Page:The Federal and state constitutions v2.djvu/604

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Kansas—1859
1241

three; twenty-sixth, Linn, three; twenty-seventh, Franklin, two; twenty-eighth, Anderson, two; twenty-ninth, Allen, one; thirtieth, Bourbon, three; thirty-first, McGee, Dorn, Wilson, and Godfrey, one; district number thirty-two, to consist of all the western part of Kansas not otherwise attached, including the county of Arapahoe, one member.

Sec. 11. The general assembly, at its first session, shall provide for receiving proposals for the location of the seat of government, and shall publish such proposals, and also a plan for the purchase of a site by the State, and submit them to a full and fair vote of the people at the first general election after such session; and if no proposal or plan submitted shall receive a majority of all the votes cast, then they shall be submitted at each subsequent and general election until such choice shall be made ; and when a proposal or plan shall be adopted, the legislature shall provide for the location at the place or in the manner designated, and for the application of the profits which may accrue to the State therefrom, to the support of the benevolent institutions of the State; and when the seat of government shall have been thus located, it shall not be changed but by a law ratified by a direct vote of the people; and until the selection provided for in this section shall be made, Topeka shall be the seat of government.

Sec. 12. The first general assembly shall provide by law for the submission of the question of universal suffrage to a vote of the people at the first general election of the members of the general assembly: Provided, That the qualifications of voters at the election shall be the same as at the vote on the submission of the constitution.

I hereby certify that the above is a correct copy of the constitution adopted by the convention at Leavenworth, April 3, 1858, from the original draft now in my possession.

M. F. Conway, President.

Attest:

Sam’l F. Tappan, Jr., Secretary.


CONSTITUTION OF KANSAS—1859[1]

Adopted at Wyandotte July 29, 1859; ratified by the people October 4, 1859; went into operation January 29, 1861; with all amendments adopted prior to January 1, 1905, and also those which will be voted on in November, 1906.

preamble—boundaries

We, the People of Kansas, grateful to Almighty God for our civil and religious privileges, in order to insure the full enjoyment of our rights as American citizens, do ordain and establish this constitution of the State of Kansas, with the following boundaries, to wit: Beginning at a point on the western boundary of the state of Missouri, where the thirty-seventh parallel of north latitude crosses the same; thence running west on said parallel to the twenty-fifth


  1. Verified by “The Constitution of the State of Kansas. Adopted at Wyandotte July 29, 1859. Ratified by the People October 4, 1859. Went into Operation January 29, 1861. With all Amendments Adopted prior to January 1, 1905: also those to be voted on in November, 1906. Topeka: State Printing Office. 1905.” 32 pp.