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Admission of States to the Union: A Historical Reference Guide

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Admission of States to the Union: A Historical Reference Guide

Updated December 17, 2024

Congressional Research Service

https://crsreports.congress.gov

R47747

Congressional Research Service

SUMMARY

Admission of States to the Union: A Historical Reference Guide

The Constitution allows Congress to admit “New States ... into this Union.” Updated January 6, 2026 (R47747) Jump to Main Text of Report

Summary

The Constitution allows Congress to admit "New States ... into this Union." By ratifying the Constitution in 1787-1790, the 13 original states—which declared independence from Great Britain in 1776 and initially united under the Articles of Confederation—joined the new federal government. An additional 37 states joined between 1791 (Vermont) and 1959 (Alaska and Hawaii). Each star on the national flag represents one of the 50 states.

This report provides historical information about each state's journey to statehood with a focus on the role of Congress. A chronology describes selected events for each state such as the formation of a territorial government; federal legislation that enabled residents to prepare for statehood; the drafting and adoption of a state constitution; and federal legislation that admitted the new state into the Union. Citations point, in general, to primary legislative sources such as the Congressional Record, House Journal, and Senate Journal.

The five tables in this report summarize key information across all 50 states: admission order and date, territorial law (if any), enabling law (if any), admission law, and the outcome of state-level ratification or referendum votes (if any).

This report does not address the history of a territory before its acquisition by the United States, policy or legal questions related to statehood, potential future action by Congress, the status of current U.S. territories, or statehood-related proposals that have not become law.

R47747

December 17, 2024

Ben Leubsdorf Senior Research Librarian

Kathleen E. Marchsteiner Senior Research Librarian

Carol Wilson Senior Research Librarian

Admission of States to the Union: A Historical Reference Guide

Congressional Research Service

Contents

Introduction ..................................................................................................................................... 1

Overview ................................................................................................................................... 1 About This Report ..................................................................................................................... 1

Sources, Compilations, and Additional Resources .................................................................... 2

Summary Tables .............................................................................................................................. 3 Statehood Timelines ...................................................................................................................... 15

Alabama .................................................................................................................................. 15 Alaska ...................................................................................................................................... 17

Arizona .................................................................................................................................... 18

Arkansas .................................................................................................................................. 20

California ................................................................................................................................ 22 Colorado .................................................................................................................................. 23

Connecticut ............................................................................................................................. 24 Delaware ................................................................................................................................. 25 Florida ..................................................................................................................................... 25 Georgia .................................................................................................................................... 27

Hawaii ..................................................................................................................................... 27 Idaho ........................................................................................................................................ 29

Illinois ..................................................................................................................................... 30 Indiana ..................................................................................................................................... 31

Iowa ......................................................................................................................................... 33

Kansas ..................................................................................................................................... 34 Kentucky ................................................................................................................................. 36 Louisiana ................................................................................................................................. 37

Maine ...................................................................................................................................... 39 Maryland ................................................................................................................................. 40 Massachusetts .......................................................................................................................... 41

Michigan ................................................................................................................................. 42 Minnesota ................................................................................................................................ 43

Mississippi .............................................................................................................................. 45 Missouri .................................................................................................................................. 46 Montana .................................................................................................................................. 48 Nebraska .................................................................................................................................. 50

Nevada .................................................................................................................................... 52 New Hampshire ....................................................................................................................... 53

New Jersey .............................................................................................................................. 53 New Mexico ............................................................................................................................ 54 New York ................................................................................................................................ 56 North Carolina ......................................................................................................................... 56

North Dakota ........................................................................................................................... 57

Ohio ......................................................................................................................................... 59

Oklahoma ................................................................................................................................ 61 Oregon ..................................................................................................................................... 63

Pennsylvania ........................................................................................................................... 64 Rhode Island............................................................................................................................ 64 South Carolina ......................................................................................................................... 65

South Dakota ........................................................................................................................... 65

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Tennessee ................................................................................................................................ 67 Texas ....................................................................................................................................... 69 Utah ......................................................................................................................................... 71

Vermont ................................................................................................................................... 72

Virginia .................................................................................................................................... 74

Washington .............................................................................................................................. 74

West Virginia ........................................................................................................................... 76

Wisconsin ................................................................................................................................ 78 Wyoming ................................................................................................................................. 80

Tables

Table 1. Chronological List of State Admissions ............................................................................ 3 Table 2. Territorial Acts ................................................................................................................... 4 Table 3. Enabling Acts ..................................................................................................................... 7

Table 4. Admission Acts .................................................................................................................. 9 Table 5. Referendum Votes ............................................................................................................. 11

Contacts

Author Information ........................................................................................................................ 81

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Introduction

Overview

Introduction

Overview

The Constitution allows Congress to admit "New States ... into this Union."1 Congress has exercised this power 37 times since 1791, most recently in 1959.

The 13 original colonies, which declared independence from Great Britain in 1776 and initially united under the Articles of Confederation, joined the new federal government by ratifying the Constitution in 1787-1790. Vermont was the next state to join the Union, in 1791, followed by Kentucky in 1792.

As the United States expanded across North America, many regions were organized as territories, beginning with the Northwest Territory.2 Tennessee, in 1796, was the first state to join the Union following a period of territorial government (as the Southwest Territory). Six states joined the Union without first being organized as a territory: California, Kentucky, Maine, Texas, Vermont, and West Virginia.

The 1912 admission of Arizona and New Mexico completed the Lower 48 contiguous states stretching from the Atlantic Ocean in the east to the Pacific Ocean in the west. Alaska and Hawaii both achieved statehood in 1959, taking the nation to its current count of 50 states—each represented by a star on the national flag.3

About This Report

This report provides selected historical information about each state's journey to statehood with a focus on the role of Congress.

For each state, a chronology (in the form of a bulleted list) describes selected events in the history of its admission (see "Statehood Timelines"). These events may include acquisition of the region by the U.S. government, the creation of a territorial government,4 federal legislation that enabled residents to prepare for statehood, the drafting of a state constitution, any state-level referendum or ratification votes related to statehood, federal legislation to admit the new state into the Union, and a presidential proclamation to make its admission official. A shaded box for each state provides key dates and United States Statutes at Large citations, when applicable.

Some states took similar paths to admission, though, in general, those paths have varied considerably. Although this report focuses on Congress's role in the admission of states, the statehood timelines do not describe every legislative action taken during the admission process, and they generally omit proposals or bills that did not become law.5 Moreover, the timelines do not typically discuss the details of legislative measures, such as conditions Congress may have

1 Article IV, Section 3, Clause 1.

2 Congress, operating under the Articles of Confederation, established the Territory of the United States North West of the River Ohio in 1787. It included all or part of six future states: Indiana, Illinois, Michigan, Minnesota, Ohio, and Wisconsin. See the “Ohio” timeline for details.

3 4 U.S.C. §§1-2.

4 Many territories were created out of existing territories, and territorial boundaries changed over time. Illinois Territory, for example, was initially part of the Northwest Territory and then part of Indiana Territory. For simplicity, the timelines in this report generally omit territorial affiliations before legislation that created a separate and distinct territory that would later achieve statehood.

5 For example, the “Hawaii” timeline does not include multiple attempts to achieve statehood before 1959.

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placed on a state’placed on a state's admission; actions taken by territorial legislatures or governors; or the wording of ballot questions related to statehood.

This report includes five tables summarizing key information from the individual timelines:

Table 1 shows the dates and order of admission for each state.

Table 2 describes legislation that established territorial governments, if any.

Table 3 describes enabling legislation that allowed territories to prepare for statehood, if any.

Table 4 describes legislation that admitted states to the Union, if any.

Table 5 describes popular or convention votes on statehood or related matters, such as ratification of a state constitution in preparation for admission, if any.

With the exception of the information provided in Table 1, available information on the states varies according to the specific path to statehood for each state. The availability of this information for each state is noted in the tables.

In general, this report does not discuss the history or status of a territory before its acquisition by the United States, nor does it address policy or legal questions related to statehood, potential future action by Congress, or the status of current U.S. territories and the District of Columbia.6

Sources, Compilations, and Additional Resources

Many footnotes in this report point to primary legislative sources such as the Journal of the House of Representatives of the United States (the House Journal) and the Journal of the Senate of the United States of America (the Senate Journal). Also cited are the Congressional Record and two of its predecessor publications: The Debates and Proceedings in the Congress of the United States (the Annals of Congress) and the Congressional Globe.7

Some citations point to multivolume compilations of historical documents, such as The Documentary History of the Ratification of the Constitution;8 The Territorial Papers of the United States;9 and The Federal and State Constitutions, Colonial Charters, and Other Organic Laws of the States, Territories, and Colonies Now or Heretofore Forming the United States of America.10

In addition, this report cites secondary sources such as scholarly books and journal articles, as well as reference materials such as encyclopedias and research guides.

Almost all of the primary sources and compilations cited in this report are available online. The Library of Congress's A Century of Lawmaking for a New Nation collection contains congressional and legal records for 1774 to 1875.11 Other freely available repositories include the

6 Information about these subjects is available in other CRS products, including CRS In Focus IF11792, Statehood Process and Political Status of U.S. Territories: Brief Policy Background, by R. Sam Garrett; CRS Report R44721, Political Status of Puerto Rico: Brief Background and Recent Developments for Congress, by R. Sam Garrett; CRS In Focus IF11443, District of Columbia Statehood and Voting Representation, by Joseph V. Jaroscak; and CRS Report R47101, DC Statehood: Constitutional Considerations for Proposed Legislation, by Mainon A. Schwartz.

7 See CRS Report R43434, Policy and Legislative Research for Congressional Staff: Finding Documents, Analysis, News, and Training, by Sarah W. Caldwell, Ellen M. Lechman, and Michele L. Malloy.

8 Bibliographic information is available from the University of Wisconsin-Madison’s Center for the Study of the American Constitution at https://csac.history.wisc.edu.

9 Twenty-eight volumes, printed by the U.S. Government Printing Office (GPO), 1934-1975.

10 Seven volumes, edited by Francis Newton Thorpe and printed by GPO, 1909.

11 Available at https://www.loc.gov/collections/century-of-lawmaking.

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American Presidency Project database, maintained by the University of California, Santa Barbara;12 the Government Publishing Office's (GPO's) GovInfo website;13 HathiTrust's database of historical books and government publications;14 the Law Library of Congress website;15 LLMC Digital's collection of historical legal materials;16 and Yale Law School's Avalon Project collection.17 Subscription-only databases, such as ProQuest Congressional, also contain relevant content such as legislative documents.

Additional information about territories and statehood is available in reference resources such as Prestatehood Legal Materials: A Fifty-State Research Guide, Including New York City and the District of Columbia18 and The Uniting States: The Story of Statehood for the Fifty United States.19

Members and congressional staff can contact CRS for assistance locating research materials, including materials about a specific state.

Summary Tables

Table 1. Chronological List of State Admissions

Order

State

Admission Date

1

Delaware

December 7, 1787

2

Pennsylvania

December 12, 1787

3

New Jersey

December 18, 1787

4

Georgia

January 2, 1788

5

Connecticut

January 9, 1788

6

Massachusetts

February 6, 1788

7

Maryland

April 28, 1788

8

South Carolina

May 23, 1788

9

New Hampshire

June 21, 1788

10

Virginia

June 25, 1788

11

New York

July 26, 1788

12

North Carolina

November 21, 1789

13

Rhode Island

May 29, 1790

14

Vermont

March 4, 1791

15

Kentucky

June 1, 1792

16

Tennessee

June 1, 1796

17

Ohio

March 1, 1803

18

Louisiana

April 30, 1812

19

Indiana

December 11, 1816

20

Mississippi

December 10, 1817

21

Illinois

December 3, 1818

22

Alabama

December 14, 1819

23

Maine

March 15, 1820

24

Missouri

August 10, 1821

25

Arkansas

June 15, 1836

26

Michigan

January 26, 1837

27

Florida

March 3, 1845

28

Texas

December 29, 1845

29

Iowa

December 28, 1846

30

Wisconsin

May 29, 1848

31

California

September 9, 1850

32

Minnesota

May 11, 1858

33

Oregon

February 14, 1859

34

Kansas

January 29, 1861

35

West Virginia

June 20, 1863

36

Nevada

October 31, 1864

37

Nebraska

March 1, 1867

38

Colorado

August 1, 1876

39

North Dakota

November 2, 1889

40

South Dakota

November 2, 1889

41

Montana

November 8, 1889

42

Washington

November 11, 1889

43

Idaho

July 3, 1890

44

Wyoming

July 10, 1890

45

Utah

January 4, 1896

46

Oklahoma

November 16, 1907

47

New Mexico

January 6, 1912

48

Arizona

February 14, 1912

49

Alaska

January 3, 1959

50

Hawaii

August 21, 1959

Sources: Benjamin F. Shearer (ed.), The Uniting States: The Story of Statehood for the Fifty United States, 3 vols. (Table 1. Chronological List of State Admissions

Order State Admission Date

1 Delaware December 7, 1787

2 Pennsylvania December 12, 1787

3 New Jersey December 18, 1787

4 Georgia January 2, 1788

5 Connecticut January 9, 1788

6 Massachusetts February 6, 1788

7 Maryland April 28, 1788

8 South Carolina May 23, 1788

9 New Hampshire June 21, 1788

10 Virginia June 25, 1788

11 New York July 26, 1788

12 North Carolina November 21, 1789

13 Rhode Island May 29, 1790

14 Vermont March 4, 1791

15 Kentucky June 1, 1792

16 Tennessee June 1, 1796

17 Ohio March 1, 1803

18 Louisiana April 30, 1812

19 Indiana December 11, 1816

20 Mississippi December 10, 1817

21 Illinois December 3, 1818

22 Alabama December 14, 1819

23 Maine March 15, 1820

24 Missouri August 10, 1821

25 Arkansas June 15, 1836

12 Available at https://www.presidency.ucsb.edu.

13 Available at https://www.govinfo.gov.

14 Available at https://www.hathitrust.org.

15 Available at https://www.loc.gov/research-centers/law-library-of-congress.

16 Available at https://llmc.com.

17 Available at https://avalon.law.yale.edu.

18Two volumes, edited by Michael Chiorazzi and Marguerite Most (New York: The Haworth Information Press, 2005).

19 Three volumes, edited by Benjamin F. Shearer (Westport, CT: Greenwood Press, 2004).

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Order State Admission Date

26 Michigan January 26, 1837

27 Florida March 3, 1845

28 Texas December 29, 1845

29 Iowa December 28, 1846

30 Wisconsin May 29, 1848

31 California September 9, 1850

32 Minnesota May 11, 1858

33 Oregon February 14, 1859

34 Kansas January 29, 1861

35 West Virginia June 20, 1863

36 Nevada October 31, 1864

37 Nebraska March 1, 1867

38 Colorado August 1, 1876

39 North Dakota November 2, 1889

40 South Dakota November 2, 1889

41 Montana November 8, 1889

42 Washington November 11, 1889

43 Idaho July 3, 1890

44 Wyoming July 10, 1890

45 Utah January 4, 1896

46 Oklahoma November 16, 1907

47 New Mexico January 6, 1912

48 Arizona February 14, 1912

49 Alaska January 3, 1959

50 Hawaii August 21, 1959

Sources: Benjamin F. Shearer (ed.), The Uniting States: The Story of Statehood for the Fifty United States, 3 vols. (Westport, CT: Greenwood Press, 2004); Michael Chiorazzi and Marguerite Most (eds.), Prestatehood Legal Materials: A Fifty-State Research Guide, Including New York City and the District of Columbia, 2 vols. (New York: The Haworth Information Press, 2005). Notes: Admission date for the 13 original states indicates the date states ratified the U.S. Constitution. For other states, admission date indicates the date that their admission became effective. In some cases, this differs from the date of presidential approval listed in Table 4 (e.g., if admission was finalized by a presidential proclamation authorized by the admission law, or if the admission law specified a specific date to take effect).

Table 2. T erritorial Acts

Territorial Acts

Enacted legislation that established a territorial government

State

State(Territory, if

Name Differs) House Passage

House Passage

Senate Passage

Presidential

Approval

Citation(s)

Alabama

March 3, 1817

Feb. 21, 1817

March 3, 1817

3 Stat. 371

Alaska

Aug. 20, 1912

Aug. 17, 1912

Aug. 24, 1912

37 Stat. 512

62 H.R. 38

Arizona

May 8, 1862

Feb. 20, 1863

25-12

Feb. 24, 1863

12 Stat. 664

37 H.R. 357

Arkansas

Feb. 20, 1819

March 1, 1819

March 2, 1819

3 Stat. 493

California

N/A

N/A

N/A

N/A

Colorado

Feb. 18, 1861

90-44

Feb. 26, 1861

26-18

Feb. 28, 1861

12 Stat. 172

36 S. 366

Connecticut

N/A

N/A

N/A

N/A

Delaware

N/A

N/A

N/A

N/A

Florida

March 27, 1822

Unanimousa

March 27, 1822

March 30, 1822

3 Stat. 654

Georgia

N/A

N/A

N/A

N/A

Hawaii

Apr. 27, 1900

138-54

Apr. 25, 1900

Apr. 30, 1900

31 Stat. 141

56 S. 222

Idaho

March 3, 1863

65-33a

March 3, 1863

25-12

March 3, 1863

12 Stat. 808

37 H.R. 738

Illinois

Jan. 18, 1809

69-37

Jan. 31, 1809

Feb. 3, 1809

2 Stat. 514

Indiana

May 3, 1800

May 5, 1800

May 7, 1800

2 Stat. 58

Iowa

June 6, 1838

118-51

June 6, 1838

June 12, 1838

5 Stat. 235

25 S. 269

Kansas

May 22, 1854

113-100

May 25, 1854

35-13

May 30, 1854

10 Stat. 277

33 H.R. 236

Kentucky

N/A

N/A

N/A

N/A

Louisiana(Orleans Territory)

March 23, 1804

51-45

March 23, 1804

15-9

March 26, 1804

2 Stat. 283

Maine

N/A

N/A

N/A

N/A

Maryland

N/A

N/A

N/A

N/A

Massachusetts

N/A

N/A

N/A

N/A

Michigan

Jan. 7, 1805

Jan. 8, 1805

Jan. 11, 1805

2 Stat. 309

Minnesota

March 3, 1849

107-70

March 1, 1849

30-18

March 3, 1849

9 Stat. 403

30 S. 152

Mississippi

March 27, 1798

March 29, 1798

Apr. 7, 1798

1 Stat. 549

Missouri

May 21, 1812

May 21, 1812

June 4, 1812

2 Stat. 743

Montana

May 20, 1864

102-26

May 19, 1864

26-13

May 26, 1864

13 Stat. 85

38 H.R. 15

Nebraska

May 22, 1854

113-100

May 25, 1854

35-13

May 30, 1854

10 Stat. 277

33 H.R. 236

Nevada

March 1, 1861

92-52b

Feb. 26, 1861

March 2, 1861

12 Stat. 209

36 S. 563

New Hampshire

N/A

N/A

N/A

N/A

New Jersey

N/A

N/A

N/A

N/A

New Mexico

Sept. 6, 1850

108-97

Sept. 9, 1850

31-10

Sept. 9, 1850

9 Stat. 446

31 S. 307

New York

N/A

N/A

N/A

N/A

North Carolina

N/A

N/A

N/A

N/A

North Dakota (Dakota Territory)

March 1, 1861

Feb. 26, 1861

March 2, 1861

12 Stat. 239

36 S. 562

Ohio(Northwest Territory)

Aug. 5, 1789

Aug. 4, 1789

Aug. 7, 1789

1 Stat. 50

Oklahoma

Apr. 21, 1890

Apr. 23, 1890

50-5

May 2, 1890

26 Stat. 81

51 S. 895

Oregon

Aug. 2, 1848

128-71b

Aug. 12, 1848

31-23 and 29-25

Aug. 14, 1848

9 Stat. 323

30 H.R. 201

Pennsylvania

N/A

N/A

N/A

N/A

Rhode Island

N/A

N/A

N/A

N/A

South Carolina

N/A

N/A

N/A

N/A

South Dakota (Dakota Territory)

March 1, 1861

Feb. 26, 1861

March 2, 1861

12 Stat. 239

36 S. 562

Tennessee (Southwest Territory)

May 5, 1790

Apr. 27, 1790

May 26, 1790

1 Stat. 123

Texas

N/A

N/A

N/A

N/A

Utah

Sept. 7, 1850

97-85

Aug. 1, 1850

Sept. 9, 1850

9 Stat. 453

31 S. 225

Vermont

N/A

N/A

N/A

N/A

Virginia

N/A

N/A

N/A

N/A

Washington

Feb. 10, 1853

129-29b

March 2, 1853

March 2, 1853

10 Stat. 172

32 H.R. 348

West Virginia

N/A

N/A

N/A

N/A

Wisconsin

Apr. 14, 1836

Apr. 18, 1836

Apr. 20, 1836

5 Stat. 10

24 S. 92

Wyoming

July 22, 1868

106-50

June 3, 1868

July 25, 1868

15 Stat. 178

40 S. 357

Approval Citation(s)

Alabama March 3, 1817 Feb. 21, 1817 March 3, 1817 3 Stat. 371

Alaska Aug. 20, 1912 Aug. 17, 1912 Aug. 24, 1912 37 Stat. 512

62 H.R. 38

Arizona May 8, 1862 Feb. 20, 1863

25-12

Feb. 24, 1863 12 Stat. 664 37 H.R. 357

Arkansas Feb. 20, 1819 March 1, 1819 March 2, 1819 3 Stat. 493

California N/A N/A N/A N/A

Colorado Feb. 18, 1861

90-44

Feb. 26, 1861

26-18

Feb. 28, 1861 12 Stat. 172

36 S. 366

Connecticut N/A N/A N/A N/A

Delaware N/A N/A N/A N/A

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State

(Territory, if

Name Differs) House Passage Senate Passage

Presidential

Approval Citation(s)

Florida March 27, 1822

Unanimousa

March 27, 1822 March 30, 1822 3 Stat. 654

Georgia N/A N/A N/A N/A

Hawaii Apr. 27, 1900

138-54

Apr. 25, 1900 Apr. 30, 1900 31 Stat. 141

56 S. 222

Idaho March 3, 1863

65-33a

March 3, 1863

25-12

March 3, 1863 12 Stat. 808 37 H.R. 738

Illinois Jan. 18, 1809

69-37

Jan. 31, 1809 Feb. 3, 1809 2 Stat. 514

Indiana May 3, 1800 May 5, 1800 May 7, 1800 2 Stat. 58

Iowa June 6, 1838

118-51

June 6, 1838 June 12, 1838 5 Stat. 235

25 S. 269

Kansas May 22, 1854

113-100

May 25, 1854

35-13

May 30, 1854 10 Stat. 277 33 H.R. 236

Kentucky N/A N/A N/A N/A

Louisiana (Orleans Territory)

March 23, 1804

51-45

March 23, 1804

15-9

March 26, 1804 2 Stat. 283

Maine N/A N/A N/A N/A

Maryland N/A N/A N/A N/A

Massachusetts N/A N/A N/A N/A

Michigan Jan. 7, 1805 Jan. 8, 1805 Jan. 11, 1805 2 Stat. 309

Minnesota March 3, 1849

107-70

March 1, 1849

30-18

March 3, 1849 9 Stat. 403

30 S. 152

Mississippi March 27, 1798 March 29, 1798 Apr. 7, 1798 1 Stat. 549

Missouri May 21, 1812 May 21, 1812 June 4, 1812 2 Stat. 743

Montana May 20, 1864

102-26

May 19, 1864

26-13

May 26, 1864 13 Stat. 85 38 H.R. 15

Nebraska May 22, 1854

113-100

May 25, 1854

35-13

May 30, 1854 10 Stat. 277 33 H.R. 236

Nevada March 1, 1861

92-52b

Feb. 26, 1861 March 2, 1861 12 Stat. 209

36 S. 563

New Hampshire N/A N/A N/A N/A

New Jersey N/A N/A N/A N/A

New Mexico Sept. 6, 1850

108-97

Sept. 9, 1850

31-10

Sept. 9, 1850 9 Stat. 446

31 S. 307

New York N/A N/A N/A N/A

North Carolina N/A N/A N/A N/A

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State

(Territory, if

Name Differs) House Passage Senate Passage

Presidential

Approval Citation(s)

North Dakota (Dakota Territory)

March 1, 1861 Feb. 26, 1861 March 2, 1861 12 Stat. 239

36 S. 562

Ohio (Northwest Territory)

Aug. 5, 1789 Aug. 4, 1789 Aug. 7, 1789 1 Stat. 50

Oklahoma Apr. 21, 1890 Apr. 23, 1890

50-5

May 2, 1890 26 Stat. 81

51 S. 895

Oregon Aug. 2, 1848

128-71b

Aug. 12, 1848

31-23 and 29-25

Aug. 14, 1848 9 Stat. 323

30 H.R. 201

Pennsylvania N/A N/A N/A N/A

Rhode Island N/A N/A N/A N/A

South Carolina N/A N/A N/A N/A

South Dakota (Dakota Territory)

March 1, 1861 Feb. 26, 1861 March 2, 1861 12 Stat. 239

36 S. 562

Tennessee (Southwest Territory)

May 5, 1790 Apr. 27, 1790 May 26, 1790 1 Stat. 123

Texas N/A N/A N/A N/A

Utah Sept. 7, 1850

97-85

Aug. 1, 1850 Sept. 9, 1850 9 Stat. 453

31 S. 225

Vermont N/A N/A N/A N/A

Virginia N/A N/A N/A N/A

Washington Feb. 10, 1853

129-29b

March 2, 1853 March 2, 1853 10 Stat. 172 32 H.R. 348

West Virginia N/A N/A N/A N/A

Wisconsin Apr. 14, 1836 Apr. 18, 1836 Apr. 20, 1836 5 Stat. 10

24 S. 92

Wyoming July 22, 1868

106-50

June 3, 1868 July 25, 1868 15 Stat. 178

40 S. 357

Sources: Annals of Congress, Congressional Globe, Congressional Record, House Journal, Senate Journal, U.S. Statutes at Large. Notes: N/A means no territorial legislation was enacted (i.e., the 13 original states plus six states moved directly to statehood without an intervening period of territorial government). Final votes on passage are listed. Two vote tallies are listed if the question was divided. No vote count is listed when a vote tally was not recorded (e.g., a measure was passed by voice vote). The effective date of legislation may differ from its date of presidential approval. Bills and resolutions are presented with the Congress number preceding the bill citation (e.g., H.R. 1 during the 50th Congress would appear as 50 H.R. 1). No bill or resolution number is listed for legislation that was not identified in the record by number. The names of territories are noted in parentheses if they differ from the eventual name of the state. Many territories were created out of existing territories, so territorial boundaries differed at times from future state boundaries. a. Votes marked with “a”"a" are based on the vote tally in the Congressional Record or predecessor publication, with no vote count listed in the House Journal or Senate Journal.

