Improvement of the Mississippi River: Speech of Hon. Randall L. Gibson, of Louisiana, in the House of Representatives, February 5, 18791879 - 21 pages |
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Page 7
... sheltering harbors and piers upon the lakes at the cost of mill- ions . You appropriated ten millions to unite the Wisconsin and Fox Rivers and four and a half millions to build a canal around the Des Moines Rapids . These are but a few ...
... sheltering harbors and piers upon the lakes at the cost of mill- ions . You appropriated ten millions to unite the Wisconsin and Fox Rivers and four and a half millions to build a canal around the Des Moines Rapids . These are but a few ...
Page 8
... sheltering piers and harbors , and light - houses and beacons and buoys are to the sea and lake coasts . Would you decline such appropriations so clearly constitutional under the power to regulate commerce , when they are smaller in pro ...
... sheltering piers and harbors , and light - houses and beacons and buoys are to the sea and lake coasts . Would you decline such appropriations so clearly constitutional under the power to regulate commerce , when they are smaller in pro ...
Page 11
... sheltering piers , no buoys , no light - houses for the ship- ping ; they cannot be applied to these conditions so as to afford shelter or protection . Great boats propelled by steam are sometimes de- stroyed and often detained several ...
... sheltering piers , no buoys , no light - houses for the ship- ping ; they cannot be applied to these conditions so as to afford shelter or protection . Great boats propelled by steam are sometimes de- stroyed and often detained several ...
Page 13
... sheltering - piers , why should not the Federal Government undertake their construction ? We have listened in the course of this debate to able and strenuous advocates of the outlet theory . The honorable member from Texas [ Mr. REAGAN ] ...
... sheltering - piers , why should not the Federal Government undertake their construction ? We have listened in the course of this debate to able and strenuous advocates of the outlet theory . The honorable member from Texas [ Mr. REAGAN ] ...
Page 18
... is this : Levees establish the proper in- struments to protect commerce and trade on the Mississippi River ; they are continuous harbors of sheltering - piers ; they are adapted to 66 give the protection and facilities needed ; they are 18.
... is this : Levees establish the proper in- struments to protect commerce and trade on the Mississippi River ; they are continuous harbors of sheltering - piers ; they are adapted to 66 give the protection and facilities needed ; they are 18.
Other editions - View all
Improvement of the Mississippi River: Remarks of Hon. Randall L. Gibson, of ... Randall Lee Gibson No preview available - 2018 |
Improvement of the Mississippi River: Remarks of Hon. Randall L. Gibson, of ... Randall Lee Gibson No preview available - 2018 |
Improvement of the Mississippi River: Speech of Hon. Randall L. Gibson, of ... Randall Lee Gibson No preview available - 2018 |
Common terms and phrases
additional surveys afford alluvial region amendments banks barges beacons benefit boats buoys Cairo called The Mississippi canal civil engineers Coast and Geodetic commerce and trade commissioners appointed complete confine the water Constitution contemplated December 22 deemed necessary Eads easy and safe Engineer Corps expend facilities Federal Government flatboats flood-line Fox Rivers gentleman from Illinois Geodetic Survey GIBSON harbors headwaters hereby highway hydrographical hydrometrical inland sea jurisdiction levee system Louisiana Lower Mississippi machinery and instruments merce mighty valley Mississippi River Commission Mississippi Valley mouth navigation thereof ocean fronts Orleans overflow passed plans and estimates power to regulate President prevent destructive floods public piers RANDALL L regulate commerce Rhine safety and ease seasons Secretary Secretary of War secure deep water sedimentary rivers Senate sheltering piers snags stream submitted support of light-houses system of levees tion trade and commerce transmitted to Congress uplands velocity vessel or vessels veys water-gaps
Popular passages
Page 4 - Senate and House of Representatives of the United States of America in Congress assembled^ That a commission is hereby created, to be called "The Mississippi River Commission", to consist of seven members.
Page 4 - It shall be the duty of said commission to direct and complete such surveys of said river, between the Head of the Passes near its mouth to its headwaters as may now be in progress, and to make such additional surveys, examinations and investigations, topographical, hydrographical and hydrometrical, of said river and its tributaries, as may be deemed necessary by said commission to carry out the objects of this act.
Page 3 - Commission for the improvement of said river, from the head of the Passes near its mouth to...
Page 4 - Commission to take into consideration and mature such plan or plans and estimates as will correct, permanently locate, and deepen the channel and protect the banks of the Mississippi River; improve and give safety and ease to the navigation thereof; prevent destructive floods; promote and facilitate commerce, trade, and the postal service ; and when so prepared and matured, to submit to the Secretary of War a full and detailed report of their proceedings and actions, and of such plans, with estimates...
Page 3 - The president of the United States shall by and with the advice and consent of the senate, appoint the commission from officers of the corps of engineers, United States army.
Page 15 - Over whatever other interests of the country this government may diffuse its benefits and its blessings, it will always be true, as matter of historical fact, that it had its immediate origin in the necessities of commerce ; and for its immediate object, the relief of those necessities, by removing their causes, and by establishing a uniform and steady system.
Page 4 - Commission," to consist of seven members. SEC. 2. The ^President of the United States shall, by and with the advice and consent of the Senate, appoint seven commissioners, three of whom shall be selected from the Engineer Corps of the Army, one from the Coast and Geodetic Survey, and three from civil life, two of whom shall be civil engineers.
Page 10 - ... the admiralty and maritime jurisdiction granted to the federal government by the constitution of the United States is not limited to tide waters, but extends to all public navigable lakes and rivers where commerce is carried on between different states or with foreign nations.
Page 4 - Survey such officers and men as may be necessary, and shall place in the charge and for the use of said commission such vessel or vessels and such machinery and instruments as may be under his control and may be deemed necessary. And the said commission may, with the approval of the Secretary...
Page 13 - The great obstacle to the improvement of the low-water navigation and to maintaining a levee system is one and the same for both, viz., the instability of the river from the caving of its banks We believe that the levee system, if undertaken, should be matured and developed in connection with the navigation improvement.1...