown, of Georgia, were much aroused over thearrest and detention of some of their citizens, and, in heated cor-respondence with the War Department, claimed that the rightsof the States were in peril. [212].


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