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b. Votes marked with “b”"b" are based on the vote tally in the House Journal or Senate Journal, with the Congressional Record or predecessor publication listing a different vote count.

Table 3. Enabling Acts

Enacted legislation that allowed residents to prepare for statehood

State House Passage Senate Passage

Presidential

Approval Citation(s)

Alabama Feb. 19, 1819 Feb. 23, 1819 March 2, 1819 3 Stat. 489

Alaska N/A N/A N/A N/A

Arizona June 18, 1910 June 16, 1910

65-0

June 20, 1910 36 Stat. 557

61 H.R. 18166

Arkansas N/A N/A N/A N/A

California N/A N/A N/A N/A

Colorado March 3, 1875

164-76a

Feb. 24, 1875

43-13b

March 3, 1875 18 Stat. 474c 43 H.R. 435c

Connecticut N/A N/A N/A N/A

Delaware N/A N/A N/A N/A

Florida N/A N/A N/A N/A

Georgia N/A N/A N/A N/A

Hawaii N/A N/A N/A N/A

Idaho N/A N/A N/A N/A

Illinois Apr. 15, 1818 Apr. 14, 1818 Apr. 18, 1818 3 Stat. 428

Indiana Apr. 15, 1816 Apr. 13, 1816 Apr. 19, 1816 3 Stat. 289

Iowa N/A N/A N/A N/A

Kansas N/A N/A N/A N/A

Kentucky N/A N/A N/A N/A

Louisiana Feb. 13, 1811

69-45

Feb. 7, 1811

22-10

Feb. 20, 1811 2 Stat. 641

Maine N/A N/A N/A N/A

Maryland N/A N/A N/A N/A

Massachusetts N/A N/A N/A N/A

Michigan June 13, 1836 Apr. 2, 1836

24-18

June 15, 1836 5 Stat. 49 24 S. 177

Minnesota Jan. 31, 1857

97-75

Feb. 25, 1857

31-22

Feb. 26, 1857 11 Stat. 166 34 H.R. 642

Mississippi Feb. 26, 1817 Feb. 27, 1817 March 1, 1817 3 Stat. 348

Missouri March 2, 1820

90-87 and 134-42

March 2, 1820 March 6, 1820 3 Stat. 545

Montana Feb. 20, 1889 Feb. 20, 1889 Feb. 22, 1889

State

House Passage

Senate Passage

Presidential Approval

Citation(s)

Alabama

Feb. 19, 1819

Feb. 23, 1819

Mar. 2, 1819

3 Stat. 489

Alaska

N/A

N/A

N/A

N/A

Arizona

June 18, 1910

June 16, 1910

65-0

June 20, 1910

36 Stat. 557

61 H.R. 18166

Arkansas

N/A

N/A

N/A

N/A

California

N/A

N/A

N/A

N/A

Colorado

Mar. 3, 1875

164-76

Feb. 24, 1875

43-13b

Mar. 3, 1875

18 Stat. 474c 43 H.R. 435c

Connecticut

N/A

N/A

N/A

N/A

Delaware

N/A

N/A

N/A

N/A

Florida

N/A

N/A

N/A

N/A

Georgia

N/A

N/A

N/A

N/A

Hawaii

N/A

N/A

N/A

N/A

Idaho

N/A

N/A

N/A

N/A

Illinois

Apr. 15, 1818

Apr. 14, 1818

Apr. 18, 1818

3 Stat. 428

Indiana

Apr. 15, 1816

Apr. 13, 1816

Apr. 19, 1816

3 Stat. 289

Iowa

N/A

N/A

N/A

N/A

Kansas

N/A

N/A

N/A

N/A

Kentucky

N/A

N/A

N/A

N/A

Louisiana

Feb. 13, 1811

69-45

Feb. 7, 1811

22-10

Feb. 20, 1811

2 Stat. 641

Maine

N/A

N/A

N/A

N/A

Maryland

N/A

N/A

N/A

N/A

Massachusetts

N/A

N/A

N/A

N/A

Michigan

June 13, 1836

Apr. 2, 1836

24-18

June 15, 1836

5 Stat. 49

24 S. 177

Minnesota

Jan. 31, 1857

97-75

Feb. 25, 1857

31-22

Feb. 26, 1857

11 Stat. 166

34 H.R. 642

Mississippi

Feb. 26, 1817

Feb. 27, 1817

Mar. 1, 1817

3 Stat. 348

Missouri

Mar. 2, 1820

90-87 and 134-42

Mar. 2, 1820

Mar. 6, 1820

3 Stat. 545

Montana

Feb. 20, 1889

Feb. 20, 1889

Feb. 22, 1889

25 Stat. 676c25 Stat. 676c

50 S. 185c

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State House Passage Senate Passage

Presidential

Approval Citation(s)

Nebraska March 17, 1864 Apr. 14, 1864 Apr. 19, 1864 13 Stat. 47

38 H.R. 14½

Nevada March 17, 1864 Feb. 24, 1864 March 21, 1864

Nebraska

Mar. 17, 1864

Apr. 14, 1864

Apr. 19, 1864

13 Stat. 47

38 H.R. 14½

Nevada

Mar. 17, 1864

Feb. 24, 1864

Mar. 21, 1864

13 Stat. 30c13 Stat. 30c

38 S. 96c

New Hampshire N/A N/A N/A N/A

New Jersey N/A N/A N/A N/A

New Mexico June 18, 1910 June 16, 1910

65-0

June 20, 1910 36 Stat. 557

61 H.R. 18166

New York N/A N/A N/A N/A

North Carolina N/A N/A N/A N/A

North Dakota Feb. 20, 1889 Feb. 20, 1889 Feb. 22, 1889 38 S. 96c

New Hampshire

N/A

N/A

N/A

N/A

New Jersey

N/A

N/A

N/A

N/A

New Mexico

June 18, 1910

June 16, 1910

65-0

June 20, 1910

36 Stat. 557

61 H.R. 18166

New York

N/A

N/A

N/A

N/A

North Carolina

N/A

N/A

N/A

N/A

North Dakota

Feb. 20, 1889

Feb. 20, 1889

Feb. 22, 1889

25 Stat. 676c25 Stat. 676c

50 S. 185c

Ohio Apr. 29, 1802 Apr. 28, 1802

16-6

Apr. 30, 1802 2 Stat. 173

Oklahoma June 14, 1906 June 13, 1906 June 16, 1906

Ohio

Apr. 29, 1802

Apr. 28, 1802

16-6

Apr. 30, 1802

2 Stat. 173

Oklahoma

June 14, 1906

June 13, 1906

June 16, 1906

34 Stat. 267c34 Stat. 267c

59 H.R. 12707c

Oregon N/A N/A N/A N/A

Pennsylvania N/A N/A N/A N/A

Rhode Island N/A N/A N/A N/A

South Carolina N/A N/A N/A N/A

South Dakota Feb. 20, 1889 Feb. 20, 1889 Feb. 22, 1889

Oregon

N/A

N/A

N/A

N/A

Pennsylvania

N/A

N/A

N/A

N/A

Rhode Island

N/A

N/A

N/A

N/A

South Carolina

N/A

N/A

N/A

N/A

South Dakota

Feb. 20, 1889

Feb. 20, 1889

Feb. 22, 1889

25 Stat. 676c25 Stat. 676c

50 S. 185c

Tennessee N/A N/A N/A N/A

Texas Feb. 28, 1845

134-77b

Feb. 27, 1845

27-25

March 1, 1845 5 Stat. 797

28 H.J.Res. 46

Utah Dec. 13, 1893 July 10, 1894 July 16, 1894 28 Stat. 107c 53 H.R. 352c

Vermont N/A N/A N/A N/A

Virginia N/A N/A N/A N/A

Washington Feb. 20, 1889 Feb. 20, 1889 Feb. 22, 1889 50 S. 185c

Tennessee

N/A

N/A

N/A

N/A

Texas

Feb. 28, 1845

134-77b

Feb. 27, 1845

27-25

Mar. 1, 1845

5 Stat. 797

28 H.J.Res. 46

Utah

Dec. 13, 1893

July 10, 1894

July 16, 1894

28 Stat. 107c 53 H.R. 352c

Vermont

N/A

N/A

N/A

N/A

Virginia

N/A

N/A

N/A

N/A

Washington

Feb. 20, 1889

Feb. 20, 1889

Feb. 22, 1889

25 Stat. 676c25 Stat. 676c

50 S. 185c

West Virginia

N/A

N/A

N/A

N/A

Wisconsin

June 10, 1846

Aug. 5, 1846

Aug. 6, 1846

9 Stat. 56

29 H.R. 105

Wyoming

N/A

N/A

N/A

N/A

West Virginia N/A N/A N/A N/A

Wisconsin June 10, 1846 Aug. 5, 1846 Aug. 6, 1846 9 Stat. 56

29 H.R. 105

Wyoming N/A N/A N/A N/A

Sources: Annals of Congress, Congressional Globe, Congressional Record, House Journal, Senate Journal, U.S. Statutes at Large. Notes: N/A means no enabling legislation was enacted ahead of final legislation to admit the state to the Union. Some enabling acts involved multiple future states. Only final votes on passage are listed. Two vote tallies are

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Congressional Research Service 9

listed if the question was divided. No vote count is listed when a a measure was passed by voice vote. The effective date of legislation may differ from the date of presidential approval. Bills and resolutions are presented with the Congress number preceding the bill citation (e.g., H.R. 1 during the 50th Congress would appear as 50 H.R. 1). No bill or resolution number is listed for legislation not identified in the record by number. a. Votes marked with “a”"a" are based on the vote tally in the Congressional Record or predecessor publication, with no vote count listed in the House Journal or Senate Journal.

b. Votes marked with “b”"b" are based on the vote tally in the House Journal or Senate Journal, with the Congressional Record or predecessor publication listing a different vote count.

c. Citations marked with “c”"c" are combined enabling and admission acts, and appear in both Table 3 and Table 4.

Table 4. Admission Acts

Enacted legislation that admitted a state into the Union

State House Passage Senate Passage

Presidential

Approval Citation(s)

Alabama Dec. 8, 1819 Dec. 8, 1819 Dec. 14, 1819 3 Stat. 608

Alaska May 28, 1958

210-166

June 30, 1958

64-20

July 7, 1958 72 Stat. 339

85 H.R. 7999

Arizona Aug. 19, 1911 Aug. 18, 1911

53-9

Aug. 21, 1911 37 Stat. 39

62 S.J.Res. 57

Arkansas June 13, 1836

143-50

Apr. 4, 1836

31-6

June 15, 1836 5 Stat. 50

24 S. 178

California Sept. 7, 1850

150-56

Aug. 13, 1850

34-18

Sept. 9, 1850 9 Stat. 452

31 S. 169

Colorado March 3, 1875

164-76

Feb. 24, 1875

43-13a

March 3, 1875 18 Stat. 474b 43 H.R. 435b

Connecticut N/A N/A N/A N/A

Delaware N/A N/A N/A N/A

Florida Feb. 13, 1845

144-48a

March 1, 1845

36-9

March 3, 1845 5 Stat. 742

28 H.R. 497

Georgia N/A N/A N/A N/A

Hawaii March 12, 1959

323-89

March 11, 1959

76-15

March 18, 1959 73 Stat. 4

86 S. 50

Idaho Apr. 3, 1890

129-1

July 1, 1890 July 3, 1890 26 Stat. 215

51 H.R. 4562

Illinois Nov. 23, 1818

117-34

Dec. 1, 1818 Dec. 3, 1818 3 Stat. 536

Indiana Dec. 9, 1816

Unanimousc

Dec. 6, 1816 Dec. 11, 1816 3 Stat. 399

Iowa Dec. 21, 1846 Dec. 24, 1846 Dec. 28, 1846 9 Stat. 117

29 H.R. 557

Kansas Jan. 28, 1861 Jan. 21, 1861

36-16

Jan. 29, 1861 12 Stat. 126

36 H.R. 23

Kentucky Jan. 28, 1791 Jan. 12, 1791 Feb. 4, 1791 1 Stat. 189

Louisiana Apr. 6, 1812 Apr. 1, 1812 Apr. 8, 1812 2 Stat. 701

Maine March 3, 1820 March 3, 1820 March 3, 1820 3 Stat. 544

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State House Passage Senate Passage

Presidential

Approval Citation(s)

Maryland N/A N/A N/A N/A

Massachusetts N/A N/A N/A N/A

Michigan Jan. 25, 1837

132-43

Jan. 5, 1837

25-10

Jan. 26, 1837 5 Stat. 144

24 S. 81

Minnesota May 11, 1858

157-39a

Apr. 7, 1858

49-3

May 11, 1858 11 Stat. 285

35 S. 86

Mississippi Dec. 8, 1817 Dec. 3, 1817 Dec. 10, 1817 3 Stat. 472

Missouri Feb. 26, 1821

87-81

Feb. 28, 1821

28-14

March 2, 1821 3 Stat. 645

Montana Feb. 20, 1889 Feb. 20, 1889 Feb. 22, 1889 25 Stat. 676b

50 S. 185b

Nebraska Jan. 15, 1867

103-55

Jan. 16, 1867

28-14

State

House Passage

Senate Passage

Presidential Approval

Citation(s)

Alabama

Dec. 8, 1819

Dec. 8, 1819

Dec. 14, 1819

3 Stat. 608

Alaska

May 28, 1958

210-166

June 30, 1958

64-20

July 7, 1958

72 Stat. 339

85 H.R. 7999

Arizona

Aug. 19, 1911

Aug. 18, 1911

53-9

Aug. 21, 1911

37 Stat. 39

62 S.J.Res. 57

Arkansas

June 13, 1836

143-50

Apr. 4, 1836

31-6

June 15, 1836

5 Stat. 50

24 S. 178

California

Sept. 7, 1850

150-56

Aug. 13, 1850

34-18

Sept. 9, 1850

9 Stat. 452

31 S. 169

Colorado

Mar. 3, 1875

164-76

Feb. 24, 1875

43-13a

Mar. 3, 1875

18 Stat. 474c 43 H.R. 435c

Connecticut

N/A

N/A

N/A

N/A

Delaware

N/A

N/A

N/A

N/A

Florida

Feb. 13, 1845

144-48a

Mar. 1, 1845

36-9

Mar. 3, 1845

5 Stat. 742

28 H.R. 497

Georgia

N/A

N/A

N/A

N/A

Hawaii

Mar. 12, 1959

323-89

Mar. 11, 1959

76-15

Mar. 18, 1959

73 Stat. 4

86 S. 50

Idaho

Apr. 3, 1890

129-1

July 1, 1890

July 3, 1890

26 Stat. 215

51 H.R. 4562

Illinois

Nov. 23, 1818

117-34

Dec. 1, 1818

Dec. 3, 1818

3 Stat. 536

Indiana

Dec. 9, 1816

Unanimousa

Dec. 6, 1816

Dec. 11, 1816

3 Stat. 399

Iowa

Dec. 21, 1846

Dec. 24, 1846

Dec. 28, 1846

9 Stat. 117

29 H.R. 557

Kansas

Jan. 28, 1861

Jan. 21, 1861

36-16

Jan. 29, 1861

12 Stat. 126

36 H.R. 23

Kentucky

Jan. 28, 1791

Jan. 12, 1791

Feb. 4, 1791

1 Stat. 189

Louisiana

Apr. 6, 1812

Apr. 1, 1812

Apr. 8, 1812

2 Stat. 701

Maine

Mar. 3, 1820

Mar. 3, 1820

Mar. 3, 1820

3 Stat. 544

Maryland

N/A

N/A

N/A

N/A

Massachusetts

N/A

N/A

N/A

N/A

Michigan

Jan. 25, 1837

132-43

Jan. 5, 1837

25-10

Jan. 26, 1837

5 Stat. 144

24 S. 81

Minnesota

May 11, 1858

157-39a

Apr. 7, 1858

49-3

May 11, 1858

11 Stat. 285

35 S. 86

Mississippi

Dec. 8, 1817

Dec. 3, 1817

Dec. 10, 1817

3 Stat. 472

Missouri

Feb. 26, 1821

87-81

Feb. 28, 1821

28-14

Mar. 2, 1821

3 Stat. 645

Montana

Feb. 20, 1889

Feb. 20, 1889

Feb. 22, 1889

25 Stat. 676c 50 S. 185c

Nebraska

Jan. 15, 1867

103-55

Jan. 16, 1867

28-14

Veto (Jan. 30, 1867) Veto (Jan. 30, 1867)

overridden by

Senate (Feb. 8,

1867, 31-9) and

House (Feb. 9,

1867, 120-44)

14 Stat. 391

39 S. 456

Nevada March 17, 1864 Feb. 24, 1864 March 21, 1864 13 Stat. 30b

38 S. 96b

New Hampshire N/A N/A N/A N/A

New Jersey N/A N/A N/A N/A

New Mexico Aug. 19, 1911 Aug. 18, 1911

53-9

Aug. 21, 1911 37 Stat. 39

62 S.J.Res. 57

New York N/A N/A N/A N/A

North Carolina N/A N/A N/A N/A

North Dakota Feb. 20, 1889 Feb. 20, 1889 Feb. 22, 1889 25 Stat. 676b

50 S. 185b

Ohio May 19, 1953 Aug. 1, 1953 Aug. 7, 1953 67 Stat. 407

83 H.J.Res. 121

Oklahoma June 14, 1906 June 13, 1906 June 16, 1906 34 Stat. 267b

59 H.R. 12707b

Oregon Feb. 12, 1859

114-103

May 18, 1858

35-17

Feb. 14, 1859 11 Stat. 383

35 S. 239

Pennsylvania N/A N/A N/A N/A

Rhode Island N/A N/A N/A N/A

South Carolina N/A N/A N/A N/A

South Dakota Feb. 20, 1889 Feb. 20, 1889 Feb. 22, 1889 25 Stat. 676b

50 S. 185b

Tennessee May 30, 1796 May 31, 1796 June 1, 1796 1 Stat. 491

Texas Dec. 16, 1845

141-57a

Dec. 22, 1845

31-14

Dec. 29, 1845 9 Stat. 108

29 H.J.Res. 2

Utah Dec. 13, 1893 July 10, 1894 July 16, 1894 28 Stat. 107b 53 H.R. 352b

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State House Passage Senate Passage

Presidential

Approval Citation(s)

Vermont Feb. 14, 1791 Feb. 12, 1791 Feb. 18, 1791 1 Stat. 191

Virginia N/A N/A N/A N/A

Washington Feb. 20, 1889 Feb. 20, 1889 Feb. 22, 1889 25 Stat. 676b

50 S. 185b

West Virginia Dec. 10, 1862

96-55

July 14, 1862

23-17

Dec. 31, 1862 12 Stat. 633

37 S. 365

Wisconsin May 11, 1848 May 19, 1848 May 29, 1848 9 Stat. 233

30 H.R. 397

Wyoming July 8, 1890 June 27, 1890

29-18

July 10, 1890 26 Stat. 222 51 H.R. 982

Sources: Annals of Congress, Congressional Globe, Congressional Record, House Journal, Senate Journal, U.S. Statutes at Large.

39 S. 456

Nevada

Mar. 17, 1864

Feb. 24, 1864

Mar. 21, 1864

13 Stat. 30c 38 S. 96c

New Hampshire

N/A

N/A

N/A

N/A

New Jersey

N/A

N/A

N/A

N/A

New Mexico

Aug. 19, 1911

Aug. 18, 1911

53-9

Aug. 21, 1911

37 Stat. 39

62 S.J.Res. 57

New York

N/A

N/A

N/A

N/A

North Carolina

N/A

N/A

N/A

N/A

North Dakota

Feb. 20, 1889

Feb. 20, 1889

Feb. 22, 1889

25 Stat. 676c 50 S. 185c

Ohio

May 19, 1953

Aug. 1, 1953

Aug. 7, 1953

67 Stat. 407

83 H.J.Res. 121

Oklahoma

June 14, 1906

June 13, 1906

June 16, 1906

34 Stat. 267c 59 H.R. 12707c

Oregon

Feb. 12, 1859

114-103

May 18, 1858

35-17

Feb. 14, 1859

11 Stat. 383

35 S. 239

Pennsylvania

N/A

N/A

N/A

N/A

Rhode Island

N/A

N/A

N/A

N/A

South Carolina

N/A

N/A

N/A

N/A

South Dakota

Feb. 20, 1889

Feb. 20, 1889

Feb. 22, 1889

25 Stat. 676c 50 S. 185c

Tennessee

May 30, 1796

May 31, 1796

June 1, 1796

1 Stat. 491

Texas

Dec. 16, 1845

141-57a

Dec. 22, 1845

31-14

Dec. 29, 1845

9 Stat. 108

29 H.J.Res. 2

Utah

Dec. 13, 1893

July 10, 1894

July 16, 1894

28 Stat. 107c 53 H.R. 352c

Vermont

Feb. 14, 1791

Feb. 12, 1791

Feb. 18, 1791

1 Stat. 191

Virginia

N/A

N/A

N/A

N/A

Washington

Feb. 20, 1889

Feb. 20, 1889

Feb. 22, 1889

25 Stat. 676c 50 S. 185c

West Virginia

Dec. 10, 1862

96-55

July 14, 1862

23-17

Dec. 31, 1862

12 Stat. 633

37 S. 365

Wisconsin

May 11, 1848

May 19, 1848

May 29, 1848

9 Stat. 233

30 H.R. 397

Wyoming

July 8, 1890

June 27, 1890

29-18

July 10, 1890

26 Stat. 222

51 H.R. 982

Sources: Annals of Congress, Congressional Globe, Congressional Record, House Journal, Senate Journal, U.S. Statutes at Large.

Notes:
N/A means no admission act (i.e., one of the 13 original states). Some admission acts involved multiple states. An admission act may have preceded a presidential proclamation formally admitting the state, and/or the effective date of admission may have differed from the date of presidential approval; see Table 1 for each state's effective date of admission. Only final votes on passage are listed. Two vote tallies are listed if the question was divided. No vote count is listed when a vote tally was not recorded (e.g., a measure was passed by voice vote). Bills and resolutions are presented with the Congress number preceding the bill citation (e.g., H.R. 1 during the 50th Congress would appear as 50 H.R. 1). No bill or resolution number is listed for legislation not identified in the record by number. a. Votes marked with “b” a. Votes marked with "a" are based on the vote tally in the Congressional Record or predecessor publication, with no vote count listed in the House Journal or Senate Journal. b. Votes marked with "b" are based on the vote tally in the House Journal or Senate Journal, with the Congressional Record or predecessor publication listing a different vote count.

b. c. Citations marked with “c”"c" are combined enabling and admission acts, and appear in both Table 3 and Table 4.

c. Votes marked with “a” are based on the vote tally in the Congressional Record or predecessor publication, with no vote count listed in the House Journal or Senate Journal.

Table 5. Referendum Votes

State-level referendums, ratifications, and other statehood-related votes, including

both popular votes and votes by delegates elected to a convention

State

Referendum

Referendum Question or Type Date

Vote

(Yes-No) Notes

Alabama N/A N/A N/A N/A

Alaska “

Date

Vote(Yes-No)

Notes

Alabama

N/A

N/A

N/A

N/A

Alaska

"Shall Alaska immediately be admitted into the Union as a State?

"

Aug. 26, 1958 40,452-8,010

40,452-8,010

Earlier statehood referendum held Oct. 8, 1946; state constitution ratified Apr. 24, 1956

Arizona

Arizona

Amendment to state constitution

Dec. 12, 1911 14,963-1,980

14,963-1,980

Congress required amendment as condition for admission; state constitution ratified Feb. 9, 1911

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State

Referendum

Question or Type Date

Vote

(Yes-No) Notes

Arkansas

Arkansas

Opinion of statehood

Aug. 1, 1835 1,942-908

1,942-908

Several counties allowed opinion on statehood to be recorded on territorial election ballot

California

California

Ratification of state constitution

Nov. 13, 1849 12,061-811

Colorado

12,061-811

Colorado

Ratification of state constitution

July 1, 1876 15,443-4,062

Connecticut

Connecticut

Ratification of U.S. Constitution

Jan. 9, 1788 128-40 Vote of delegates to state convention

Delaware

Jan. 9, 1788

128-40

Vote of delegates to state convention

Delaware

Ratification of U.S. Constitution

Dec. 7, 1787

30-0

Vote of delegates to state convention

Florida

Dec. 7, 1787 30-0 Vote of delegates to state convention

Florida Ratification of state constitution

May 6, 1839 2,071-1,958 Earlier statehood referendum held May 1, 1837

Georgia

May 6, 1839

2,071-1,958

Earlier statehood referendum held May 1, 1837

Georgia

Ratification of U.S. Constitution

Dec. 31, 1787 26-0

26-0

Vote of delegates to state convention; ratification formalized Jan. 2, 1788

Hawaii “

Hawaii

"Shall Hawaii immediately be admitted into the Union as a State?

"

June 27, 1959 132,773-7,971

132,773-7,971

Earlier statehood referendum held Nov. 5, 1940; state constitution ratified Nov. 7, 1950

Idaho

Idaho

Ratification of state constitution

Nov. 5, 1889 12,398-1,773

Illinois N/A N/A N/A N/A

Indiana N/A N/A N/A N/A

Iowa

Illinois

N/A

N/A

N/A

N/A

Indiana

N/A

N/A

N/A

N/A

Iowa

Ratification of state constitution

Aug. 3, 1846 9,492-9,036

9,492-9,036

Earlier state constitution rejected Apr. 7, 1845 and Aug. 4, 1845; earlier referendum Apr. 1, 1844

Kansas

Kansas

Ratification of state constitution

Oct. 4, 1859 10,421-5,530 Earlier state constitution rejected Aug. 2, 1858

Kentucky Opinion of statehood

July 28, 1790 24-18 Vote of delegates to Ninth Kentucky Convention

Louisiana N/A N/A N/A

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Congressional Research Service 13

State

Referendum

Question or Type Date

Vote

(Yes-No) Notes

Maine “Should Maine separate from Massachusetts?”

July 26, 1819 17,091-7,132

Oct. 4, 1859

10,421-5,530

Earlier state constitution rejected Aug. 2, 1858

Kentucky

Opinion of statehood

July 28, 1790

24-18

Vote of delegates to Ninth Kentucky Convention

Louisiana

N/A

N/A

N/A

Maine

"Should Maine separate from Massachusetts?"

July 26, 1819

17,091-7,132

Earlier votes on separation held in 1792, 1797, 1807, and 1816 (twice)

Maryland

Maryland

Ratification of U.S. Constitution

Apr. 26, 1788 63-11

63-11

Vote of delegates to state convention; ratification formalized Apr. 28, 1788

Massachusetts

Massachusetts

Ratification of U.S. Constitution

Feb. 6, 1788

187-168

Vote of delegates to state convention

Michigan

Feb. 6, 1788 187-168 Vote of delegates to state convention

Michigan Ratification of state constitution

Oct. 5-06, 1835 6,752-1,374

6,752-1,374

Later, on Dec. 15, 1836, a second state convention known as the "Frostbitten Convention" unanimously approved the conditions of the enabling act

Minnesota

Minnesota

Ratification of state constitution

Oct. 13, 1857

30,055-571

Mississippi

N/A

N/A

N/A

N/A

Missouri

N/A

N/A

N/A

N/A

Montana

Oct. 13, 1857 30,055-571

Mississippi N/A N/A N/A N/A

Missouri N/A N/A N/A N/A

Montana Ratification of state constitution

Oct. 1, 1889 24,676-2,274

Nebraska

24,676-2,274

Nebraska

Ratification of state constitution

June 2, 1866 3,938-3,838

Nevada

Nevada

Ratification of state constitution

Sept. 7, 1864 10,375-1,284

10,375-1,284

New Hampshire Ratification of U.S. Constitution

June 21, 1788 57-47

57-47

Vote of delegates to state convention

New Jersey Ratification of U.S. Constitution

Dec. 18, 1787

38-0

Vote of delegates to state convention

New Mexico

Dec. 18, 1787 38-0 Vote of delegates to state convention

New Mexico Amendment to state constitution

Nov. 7, 1911 34,897-22,831

34,897-22,831

Congress required amendment as condition for admission; state constitution ratified Jan. 21, 1911

New York Ratification of U.S. Constitution

July 26, 1788 30-27 Vote of delegates to state convention

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State

Referendum

Question or Type Date

Vote

(Yes-No) Notes

North Carolina

30-27

Vote of delegates to state convention

North Carolina

Ratification of U.S. Constitution

Nov. 21, 1789 194-77

194-77

Vote of delegates to second state convention; first convention voted Aug. 2, 1788 to demand amendments

North Dakota

North Dakota

Ratification of state constitution

Oct. 1, 1889 27,441-8,107 Earlier referendum on dividing Dakota Territory held Nov. 8, 1887

Ohio N/A N/A N/A N/A

Oklahoma Ratification of state constitution

Sept. 17, 1907 180,333-73,059

Oct. 1, 1889

27,441-8,107

Earlier referendum on dividing Dakota Territory held Nov. 8, 1887

Ohio

N/A

N/A

N/A

N/A

Oklahoma

Ratification of state constitution

Sept. 17, 1907

180,333-73,059

Indian Territory voted Nov. 7, 1905 on constitution for separate state of Sequoyah

Oregon

Oregon

Ratification of state constitution

Nov. 9, 1857 7,195-3,215 Earlier referendum on statehood held June 1857

Pennsylvania

Nov. 9, 1857

7,195-3,215

Earlier referendum on statehood held June 1857

Pennsylvania

Ratification of U.S. Constitution

Dec. 12, 1787

46-23

Vote of delegates to state convention

Rhode Island

Dec. 12, 1787 46-23 Vote of delegates to state convention

Rhode Island Ratification of U.S. Constitution

May 29, 1790 34-32

34-32

Vote of delegates to state convention

South Carolina Ratification of U.S. Constitution

May 23, 1788

149-73

Vote of delegates to state convention

South Dakota

May 23, 1788 149-73 Vote of delegates to state convention

South Dakota Ratification of state constitution

Oct. 1, 1889 70,131-3,267

70,131-3,267

Earlier referendum on dividing Dakota Territory held Nov. 8, 1887

Tennessee “

Tennessee

"Is it your wish if, on taking the enumeration, there should prove to be less than sixty thousand inhabitants, that the Territory shall be admitted as a State in to the Federal Union with such less number or not?

"

Sept. 15, 1795 to

Nov. 15, 1795

6,504-2,562

Texas

Texas

Annexation and ratification of state constitution

Oct. 13, 1845 7,664-430

(annexation), 7,527-

536 (ratification)

Utah

Utah

Ratification of state constitution

Nov. 5, 1895 31,305-7,607

Vermont

31,305-7,607

Vermont

Ratification of U.S. Constitution

Jan. 10, 1791 105-4 Vote of delegates to state convention

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State

Referendum

Question or Type Date

Vote

(Yes-No) Notes

Virginia

105-4

Vote of delegates to state convention

Virginia

Ratification of U.S. Constitution

June 25, 1788

89-79

Vote of delegates to state convention

Washington

June 25, 1788 89-79 Vote of delegates to state convention

Washington Ratification of state constitution

Oct. 1, 1889

40,152-11,879

West Virginia

Oct. 1, 1889 40,152-11,879

West Virginia Ratification of state constitution

March 26, 1863

28,321-572

Earlier vote on statehood Oct. 24, 1861

Wisconsin

March 26, 1863 28,321-572 Earlier vote on statehood Oct. 24, 1861

Wisconsin Ratification of state constitution

March 13, 1848 16,759-6,384 Earlier state constitution rejected Apr. June 1847

Wyoming

March 13, 1848

16,759-6,384

Earlier state constitution rejected Apr. June 1847

Wyoming

Ratification of state constitution

Nov. 5, 1889 6,272-1,923

6,272-1,923

Sources: Various; see citations in the "Statehood Timelines" section for details. Notes: N/A means no referendum or similar vote was located. In general, if multiple votes occurred as part of the statehood process (e.g., an initial referendum on whether to seek admission and a subsequent ratification vote on the state constitution), the final vote is described in the table (in this example, ratification of the state constitution) and the earlier vote (in this example, the initial referendum) is mentioned in the “Notes” column.

Statehood Timelines

Alabama

"Notes" column. Statehood Timelines Alabama

Alabama: 22nd State

Alabama Territory created March 3, 1817 (3 Stat. 371)

Enabling law enacted March 2, 1819 (3 Stat. 489)

Alabama admitted December 14, 1819 (3 Stat. 608)

September 3, 1783: United States acquires part of the future Alabama from Great Britain in the Treaty of Paris. Additional territory is later acquired in the Adams-Onís Treaty of 1819.20

January 17, 1817: Senator Charles Tait of Georgia reports, from a select committee, a bill that would create a new territorial government in the eastern part of the Mississippi Territory. He also reports a separate bill to prepare the western part of the territory for statehood.21

February 21, 1817: Senate passes the bill creating the Alabama Territory without a recorded vote.22

  • March 3, 1817: House passes the Alabama Territory bill without a recorded vote.23 President James Madison signs "[a]n Act to establish a separate territorial government for the eastern part of the Mississippi territory," creating the Alabama Territory.24
  • : Senate passes the bill creating the Alabama Territory without a recorded vote.22

    20 Harriet E. Amos Doss, “The State of Alabama,” in The Uniting States: The Story of Statehood for the Fifty United States, vol. 1, ed. Benjamin F. Shearer (Westport, CT: Greenwood Press, 2004), pp. 24-53.

    21 Journal of the Senate of the United States of America (Senate Journal), 14th Cong., 2nd sess. (January 17, 1817), p. 123; The Debates and Proceedings in the Congress of the United States (Annals of Congress), vol. 30, 14th Cong., 2nd sess. (January 17, 1817), p. 71. See the “Mississippi” timeline for information on the latter bill.

    22 Senate Journal, 14th Cong., 2nd sess. (February 21, 1817), pp. 273-274; Annals of Congress, vol. 30, 14th Cong., 2nd sess. (February 21, 1817), p. 139.

    Alabama: 22nd State

    Alabama Territory created March 3, 1817 (3 Stat. 371) Enabling law enacted March 2, 1819 (3 Stat. 489) Alabama admitted December 14, 1819 (3 Stat. 608)

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    March 3, 1817: House passes the Alabama Territory bill without a recorded vote.23 President James Madison signs “[a]n Act to establish a separate territorial government for the eastern part of the Mississippi territory,” creating the Alabama Territory.24

    December 11, 1818: Senate receives a petition from Alabama territorial officials "praying admission into the Union" as a state and refers it to a select committee.25

    December 18, 1818: Senator Tait reports from the select committee a bill enabling Alabama to "form a constitution and state government" and join the Union.26

    January 12, 1819: Senate passes the Alabama statehood bill without a recorded vote.27

    February 19, 1819: House passes an amended version of the enabling act without a recorded vote.28

    February 23, 1819: Senate concurs in the House's amendments to the enabling act without a recorded vote.29

    March 2, 1819: President James Monroe signs "[a]n Act to enable the people of the Alabama territory to form a constitution and state government, and for the admission of such state into the Union on an equal footing with the original states."30

    July 5, 1819: Delegates gather in Huntsville to write a state constitution for Alabama.31

    August 2, 1819: Delegates at the Huntsville convention finalize and sign a state constitution for Alabama.32

    23 Journal of the House of Representatives of the United States (House Journal), 14th Cong., 2nd sess. (March 3, 1817), p. 545; Annals of Congress, vol. 30, 14th Cong., 2nd sess. (March 3, 1817), p. 1066.

    24 3 Stat. 371.

    25 Senate Journal, 15th Cong., 2nd sess. (December 11, 1818), p. 70; Annals of Congress, vol. 33, 15th Cong., 2nd sess. (December 11, 1818), p. 66.

    26 Senate Journal, 15th Cong., 2nd sess. (December 18, 1818), p. 86; Annals of Congress, vol. 33, 15th Cong., 2nd sess. (December 18, 1818), p. 75.

    27 Senate Journal, 15th Cong., 2nd sess. (January 12, 1819), p. 143; Annals of Congress, vol. 33, 15th Cong., 2nd sess. (January 12, 1819), p. 121.

    28 House Journal, 15th Cong., 2nd sess. (February 19, 1819), pp. 290-291; Annals of Congress, vol. 34, 15th Cong., 2nd sess. (February 19, 1819), p. 1272.

    29 Senate Journal, 15th Cong., 2nd sess. (February 23, 1819), p. 295; Annals of Congress, vol. 33, 15th Cong., 2nd sess. (February 23, 1819), p. 253.

    30 3 Stat. 489.

    31 Journal of the Convention of the Alabama Territory Begun July 5, 1819 (Huntsville, AL: John Boardman, 1819), pp. 3-4.

    32 Journal of the Convention of the Alabama Territory, pp. 38-39.

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    December 8, 1819: Senate adopts a joint resolution declaring Alabama admitted into the Union, without a recorded vote.33 House adopts the resolution without a recorded vote.34

    December 14, 1819: President Monroe signs the admission resolution into law, establishing “[t]hat the state of Alabama shall be one, and is hereby declared to be one, of the United States of America.”35

    Alaska

    October 18, 1867: United States purchases Alaska from Russia.36

    May 17, 1884: President Chester A. Arthur signs “[a]n act providing a civil government for Alaska,” which creates the District of Alaska.37

    April 4, 1911: Delegate James Wickersham of Alaska introduces 62 H.R. 38,38 which would grant territory status to Alaska.39

    April 24, 1912: House amends 62 H.R. 38 and passes it without a recorded vote.40

    July 24, 1912: Senate amends 62 H.R. 38 and passes it without a recorded vote.41

    August 17, 1912: Senate adopts conference report on 62 H.R. 38 without a recorded vote.42

    August 20, 1912: House agrees to conference report on 62 H.R. 38 without a recorded vote.43

    33 Senate Journal, 16th Cong., 1st sess. (December 8, 1819), p. 21; Annals of Congress, vol. 35, 16th Cong., 1st sess. (December 8, 1819), p. 20-21.

    34 House Journal, 16th Cong., 1st sess. (December 8, 1819), p. 22; Annals of Congress, vol. 35, 16th Cong., 1st sess. (December 8, 1819), p. 710.

    35 3 Stat. 608.

    36 William S. Hanable, “The State of Alaska,” in Shearer, Uniting States, vol. 1, pp. 54-78.

    37 23 Stat. 24. District status gave Alaska a governor and federal court, but no territorial legislature. See Jessica Van Buren, “Alaska Prestatehood Legal Research Resources,” in Prestatehood Legal Materials: A Fifty-State Research Guide, Including New York City and the District of Columbia, vol. 1, eds. Michael Chiorazzi and Marguerite Most (New York: The Haworth Information Press, 2005), pp. 31-50.

    38 Throughout this report, bills and resolutions are presented with the Congress number preceding the bill citation. In this instance, 62 H.R. 38 is H.R. 38 during the 62nd Congress.

    39 House Journal, 62nd Cong., 1st sess. (April 4, 1911), p. 15; Congressional Record, vol. 47, part 1 (April 4, 1911), p. 22.

    40 House Journal, 62nd Cong., 2nd sess. (April 24, 1912), pp. 598-599; Congressional Record, vol. 48, part 6 (April 24, 1912), pp. 5260-5303.

    41 Senate Journal, 62nd Cong., 2nd sess. (July 24, 1912), p. 479; Congressional Record, vol. 48, part 10 (July 24, 1912), pp. 9535-9540.

    42 Senate Journal, 62nd Cong., 2nd sess. (August 17, 1912), pp. 559-560; Congressional Record, vol. 48, part 11 (August 17, 1912), pp. 11164-11165.

    43 House Journal, 62nd Cong., 2nd sess. (August 20, 1912), p. 994; Congressional Record, vol. 48, part 11 (August 20, 1912), pp. 11393-11394.

    Alaska: 49th State

    Alaska Territory created August 24, 1912 (37 Stat. 512) Statehood law enacted July 7, 1958 (72 Stat. 339) Alaska admitted January 3, 1959 (73 Stat. c16)

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    August 24, 1912: President William Howard Taft signs 62 H.R. 38 into law, establishing a territorial government for Alaska.44

    October 8, 1946: Alaska voters back statehood, 9,630 to 6,822, in a referendum.45

    November 8, 1955: A constitutional convention called by the Territorial Legislature holds its first meeting at the University of Alaska, just outside Fairbanks.46

    February 5, 1956: Delegates vote 54-0 to adopt a state constitution for Alaska.47

    April 24, 1956: Alaska residents vote 17,477 to 7,180 in favor of ratifying the new state constitution.48

    June 7, 1957: Representative Leo W. O’Brien of New York introduces 85 H.R. 7999, a bill for “the admission of the State of Alaska into the Union.”49

    May 28, 1958: House votes 210-166 to pass 85 H.R. 7999.50

    June 30, 1958: Senate votes 64-20 to pass 85 H.R. 7999.51

    July 7, 1958: President Dwight Eisenhower signs 85 H.R. 7999 into law, admitting Alaska as a state pending a referendum vote.52

    August 26, 1958: Alaskans approve statehood in a three-part referendum. On the question, “Shall Alaska immediately be admitted into the Union as a State?” the vote is 40,452 to 8,010.53

    January 3, 1959: President Eisenhower issues Proclamation No. 3269, “Admission of the State of Alaska into the Union,” concluding the statehood process.54

    Arizona

    44 37 Stat. 512.

    45 Ernest Gruening, Annual Report of the Governor of Alaska to the Secretary of the Interior (Washington: GPO, 1947), p. 1.

    46 Minutes of the Daily Proceedings, Alaska Constitutional Convention, vol. 1 (Juneau, AK: Alaska Legislative Council, 1965), p. 1.

    47 Minutes of the Daily Proceedings, Alaska Constitutional Convention, vol. 5, pp. 3938-3939.

    48 B. Frank Heintzleman, 1956 Annual Report, Governor of Alaska to the Secretary of the Interior (Washington: GPO, 1956), p. 1.

    49 House Journal, 85th Cong., 1st sess. (June 7, 1957), p. 512; Congressional Record, vol. 103, part 7 (June 7, 1957), p. 8564.

    50 House Journal, 85th Cong., 2nd sess. (May 28, 1958), pp. 408-409; Congressional Record, vol. 104, part 7 (May 28, 1958), pp. 9756-9757.

    51 Senate Journal, 85th Cong., 2nd sess. (June 30, 1958), p. 435; Congressional Record, vol. 104, part 10 (June 30, 1958), p. 12650.

    52 72 Stat. 339.

    53 Alaska Division of Elections, Statehood Election: Final Results of Special Referendum Election, at https://www.elections.alaska.gov/Core/Archive/58STATE/1958-statehood.pdf.

    54 73 Stat. c16.

    Arizona: 48th State

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    April 25, 1854: The United States buys part of the land that will become Arizona from Mexico in the Gadsden Purchase, adding to land acquired in 1848 by the Treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo.55

    March 12, 1862: Representative James M. Ashley of Ohio reports 37 H.R. 357, a bill to create a territorial government for Arizona, from the House Committee on Territories.56

    May 8, 1862: House passes 37 H.R. 357 without a recorded vote, after rejecting a motion to table the bill.57

    February 20, 1863: Senates passes 37 H.R. 357 on a 25-12 vote.58

    February 24, 1863: President Abraham Lincoln signs 37 H.R. 357 into law, creating the Territory of Arizona.59

    January 14, 1910: Representative Edward L. Hamilton of Michigan introduces 61 H.R. 18166, which would enable Arizona and New Mexico to write constitutions in preparation for statehood.60

    January 17, 1910: House suspends the rules and passes 61 H.R. 18166 without a recorded vote.61

    June 16, 1910: Senate amends 61 H.R. 18166, then passes it on a 65-0 vote.62

    June 18, 1910: House passes Senate-amended version of 61 H.R. 18166 without a recorded vote.63

    June 20, 1910: President William Howard Taft signs 61 H.R. 18166 into law, enabling Arizona and New Mexico to write constitutions and form state governments.64

    October 10, 1910: Delegates gather in Phoenix to write a state constitution for Arizona.65

    55 Valerie L. Adams, “The State of Arizona,” in Shearer, Uniting States, vol. 1, pp. 79-105.

    56 House Journal, 37th Cong., 2nd sess. (March 12, 1862), p. 439; Congressional Globe, 37th Cong., 2nd sess. (March 12, 1862), p. 1193.

    57 The House Journal reported the vote on tabling the bill as 72-50, while the Congressional Globe reported the vote as 72-52. See House Journal, 37th Cong., 2nd sess. (May 8, 1862), pp. 657-659, and Congressional Globe, 37th Cong., 2nd sess. (May 8, 1862), pp. 2023-2030.

    58 Senate Journal, 37th Cong., 3rd sess. (February 20, 1863), p. 300; Congressional Globe, 37th Cong., 3rd sess. (February 20, 1863), pp. 1125-1128.

    59 12 Stat. 664.

    60 House Journal, 61st Cong., 2nd sess. (January 14, 1910), p. 168; Congressional Record, vol. 45, part 1 (January 14, 1910), p. 654.

    61 House Journal, 61st Cong., 2nd sess. (January 17, 1910), pp. 175-176; Congressional Record, vol. 45, part 1 (January 17, 1910), pp. 702-714.

    62 Senate Journal 61st Cong., 2nd sess. (June 16, 1910), pp. 452-453; Congressional Record, vol. 45, part 8 (June 16, 1910), pp. 8225-8237.

    63 House Journal, 61st Cong., 2nd sess. (June 18, 1910), p. 803; Congressional Record, vol. 45, part 8 (June 18, 1910), pp. 8485-8487.

    64 36 Stat. 557.

    65 Minutes of the Constitutional Convention of the Territory of Arizona (Phoenix, AZ: Press of Phoenix Printing Co., 1910), p. 5.

    Arizona Territory created February 24, 1863 (12 Stat. 664) Enabling law enacted June 20, 1910 (36 Stat. 557) Admission law enacted August 21, 1911 (37 Stat. 39) Arizona admitted February 14, 1912 (37 Stat. 1728)

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    December 9, 1910: Delegates vote 40-12 to adopt a state constitution for Arizona.66

    February 9, 1911: Arizona voters ratify the state constitution by a vote of 12,534 to 3,920.67

    August 15, 1911: President Taft vetoes 62 H.J.Res. 14, a joint resolution to admit Arizona and New Mexico as states, objecting to the provision of Arizona’s constitution that allows voters to recall judges.68

    August 17, 1911: Senator William A. Smith of Michigan reports 62 S.J.Res. 57 from the Senate Committee on Territories. This joint resolution would admit Arizona and New Mexico as states, but it would first require Arizona to remove judicial recall from its state constitution.69

    August 18, 1911: Senate debates and passes 62 S.J.Res. 57 on a 53-9 vote.70

    August 19, 1911: House debates and passes 62 S.J.Res. 57 without a recorded vote.71

    August 21, 1911: President Taft signs 62 S.J.Res. 57 into law, admitting New Mexico and Arizona as states once certain conditions have been met, including the amending of Arizona’s constitution to exempt judicial officers from recall.72

    December 12, 1911: Arizona voters amend the state constitution to remove judicial recall, by a 14,963 to 1,980 vote, meeting President Taft’s demand.73

    February 14, 1912: President Taft issues a proclamation admitting Arizona as the 48th state.74

    Arkansas

    April 30, 1803: The United States acquires the land that will become Arkansas from France in the Louisiana Purchase.75

    December 16, 1818: House convenes a select committee to consider whether to create a separate territorial

    66 Minutes of the Constitutional Convention of the Territory of Arizona, pp. 433-434.

    67 Richard E. Sloan, Report of the Governor of Arizona to the Secretary of the Interior For the Fiscal Year Ended June 30, 1911 (Washington: GPO, 1911), p. 5.

    68 William Howard Taft, Special Message of the President of the United States Returning Without Approval House Joint Resolution No. 14, H. Doc. 62-106 (Washington: GPO, 1911).

    69 Senate Journal, 62nd Cong., 1st sess. (August 17, 1911), p. 178; Congressional Record, vol. 47, part 4 (August 17, 1911), p. 4061.

    70 Senate Journal, 62nd Cong., 1st sess. (August 18, 1911), p. 185; Congressional Record, vol. 47, part 4 (August 18, 1911), pp. 4118-4141.

    71 House Journal, 62nd Cong., 1st sess. (August 19, 1911), p. 390; Congressional Record, vol. 47, part 5 (August 19, 1911), pp. 4217-4242.

    72 37 Stat. 39. See “New Mexico” timeline for details on its admission.

    73 Voters would restore the provision in November 1912. See David R. Berman, Arizona Politics and Government: The Quest for Autonomy, Democracy, and Development (Lincoln, NE: University of Nebraska Press, 1998), p. 35.

    74 37 Stat. 1728.

    75 William D. Baker, “The State of Arkansas,” in Shearer, Uniting States, vol. 1, pp. 106-133.

    Arkansas: 25th State

    Arkansas Territory created July 4, 1819 (3 Stat. 493) Arkansas admitted June 15, 1836 (5 Stat. 50)

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    government for the “Arkansaw Country” (also spelled “Arkansas Country”) within the existing Missouri Territory.76

    December 21, 1818: Representative George Robertson of Kentucky reports a bill from the select committee creating a new territory.77

    February 20, 1819: House passes the bill to establish Arkansas Territory without a recorded vote on final passage, following days of debate and several close votes on amendments and procedural motions related to slavery in the territory.78

    March 1, 1819: Senate passes the Arkansas Territory bill without a recorded vote on final passage, following a 19-14 vote to defeat a motion to recommit with instructions to report the bill back with an antislavery amendment.79

    March 2, 1819: President James Monroe signs the law “establishing a separate territorial government in the southern part of the territory of Missouri.” The new territory, which will come into existence on July 4, 1819, is spelled “Arkansaw” in the statute, though “Arkansas” becomes the standard spelling.80

    August 1, 1835: During territorial elections, several Arkansas counties allow voters to express an opinion of statehood on their ballots. The Arkansas Advocate newspaper reports the tally as 1,942 in favor and 908 opposed.81

    January 4, 1836: Delegates gather in Little Rock to write a new state constitution for Arkansas.82

    January 30, 1836: Delegates at the Little Rock convention vote 46-4 to adopt the Arkansas state constitution.83

    March 10, 1836: Senate votes 22-17 to refer the Arkansas state constitution to a select committee.84

    March 22, 1836: Senate select committee reports out 24 S. 178, a bill admitting Arkansas as a state.85

    April 4, 1836: Senate votes 31-6 to pass 24 S. 178.86

    76 House Journal, 15th Cong., 2nd sess. (December 16, 1818), pp. 107-108; Annals of Congress, vol. 33, 15th Cong., 2nd sess. (December 16, 1818), p. 413-414.

    77 House Journal, 15th Cong., 2nd sess. (December 21, 1818), p. 119; Annals of Congress, vol. 33, 15th Cong., 2nd sess. (December 21, 1818), p. 422.

    78 House Journal, 15th Cong., 2nd sess. (February 20, 1819), p. 296; Annals of Congress, vol. 34, 15th Cong., 2nd sess. (February 20, 1819), p. 1283.

    79 Senate Journal, 15th Cong., 2nd sess. (March 1, 1819), pp. 324-325; Annals of Congress, vol. 33, 15th Cong., 2nd sess. (March 1, 1819), p. 274.

    80 3 Stat. 493.

    81 D.A. Stokes Jr., “The First State Elections in 1836,” Arkansas Historical Quarterly 20, no. 2 (Summer 1961), 126- 150.

    82 Journal of the Proceedings of the Convention Met to Form a Constitution and System of State Government for the People of Arkansas (Little Rock, AR: Albert Pike, 1836), p. 3.

    83 Journal of the Proceedings of the Convention Met to Form a Constitution ... for the People of Arkansas, p. 51.

    84 Senate Journal, 24th Cong., 1st sess. (March 10, 1836), pp. 210-211; Congressional Globe, 24th Cong., 1st sess. (March 10, 1836), pp. 240.

    85 Senate Journal, 24th Cong., 1st sess. (March 22, 1836), pp. 236-237; Congressional Globe, 24th Cong., 1st sess. (March 22, 1836), p. 275.

    86 Senate Journal, 24th Cong., 1st sess. (April 4, 1836), pp. 266-267; Congressional Globe, 24th Cong., 1st sess. (April 4, 1836), pp. 315-316.

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    June 13, 1836: House votes 143-50 to pass 24 S. 178.87

    June 15, 1836: President Andrew Jackson signs 24 S. 178 into law, admitting Arkansas into the Union.88

    California

    February 2, 1848: The United States acquires California from Mexico in the Treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo.89

    June 3, 1849: Bennet Riley, the U.S. Army officer serving as governor of California, calls a convention with the purpose of “forming a State constitution or a plan for Territorial government.”90

    September 1, 1849: Convention delegates begin to gather in Monterey.91

    September 5, 1849: Convention delegates vote, 28-8, to draft a constitution and seek statehood for California rather than organize a territorial government.92

    October 13, 1849: Convention delegates sign a state constitution for California.93

    November 13, 1849: California residents ratify the state constitution by a vote of 12,061 to 811.94

    January 29, 1850: Senator Henry Clay of Kentucky proposes what becomes the Compromise of 1850, a legislative package that includes California’s admission to the Union as a free state, in response to growing tensions between the North and South.95

    February 13, 1850: President Zachary Taylor transmits the California state constitution to Congress.96

    March 25, 1850: Senator Stephen A. Douglas of Illinois reports 31 S. 169, a bill to admit California as a state, from the Senate Committee on Territories.97

    87 House Journal, 24th Cong., 1st sess. (June 13, 1836), pp. 997-1004; Congressional Globe, 24th Cong., 1st sess. (June 13, 1836), pp. 550-551.

    88 5 Stat. 50.

    89 Anne Woo-Sam, “The State of California,” in Shearer, Uniting States, vol. 1, pp. 134-160.

    90 J. Ross Browne, Report of the Debates in the Convention of California, on the Formation of the State Constitution, in September and October, 1849 (Washington: John T. Towers, 1850), pp. 3-5.

    91 Browne, Report of the Debates in the Convention of California, p. 7.

    92 Browne, Report of the Debates in the Convention of California, p. 23.

    93 Browne, Report of the Debates in the Convention of California, p. 476.

    94 Francis Newton Thorpe (ed.), The Federal and State Constitutions, Colonial Charters, and Other Organic Laws of the States, Territories, and Colonies Now or Heretofore Forming the United States of America, vol. 1 (Washington: GPO, 1909), p. 391.

    95 James McPherson, Battle Cry of Freedom: The Civil War Era (Oxford, UK and New York: Oxford University Press, 1988), pp. 70-75.

    96 House Journal, 31st Cong., 1st sess. (February 13, 1850), pp. 529-530; Senate Journal, 31st Cong., 1st sess. (February 13, 1850), pp. 148; Congressional Globe, 31st Cong., 1st sess. (February 13, 1850), pp. 347-350 and 355.

    97 Senate Journal, 31st Cong., 1st sess. (March 25, 1850), p. 234; Congressional Globe, 31st Cong., 1st sess. (March 25, 1850), p. 592.

    California: 31st State

    California admitted September 9, 1850 (9 Stat. 452)

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    August 13, 1850: Senate debates and passes 31 S. 169 on a 34-18 vote.98

    September 7, 1850: House debates and passes 31 S. 169 on a 150-56 vote.99

    September 9, 1850: President Millard Fillmore signs 31 S. 169 into law, admitting California as the 31st state.100

    Colorado

    February 2, 1848: The United States acquires part of the land that will become Colorado from Mexico in the Treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo, adding to land acquired in the 1803 Louisiana Purchase and the 1845 annexation of Texas.101

    April 3, 1860: Senator James S. Green of Missouri reports 36 S. 366, which would create a new territory, from the Senate Committee on Territories.102

    February 4, 1861: Senate passes 36 S. 366 to create the Colorado Territory without a recorded vote, after also considering the names “Jefferson” and “Idaho.”103

    February 18, 1861: House amends 36 S. 366, then passes it on a 90-44 vote.104

    February 26, 1861: Senate votes 26-18 to pass the House-amended version of 36 S. 366.105

    February 28, 1861: President James Buchanan signs 36 S. 366 into law, creating the Colorado Territory.106

    December 8, 1873: Following attempts to admit Colorado that President Andrew Johnson vetoed in 1866 and 1867,107 Delegate Jerome B. Chaffee of Colorado introduces 43 H.R. 435, a bill to “enable the people of Colorado to form a

    98 Senate Journal, 31st Cong., 1st sess. (August 13, 1850), p. 557; Congressional Globe, 31st Cong., 1st sess. (August 13, 1850), p. 1573.

    99 House Journal, 31st Cong., 1st sess. (September 7, 1850), pp. 1415-1424; Congressional Globe, 31st Cong., 1st sess. (September 7, 1850), pp. 1769-1772.

    100 9 Stat. 452.

    101 William Virden, “The State of Colorado,” in Shearer, Uniting States, vol. 1, pp. 161-190.

    102 Senate Journal, 36th Cong., 1st sess. (April 3, 1860), p. 335; Congressional Globe, 36th Cong., 1st sess. (April 3, 1860), pp. 1502.

    103 Senate Journal, 36th Cong., 2nd sess. (February 4, 1861), p. 184; Congressional Globe, 36th Cong., 2nd sess. (February 4, 1861), pp. 728-729.

    104 House Journal, 36th Cong., 2nd sess. (February 18, 1861), pp. 345-348; Congressional Globe, 36th Cong., 2nd sess. (February 18, 1861), pp. 1003-1005.

    105 Senate Journal, 36th Cong., 2nd sess. (February 26, 1861), pp. 313-314; Congressional Globe, 36th Cong., 2nd sess. (February 26, 1861), pp. 1205-1206.

    106 12 Stat. 172.

    107 Ben: Perley Poore (ed.), Veto Messages of the Presidents of the United States, with the Action of Congress Thereon (Washington: GPO, 1886), pp. 305-308 and 331-337.

    Colorado: 38th State

    Colorado Territory created February 28, 1861 (12 Stat. 172) Enabling and statehood law enacted March 3, 1875 (18 Stat. 474) Colorado admitted August 1, 1876 (19 Stat. 665)

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    constitution and State government, and for the admission of the said State into the Union on an equal footing with the original states.”108

    June 8, 1874: House votes to suspend the rules and pass 43 H.R. 435.109

    February 24, 1875: Senate debates and amends 43 H.R. 435, then passes it.110

    March 3, 1875: House concurs in Senate amendments with a 164-76 vote to suspend the rules and pass the bill.111

    March 3, 1875: President Ulysses S. Grant signs 43 H.R. 435 into law.112

    December 20, 1875: Delegates gather in Denver to write a state constitution for Colorado.113

    March 14, 1876: Colorado convention delegates vote 30-0 to approve the state constitution.114

    July 1, 1876: Colorado residents vote 15,443 to 4,062 in favor of ratifying the new state constitution.115

    August 1, 1876: President Grant issues a proclamation admitting Colorado as the 38th state.116

    Connecticut

    April 23, 1662: King Charles II grants a royal charter to the “Governor and Company of the English Colony of Connecticut in New-England, in America.”117

    July 4, 1776: Connecticut joins 12 other colonies in declaring independence from Great Britain.118

    July 9, 1778: Connecticut signs the Articles of Confederation.119

    108 House Journal, 43rd Cong., 1st sess. (December 8, 1873), p. 80; Congressional Record, vol. 2, part 1 (December 8, 1873), p. 89.

    109 The House Journal reported the vote as 170-66, while the Congressional Record reported the vote as 171-66. See House Journal, 43rd Cong., 1st sess. (June 8, 1874), pp. 1132-1133, and Congressional Record, vol. 2, part 5 (June 8, 1874), pp. 4691-4692.

    110 The Senate Journal reported the vote as 43-13, while the Congressional Record reported the vote as 42-12. See Senate Journal, 43rd Cong., 2nd sess. (February 24, 1875), pp. 337-339, and Congressional Record, vol. 3, part 3 (February 24, 1875), pp. 1671-1690.

    111 House Journal, 43rd Cong., 2nd sess. (March 3, 1875), pp. 644-645; Congressional Record, vol. 3, part 3 (March 3, 1875), pp. 2238-2239.

    112 18 Stat. 474.

    113 Proceedings of the Constitutional Convention Held in Denver, December 20, 1875 to Frame a Constitution for the State of Colorado (Denver, CO: Smith-Brooks Press, 1907), p. 15.

    114 Proceedings of the Constitutional Convention ... for the State of Colorado, p. 708.

    115 J. Warner Mills and John H. Gabriel, Mills Annotated Statutes of the State of Colorado, revised ed., vol. 1 (Denver, CO: Mills Publishing Co., 1912), p. c24.

    116 19 Stat. 665.

    117 Thorpe, Federal and State Constitutions, vol. 1, pp. 529-536.

    118 Worthington Chauncey Ford (ed.), Journals of the Continental Congress, 1774-1789, vol. 5 (Washington: GPO, 1906) (July 4, 1776), pp. 510-516.

    119 Journals of the Continental Congress, vol. 11 (July 9, 1778), p. 677.

    Connecticut: Fifth State

    Connecticut ratified Constitution January 9, 1788

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    May 14-September 17, 1787: Connecticut’s three delegates participate in the Constitutional Convention.120

    January 9, 1788: Connecticut’s convention ratifies the Constitution, 128-40.121

    Delaware

    August 24, 1682: James, Duke of York, gives the land that will become Delaware to William Penn, who had acquired Pennsylvania the prior year from the Duke’s brother, King Charles II.122

    1704: A new legislature holds its first meeting in New Castle, though the three counties continue to share a governor with neighboring Pennsylvania and do not formally adopt the name “Delaware” until 1776.123

    July 4, 1776: Delaware joins 12 other colonies in declaring independence from Great Britain.124

    May 5, 1779: Delaware signs the Articles of Confederation.125

    May 14-September 17, 1787: Delaware’s five delegates participate in the Constitutional Convention.126

    December 7, 1787: Delaware’s convention ratifies the Constitution by a 30-0 vote, making it the first state to join the new federal government.127

    Florida

    February 22, 1819: The United States acquires Florida from Spain in the Adams-Onís Treaty.128

    120 Max Farrand (ed.), The Records of the Federal Convention of 1787, vol. 3 (New Haven, CT: Yale University Press, 1911), p. 557.

    121 Jonathan Elliot (ed.), The Debates in the Several State Conventions on the Adoption of the Federal Constitution, vol. 1 (Washington: Printed For the Author, 1836), pp. 321-322; Merrill Jensen (ed.), The Documentary History of the Ratification of the Constitution, vol. 3 (Madison, WI: State Historical Society of Wisconsin, 1978), pp. 554-562.

    122 “The Duke of York’s Deed of Feoffment of Newcastle, and Twelve Miles Circle, to William Penn, August 24, 1682,” in Votes and Proceedings of the House of Representatives of the Province of Pennsylvania, vol. 1, part 1 (Philadelphia: B. Franklin and D. Hall, 1752), pp. xxxvi-xxxvii.

    123 Eileen B. Cooper, David King, and Mary Jane Mallonee, “Colonial Delaware Legal Bibliography,” in Chiorazzi and Most, Prestatehood Legal Materials, vol. 1, pp. 175-217.

    124 Journals of the Continental Congress, vol. 5 (July 4, 1776), pp. 510-516.

    125 Journals of the Continental Congress, vol. 14 (May 5, 1779), p. 548.

    126 Farrand, Records, vol. 3, p. 558.

    127 Elliot, Debates, vol. 1, p. 319; Documentary History of the Ratification of the Constitution, vol. 3, pp. 105-113.

    128 Andrew K. Frank, “The State of Florida,” in Shearer, Uniting States, vol. 1, pp. 245-270.

    Delaware: First State

    Delaware ratified Constitution December 7, 1787

    Florida: 27th State

    Florida Territory created March 30, 1822 (3 Stat. 654) Florida admitted March 3, 1845 (5 Stat. 742)

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    February 6, 1822: Senator William Smith of South Carolina reports from the Senate Judiciary Committee a bill to establish a territorial government in Florida.129

    March 8, 1822: Senate passes Florida Territory bill without a recorded vote.130

    March 27, 1822: House passes an amended version of the Florida Territory bill.131 Senate concurs in House amendments without a recorded vote.132

    March 30, 1822: President James Monroe signs the law “for the establishment of a territorial government in Florida.”133

    May 1, 1837: In a referendum on statehood, Florida residents vote 2,214 to 1,274 in favor of seeking admission to the Union.134

    December 3, 1838: Delegates to a convention convened by the Florida Territory’s Legislative Council gather in St. Joseph to write a state constitution.135

    January 11, 1839: Delegates vote 55-1 to approve the Florida state constitution.136

    May 6, 1839: Florida voters ratify the new state constitution by a vote of 2,071 to 1,958.137

    January 7, 1845: Representative Aaron V. Brown of Tennessee reports 28 H.R. 497, a bill to admit Florida and Iowa as states, from the House Committee on Territories.138

    February 13, 1845: House votes 144-48 to pass 28 H.R. 497.139

    March 1, 1845: Senate votes 36-9 to pass 28 H.R. 497.140

    129 Senate Journal, 17th Cong., 1st sess. (February 6, 1822), p. 115; Annals of Congress, vol. 38, 17th Cong., 1st sess. (February 6, 1822), p. 182.

    130 Senate Journal, 17th Cong., 1st sess. (March 8, 1822), p. 176; Annals of Congress, vol. 38, 17th Cong., 1st sess. (March 8, 1822), p. 279.

    131 The Annals of Congress states that the “question on the passage of the bill was…carried without opposition,” while the House Journal does not describe the vote. See House Journal, 17th Cong., 1st sess. (March 27, 1822), p. 404 and Annals of Congress, vol. 39, 17th Cong., 1st sess. (March 27, 1822), p. 1379.

    132 Senate Journal, 17th Cong., 1st sess. (March 27, 1822), p. 229; Annals of Congress, vol. 38, 17th Cong., 1st sess. (March 27, 1822), p. 344.

    133 3 Stat. 654.

    134 R.K. Call, “Proclamation of Governor Call and Returns of the 1837 Election,” in Florida Becomes a State, ed. Dorothy Dodd (Tallahassee, FL: Florida Centennial Commission, 1945), pp. 109-112.

    135 Journal of the Proceedings of a Convention of Delegates to Form a Constitution for the People of Florida, Held at St. Joseph, December, 1838 (St. Joseph, FL: Printed at the “Times” Office, 1839), p. 3.

    136 Journal of the Proceedings of a Convention ... to Form a Constitution for the People of Florida, p. 117.

    137 Dodd, Florida Becomes a State, pp. 69-70; Robert Raymond Reid, “Proclamation of President of the Constitutional Convention,” in Dodd, Florida Becomes a State, p. 340; Reid, “Statement of the Votes For and Against the Constitution,” in Dodd, Florida Becomes a State, pp. 376-378.

    138 House Journal, 28th Cong., 2nd sess. (January 7, 1845), p. 177; Congressional Globe, 28th Cong., 2nd sess. (January 7, 1845), p. 104.

    139 The House Journal reported the vote as 144-48, while the Congressional Globe reported the vote as 145-46. See House Journal, 28th Cong., 2nd sess. (February 13, 1845), pp. 375-381, and Congressional Globe, 28th Cong., 2nd sess. (February 13, 1845), pp. 282-286.

    140 Senate Journal, 28th Cong., 2nd sess. (March 1, 1845), pp. 232-233; Congressional Globe, 28th Cong., 2nd sess. (March 1, 1845), pp. 377-383.

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    March 3, 1845: President John Tyler signs 28 H.R. 497 to admit Florida and Iowa as states. Florida’s admission is immediate, whereas Iowa’s admission is delayed until December 1846 due to a dispute over its borders.141

    Georgia

    June 9, 1732: King George II grants a royal charter for the colony of Georgia.142

    July 4, 1776: Georgia joins 12 other colonies in declaring independence from Great Britain.143

    July 24, 1778: Georgia signs the Articles of Confederation.144

    May 14-September 17, 1787: Georgia’s four delegates participate in the Constitutional Convention.145

    December 31, 1787: Georgia’s convention votes 26-0 to ratify the Constitution.146

    January 2, 1788: Georgia’s convention delegates sign a deed formally ratifying the Constitution.147

    Hawaii

    July 7, 1898: The United States annexes the Republic of Hawaii.148

    December 6, 1899: Senator Shelby M. Cullom of Illinois introduces 56 S. 222, a bill to create a territorial government for the Hawaiian islands.149

    March 1, 1900: Senate amends and passes 56 S. 222 without a recorded vote.150

    April 6, 1900: House amends and passes 56 S. 222 by a 120-28 vote.151

    141 5 Stat. 742. See the “Iowa” timeline for detatils on its admission process.

    142 Thorpe, Federal and State Constitutions, vol. 2, pp. 765-777.

    143 Journals of the Continental Congress, vol. 5 (July 4, 1776), pp. 510-516.

    144 Journals of the Continental Congress, vol. 11 (July 24, 1778), p. 716.

    145 Farrand, Records, vol. 3, p. 559.

    146 Documentary History of the Ratification of the Constitution, vol. 3, pp. 269-284.

    147 Elliot, Debates, vol. 1, pp. 323-324.

    148 J.D. Bowers, “The State of Hawaii,” in Shearer, Uniting States, vol. 1, pp. 295-324.

    149 Senate Journal, 56th Cong., 1st sess. (December 6, 1899), p. 29; Congressional Record, vol. 33, part 1 (December 6, 1899), p. 89.

    150 Senate Journal, 56th Cong., 1st sess. (March 1, 1900), p. 170; Congressional Record, vol. 33, part 3 (March 1, 1900), pp. 2438-2449.

    151 The House Journal did not report the vote, but it appears in the Congressional Record. See House Journal, 56th Cong., 1st sess. (April 6, 1900), p. 443, and Congressional Record, vol. 33, part 4 (April 6, 1900), pp. 3851-3866.

    Georgia: Fourth State

    Georgia ratified Constitution January 2, 1788

    Hawaii: 50th State

    Hawaii Territory created April 30, 1900 (31 Stat. 141) Statehood law enacted March 18, 1959 (73 Stat. 4) Hawaii admitted August 21, 1959 (73 Stat. c74)

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    April 25, 1900: Senate approves conference report on 56 S. 222 without a recorded vote.152

    April 27, 1900: House approves conference report on 56 S. 222 by a 138-54 vote.153

    April 30, 1900: President William McKinley signs 56 S. 222 into law, creating the Territory of Hawaii.154

    November 5, 1940: Hawaii Territory voters back statehood, 46,174 to 22,428, in a plebiscite that asked, “Do you favor statehood for Hawaii?”155

    April 3, 1950: Delegates to a convention convened by the territorial legislature gather in Honolulu to draft a state constitution.156

    July 22, 1950: Delegates at the Honolulu convention vote 60-1 to adopt a state constitution.157

    November 7, 1950: Hawaii residents vote 82,788 to 27,109 in favor of ratifying the state constitution.158

    January 9, 1959: Senator James E. Murray of Montana introduces 86 S. 50, a bill to admit Hawaii as a state. The latest effort followed decades of debate and unsuccessful attempts to achieve statehood, but the bill is introduced less than a week after Alaska is admitted as the 49th state.159

    March 11, 1959: Senate passes 86 S. 50 on a 76-15 vote.160

    March 12, 1959: House passes 86 S. 50 on a 323-89 vote.161

    March 18, 1959: President Dwight Eisenhower signs 86 S. 50 into law.162

    June 27, 1959: Hawaii voters endorse statehood in a three-part referendum. The vote is 132,773 to 7,971 on the question, “Shall Hawaii immediately be admitted into the Union as a State?”163

    152 Senate Journal, 56th Cong., 1st sess. (April 25, 1900), pp. 304-305; Congressional Record, vol. 33, part 5 (April 25, 1900), pp. 4648-4651.

    153 House Journal, 56th Cong., 1st sess. (April 27, 1900), p. 512; Congressional Record, vol. 33, part 5 (April 27, 1900), pp. 4766-4767.

    154 31 Stat. 141.

    155 Roger Bell, Last Among Equals: Hawaiian Statehood and American Politics (Honolulu, HI: University of Hawai’i Press, 1984), pp. 71-78 and 353.

    156 Proceedings of the Constitutional Convention of Hawaii, 1950, vol. 1 (Honolulu, HI: State of Hawaii, 1960), p. 1.

    157 Proceedings of the Constitutional Convention of Hawaii, vol. 1, p. 139.

    158 U.S. Congress, Senate Committee on Interior and Insular Affairs, State Constitution of Hawaii, committee print, 85th Cong., 1st sess., March 28, 1957, p. iii.

    159 Senate Journal, 86th Cong., 1st sess. (January 9, 1959), p. 26; Congressional Record, vol. 105, part 1 (January 9, 1959), p. 228.

    160 Senate Journal, 86th Cong., 1st sess. (March 11, 1959), p. 175; Congressional Record, vol. 105, part 3 (March 11, 1959), p. 3890.

    161 House Journal, 86th Cong., 1st sess. (March 12, 1959), p. 284; Congressional Record, vol. 105, part 3 (March 12, 1959), pp. 4038-4039.

    162 73 Stat. 4.

    163 Letter from William F. Quinn, Governor of the Territory of Hawaii, to Dwight Eisenhower, President of the United States of America, July 2, 1959, at https://www.eisenhowerlibrary.gov/sites/default/files/research/online-documents/ hawaii-statehood/1959-07-02-quinn-to-dde.pdf.

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    August 21, 1959: President Eisenhower issues Proclamation 3309, “Admission of the State of Hawaii Into the Union,” formally admitting Hawaii as the 50th state.164

    Idaho

    June 15, 1846: The United States acquires the Oregon Country, including the land that will become Idaho, following a period of joint occupation with Great Britain.165

    February 11, 1863: Representative James M. Ashley of Ohio reports 37 H.R. 738, a bill to create a new territorial government, from the House Committee on Territories.166

    February 12, 1863: House amends and passes 37 H.R. 738.167

    March 3, 1863: Senate amends 37 H.R. 738, naming the new territory “Idaho” instead of “Montana,” then passes it on a 25-12 vote.168 House concurs in Senate changes to 37 H.R. 738 by a vote of 65-33.169 President Abraham Lincoln signs 37 H.R. 738 into law, creating the Territory of Idaho.170

    April 2, 1889: Idaho’s territorial governor calls a constitutional convention.171

    July 4, 1889: Delegates meet in Boise to begin writing a state constitution.172

    August 6, 1889: Delegates at the Boise convention vote 51-0 to adopt a state constitution for Idaho.173

    November 5, 1889: Voters in Idaho ratify the state constitution by a 12,398 to 1,773 margin.174

    164 73 Stat. c74.

    165 Katherine G. Aiken, “The State of Idaho,” in Shearer, Uniting States, vol. 1, pp. 325-356.

    166 The Congressional Globe reported the bill number as H.R. 626. See House Journal, 37th Cong., 3rd sess. (February 11, 1863), p. 369, and Congressional Globe, 37th Cong., 3rd sess. (February 11, 1863), pp. 884-885.

    167 The House Journal records the vote as 86-40, while the Congressional Globe records the vote as 85-39. See House Journal, 37th Cong., 3rd sess. (February 12, 1863), pp. 379-381, and Congressional Globe, 37th Cong., 3rd sess. (February 12, 1863), p. 914.

    168 Senate Journal, 37th Cong., 3rd sess. (March 3, 1863), pp. 415-416; Congressional Globe, 37th Cong., 3rd sess. (March 3, 1863), pp. 1507-1509.

    169 The House Journal did not report the vote, but it appears in the Congressional Globe. See House Journal, 37th Cong., 3rd sess. (March 3, 1863), pp. 587, and Congressional Globe, 37th Cong., 3rd sess. (March 3, 1863), p. 1542.

    170 12 Stat. 808.

    171 E.A. Stevenson, “Proclamation,” April 2, 1889, Idaho State Archives, at https://idahohistory.contentdm.oclc.org/ digital/collection/p16281coll38/id/52.

    172 I.W. Hart (ed.), Proceedings and Debates of the Constitutional Convention of Idaho, 1889, vol. 1 (Caldwell, ID: Caxton Printers, 1912), p. 1.

    173 Proceedings and Debates of the Constitutional Convention of Idaho, vol. 2, p. 2037.

    174 George L. Shoup, Report of the Governor of Idaho to the Secretary of the Interior, 1890 (Washington: GPO, 1890), p. 88.

    Idaho: 43rd State

    Idaho Territory created March 3, 1863 (12 Stat. 808) Idaho admitted July 3, 1890 (26 Stat. 215)

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    January 13, 1890: Representative Isaac S. Struble of Iowa introduces 51 H.R. 4562, a bill “to provide for the admission of the State of Idaho.”175

    April 3, 1890: House passes 51 H.R. 4562 by a 129-1 vote.176

    July 1, 1890: Senate passes 51 H.R. 4562 without a recorded vote.177

    July 3, 1890: President Benjamin Harrison signs 51 H.R. 4562 into law, admitting Idaho as the 43rd state.178

    Illinois

    September 3, 1783: The United States acquires the land that will become Illinois from Great Britain in the Treaty of Paris.179

    December 31, 1808: Delegate Jesse B. Thomas of Indiana reports a bill to divide the Indiana Territory into two territories, from a select committee appointed to examine the issue.180

    January 18, 1809: House votes 69-37 to pass the bill dividing Indiana Territory.181

    January 31, 1809: Senate passes the Indiana Territory bill without a recorded vote.182

    February 3, 1809: President Thomas Jefferson signs the bill to split the Indiana Territory, creating the Illinois Territory effective March 1, 1809.183

    January 23, 1818: Delegate Nathaniel Pope of Illinois reports a bill allowing Illinois Territory residents to write a constitution and form a state government in preparation for admission to the Union, from a select committee appointed to review the territorial government’s petition seeking statehood.184

    175 According to the Congressional Record, Rep. Edwin H. Conger of Iowa introduced the bill on behalf of Rep. Struble, who was “absent on account of sickness.” See House Journal, 51st Cong., 1st sess. (January 13, 1890), p. 110, and Congressional Record, vol. 21, part 1 (January 13, 1890), p. 523.

    176 House Journal, 51st Cong., 1st sess. (April 3, 1890), p. 430; Congressional Record, vol. 21, part 3 (April 3, 1890), pp. 3005-3006.

    177 Senate Journal, 51st Cong., 1st sess. (July 1, 1890), p. 411; Congressional Record, vol. 21, part 7 (July 1, 1890), p. 6834.

    178 26 Stat. 215.

    179 Michael E. Meagher, “The State of Illinois,” in Shearer, Uniting States, vol. 1, pp. 357-382.

    180 House Journal, 10th Cong., 2nd sess. (December 31, 1808), p. 432; Annals of Congress, vol. 19, 10th Cong., 2nd sess. (December 31, 1808), pp. 971-973.

    181 House Journal, 10th Cong., 2nd sess. (January 18, 1809), pp. 477-478; Annals of Congress, vol. 19, 10th Cong., 2nd sess. (January 18, 1809), pp. 1093-1095.

    182 Senate Journal, 10th Cong., 2nd sess. (January 31, 1809), p. 336; Annals of Congress, vol. 19, 10th Cong., 2nd sess. (January 31, 1809), p. 339.

    183 2 Stat. 514.

    184 House Journal, 15th Cong., 1st sess. (January 23, 1818), p. 174; Annals of Congress, vol. 31, 15th Cong., 1st sess. (January 23, 1818), p. 814.

    Illinois: 21st State

    Illinois Territory created March 1, 1809 (2 Stat. 514) Enabling law enacted April 18, 1818 (3 Stat. 428) Illinois admitted December 3, 1818 (3 Stat. 536)

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    April 6, 1818: House passes the Illinois bill without a recorded vote.185

    April 14, 1818: Senate passes an amended version of the Illinois bill without a recorded vote.186

    April 15, 1818: House concurs in Senate amendments to the Illinois bill without a recorded vote.187

    April 18, 1818: President James Monroe signs the Illinois enabling legislation into law.188

    August 3-26, 1818: Delegates meet in Kaskaskia and draft a state constitution for Illinois.189

    November 20, 1818: Representative Richard C. Anderson Jr. of Kentucky reports a joint resolution admitting Illinois to the Union, from a select committee appointed to review the state constitution.190

    November 23, 1818: House passes the resolution admitting Illinois to the Union on a 117-34 vote.191

    December 1, 1818: Senate passes the Illinois statehood resolution without a recorded vote.192

    December 3, 1818: President Monroe signs into law the resolution admitting Illinois as the 21st state.193

    Indiana

    September 3, 1783: The United States acquires the land that will become Indiana from Great Britain in the Treaty of Paris.194

    185 House Journal, 15th Cong., 1st sess. (April 6, 1818), p. 428; Annals of Congress, vol. 32, 15th Cong., 1st sess. (April 6, 1818), p. 1681.

    186 Senate Journal, 15th Cong., 1st sess. (April 14, 1818), pp. 357-358; Annals of Congress, vol. 31, 15th Cong., 1st sess. (April 14, 1818), p. 365.

    187 House Journal, 15th Cong., 1st sess. (April 15, 1818), pp. 466-467; Annals of Congress, vol. 32, 15th Cong., 1st sess. (April 15, 1818), p. 1738.

    188 3 Stat. 428.

    189 Richard V. Carpenter, “The Illinois Constitutional Convention of 1818,” Journal of the Illinois State Historical Society 6, no. 3 (October 1913), pp. 327-424; Illinois Legislative Reference Bureau, Constitutional Conventions in Illinois (Springfield, IL: Illinois State Journal Co., 1918), pp. 9-11.

    190 House Journal, 15th Cong., 2nd sess. (November 20, 1818), p. 25; Annals of Congress, vol. 33, 15th Cong., 2nd sess. (November 20, 1818), pp. 297-298.

    191 House Journal, 15th Cong., 2nd sess. (November 23, 1818), pp. 30-31; Annals of Congress, vol. 33, 15th Cong., 2nd sess. (November 23, 1818), pp. 305-311.

    192 Senate Journal, 15th Cong., 2nd sess. (December 1, 1818), p. 43; Annals of Congress, vol. 33, 15th Cong., 2nd sess. (December 1, 1818), p. 32.

    193 3 Stat. 536.

    194 John P. Hundley, “The State of Indiana,” in Shearer, Uniting States, vol. 1, pp. 383-409.

    Indiana: 19th State

    Indiana Territory created July 4, 1800 (2 Stat. 58) Enabling law enacted April 19, 1816 (3 Stat. 289) Indiana admitted December 11, 1816 (3 Stat. 399)

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    March 20, 1800: Representative William Craik of Maryland reports a bill to divide the Territory Northwest of the River Ohio (Northwest Territory) into two parts.195

    March 31, 1800: House passes the Northwest Territory bill without a recorded vote.196

    April 21, 1800: Senate amends and passes the Northwest Territory bill without a recorded vote.197

    May 3, 1800: House agrees to a compromise version of the Northwest Territory bill without a recorded vote.198

    May 5, 1800: Senate agrees to the compromise version of the Northwest Territory bill without a recorded vote.199

    May 7, 1800: President John Adams signs the bill to split the Northwest Territory, creating Indiana Territory in the west effective July 4, 1800.200

    January 5, 1816: Delegate Jonathan Jennings of Indiana reports a bill enabling Indiana to write a constitution and form a state government in preparation for admission to the Union.201

    March 30, 1816: House passes the Indiana bill on a 108-3 vote.202

    April 13, 1816: Senate passes an amended version of the Indiana bill without a recorded vote.203

    April 15, 1816: House agrees to the Senate’s amendments to the Indiana bill without a recorded vote.204

    April 19, 1816: President James Madison signs the Indiana enabling act.205

    June 10-29, 1816: Delegates meet in Corydon and draft a state constitution for Indiana.206

    195 House Journal, 6th Cong., 1st sess. (March 20, 1800), p. 635; Annals of Congress, vol. 10, 6th Cong. (March 20, 1800), 1st sess., p. 635.

    196 House Journal, 6th Cong., 1st sess. (March 31, 1800), p. 646; Annals of Congress, vol. 10, 6th Cong., 1st sess. (March 31, 1800), p. 649.

    197 Senate Journal, 6th Cong., 1st sess. (April 21, 1800), p. 77; Annals of Congress, vol. 10, 6th Cong., 1st sess. (April 21, 1800), p. 164.

    198 House Journal, 6th Cong., 1st sess. (May 3, 1800), p. 695; Annals of Congress, vol. 10, 6th Cong., 1st sess. (May 3, 1800), pp. 698-699.

    199 Senate Journal, 6th Cong., 1st sess. (May 5, 1800), p. 86; Annals of Congress, vol. 10, 6th Cong., 1st sess. (May 5, 1800), p. 173.

    200 2 Stat. 58.

    201 House Journal, 14th Cong., 1st sess. (January 5, 1816), p. 128; Annals of Congress, vol. 29, 14th Cong., 1st sess. (January 5, 1816), pp. 459-461.

    202 House Journal, 14th Cong., 1st sess. (March 30, 1816), pp. 554-555; Annals of Congress, vol. 29, 14th Cong., 1st sess. (March 30, 1816), p. 1300.

    203 Senate Journal, 14th Cong., 1st sess. (April 13, 1816), p. 450; Annals of Congress, vol. 29, 14th Cong., 1st sess. (April 13, 1816), p. 315.

    204 House Journal, 14th Cong., 1st sess. (April 15, 1816), p. 651; Annals of Congress, vol. 29, 14th Cong., 1st sess. (April 15, 1816), p. 1373.

    205 3 Stat. 289.

    206 Journal of the Convention of the Indiana Territory (Louisville: Butler & Wood, 1816), pp. 3 and 68-69.

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    December 2, 1816: Senate appoints a select committee to investigate whether additional legislation is necessary to complete Indiana’s admission as a state.207

    December 4, 1816: Senator Jeremiah Morrow of Ohio reports from the select committee a resolution declaring Indiana admitted to the Union.208

    December 6, 1816: Senate amends and passes the Indiana statehood resolution without a recorded vote.209

    December 9, 1816: House passes Indiana statehood resolution.210

    December 11, 1816: President Madison signs the resolution admitting Indiana as the 19th state.211

    Iowa

    April 30, 1803: The United States acquires the land that will become Iowa from France in the Louisiana Purchase.212

    March 14, 1838: Senator Thomas Morris of Ohio introduces 25 S. 269, a bill to create a new Iowa Territory.213

    June 1, 1838: Senate passes 25 S. 269 without a recorded vote.214

    June 6, 1838: House amends 25 S. 269 before passing it on a 118-51 vote.215 Senate passes the House-amended bill without a recorded vote, following a 33-6 vote against tabling the bill.216

    June 12, 1838: President Martin Van Buren signs 25 S. 269 into law, creating the Iowa Territory effective July 3, 1838.217

    April 1, 1844: Iowa Territory voters, by a margin of 6,976 to 4,181, support calling a convention to write a state constitution.218

    207 Senate Journal, 14th Cong., 2nd sess. (December 2, 1816), p. 5; Annals of Congress, vol. 30, 14th Cong., 2nd sess. (December 2, 1816), pp. 9-10.

    208 Senate Journal, 14th Cong., 2nd sess. (December 4, 1816), pp. 27-28; Annals of Congress, vol. 30, 14th Cong., 2nd sess. (December 4, 1816), p. 18.

    209 Senate Journal, 14th Cong., 2nd sess. (December 6, 1816), pp. 33-34; Annals of Congress, vol. 30, 14th Cong., 2nd sess. (December 6, 1816), pp. 20-21.

    210 The House Journal did not report a specific vote count, while the Annals of Congress reported that the vote was unanimous. See House Journal, 14th Cong., 2nd sess. (December 9, 1816), p. 44, and Annals of Congress, vol. 30, 14th Cong., 2nd sess. (December 9, 1816), p. 254.

    211 3 Stat. 399.

    212 William Roba, “The State of Iowa,” in Shearer, Uniting States, vol. 1, pp. 410-433.

    213 Senate Journal, 25th Cong., 2nd sess. (March 14, 1838), pp. 290-291; Congressional Globe, 25th Cong., 2nd sess. (March 14, 1838), p. 239.

    214 Senate Journal, 25th Cong., 2nd sess. (June 1, 1838), pp. 440-441. The Congressional Globe did not report passage of the bill.

    215 House Journal, 25th Cong., 2nd sess. (June 6, 1838), pp. 1042-1044; Congressional Globe, 25th Cong., 2nd sess. (June 6, 1838), p. 432.

    216 Senate Journal, 25th Cong., 2nd sess. (June 6, 1838), pp. 448-449; Congressional Globe, 25th Cong., 2nd sess. (June 6, 1838), pp. 434-435.

    217 5 Stat. 235.

    218 Roba, “The State of Iowa,” p. 423.

    Iowa: 29th State

    Iowa Territory created July 3, 1838 (5 Stat. 235) Iowa admitted December 28, 1846 (9 Stat. 117)

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    October 7-November 1, 1844: Delegates meet in Iowa City and draft a state constitution.219

    March 3, 1845: President John Tyler signs 28 H.R. 497, a bill to admit Florida and Iowa as states.220 However, Iowa’s admission is made conditional on the territory accepting “truncated boundaries” for the state. Iowa voters twice—on April 7, 1845, and August 4, 1845—reject ratification of a state constitution with those borders.221

    May 4-19, 1846: Delegates meet in Iowa City and draft a second state constitution, with modified boundaries.222

    August 3, 1846: Iowa voters ratify their new constitution by a vote of 9,492 to 9,036.223

    August 4, 1846: President James K. Polk signs into law the compromise over Iowa’s borders, resolving the dispute and clearing the way for statehood.224

    December 17, 1846: Representative Stephen A. Douglas of Illinois reports 29 H.R. 557, a bill to admit Iowa as a state, from the House Committee on Territories.225

    December 21, 1846: House passes 29 H.R. 557 without a recorded vote.226

    December 24, 1846: Senate passes 29 H.R. 557 without a recorded vote following a 40-2 vote to reject an amendment.227

    December 28, 1846: President Polk signs 29 H.R. 557 into law, admitting Iowa into the Union.228

    Kansas

    April 30, 1803: The United States acquires part of the land that will become Kansas from France in the Louisiana Purchase, with additional

    219 Journal of the Convention for the Formation of a Constitution for the State of Iowa, Begun and Held at Iowa City, on the First Monday of October, Eighteen Hundred and Forty-Four (Iowa City, IA: Jesse Williams, 1845), pp. 3 and 211.

    220 5 Stat. 742; see the “Florida” timeline for additional details on this legislation.

    221 Roba, “The State of Iowa,” p. 424.

    222 Journal of the Convention for the Formation of a Constitution for the State of Iowa, Begun and Held at Iowa City, on the First Monday of May, Eighteen Hundred and Forty-Six (Iowa City, IA: Abraham M. Palmer, 1846), pp. 23 and 109; James Alton James, Constitution and Admission of Iowa Into the Union (Baltimore, MD: Johns Hopkins Press, 1900), pp. 33-34.

    223 James Clarke, “Proclamation by the Governor of the Territory of Iowa” (September 9, 1846) in U.S. Congress, House, Constitution of Iowa, 29th Cong., 2nd sess., December 15, 1846, H.Doc. 29-16, p. 17.

    224 9 Stat. 52; James, Constitution and Admission of Iowa Into the Union, pp. 37-39.

    225 House Journal, 29th Cong., 2nd sess. (December 17, 1846), p. 62; Congressional Globe, 29th Cong., 2nd sess. (December 17, 1846), p. 53.

    226 House Journal, 29th Cong., 2nd sess. (December 21, 1846), p. 81; Congressional Globe, 29th Cong., 2nd sess. (December 21, 1846), pp. 57-58.

    227 Senate Journal, 29th Cong., 2nd sess. (December 24, 1846), pp. 69-70; Congressional Globe, 29th Cong., 2nd sess. (December 24, 1846), pp. 79-82.

    228 9 Stat. 117.

    Kansas: 34th State

    Kansas Territory created May 30, 1854 (10 Stat. 277) Kansas admitted January 29, 1861 (12 Stat. 126)

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    territory acquired in 1845 in the annexation of Texas.229

    December 14, 1853: Senator Augustus Caesar Dodge of Iowa introduces 33 S. 22, a bill to create a new Nebraska Territory.230

    January 31, 1854: Representative William A. Richardson of Illinois reports 33 H.R. 236, a bill creating new territorial governments for Kansas and Nebraska, from the House Committee on Territories.231

    March 3, 1854: Senate votes 37-14 to pass 33 S. 22, which as amended would create two new territories, Kansas and Nebraska.232

    May 22, 1854: House passes an amended version of 33 H.R. 236 on a 113-100 vote, in lieu of voting on the Senate-passed 33 S. 22.233

    May 25, 1854: Senate passes 33 H.R. 236 on a 35-13 vote.234

    May 30, 1854: President Franklin Pierce signs 33 H.R. 236 into law, creating the Kansas and Nebraska territories and repealing the 1820 Missouri Compromise, which would have barred slavery in the new territories. Instead, the Kansas- Nebraska Act leaves residents of the two territories “perfectly free to form and regulate their domestic institutions in their own way.”235

    February 2, 1858: President James Buchanan recommends that Congress admit Kansas under a pro-slavery state constitution drafted in Lecompton amid years of violence in the territory between anti- and pro-slavery factions. Faced with opposition in the House, the law signed by President Buchanan on May 4, 1858, requires a “fair and free” vote by Kansans on the Lecompton Constitution as a condition of statehood. Kansas voters overwhelmingly reject the Lecompton Constitution in an August 2, 1858 referendum.236

    July 5, 1859: Delegates gather in Wyandotte to draft a new state constitution, the territory’s fourth constitutional convention following gatherings in Topeka in 1855, Lecompton in 1857, and Leavenworth in 1858.237

    July 29, 1859: The Wyandotte convention votes 34-13 to adopt a new, anti- slavery state constitution.238

    229 M.H. Hoeflich, “The State of Kansas,” in Shearer, Uniting States, vol. 1, pp. 434-459.

    230 Senate Journal, 33rd Cong., 1st sess. (December 14, 1853), p. 44; Congressional Globe, 33rd Cong., 1st sess. (December 14, 1853), p. 44.

    231 House Journal, 33rd Cong., 1st sess. (January 31, 1854), p. 296; Congressional Globe, 33rd Cong., 1st sess. (January 31, 1854), pp. 294-297.

    232 Senate Journal, 33rd Cong., 1st sess. (March 3, 1854), pp. 236-237; Congressional Globe, 33rd Cong., 1st sess. (March 3, 1854), pp. 531-532.

    233 House Journal, 33rd Cong., 1st sess. (May 22, 1854), pp. 923-924; Congressional Globe, 33rd Cong., 1st sess. (May 22, 1854), p. 1254.

    234 Senate Journal, 33rd Cong., 1st sess. (May 25, 1854), pp. 412-413; Congressional Globe, 33rd Cong., 1st sess. (May 25, 1854), p. 1321.

    235 10 Stat. 277. Additional documents related to the Kansas-Nebraska Act are available in the Library of Congress research guide “Kansas-Nebraska Act: Primary Documents in American History,” at https://guides.loc.gov/kansas- nebraska-act.

    236 McPherson, Battle Cry of Freedom, pp. 167-169; 11 Stat. 269.

    237 Kansas Historical Society, “Kansas Constitutions,” in Kansapedia, at https://www.kshs.org/kansapedia/kansas- constitutions/16532.

    238 Harry G. Larimer (ed.), Kansas Constitutional Convention: A Reprint of the Proceedings and Debates of the (continued...)

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    October 4, 1859: Kansas voters ratify the Wyandotte Constitution by a vote of 10,421 to 5,530.239

    February 15, 1860: Representative Galusha A. Grow of Pennsylvania introduces 36 H.R. 23, a bill to admit Kansas to the Union.240

    April 11, 1860: House votes to pass 36 H.R. 23.241

    January 21, 1861: Senate amends 36 H.R. 23 and passes it by a 36-16 vote.242

    January 28, 1861: House votes 119-41 to suspend the rules and take up 36 H.R. 23, then agrees to the Senate’s amendments without a recorded vote.243

    January 29, 1861: President Buchanan signs 36 H.R. 23 into law, admitting Kansas as the 34th state.244

    Kentucky

    December 31, 1776: Virginia’s General Assembly establishes Kentucky County in the western part of the commonwealth.245

    November 1, 1780: Virginia’s General Assembly splits Kentucky into multiple counties and subsequently refers to the area as the District of Kentucky.246

    July 3, 1788: Congress, still operating under the Articles of Confederation, decides to postpone a decision on statehood for Kentucky until the new federal government convenes in 1789.247

    December 18, 1789: Virginia’s General Assembly enacts a law “concerning the erection of the district of Kentuckey [sic] into an independent state,” clearing the way for Kentucky to secede from Virginia and enter the Union on its own.248

    Convention Which Framed the Constitution of Kansas at Wyandotte in July, 1859 (Topeka, KS: Kansas State Printing Plant, 1920), pp. 570-571.

    239 Samuel Medary, “Proclamation” (November 1, 1859) in U.S. Congress, House Committee on Territories, Kansas, report to accompany H.R. 23, 36th Cong., 1st sess., H.Rept. 36-255, March 29, 1860, pp. 20-21.

    240 House Journal, 36th Cong., 1st sess. (February 15, 1860), p. 294; Congressional Globe, 36th Cong., 1st sess. (February 15, 1860), p. 795.

    241 The House Journal reported the vote as 135-72, while the Congressional Globe reported the vote as 134-73. See House Journal, 36th Cong., 1st sess. (April 11, 1860), pp. 707-708, and Congressional Globe, 36th Cong., 1st sess. (April 11, 1860), p. 1672.

    242 Senate Journal, 36th Cong., 2nd sess. (January 21, 1861), pp. 127-128; Congressional Globe, 36th Cong., 2nd sess. (January 21, 1861), pp. 487-489.

    243 House Journal, 36th Cong., 2nd sess. (January 28, 1861), pp. 236-237; Congressional Globe, 36th Cong., 2nd sess. (January 28, 1861), pp. 603-604.

    244 12 Stat. 126.

    245 William Waller Hening (ed.), The Statutes at Large; Being a Collection of All the Laws of Virginia, From the First Session of the Legislature, in the Year 1619, vol. 9 (Richmond, VA: J&G Cochran, Printers, 1821), pp. 257-261.

    246 Hening, Statutes at Large, vol. 10, pp. 315-317 and 436.

    247 Journals of the Continental Congress, vol. 34 (July 3, 1788), pp. 287-294.

    248 Hening, Statutes at Large, vol. 13, pp. 17-21.

    Kentucky: 15th State

    Kentucky admitted June 1, 1792 (1 Stat. 189)

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    July 28, 1790: Delegates gathered in Danville vote 24-18 that “it is expedient for, and the will of, the good people of the District of Kentucky that the same be erected into an Independent State.”249

    December 8, 1790: President George Washington asks Congress to consider Kentucky’s application for statehood.250

    December 14, 1790: Senate creates a committee to consider Kentucky statehood.251

    January 3, 1791: Senator Philip Schuyler of New York reports the committee’s recommendation that Kentucky be granted statehood.252

    January 4, 1791: Senate committee assigned to consider Kentucky statehood reports a bill admitting Kentucky to the Union.253

    January 12, 1791: Senate passes the Kentucky bill without a recorded vote.254

    January 28, 1791: House passes the Kentucky bill without a recorded vote.255

    February 4, 1791: President Washington signs into law the act declaring that on June 1, 1792, Kentucky will “be received and admitted into this Union, as a new and entire member of the United States of America.”256

    April 2, 1792: Delegates gather in Danville to write a state constitution.257

    April 19, 1792: Delegates in Danville adopt a state constitution for Kentucky.258

    June 1, 1792: Kentucky joins the Union as the 15th state.259

    Louisiana

    April 30, 1803: Robert Livingston and James Monroe sign the Louisiana

    249 Letter from George Muter, President of the Ninth Kentucky Convention, to George Washington, President of the United States of America, October 4, 1790, at https://founders.archives.gov/documents/Washington/05-06-02-0250.

    250 Washington, “Second Annual Address to Congress” (December 8, 1790), American Presidency Project (University of California, Santa Barbara), at https://www.presidency.ucsb.edu/node/203719.

    251 Senate Journal, 1st Cong., 3rd sess. (December 14, 1790), p. 222; Annals of Congress, vol. 2, 1st Cong., 3rd sess. (December 14, 1790), p. 1777.

    252 Senate Journal, 1st Cong., 3rd sess. (January 3, 1791), pp. 228-229; Annals of Congress, vol. 2, 1st Cong., 3rd sess. (January 3, 1791), pp. 1784-1785.

    253 Senate Journal, 1st Cong., 3rd sess. (January 4, 1791), p. 229; Annals of Congress, vol. 2, 1st Cong., 3rd sess. (January 4, 1791), p. 1785.

    254 Senate Journal, 1st Cong., 3rd sess. (January 12, 1791), p. 232; Annals of Congress, vol. 2, 1st Cong., 3rd sess. (January 12, 1791), p. 1788.

    255 House Journal, 1st Cong., 3rd sess. (January 28, 1791), p. 366; Annals of Congress, vol. 2, 1st Cong., 3rd sess. (January 28, 1791), p. 1934.

    256 1 Stat. 189.

    257 Journal of the First Constitutional Convention of Kentucky (Lexington, KY: State Bar Association of Kentucky, 1942), p. 1.

    258 Journal of the First Constitutional Convention of Kentucky, p. 22.

    259 Stephen Asperheim, “The Commonwealth of Kentucky,” in Shearer, Uniting States, vol. 1, pp. 460-485.

    Louisiana: 18th State

    Orleans Territory created March 26, 1804 (2 Stat. 283) Enabling law enacted February 20, 1811 (2 Stat. 641) Louisiana admitted April 30, 1812 (2 Stat. 701)

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    Purchase Treaty and Conventions in Paris, France.260

    October 20, 1803: The Senate ratifies the Louisiana Purchase treaty by a vote of 24-7.261

    December 30, 1803: Senator John Breckinridge of Kentucky reports a bill “erecting Louisiana into two territories,” from a committee appointed to study the issue.262

    February 18, 1804: The Senate passes an amended version of the bill “erecting Louisiana into two Territories” by a vote of 20-5.263

    March 17, 1804: The House passes an amended version of the bill splitting the Louisiana Purchase into two territories by a vote of 66-21.”264

    March 20, 1804: The Senate rejects several of the House’s changes to the Louisiana bill.265

    March 21, 1804: The House requests a conference committee with the Senate to resolve differences over the Louisiana bill.266

    March 23, 1804: House votes 51-45 to pass a compromise version of the Louisiana bill,267 followed by a 15-9 vote in the Senate.268

    March 26, 1804: President Thomas Jefferson signs the act splitting the Louisiana Purchase into two areas: the Territory of Orleans, including the city of New Orleans, and the District of Louisiana, covering the bulk of the land acquired from France.269

    December 27, 1810: Representative Nathaniel Macon of North Carolina introduces a bill that would enable Orleans Territory residents to draft a constitution and form a state government in preparation for statehood.270

    January 15, 1811: House passes the Orleans Territory bill by a 77-36 vote.271

    260 8 Stat. 200.

    261 Senate Journal, 8th Cong., 1st sess. (October 20, 1803), p. 450. This does not appear in the Annals of Congress.

    262 Senate Journal, 8th Cong., 1st sess. (December 30, 1803), p. 331; Annals of Congress, vol. 13, 8th Cong., 1st sess. (December 30, 1803), p. 223.

    263 Senate Journal, 8th Cong., 1st sess. (February 18, 1804), p. 360; Annals of Congress, vol. 13, 8th Cong., 1st sess. (February 18, 1804), p. 255.

    264 House Journal, 8th Cong., 1st sess. (March 17, 1804), pp. 661-662; Annals of Congress, vol. 13, 8th Cong., 1st sess. (March 17, 1804), p. 1199.

    265 Senate Journal, 8th Cong., 1st sess. (March 20, 1804), pp. 384-385; Annals of Congress, vol. 13, 8th Cong., 1st sess. (March 20, 1804), pp. 288-290.

    266 House Journal, 8th Cong., 1st sess. (March 21, 1804), p. 661; Annals of Congress, vol. 13, 8th Cong., 1st sess. (March 21, 1804), pp. 1206-1208.

    267 House Journal, 8th Cong., 1st sess. (March 23, 1804), pp. 678-679; Annals of Congress, vol. 13, 8th Cong., 1st sess. (March 23, 1804), pp. 1229-1230.

    268 Senate Journal, 8th Cong., 1st sess. (March 23, 1804), p. 391; Annals of Congress, vol. 13, 8th Cong., 1st sess. (March 23, 1804), pp. 296-297.

    269 2 Stat. 283. The District of Louisiana will later become the Louisiana Territory and, in 1812, the Missouri Territory. See the “Missouri” timeline for details.

    270 House Journal, 11th Cong., 3rd sess. (December 27, 1810), p. 464; Annals of Congress, vol. 22, 11th Cong., 3rd sess. (December 27, 1810), p. 466.

    271 House Journal, 11th Cong., 3rd sess. (January 15, 1811), pp. 483-485; Annals of Congress, vol. 22, 11th Cong., 3rd sess. (January 15, 1811), p. 577.

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    February 7, 1811: Senate passes an amended version of the Orleans Territory bill by a 22-10 vote.272

    February 13, 1811: House agrees to the Senate’s amendment by a 69-45 vote.273

    February 20, 1811: President James Madison signs the act enabling Orleans Territory to prepare for statehood.274

    November 4, 1811: A constitutional convention begins in New Orleans.275

    January 22, 1812: Delegates to the New Orleans convention sign a state constitution for Louisiana.276

    March 16, 1812: Representative John Dawson of Virginia introduces a bill to admit Louisiana as a state.277

    March 20, 1812: House votes 79-23 to pass the Louisiana statehood bill.278

    April 1, 1812: Senate passes an amended version of the Louisiana statehood act without a recorded vote.279

    April 6, 1812: House agrees to the Senate-amended version of the admission act without a recorded vote.280

    April 8, 1812: President Madison signs the act admitting Louisiana into the Union, which will take effect on April 30.281

    April 30, 1812: Louisiana becomes the 18th state.

    Maine

    October 7, 1691: A new charter for the Massachusetts Bay colony enlarges it to include Maine, among other places. Maine will remain part of Massachusetts for more than a century.282

    272 Senate Journal, 11th Cong., 3rd sess. (February 7, 1811), p. 564; Annals of Congress, vol. 22, 11th Cong., 3rd sess. (February 7, 1811), p. 127.

    273 House Journal, 11th Cong., 3rd sess. (February 13, 1811), pp. 549-551; Annals of Congress, vol. 22, 11th Cong., 3rd sess. (February 13, 1811), p. 964.

    274 2 Stat. 641.

    275 Journal de la Convention d’Orléans de 1811-12 (Jackson, LA: Jerome Bayon, 1844), p. 1.

    276 Constitution or Form of Government of the State of Louisiana (New Orleans: Jo. Bar. Baird, 1812), p. 30.

    277 House Journal, 12th Cong., 1st sess. (March 16, 1812), p. 248; Annals of Congress, vol. 24, 12th Cong., 1st sess. (March 16, 1812), p. 466.

    278 House Journal, 12th Cong., 1st sess. (March 20, 1812), pp. 257-258; Annals of Congress, vol. 24, 12th Cong., 1st sess. (March 20, 1812), p. 1227.

    279 Senate Journal, 12th Cong., 1st sess. (April 1, 1812), pp. 90-91; Annals of Congress, vol. 23, 12th Cong., 1st sess. (April 1, 1812), p. 186.

    280 House Journal, 12th Cong., 1st sess. (April 6, 1812), p. 276; Annals of Congress, vol. 24, 12th Cong., 1st sess. (April 6, 1812), p. 1254.

    281 2 Stat. 701.

    282 “The Charter of Massachusetts Bay—1691,” in Thorpe, Federal and State Constitutions, vol. 3, pp. 1870-1886; M.H. Hoeflich, “The State of Maine,” in Shearer, Uniting States, vol. 2, p. 513-538.

    Maine: 23rd State

    Maine admitted March 15, 1820 (3 Stat. 544)

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    June 19, 1819: Massachusetts consents to Maine’s separation and statehood, pending the outcome of a referendum vote and other steps.283

    July 26, 1819: Mainers vote in favor of separating from Massachusetts, 17,091 to 7,132. It is the sixth in a series of votes on the subject going back to 1792.284

    October 11-29, 1819: Delegates gather in Portland to write a new Maine constitution.285

    December 6, 1819: Maine voters ratify the new state constitution by 9,040 to 796.286

    December 21, 1819: Representative John Holmes of Massachusetts reports, from a select committee, a bill to admit Maine as a state.287

    January 3, 1820: House passes an amended version of the Maine statehood bill without a recorded vote.288

    February 18, 1820: Senate amends and passes the Maine statehood bill without a recorded vote on final passage.289

    March 3, 1820: House and Senate agree to a compromise version of the Maine statehood bill, which is then passed by the House and Senate without recorded votes.290 President James Monroe signs the bill, which will take effect on March 15, 1820.291

    March 15, 1820: Maine becomes the 23rd state. Its admission is paired with the admission of Missouri as a slave state as part of the Missouri Compromise.292

    Maryland

    283 “An Act relating to the Separation of the District of Maine from Massachusetts Proper, and forming the same into a Separate and Independent State,” in Laws of the Commonwealth of Massachusetts, Passed at the Several Sessions of the General Court, Beginning May, 1818 and Ending February, 1822 (Boston: Russell and Gardner, 1822), pp. 248- 260, at https://archives.lib.state.ma.us/handle/2452/110107.

    284 Stephanie Kermes, Creating an American Identity: New England, 1789-1825 (New York: Palgrave Macmillan, 2008), p. 158; Appendix V in Ronald F. Banks, Maine Becomes a State: The Movement to Separate Maine from Massachusetts, 1785-1820 (Middleton, CT: Wesleyan University Press, 1970).

    285

  • December 8, 1819: Senate adopts a joint resolution declaring Alabama admitted into the Union, without a recorded vote.33 House adopts the resolution without a recorded vote.34
  • December 14, 1819: President Monroe signs the admission resolution into law, establishing "[t]hat the state of Alabama shall be one, and is hereby declared to be one, of the United States of America."35
  • Alaska

    Alaska: 49th State

    Alaska Territory created August 24, 1912 (37 Stat. 512)

    Statehood law enacted July 7, 1958 (72 Stat. 339)

    Alaska admitted January 3, 1959 (73 Stat. c16)

    • October 18, 1867: United States purchases Alaska from Russia.36
    • May 17, 1884: President Chester A. Arthur signs "[a]n act providing a civil government for Alaska," which creates the District of Alaska.37
    • April 4, 1911: Delegate James Wickersham of Alaska introduces 62 H.R. 38,38 which would grant territory status to Alaska.39
    • April 24, 1912: House amends 62 H.R. 38 and passes it without a recorded vote.40
    • July 24, 1912: Senate amends 62 H.R. 38 and passes it without a recorded vote.41
    • August 17, 1912: Senate adopts conference report on 62 H.R. 38 without a recorded vote.42
    • August 20, 1912: House agrees to conference report on 62 H.R. 38 without a recorded vote.43
    • August 24, 1912: President William Howard Taft signs 62 H.R. 38 into law, establishing a territorial government for Alaska.44
    • October 8, 1946: Alaska voters back statehood, 9,630 to 6,822, in a referendum.45
    • November 8, 1955: A constitutional convention called by the Territorial Legislature holds its first meeting at the University of Alaska, just outside Fairbanks.46
    • February 5, 1956: Delegates vote 54-0 to adopt a state constitution for Alaska.47
    • April 24, 1956: Alaska residents vote 17,477 to 7,180 in favor of ratifying the new state constitution.48
    • June 7, 1957: Representative Leo W. O'Brien of New York introduces 85 H.R. 7999, a bill for "the admission of the State of Alaska into the Union."49
    • May 28, 1958: House votes 210-166 to pass 85 H.R. 7999.50
    • June 30, 1958: Senate votes 64-20 to pass 85 H.R. 7999.51
    • July 7, 1958: President Dwight Eisenhower signs 85 H.R. 7999 into law, admitting Alaska as a state pending a referendum vote.52
    • August 26, 1958: Alaskans approve statehood in a three-part referendum. On the question, "Shall Alaska immediately be admitted into the Union as a State?" the vote is 40,452 to 8,010.53
    • January 3, 1959: President Eisenhower issues Proclamation No. 3269, "Admission of the State of Alaska into the Union," concluding the statehood process.54
    Arizona

    Arizona: 48th State

    Arizona Territory created February 24, 1863 (12 Stat. 664)

    Enabling law enacted June 20, 1910 (36 Stat. 557)

    Admission law enacted August 21, 1911 (37 Stat. 39)

    Arizona admitted February 14, 1912 (37 Stat. 1728)

    • April 25, 1854: The United States buys part of the land that will become Arizona from Mexico in the Gadsden Purchase, adding to land acquired in 1848 by the Treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo.55
    • March 12, 1862: Representative James M. Ashley of Ohio reports 37 H.R. 357, a bill to create a territorial government for Arizona, from the House Committee on Territories.56
    • May 8, 1862: House passes 37 H.R. 357 without a recorded vote, after rejecting a motion to table the bill.57
    • February 20, 1863: Senates passes 37 H.R. 357 on a 25-12 vote.58
    • February 24, 1863: President Abraham Lincoln signs 37 H.R. 357 into law, creating the Territory of Arizona.59
    • January 14, 1910: Representative Edward L. Hamilton of Michigan introduces 61 H.R. 18166, which would enable Arizona and New Mexico to write constitutions in preparation for statehood.60
    • January 17, 1910: House suspends the rules and passes 61 H.R. 18166 without a recorded vote.61
    • June 16, 1910: Senate amends 61 H.R. 18166, then passes it on a 65-0 vote.62
    • June 18, 1910: House passes Senate-amended version of 61 H.R. 18166 without a recorded vote.63
    • June 20, 1910: President William Howard Taft signs 61 H.R. 18166 into law, enabling Arizona and New Mexico to write constitutions and form state governments.64
    • October 10, 1910: Delegates gather in Phoenix to write a state constitution for Arizona.65
    • December 9, 1910: Delegates vote 40-12 to adopt a state constitution for Arizona.66
    • February 9, 1911: Arizona voters ratify the state constitution by a vote of 12,534 to 3,920.67
    • August 15, 1911: President Taft vetoes 62 H.J.Res. 14, a joint resolution to admit Arizona and New Mexico as states, objecting to the provision of Arizona's constitution that allows voters to recall judges.68
    • August 17, 1911: Senator William A. Smith of Michigan reports 62 S.J.Res. 57 from the Senate Committee on Territories. This joint resolution would admit Arizona and New Mexico as states, but it would first require Arizona to remove judicial recall from its state constitution.69
    • August 18, 1911: Senate debates and passes 62 S.J.Res. 57 on a 53-9 vote.70
    • August 19, 1911: House debates and passes 62 S.J.Res. 57 without a recorded vote.71
    • August 21, 1911: President Taft signs 62 S.J.Res. 57 into law, admitting New Mexico and Arizona as states once certain conditions have been met, including the amending of Arizona's constitution to exempt judicial officers from recall.72
    • December 12, 1911: Arizona voters amend the state constitution to remove judicial recall, by a 14,963 to 1,980 vote, meeting President Taft's demand.73
    • February 14, 1912: President Taft issues a proclamation admitting Arizona as the 48th state.74
    Arkansas

    Arkansas: 25th State

    Arkansas Territory created July 4, 1819 (3 Stat. 493)

    Arkansas admitted June 15, 1836 (5 Stat. 50)

    • April 30, 1803: The United States acquires the land that will become Arkansas from France in the Louisiana Purchase.75
    • December 16, 1818: House convenes a select committee to consider whether to create a separate territorial government for the "Arkansaw Country" (also spelled "Arkansas Country") within the existing Missouri Territory.76
    • December 21, 1818: Representative George Robertson of Kentucky reports a bill from the select committee creating a new territory.77
    • February 20, 1819: House passes the bill to establish Arkansas Territory without a recorded vote on final passage, following days of debate and several close votes on amendments and procedural motions related to slavery in the territory.78
    • March 1, 1819: Senate passes the Arkansas Territory bill without a recorded vote on final passage, following a 19-14 vote to defeat a motion to recommit with instructions to report the bill back with an antislavery amendment.79
    • March 2, 1819: President James Monroe signs the law "establishing a separate territorial government in the southern part of the territory of Missouri." The new territory, which will come into existence on July 4, 1819, is spelled "Arkansaw" in the statute, though "Arkansas" becomes the standard spelling.80
    • August 1, 1835: During territorial elections, several Arkansas counties allow voters to express an opinion of statehood on their ballots. The Arkansas Advocate newspaper reports the tally as 1,942 in favor and 908 opposed.81
    • January 4, 1836: Delegates gather in Little Rock to write a new state constitution for Arkansas.82
    • January 30, 1836: Delegates at the Little Rock convention vote 46-4 to adopt the Arkansas state constitution.83
    • March 10, 1836: Senate votes 22-17 to refer the Arkansas state constitution to a select committee.84
    • March 22, 1836: Senate select committee reports out 24 S. 178, a bill admitting Arkansas as a state.85
    • April 4, 1836: Senate votes 31-6 to pass 24 S. 178.86
    • June 13, 1836: House votes 143-50 to pass 24 S. 178.87
    • June 15, 1836: President Andrew Jackson signs 24 S. 178 into law, admitting Arkansas into the Union.88
    California

    California: 31st State

    California admitted September 9, 1850 (9 Stat. 452)

    • February 2, 1848: The United States acquires California from Mexico in the Treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo.89
    • June 3, 1849: Bennet Riley, the U.S. Army officer serving as governor of California, calls a convention with the purpose of "forming a State constitution or a plan for Territorial government."90
    • September 1, 1849: Convention delegates begin to gather in Monterey.91
    • September 5, 1849: Convention delegates vote, 28-8, to draft a constitution and seek statehood for California rather than organize a territorial government.92
    • October 13, 1849: Convention delegates sign a state constitution for California.93
    • November 13, 1849: California residents ratify the state constitution by a vote of 12,061 to 811.94
    • January 29, 1850: Senator Henry Clay of Kentucky proposes what becomes the Compromise of 1850, a legislative package that includes California's admission to the Union as a free state, in response to growing tensions between the North and South.95
    • February 13, 1850: President Zachary Taylor transmits the California state constitution to Congress.96
    • March 25, 1850: Senator Stephen A. Douglas of Illinois reports 31 S. 169, a bill to admit California as a state, from the Senate Committee on Territories.97
    • August 13, 1850: Senate debates and passes 31 S. 169 on a 34-18 vote.98
    • September 7, 1850: House debates and passes 31 S. 169 on a 150-56 vote.99
    • September 9, 1850: President Millard Fillmore signs 31 S. 169 into law, admitting California as the 31st state.100
    Colorado

    Colorado: 38th State

    Colorado Territory created February 28, 1861 (12 Stat. 172)

    Enabling and statehood law enacted March 3, 1875 (18 Stat. 474)

    Colorado admitted August 1, 1876 (19 Stat. 665)

    • February 2, 1848: The United States acquires part of the land that will become Colorado from Mexico in the Treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo, adding to land acquired in the 1803 Louisiana Purchase and the 1845 annexation of Texas.101
    • April 3, 1860: Senator James S. Green of Missouri reports 36 S. 366, which would create a new territory, from the Senate Committee on Territories.102
    • February 4, 1861: Senate passes 36 S. 366 to create the Colorado Territory without a recorded vote, after also considering the names "Jefferson" and "Idaho."103
    • February 18, 1861: House amends 36 S. 366, then passes it on a 90-44 vote.104
    • February 26, 1861: Senate votes 26-18 to pass the House-amended version of 36 S. 366.105
    • February 28, 1861: President James Buchanan signs 36 S. 366 into law, creating the Colorado Territory.106
    • December 8, 1873: Following attempts to admit Colorado that President Andrew Johnson vetoed in 1866 and 1867,107 Delegate Jerome B. Chaffee of Colorado introduces 43 H.R. 435, a bill to "enable the people of Colorado to form a constitution and State government, and for the admission of the said State into the Union on an equal footing with the original states."108
    • June 8, 1874: House votes to suspend the rules and pass 43 H.R. 435.109
    • February 24, 1875: Senate debates and amends 43 H.R. 435, then passes it.110
    • March 3, 1875: House concurs in Senate amendments with a 164-76 vote to suspend the rules and pass the bill.111
    • March 3, 1875: President Ulysses S. Grant signs 43 H.R. 435 into law.112
    • December 20, 1875: Delegates gather in Denver to write a state constitution for Colorado.113
    • March 14, 1876: Colorado convention delegates vote 30-0 to approve the state constitution.114
    • July 1, 1876: Colorado residents vote 15,443 to 4,062 in favor of ratifying the new state constitution.115
    • August 1, 1876: President Grant issues a proclamation admitting Colorado as the 38th state.116
    Connecticut

    Connecticut: Fifth State

    Connecticut ratified Constitution January 9, 1788

    • April 23, 1662: King Charles II grants a royal charter to the "Governor and Company of the English Colony of Connecticut in New-England, in America."117
    • July 4, 1776: Connecticut joins 12 other colonies in declaring independence from Great Britain.118
    • July 9, 1778: Connecticut signs the Articles of Confederation.119
    • May 14-September 17, 1787: Connecticut's three delegates participate in the Constitutional Convention.120
    • January 9, 1788: Connecticut's convention ratifies the Constitution, 128-40.121
    Delaware

    Delaware: First State

    Delaware ratified Constitution December 7, 1787

    • August 24, 1682: James, Duke of York, gives the land that will become Delaware to William Penn, who had acquired Pennsylvania the prior year from the Duke's brother, King Charles II.122
    • 1704: A new legislature holds its first meeting in New Castle, though the three counties continue to share a governor with neighboring Pennsylvania and do not formally adopt the name "Delaware" until 1776.123
    • July 4, 1776: Delaware joins 12 other colonies in declaring independence from Great Britain.124
    • May 5, 1779: Delaware signs the Articles of Confederation.125
    • May 14-September 17, 1787: Delaware's five delegates participate in the Constitutional Convention.126
    • December 7, 1787: Delaware's convention ratifies the Constitution by a 30-0 vote, making it the first state to join the new federal government.127
    Florida

    Florida: 27th State

    Florida Territory created March 30, 1822 (3 Stat. 654)

    Florida admitted March 3, 1845 (5 Stat. 742)

    • February 22, 1819: The United States acquires Florida from Spain in the Adams-Onís Treaty.128
    • February 6, 1822: Senator William Smith of South Carolina reports from the Senate Judiciary Committee a bill to establish a territorial government in Florida.129
    • March 8, 1822: Senate passes Florida Territory bill without a recorded vote.130
    • March 27, 1822: House passes an amended version of the Florida Territory bill.131 Senate concurs in House amendments without a recorded vote.132
    • March 30, 1822: President James Monroe signs the law "for the establishment of a territorial government in Florida."133
    • May 1, 1837: In a referendum on statehood, Florida residents vote 2,214 to 1,274 in favor of seeking admission to the Union.134
    • December 3, 1838: Delegates to a convention convened by the Florida Territory's Legislative Council gather in St. Joseph to write a state constitution.135
    • January 11, 1839: Delegates vote 55-1 to approve the Florida state constitution.136
    • May 6, 1839: Florida voters ratify the new state constitution by a vote of 2,071 to 1,958.137
    • January 7, 1845: Representative Aaron V. Brown of Tennessee reports 28 H.R. 497, a bill to admit Florida and Iowa as states, from the House Committee on Territories.138
    • February 13, 1845: House votes 144-48 to pass 28 H.R. 497.139
    • March 1, 1845: Senate votes 36-9 to pass 28 H.R. 497.140
    • March 3, 1845: President John Tyler signs 28 H.R. 497 to admit Florida and Iowa as states. Florida's admission is immediate, whereas Iowa's admission is delayed until December 1846 due to a dispute over its borders.141
    Georgia

    Georgia: Fourth State

    Georgia ratified Constitution January 2, 1788

    • June 9, 1732: King George II grants a royal charter for the colony of Georgia.142
    • July 4, 1776: Georgia joins 12 other colonies in declaring independence from Great Britain.143
    • July 24, 1778: Georgia signs the Articles of Confederation.144
    • May 14-September 17, 1787: Georgia's four delegates participate in the Constitutional Convention.145
    • December 31, 1787: Georgia's convention votes 26-0 to ratify the Constitution.146
    • January 2, 1788: Georgia's convention delegates sign a deed formally ratifying the Constitution.147
    Hawaii

    Hawaii: 50th State

    Hawaii Territory created April 30, 1900 (31 Stat. 141)

    Statehood law enacted March 18, 1959 (73 Stat. 4)

    Hawaii admitted August 21, 1959 (73 Stat. c74)

    • July 7, 1898: The United States annexes the Republic of Hawaii.148
    • December 6, 1899: Senator Shelby M. Cullom of Illinois introduces 56 S. 222, a bill to create a territorial government for the Hawaiian islands.149
    • March 1, 1900: Senate amends and passes 56 S. 222 without a recorded vote.150
    • April 6, 1900: House amends and passes 56 S. 222 by a 120-28 vote.151
    • April 25, 1900: Senate approves conference report on 56 S. 222 without a recorded vote.152
    • April 27, 1900: House approves conference report on 56 S. 222 by a 138-54 vote.153
    • April 30, 1900: President William McKinley signs 56 S. 222 into law, creating the Territory of Hawaii.154
    • November 5, 1940: Hawaii Territory voters back statehood, 46,174 to 22,428, in a plebiscite that asked, "Do you favor statehood for Hawaii?"155
    • April 3, 1950: Delegates to a convention convened by the territorial legislature gather in Honolulu to draft a state constitution.156
    • July 22, 1950: Delegates at the Honolulu convention vote 60-1 to adopt a state constitution.157
    • November 7, 1950: Hawaii residents vote 82,788 to 27,109 in favor of ratifying the state constitution.158
    • January 9, 1959: Senator James E. Murray of Montana introduces 86 S. 50, a bill to admit Hawaii as a state. The latest effort followed decades of debate and unsuccessful attempts to achieve statehood, but the bill is introduced less than a week after Alaska is admitted as the 49th state.159
    • March 11, 1959: Senate passes 86 S. 50 on a 76-15 vote.160
    • March 12, 1959: House passes 86 S. 50 on a 323-89 vote.161
    • March 18, 1959: President Dwight Eisenhower signs 86 S. 50 into law.162
    • June 27, 1959: Hawaii voters endorse statehood in a three-part referendum. The vote is 132,773 to 7,971 on the question, "Shall Hawaii immediately be admitted into the Union as a State?"163
    • August 21, 1959: President Eisenhower issues Proclamation 3309, "Admission of the State of Hawaii Into the Union," formally admitting Hawaii as the 50th state.164
    Idaho

    Idaho: 43rd State

    Idaho Territory created March 3, 1863 (12 Stat. 808)

    Idaho admitted July 3, 1890 (26 Stat. 215)

    • June 15, 1846: The United States acquires the Oregon Country, including the land that will become Idaho, following a period of joint occupation with Great Britain.165
    • February 11, 1863: Representative James M. Ashley of Ohio reports 37 H.R. 738, a bill to create a new territorial government, from the House Committee on Territories.166
    • February 12, 1863: House amends and passes 37 H.R. 738.167
    • March 3, 1863: Senate amends 37 H.R. 738, naming the new territory "Idaho" instead of "Montana," then passes it on a 25-12 vote.168 House concurs in Senate changes to 37 H.R. 738 by a vote of 65-33.169 President Abraham Lincoln signs 37 H.R. 738 into law, creating the Territory of Idaho.170
    • April 2, 1889: Idaho's territorial governor calls a constitutional convention.171
    • July 4, 1889: Delegates meet in Boise to begin writing a state constitution.172
    • August 6, 1889: Delegates at the Boise convention vote 51-0 to adopt a state constitution for Idaho.173
    • November 5, 1889: Voters in Idaho ratify the state constitution by a 12,398 to 1,773 margin.174
    • January 13, 1890: Representative Isaac S. Struble of Iowa introduces 51 H.R. 4562, a bill "to provide for the admission of the State of Idaho."175
    • April 3, 1890: House passes 51 H.R. 4562 by a 129-1 vote.176
    • July 1, 1890: Senate passes 51 H.R. 4562 without a recorded vote.177
    • July 3, 1890: President Benjamin Harrison signs 51 H.R. 4562 into law, admitting Idaho as the 43rd state.178
    Illinois

    Illinois: 21st State

    Illinois Territory created March 1, 1809 (2 Stat. 514)

    Enabling law enacted April 18, 1818 (3 Stat. 428)

    Illinois admitted December 3, 1818 (3 Stat. 536)

    • September 3, 1783: The United States acquires the land that will become Illinois from Great Britain in the Treaty of Paris.179
    • December 31, 1808: Delegate Jesse B. Thomas of Indiana reports a bill to divide the Indiana Territory into two territories, from a select committee appointed to examine the issue.180
    • January 18, 1809: House votes 69-37 to pass the bill dividing Indiana Territory.181
    • January 31, 1809: Senate passes the Indiana Territory bill without a recorded vote.182
    • February 3, 1809: President Thomas Jefferson signs the bill to split the Indiana Territory, creating the Illinois Territory effective March 1, 1809.183
    • January 23, 1818: Delegate Nathaniel Pope of Illinois reports a bill allowing Illinois Territory residents to write a constitution and form a state government in preparation for admission to the Union, from a select committee appointed to review the territorial government's petition seeking statehood.184
    • April 6, 1818: House passes the Illinois bill without a recorded vote.185
    • April 14, 1818: Senate passes an amended version of the Illinois bill without a recorded vote.186
    • April 15, 1818: House concurs in Senate amendments to the Illinois bill without a recorded vote.187
    • April 18, 1818: President James Monroe signs the Illinois enabling legislation into law.188
    • August 3-26, 1818: Delegates meet in Kaskaskia and draft a state constitution for Illinois.189
    • November 20, 1818: Representative Richard C. Anderson Jr. of Kentucky reports a joint resolution admitting Illinois to the Union, from a select committee appointed to review the state constitution.190
    • November 23, 1818: House passes the resolution admitting Illinois to the Union on a 117-34 vote.191
    • December 1, 1818: Senate passes the Illinois statehood resolution without a recorded vote.192
    • December 3, 1818: President Monroe signs into law the resolution admitting Illinois as the 21st state.193
    Indiana

    Indiana: 19th State

    Indiana Territory created July 4, 1800 (2 Stat. 58)

    Enabling law enacted April 19, 1816 (3 Stat. 289)

    Indiana admitted December 11, 1816 (3 Stat. 399)

    • September 3, 1783: The United States acquires the land that will become Indiana from Great Britain in the Treaty of Paris.194
    • March 20, 1800: Representative William Craik of Maryland reports a bill to divide the Territory Northwest of the River Ohio (Northwest Territory) into two parts.195
    • March 31, 1800: House passes the Northwest Territory bill without a recorded vote.196
    • April 21, 1800: Senate amends and passes the Northwest Territory bill without a recorded vote.197
    • May 3, 1800: House agrees to a compromise version of the Northwest Territory bill without a recorded vote.198
    • May 5, 1800: Senate agrees to the compromise version of the Northwest Territory bill without a recorded vote.199
    • May 7, 1800: President John Adams signs the bill to split the Northwest Territory, creating Indiana Territory in the west effective July 4, 1800.200
    • January 5, 1816: Delegate Jonathan Jennings of Indiana reports a bill enabling Indiana to write a constitution and form a state government in preparation for admission to the Union.201
    • March 30, 1816: House passes the Indiana bill on a 108-3 vote.202
    • April 13, 1816: Senate passes an amended version of the Indiana bill without a recorded vote.203
    • April 15, 1816: House agrees to the Senate's amendments to the Indiana bill without a recorded vote.204
    • April 19, 1816: President James Madison signs the Indiana enabling act.205
    • June 10-29, 1816: Delegates meet in Corydon and draft a state constitution for Indiana.206
    • December 2, 1816: Senate appoints a select committee to investigate whether additional legislation is necessary to complete Indiana's admission as a state.207
    • December 4, 1816: Senator Jeremiah Morrow of Ohio reports from the select committee a resolution declaring Indiana admitted to the Union.208
    • December 6, 1816: Senate amends and passes the Indiana statehood resolution without a recorded vote.209
    • December 9, 1816: House passes Indiana statehood resolution.210
    • December 11, 1816: President Madison signs the resolution admitting Indiana as the 19th state.211
    Iowa

    Iowa: 29th State

    Iowa Territory created July 3, 1838 (5 Stat. 235)

    Iowa admitted December 28, 1846 (9 Stat. 117)

    • April 30, 1803: The United States acquires the land that will become Iowa from France in the Louisiana Purchase.212
    • March 14, 1838: Senator Thomas Morris of Ohio introduces 25 S. 269, a bill to create a new Iowa Territory.213
    • June 1, 1838: Senate passes 25 S. 269 without a recorded vote.214
    • June 6, 1838: House amends 25 S. 269 before passing it on a 118-51 vote.215 Senate passes the House-amended bill without a recorded vote, following a 33-6 vote against tabling the bill.216
    • June 12, 1838: President Martin Van Buren signs 25 S. 269 into law, creating the Iowa Territory effective July 3, 1838.217
    • April 1, 1844: Iowa Territory voters, by a margin of 6,976 to 4,181, support calling a convention to write a state constitution.218
    • October 7-November 1, 1844: Delegates meet in Iowa City and draft a state constitution.219
    • March 3, 1845: President John Tyler signs 28 H.R. 497, a bill to admit Florida and Iowa as states.220 However, Iowa's admission is made conditional on the territory accepting "truncated boundaries" for the state. Iowa voters twice—on April 7, 1845, and August 4, 1845—reject ratification of a state constitution with those borders.221
    • May 4-19, 1846: Delegates meet in Iowa City and draft a second state constitution, with modified boundaries.222
    • August 3, 1846: Iowa voters ratify their new constitution by a vote of 9,492 to 9,036.223
    • August 4, 1846: President James K. Polk signs into law the compromise over Iowa's borders, resolving the dispute and clearing the way for statehood.224
    • December 17, 1846: Representative Stephen A. Douglas of Illinois reports 29 H.R. 557, a bill to admit Iowa as a state, from the House Committee on Territories.225
    • December 21, 1846: House passes 29 H.R. 557 without a recorded vote.226
    • December 24, 1846: Senate passes 29 H.R. 557 without a recorded vote following a 40-2 vote to reject an amendment.227
    • December 28, 1846: President Polk signs 29 H.R. 557 into law, admitting Iowa into the Union.228
    Kansas

    Kansas: 34th State

    Kansas Territory created May 30, 1854 (10 Stat. 277)

    Kansas admitted January 29, 1861 (12 Stat. 126)

    • April 30, 1803: The United States acquires part of the land that will become Kansas from France in the Louisiana Purchase, with additional territory acquired in 1845 in the annexation of Texas.229
    • December 14, 1853: Senator Augustus Caesar Dodge of Iowa introduces 33 S. 22, a bill to create a new Nebraska Territory.230
    • January 31, 1854: Representative William A. Richardson of Illinois reports 33 H.R. 236, a bill creating new territorial governments for Kansas and Nebraska, from the House Committee on Territories.231
    • March 3, 1854: Senate votes 37-14 to pass 33 S. 22, which as amended would create two new territories, Kansas and Nebraska.232
    • May 22, 1854: House passes an amended version of 33 H.R. 236 on a 113-100 vote, in lieu of voting on the Senate-passed 33 S. 22.233
    • May 25, 1854: Senate passes 33 H.R. 236 on a 35-13 vote.234
    • May 30, 1854: President Franklin Pierce signs 33 H.R. 236 into law, creating the Kansas and Nebraska territories and repealing the 1820 Missouri Compromise, which would have barred slavery in the new territories. Instead, the Kansas-Nebraska Act leaves residents of the two territories "perfectly free to form and regulate their domestic institutions in their own way."235
    • February 2, 1858: President James Buchanan recommends that Congress admit Kansas under a pro-slavery state constitution drafted in Lecompton amid years of violence in the territory between anti- and pro-slavery factions. Faced with opposition in the House, the law signed by President Buchanan on May 4, 1858, requires a "fair and free" vote by Kansans on the Lecompton Constitution as a condition of statehood. Kansas voters overwhelmingly reject the Lecompton Constitution in an August 2, 1858 referendum.236
    • July 5, 1859: Delegates gather in Wyandotte to draft a new state constitution, the territory's fourth constitutional convention following gatherings in Topeka in 1855, Lecompton in 1857, and Leavenworth in 1858.237
    • July 29, 1859: The Wyandotte convention votes 34-13 to adopt a new, anti-slavery state constitution.238
    • October 4, 1859: Kansas voters ratify the Wyandotte Constitution by a vote of 10,421 to 5,530.239
    • February 15, 1860: Representative Galusha A. Grow of Pennsylvania introduces 36 H.R. 23, a bill to admit Kansas to the Union.240
    • April 11, 1860: House votes to pass 36 H.R. 23.241
    • January 21, 1861: Senate amends 36 H.R. 23 and passes it by a 36-16 vote.242
    • January 28, 1861: House votes 119-41 to suspend the rules and take up 36 H.R. 23, then agrees to the Senate's amendments without a recorded vote.243
    • January 29, 1861: President Buchanan signs 36 H.R. 23 into law, admitting Kansas as the 34th state.244
    Kentucky

    Kentucky: 15th State

    Kentucky admitted June 1, 1792 (1 Stat. 189)

    • December 31, 1776: Virginia's General Assembly establishes Kentucky County in the western part of the commonwealth.245
    • November 1, 1780: Virginia's General Assembly splits Kentucky into multiple counties and subsequently refers to the area as the District of Kentucky.246
    • July 3, 1788: Congress, still operating under the Articles of Confederation, decides to postpone a decision on statehood for Kentucky until the new federal government convenes in 1789.247
    • December 18, 1789: Virginia's General Assembly enacts a law "concerning the erection of the district of Kentuckey [sic] into an independent state," clearing the way for Kentucky to secede from Virginia and enter the Union on its own.248
    • July 28, 1790: Delegates gathered in Danville vote 24-18 that "it is expedient for, and the will of, the good people of the District of Kentucky that the same be erected into an Independent State."249
    • December 8, 1790: President George Washington asks Congress to consider Kentucky's application for statehood.250
    • December 14, 1790: Senate creates a committee to consider Kentucky statehood.251
    • January 3, 1791: Senator Philip Schuyler of New York reports the committee's recommendation that Kentucky be granted statehood.252
    • January 4, 1791: Senate committee assigned to consider Kentucky statehood reports a bill admitting Kentucky to the Union.253
    • January 12, 1791: Senate passes the Kentucky bill without a recorded vote.254
    • January 28, 1791: House passes the Kentucky bill without a recorded vote.255
    • February 4, 1791: President Washington signs into law the act declaring that on June 1, 1792, Kentucky will "be received and admitted into this Union, as a new and entire member of the United States of America."256
    • April 2, 1792: Delegates gather in Danville to write a state constitution.257
    • April 19, 1792: Delegates in Danville adopt a state constitution for Kentucky.258
    • June 1, 1792: Kentucky joins the Union as the 15th state.259
    Louisiana

    Louisiana: 18th State

    Orleans Territory created March 26, 1804 (2 Stat. 283)

    Enabling law enacted February 20, 1811 (2 Stat. 641)

    Louisiana admitted April 30, 1812 (2 Stat. 701)

    April 30, 1803: Robert Livingston and James Monroe sign the Louisiana Purchase Treaty and Conventions in Paris, France.260
  • October 20, 1803: The Senate ratifies the Louisiana Purchase treaty by a vote of 24-7.261
  • December 30, 1803: Senator John Breckinridge of Kentucky reports a bill "erecting Louisiana into two territories," from a committee appointed to study the issue.262
  • February 18, 1804: The Senate passes an amended version of the bill "erecting Louisiana into two Territories" by a vote of 20-5.263
  • March 17, 1804: The House passes an amended version of the bill splitting the Louisiana Purchase into two territories by a vote of 66-21."264
  • March 20, 1804: The Senate rejects several of the House's changes to the Louisiana bill.265
  • March 21, 1804: The House requests a conference committee with the Senate to resolve differences over the Louisiana bill.266
  • March 23, 1804: House votes 51-45 to pass a compromise version of the Louisiana bill,267 followed by a 15-9 vote in the Senate.268
  • March 26, 1804: President Thomas Jefferson signs the act splitting the Louisiana Purchase into two areas: the Territory of Orleans, including the city of New Orleans, and the District of Louisiana, covering the bulk of the land acquired from France.269
  • December 27, 1810: Representative Nathaniel Macon of North Carolina introduces a bill that would enable Orleans Territory residents to draft a constitution and form a state government in preparation for statehood.270
  • January 15, 1811: House passes the Orleans Territory bill by a 77-36 vote.271
  • February 7, 1811: Senate passes an amended version of the Orleans Territory bill by a 22-10 vote.272
  • February 13, 1811: House agrees to the Senate's amendment by a 69-45 vote.273
  • February 20, 1811: President James Madison signs the act enabling Orleans Territory to prepare for statehood.274
  • November 4, 1811: A constitutional convention begins in New Orleans.275
  • January 22, 1812: Delegates to the New Orleans convention sign a state constitution for Louisiana.276
  • March 16, 1812: Representative John Dawson of Virginia introduces a bill to admit Louisiana as a state.277
  • March 20, 1812: House votes 79-23 to pass the Louisiana statehood bill.278
  • April 1, 1812: Senate passes an amended version of the Louisiana statehood act without a recorded vote.279
  • April 6, 1812: House agrees to the Senate-amended version of the admission act without a recorded vote.280
  • April 8, 1812: President Madison signs the act admitting Louisiana into the Union, which will take effect on April 30.281
  • April 30, 1812: Louisiana becomes the 18th state.
  • Maine

    Maine: 23rd State

    Maine admitted March 15, 1820 (3 Stat. 544)

    • October 7, 1691: A new charter for the Massachusetts Bay colony enlarges it to include Maine, among other places. Maine will remain part of Massachusetts for more than a century.282
    • June 19, 1819: Massachusetts consents to Maine's separation and statehood, pending the outcome of a referendum vote and other steps.283
    • July 26, 1819: Mainers vote in favor of separating from Massachusetts, 17,091 to 7,132. It is the sixth in a series of votes on the subject going back to 1792.284
    • October 11-29, 1819: Delegates gather in Portland to write a new Maine constitution.285
    • December 6, 1819: Maine voters ratify the new state constitution by 9,040 to 796.286
    • December 21, 1819: Representative John Holmes of Massachusetts reports, from a select committee, a bill to admit Maine as a state.287
    • January 3, 1820: House passes an amended version of the Maine statehood bill without a recorded vote.288
    • February 18, 1820: Senate amends and passes the Maine statehood bill without a recorded vote on final passage.289
    • March 3, 1820: House and Senate agree to a compromise version of the Maine statehood bill, which is then passed by the House and Senate without recorded votes.290 President James Monroe signs the bill, which will take effect on March 15, 1820.291
    • March 15, 1820: Maine becomes the 23rd state. Its admission is paired with the admission of Missouri as a slave state as part of the Missouri Compromise.292
    Maryland Maryland: Seventh State

    Maryland ratified Constitution April 28, 1788

    • June 20, 1632: King Charles I grants the charter for the colony of Maryland to Cecil Calvert.293
    • July 4, 1776: Maryland joins 12 other colonies in declaring independence from Great Britain.294
    • March 1, 1781: Maryland signs and ratifies the Articles of Confederation.295
    • May 14-September 17, 1787: Maryland's five delegates participate in the Constitutional Convention.296
    • April 28, 1788: Maryland's convention formally ratifies the Constitution, following a 63-11 vote on April 26.297
    Massachusetts Massachusetts: Sixth State

    Massachusetts ratified Constitution February 6, 1788

    March 4, 1629: A charter is given to the "Governor and Company of the Massachusetts Bay in New England" by King Charles I.298
  • October 7, 1691: A new charter, given by King William and Queen Mary, enlarges Massachusetts "to include the old colony of Massachusetts Bay, Plymouth Colony, Martha's Vineyard and Nantucket, Maine, and parts of Nova Scotia."299
  • July 4, 1776: Massachusetts joins 12 other colonies in declaring independence from Great Britain.300
  • July 9, 1778: Massachusetts signs and ratifies the Articles of Confederation.301
  • May 14-September 17, 1787: Massachusetts's four delegates participate in the Constitutional Convention.302
  • February 6, 1788: Massachusetts's convention ratifies the Constitution by a vote of 187-168.303
  • Michigan

    Michigan: 26th State

    Michigan Territory created June 30, 1805 (2 Stat. 309)

    Enabling law enacted June 15, 1836 (5 Stat. 49)

    Michigan admitted January 26, 1837 (5 Stat. 144)

    September 3, 1783: The United States acquires the land that will become Michigan from Great Britain in the Treaty of Paris.304
  • December 14, 1804: Senator Thomas Worthington of Ohio reports, from a committee on the subject, a bill that would divide the Indiana Territory into two separate territories.305
  • December 24, 1804: Senate amends and passes the Indiana Territory bill without a recorded vote.306
  • January 7, 1805: House passes an amended version of the Indiana Territory bill without a recorded vote.307
  • January 8, 1805: Senate passes the House-amended territorial bill without a recorded vote.308
  • January 11, 1805: President Thomas Jefferson signs the act to split the Indiana Territory in two, creating the Michigan Territory as of June 30, 1805.309
  • October 5-6, 1835: Michigan's constitution, drafted by a convention meeting in Detroit from May 11 to June 24, 1835, is adopted by a vote of 6,752 to 1,374.310
  • March 22, 1836: Senator Thomas Hart Benton of Missouri reports 24 S. 177, a bill that would establish the northern border of Ohio and admit Michigan as a state, from a select committee studying the issue.311
  • April 2, 1836: Senate votes to pass 24 S. 177.312
  • June 13, 1836: House passes 24 S. 177 without a recorded vote on final passage, following a 153-45 procedural vote.313
  • June 15, 1836: President Andrew Jackson signs 24 S. 177 into law, admitting Michigan as a state on the condition that it accept newly defined borders.314 Under the proposed compromise, Michigan would cede the disputed city of Toledo to Ohio but acquire much of the Upper Peninsula.315
  • September 26-30, 1836: Delegates elected to a state convention vote 28-21 to reject the congressional compromise over Michigan's borders.316
  • December 14-15, 1836: Delegates elected to a second state convention, known as the "Frostbitten Convention," vote unanimously to accept Congress's conditions for statehood.317
  • December 29, 1836: Senator Felix Grundy of Tennessee reports 24 S. 81, a bill to admit Michigan as a state, from the Senate Judiciary Committee.318
  • January 5, 1837: Senate votes 25-10 to pass 24 S. 81.319
  • January 25, 1837: House votes 132-43 to pass 24 S.81.320
  • January 26, 1837: President Jackson signs 24 S. 81 into law, admitting Michigan to the Union.321
  • Minnesota

    Minnesota: 32nd State

    Minnesota Territory created March 3, 1849 (9 Stat. 403)

    Enabling law enacted February 26, 1857 (11 Stat. 166)

    Minnesota admitted May 11, 1858 (11 Stat. 285)

    October 20, 1818: The United States acquires part of the land that will become Minnesota from Great Britain, adding to territory obtained in the Treaty of Paris (1783) and the Louisiana Purchase (1803).322
  • February 23, 1848: Senator Stephen A. Douglas of Illinois introduces 30 S. 152, a bill to create the Minnesota Territory.323
  • January 19, 1849: Senate passes an amended version of the Minnesota Territory bill without a recorded vote.324
  • February 28, 1849: House passes an amended version of the Minnesota Territory bill without a recorded vote.325
  • March 1, 1849: Senate accepts most of the House's amendments to the Minnesota Territory bill, but rejects one on a 30-18 vote.326
  • March 3, 1849: House votes 107-70 to accept the Senate's version of 30 S. 152.327 President James K. Polk signs the Minnesota Territory bill into law.328
  • December 24, 1856: Delegate Henry Rice of Minnesota introduces 34 H.R. 642, a bill authorizing Minnesota Territory residents to hold a constitutional convention in preparation for statehood.329
  • January 31, 1857: House votes 97-75 to pass an amended version of 34 H.R. 642.330
  • February 21, 1857: Senate votes 47-1 to pass an amended version of 34 H.R. 642.331
  • February 25, 1857: Senate reconsiders its amendment and votes 31-22 to approve the House-passed version.332
  • February 26, 1857: President James Buchanan signs the Minnesota enabling act into law.333
  • July 13-August 29, 1857: Elected delegates assemble in St. Paul to draft the state constitution, but the Democratic and Republican parties are so divided that two separate conventions are held and two constitutions are drafted. Eventually, a conference committee drafts a compromise document.334
  • October 13, 1857: Minnesota voters ratify the new state constitution, 30,055 to 571.335
  • January 26, 1858: Senator Douglas reports 35 S. 86, a bill "for the admission of the State of Minnesota into the Union," from the Senate Committee on Territories.336
  • April 7, 1858: Senate votes 49-3 to admit Minnesota as a state.337
  • May 11, 1858: House votes to admit Minnesota as a state.338 President Buchanan signs 35 S. 86 into law, and Minnesota became a state.339
  • Mississippi

    Mississippi: 20th State

    Mississippi Territory created April 7, 1798 (1 Stat 549)

    Enabling law enacted March 1, 1817 (3 Stat 348)

    Mississippi admitted December 10, 1817 (3 Stat. 472.)

    September 3, 1783: The United States acquires the land that will become Mississippi from Great Britain in the Treaty of Paris.340
  • February 23, 1798: Senator James Ross of Pennsylvania reports, from a committee looking into the area south and west of Georgia, a bill to establish a new Mississippi Territory.341
  • March 5, 1798: The Senate passes the Mississippi Territory bill, 20-8.342
  • March 27, 1798: The House passes an amended version of the Mississippi Territory bill without a recorded vote.343
  • March 29, 1798: The Senate agrees to the House amendments without a recorded vote.344
  • April 7, 1798: President John Adams signs the Mississippi Territory bill into law.345
  • January 17, 1817: Senator Charles Tait of Georgia reports, from a select committee studying the issue, a bill that would enable the western part of the Mississippi Territory to prepare for statehood.346
  • January 31, 1817: Senate passes an amended version of the Mississippi Territory enabling bill without a recorded vote.347
  • February 26, 1817: House amends and passes the Mississippi Territory enabling bill without a recorded vote.348
  • February 27, 1817: Senate concurs in the House's amendments without a recorded vote.349
  • March 1, 1817: President James Madison signs the enabling act for Mississippi statehood.350
  • July-August 1817: Forty-eight delegates meet to form a constitutional convention.351
  • August 15, 1817: The delegates approve the final draft of the Mississippi Constitution.352
  • December 3, 1817: Senator James Barbour of Virginia reports, from a select committee studying the issue, a resolution to admit Mississippi as a state. It passes the Senate without a recorded vote.353
  • December 8, 1817: The House passes the resolution "on the admission of the state of Mississippi into the Union" without a recorded vote.354
  • December 10, 1817: President James Monroe signs the resolution into law and Mississippi becomes the 20th state.355
  • Missouri Missouri: 24th State

    Missouri Territory created June 4, 1812 (2 Stat. 743)

    Enabling law enacted March 6, 1820 (3 Stat. 545)

    Admission law enacted March 2, 1821 (3 Stat. 645)

    Missouri admitted August 10, 1821 (3 Stat. 797)

    • April 30, 1803: The United States acquires the land that will become Missouri from France in the Louisiana Purchase. It will become part of the Louisiana Territory, while the land that will become Louisiana is governed as the Orleans Territory.356
    • November 14, 1811: Representative John Rhea of Tennessee reports, from a select committee, a bill on the Louisiana Territory's government.357
    • April 9, 1812: House passes the Louisiana Territory bill without a recorded vote.358
    • May 19, 1812: Senate passes an amended version of the Louisiana Territory bill without a recorded vote.359
    • May 21, 1812: House amends and passes the Senate-amended version of the Louisiana Territory bill without a recorded vote.360 Senate then approves the House-amended version without a recorded vote.361
    • June 4, 1812: President James Madison signs the act reorganizing the government of Louisiana Territory and giving it a new name: Missouri Territory.362
    • February 13, 1819: Representative James Tallmadge of New York proposes gradual emancipation in Missouri as a condition for statehood, setting off a sectional controversy over slavery. The eventual resolution, known as the Missouri Compromise, includes the admission of Maine as a free state, the admission of Missouri as a slave state, and the prohibition of slavery in the remainder of the Louisiana Purchase north of Missouri's southern boundary (36° 30' north latitude).363
    • March 1, 1820: House passes a bill, by a vote of 91 to 82, enabling Missouri to prepare a state constitution and government.364
    • March 2, 1820: Senate amends and passes the Missouri enabling bill without a recorded vote on final passage.365 House agrees to the Senate's amendments by votes of 90-87 and 134-42 after the question was divided.366
    • March 6, 1820: President James Monroe signs the act enabling Missouri residents to write a constitution and form a state government.367
    • June 12, 1820: Delegates gather in St. Louis to draft a state constitution.368
    • July 17, 1820: Delegates at the St. Louis convention vote 39-1 to approve a new state constitution, which they sign two days later.369
    • February 26, 1821: Representative Henry Clay of Kentucky reports, from a joint committee appointed to consider Missouri statehood, a resolution granting conditional admission to Missouri. The House approves the resolution by a vote of 87 to 81.370
    • February 28, 1821: Senate approves the resolution for conditional admission of Missouri by a 28-14 vote.371
    • March 2, 1821: President Monroe signs the resolution granting statehood to Missouri, on the condition that its legislature agree the state constitution "shall never be construed to authorize the passage of any law, and that no law shall be passed in conformity thereto, by which any citizen … shall be excluded from the enjoyment of any of the privileges and immunities to which such citizen is entitled under the constitution of the United States."372
    • August 10, 1821: President Monroe issues a proclamation admitting Missouri as the 24th state.373
    Montana Montana: 41st State

    Montana Territory created May 26, 1864 (13 Stat. 85)

    Enabling and statehood law enacted February 22, 1889 (25 Stat. 676)

    Montana admitted November 8, 1889 (26 Stat. 1551)

    • June 15, 1846: United States acquires part of the land that will become Montana from Great Britain in the Oregon Treaty, adding to land acquired from France in 1803 via the Louisiana Purchase.374
    • December 14, 1863: Representative James M. Ashley of Ohio introduces 38 H.R. 15, a bill to create a new Territory of Montana.375
    • March 17, 1864: House amends and passes 38 H.R. 15 without a recorded vote.376
    • March 31, 1864: Senate amends 38 H.R. 15 and votes 29-8 to pass it.377
    • May 19, 1864: Senate votes 26-13 to approve a compromise version of 38 H.R. 15.378
    • May 20, 1864: House votes 102-26 to approve a compromise version of 38 H.R. 15.379
    • May 26, 1864: President Abraham Lincoln signs 38 H.R. 15 into law, creating the Montana Territory.380
    • December 12, 1887: Senator Charles F. Manderson of Nebraska introduces 50 S. 185, a bill to admit southern Dakota Territory as the State of Dakota and create a new Territory of Lincoln in northern Dakota Territory.381
    • April 19, 1888: Senate votes 26-23 to pass an amended version of 50 S. 185 that would create a State of South Dakota and a new Territory of North Dakota.382
    • January 18, 1889: Houses votes 145-98 to pass an amended version of 50 S. 185. This new version would clear the way to admit Montana, New Mexico, Washington, and—depending on the results of a referendum on division—either a combined state of Dakota or separate states of North Dakota and South Dakota.383
    • February 20, 1889: House and Senate agree to a compromise version of 50 S. 185 that allows the creation and admission of four new states: Montana, North Dakota, South Dakota, and Washington. Both chambers pass the bill without recorded votes.384
    • February 22, 1889: President Grover Cleveland signs 50 S. 185, enabling statehood for Montana, North Dakota, South Dakota, and Washington.385
    • July 4, 1889: Delegates gather in Helena to write a state constitution for Montana.386
    • August 17, 1889: Delegates to the Helena convention vote 61-2 to adopt the new Montana state constitution.387
    • October 1, 1889: Montana voters ratify the new state constitution, 24,676 to 2,274.388
    • November 8, 1889: President Benjamin Harrison issues a proclamation admitting Montana as the 41st state.389
    Nebraska Nebraska: 37th State

    Nebraska Territory created May 30, 1854 (10 Stat. 277)

    Enabling law enacted April 19, 1864 (13 Stat. 47)

    Admission law enacted February 9, 1867 (14 Stat. 391)

    Nebraska admitted March 1, 1867 (14 Stat. 820)

    • April 30, 1803: United States acquires the land that will become Nebraska from France in the Louisiana Purchase.390
    • December 14, 1853: Senator Augustus Caesar Dodge of Iowa introduces 33 S. 22, a bill to create a new Nebraska Territory.391
    • January 31, 1854: Representative William A. Richardson of Illinois reports 33 H.R. 236, a bill creating new territorial governments for Kansas and Nebraska, from the House Committee on Territories.392
    • March 3, 1854: Senate votes 37-14 to pass 33 S. 22, which as amended would create two new territories, Kansas and Nebraska.393
    • May 22, 1854: House passes an amended version of 33 H.R. 236 on a 113-100 vote, in lieu of voting on the Senate-passed 33 S. 22.394
    • May 25, 1854: Senate passes 33 H.R. 236 on a 35-13 vote.395
    • May 30, 1854: President Franklin Pierce signs 33 H.R. 236 into law, creating the Kansas and Nebraska territories and repealing the 1820 Missouri Compromise that would have barred slavery there. Instead, the Kansas-Nebraska Act leaves residents of the two territories "perfectly free to form and regulate their domestic institutions in their own way."396
    • December 14, 1863: Representative James M. Ashley of Ohio introduces 38 H.R. 14½, a bill to enable the people of Nebraska to write a constitution and form a state government.397
    • March 17, 1864: House passes 38 H.R. 14½ without a recorded vote.398
    • April 14, 1864: Senate passes 38 H.R. 14½ without a recorded vote.399
    • April 19, 1864: President Abraham Lincoln signs the Nebraska enabling act into law.400
    • June 2, 1866: Following an abortive constitutional convention in 1864, Nebraska voters ratify a state constitution written by the territorial legislature, 3,938 to 3,838.401
    • December 5, 1866: Senator Benjamin Wade of Ohio introduces 39 S. 456, a bill to admit Nebraska as a state.402
    • January 9, 1867: Senate votes 24-15 to pass an amended version of 39 S. 456.403
    • January 15, 1867: House votes 103-55 to pass an amended version of 39 S. 456.404
    • January 16, 1867: Senate votes 28-14 to accept the House's version of 39 S. 456.405
    • January 30, 1867: President Andrew Johnson vetoes 39 S. 456, the Nebraska statehood act. He objected to its requirement that "there shall be no denial of the elective franchise, or of any other right, to any person, by reason of race or color" in Nebraska.406
    • February 8, 1867: Senate overrides President Johnson's veto of 39 S. 456 by a 31-9 vote.407
    • February 9, 1867: House overrides President Johnson's veto of 39 S. 456 by a 120-44 vote, enacting it into law.408
    • March 1, 1867: President Johnson issues a proclamation admitting Nebraska as the 37th state.409
    Nevada Nevada: 36th State

    Nevada Territory created March 2, 1861 (12 Stat. 209)

    Enabling and admission law enacted March 21, 1864 (13 Stat. 30)

    Nevada admitted October 31, 1864 (13 Stat. 749)

    • February 2, 1848: The United States acquires the land that will become Nevada from Mexico in the Treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo.410
    • February 14, 1861: Senator James S. Green of Missouri reports 36 S. 563, a bill creating the Nevada Territory, from the Senate Committee on Territories.411
    • February 26, 1861: Senate amends 36 S. 563 and passes it without a recorded vote.412
    • March 1, 1861: House votes to pass 36 S. 563.413
    • March 2, 1861: President James Buchanan signs 36 S. 563, creating the Nevada Territory.414
    • February 8, 1864: Senator James R. Doolittle of Wisconsin introduces 38 S. 96, a bill that would enable Nevada residents to write a constitution and form a state government, followed by its admission as a state.415
    • February 24, 1864: Senate amends and passes 38 S. 96 without a recorded vote.416
    • March 17, 1864: House passes 38 S. 96 without a recorded vote.417
    • March 21, 1864: President Abraham Lincoln signs 38 S. 96 into law.418
    • July 4, 1864: Delegates gather in Carson City to write a state constitution for Nevada.419
    • July 27, 1864: Delegates at the Carson City convention vote 19-2 to approve the state constitution.420
    • September 7, 1864: Nevada voters ratify the state constitution, 10,375-1,284.421
    • October 31, 1864: President Lincoln issues a proclamation admitting Nevada as the 36th state.422
    New Hampshire New Hampshire: Ninth State

    New Hampshire ratified Constitution June 21, 1788

    • September 18, 1679: King Charles II appoints a government for the "Province of New-Hampshire."423
    • July 4, 1776: New Hampshire joins 12 other colonies in declaring independence from Great Britain.424
    • July 9, 1778: New Hampshire signs the Articles of Confederation.425
    • May 14-September 17, 1787: Two of New Hampshire's four delegates participate in the Constitutional Convention.426
    • June 21, 1788: New Hampshire's convention ratifies the Constitution by a 57-47 vote, achieving Article VII's nine-state threshold for implementation.427
    New Jersey New Jersey: Third State

    New Jersey ratified Constitution December 18, 1787

    • April 17, 1702: Queen Anne establishes British royal control over New Jersey.428
    • July 4, 1776: New Jersey joins 12 other colonies in declaring independence from Great Britain.429
    • November 26, 1778: New Jersey signs the Articles of Confederation.430
    • May 14-September 17, 1787: Five of New Jersey's seven delegates participate in the Constitutional Convention.431
    • December 18, 1787: New Jersey's convention votes 38-0 to ratify the Constitution, making it the third state to join the new federal government.432
    New Mexico

    New Mexico: 47th State

    New Mexico Territory created September 9, 1850 (9 Stat. 446)

    Enabling law enacted June 20, 1910 (36 Stat. 557)

    Admission law enacted August 21, 1911 (37 Stat. 39)

    New Mexico admitted January 6, 1912 (37 Stat. 1723)

    • December 29, 1845: The United States acquires part of the land that will become New Mexico through the annexation of Texas, with additional territory to come in the 1848 Treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo and the 1854 Gadsden Purchase.433
    • January 29, 1850: Senator Henry Clay of Kentucky proposes what becomes the Compromise of 1850, a legislative package that includes organizing a territorial government for New Mexico and settling the Texas-New Mexico border.434
    • August 5, 1850: Senator James A. Pearce of Maryland introduces 31 S. 307, a bill to settle the northern and western borders of Texas.435
    • August 9, 1850: Senate amends and passes 31 S. 307 by a vote of 30 to 20.436
    • September 6, 1850: House votes 108-97 to pass an amended version of 31 S. 307, adding language to create the New Mexico Territory.437
    • September 9, 1850: Senate endorses the House's amendment to 31 S. 307 on a 31-10 vote.438 President Millard Fillmore signs 31 S. 307 into law, creating the New Mexico Territory.439
    • January 14, 1910: Representative Edward L. Hamilton of Michigan introduces 61 H.R. 18166, which would enable Arizona and New Mexico to write constitutions in preparation for statehood.440
    • January 17, 1910: House suspends the rules and passes 61 H.R. 18166 without a recorded vote.441
    • June 16, 1910: Senate amends 61 H.R. 18166, then passes it on a 65-0 vote.442
    • June 18, 1910: House passes Senate-amended version of 61 H.R. 18166 without a recorded vote.443
    • June 20, 1910: President William Howard Taft signs 61 H.R. 18166 into law, enabling Arizona and New Mexico to form constitutions and state governments.444
    • October 3, 1910: Delegates gather in Santa Fe to write a state constitution for New Mexico.445
    • November 21, 1910: Delegates to the Santa Fe convention vote 79-18 to adopt a state constitution.446
    • January 21, 1911: New Mexico voters ratify the state constitution by a vote of 31,742 to 13,399.447
    • August 15, 1911: President Taft vetoes 62 H.J.Res. 14, a joint resolution to admit Arizona and New Mexico as states, objecting to the provision of Arizona's constitution that allows voters to recall judges.448
    • August 17, 1911: Senator William A. Smith of Michigan reports 62 S.J.Res. 57 from the Senate Committee on Territories. This joint resolution would admit Arizona and New Mexico as states but would first require Arizona to remove judicial recall from its state constitution.449
    • August 18, 1911: Senate debates and passes 62 S.J.Res. 57 on a 53-9 vote.450
    • August 19, 1911: House debates and passes 62 S.J.Res. 57 without a recorded vote.451
    • August 21, 1911: President Taft signs 62 S.J.Res. 57 into law, admitting New Mexico and Arizona as states once certain conditions have been met, including a vote on a change to the New Mexico constitution's amendment process.452
    • November 7, 1911: New Mexico voters approve the congressionally-proposed constitutional amendment by a vote of 34,897 to 22,831.453
    • January 6, 1912: President Taft issues a proclamation formally admitting New Mexico as the 47th state.454
    New York: 11th State

    New York ratified Constitution July 26, 1788

    New YorkSeptember 8, 1664: English forces capture New Amsterdam, renaming it New York, during the Second Anglo-Dutch War. The Treaty of Breda in 1667 confirms English control of the New Netherland colony.455
  • July 15, 1776: New York, after earlier abstaining, informs the Continental Congress that it joins its 12 fellow colonies in declaring independence from Great Britain.456
  • July 9, 1778: New York signs the Articles of Confederation.457
  • May 14-September 17, 1787: New York's three delegates participate in the Constitutional Convention.458
  • July 26, 1788: New York's convention ratifies the Constitution by a 30-27 vote, making it the 11th state to join the new federal government.459
  • North Carolina North Carolina: 12th State

    North Carolina ratified Constitution November 21, 1789

    March 24, 1663: King Charles II grants a charter to eight men, later known as the "Lords Proprietors," to create the Carolina colony.460 In the early 18th century, the colony splits into North and South Carolina.461
  • July 25, 1729: Seven of the Lords Proprietors sell North Carolina to King George II.462
  • July 4, 1776: North Carolina joins 12 other colonies in declaring independence from Great Britain.463
  • July 21, 1778: North Carolina signs and ratifies the Articles of Confederation.464
  • May 14-September 17, 1787: Five delegates from North Carolina participate in the Constitutional Convention.465
  • August 2, 1788: North Carolina's ratification convention votes 184-83 to demand amendments to the Constitution, including a declaration of rights.466
  • November 21, 1789: At a second convention, North Carolina delegates vote 194-77 to ratify the Constitution and join the new government as the 12th state.467
  • North Dakota

    North Dakota: 39th State

    Dakota Territory created March 2, 1861 (12 Stat. 239)

    Enabling and statehood law enacted February 22, 1889 (25 Stat. 676)

    North Dakota admitted November 2, 1889 (26 Stat. 1548)

    • April 30, 1803: The United States acquires part of the land that will become North Dakota from France in the Louisiana Purchase, with additional territory acquired in 1818 from Great Britain.468
    • February 14, 1861: Senator James S. Green of Missouri reports 36 S. 562, a bill to create the Territory of Dakota, from the Senate Committee on Territories.469
    • February 26, 1861: Senate passes an amended version of 36 S. 562 without a recorded vote.470
    • March 1, 1861: House passes 36 S. 562 without a recorded vote.471
    • March 2, 1861: President James Buchanan signs 36 S. 562, creating the Territory of Dakota.472
    • November 8, 1887: Dakota Territory voters endorse splitting the territory into northern and southern entities, with 37,784 voting in favor of division and 32,913 voting against division.473
    • December 12, 1887: Senator Charles F. Manderson of Nebraska introduces 50 S. 185, a bill to admit the southern Dakota Territory as the State of Dakota and create a new Territory of Lincoln in northern Dakota Territory.474
    • April 19, 1888: Senate votes 26-23 to pass an amended version of 50 S. 185 that would create a State of South Dakota and a new Territory of North Dakota.475
    • January 18, 1889: House votes 145-98 to pass an amended version of 50 S. 185. This new version would clear the way to admit Montana, New Mexico, Washington, and—depending on the results of a referendum on division—either a combined state of Dakota or separate states of North Dakota and South Dakota.476
    • February 20, 1889: House and Senate agree to a compromise version of 50 S. 185 that allows the creation and admission of four new states: Montana, North Dakota, South Dakota, and Washington. Both chambers pass the bill without recorded votes.477
    • February 22, 1889: President Grover Cleveland signs 50 S. 185, enabling statehood for Montana, North Dakota, South Dakota, and Washington.478
    • July 4, 1889: Delegates gather in Bismarck to write a state constitution for North Dakota.479
    • August 17, 1889: Delegates to the Bismarck convention vote 40-23 to adopt a state constitution for North Dakota.480
    • October 1, 1889: North Dakota voters ratify the state constitution, 27,441 to 8,107.481
    • November 2, 1889: President Benjamin Harrison issues a proclamation admitting North Dakota.482
    Ohio Ohio: 17th State

    Northwest Territory created July 13, 1787 (1 Stat. 50)

    Enabling law enacted April 30, 1802 (2 Stat. 173)

    Ohio admitted March 1, 1803 (67 Stat. 407)

    • September 3, 1783: The United States acquires the land that will become Ohio from Great Britain in the Treaty of Paris.483
    • July 13, 1787: Congress, operating under the Articles of Confederation, passes the Northwest Ordinance, establishing the Territory of the United States North West of the River Ohio (often shortened to "the Northwest Territory").484
    • July 21, 1789: With the Constitution in effect, the House passes a bill, without a recorded vote, to keep the Northwest Ordinance of 1787 in effect.485
    • August 4, 1789: The Senate amends and passes the Northwest Ordinance bill without a recorded vote.486
    • August 5, 1789: House agrees to the Senate's amendments on the Northwest Ordinance bill without a recorded vote.487
    • August 7, 1789: President George Washington signs the act to keep the Northwest Ordinance of 1787 in effect.488
    • April 2, 1802: Representative William B. Giles of Virginia introduces a bill enabling residents in the eastern part of the Northwest Territory to write a constitution and form a state government.489
    • April 9, 1802: House passes the Northwest Territory enabling bill on a 47-29 vote.490
    • April 28, 1802: Senate passes an amended version of the Northwest Territory enabling bill on a 16-6 vote.491
    • April 29, 1802: House passes the Senate-amended version of the Northwest Territory enabling bill without a recorded vote.492
    • April 30, 1802: President Thomas Jefferson signs the act, enabling residents in the eastern part of the Northwest Territory to write a constitution and form a state government.493
    • November 1, 1802: Delegates gather in Chillicothe to write a state constitution.494
    • November 29, 1802: Delegates at the Chillicothe convention approve a state constitution for Ohio.495
    • February 19, 1803: President Jefferson signs an act to enforce federal law in the new state of Ohio. However, it does not explicitly enact Ohio's admission as a state.496
    • March 1, 1803: Ohio marks its admission as the 17th state.497 This statehood date is retroactively established 150 years later by P.L. 83-204.498
    • January 13, 1953: Representative George H. Bender of Ohio introduces 83 H.J.Res 121, resolving that "the State of Ohio, shall be one, and is hereby declared to be one, of the United States of America, and is admitted into the Union on an equal footing with the original States, in all respects whatever"—with an effective date of March 1, 1803.499
    • May 19, 1953: House adopts 83 H.J.Res. 121 without a recorded vote.500
    • August 1, 1953: Senate adopts 83 H.J.Res. 121 without a recorded vote.501
    • August 7, 1953: President Dwight Eisenhower signs 83 H.J.Res. 121 into law.502
    Oklahoma Oklahoma: 46th State

    Oklahoma Territory created May 2, 1890 (26 Stat. 81)

    Enabling and admission law enacted June 16, 1906 (34 Stat. 267)

    Oklahoma admitted November 16, 1907 (35 Stat. 2160)

  • April 30, 1803: The United States acquires territory from France that includes a portion of the land that will become the state of Oklahoma through the Louisiana Purchase.503
  • 1820s: The U.S. government sets aside land in the current states of Oklahoma, Kansas, and Nebraska to form an "Indian Country" (or "Indian Territory"). Many American Indians are relocated to this territory through various actions, including the Indian Removal Act, passed by Congress in 1830 (4 Stat. 411).504
  • December 29, 1845: Through the annexation of Texas, the United States obtains additional lands, known as the Oklahoma Panhandle, that will later comprise the seventh county of the Oklahoma Territory.505
  • February 2, 1848: Representatives of the United States and Mexico sign the Treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo, through which Mexico officially recognizes the annexation of Texas that occurred nearly three years prior.506
  • December 9, 1889: Senator Orville Platt of Connecticut introduces 51 S. 895, a bill to create the Oklahoma Territory.507
  • February 13, 1890: Senate amends and passes 51 S. 895 without a recorded vote.508
  • April 21, 1890: House passes, without a recorded vote, a compromise version of the Oklahoma Organic Act (51 S. 895) to form the Territory of Oklahoma from the western portion of the Indian Territory.509
  • April 23, 1890: Senate agrees to the conference report on 51 S. 895 by a vote of 50-5.510
  • May 2, 1890: President Benjamin Harrison signs the Oklahoma Organic Act into law, formally creating the Territory of Oklahoma.511
  • November 7, 1905: The people of the remaining Indian Territory vote to approve a constitution written by delegates to create the state of Sequoyah—separate from the newly formed Oklahoma Territory—by a vote of 56,279 to 9,073.512
  • December 1905-January 1906: Bills are introduced in the House (59 H.R. 79) and the Senate (59 S. 3680) "to provide for the admission of the State of Sequoyah into the Union," but both bills are tabled.513
  • January 22, 1906: Representative Edward Hamilton of Michigan introduces a bill (59 H.R. 12707) enabling the people of Oklahoma and the Indian Territory to form a constitution and state government and be admitted into the Union as one state.514
  • June 13, 1906: Senate passes a compromise version of 59 H.R. 12707 without a recorded vote.515
  • June 14, 1906: House passes the compromise version of 59 H.R. 12707 without a recorded vote.516
  • June 16, 1906: President Theodore Roosevelt signs the enabling bill.517
  • November 20, 1906-September 16, 1907: Elected delegates from the Oklahoma and Indian Territories convene the Oklahoma Constitutional Convention to draft a state constitution.518
  • July 16, 1907: Eighty-six delegates to the convention sign an amended version of the Oklahoma state constitution.519
  • September 17, 1907: The people of the Oklahoma and Indian Territories vote in favor of ratifying the state constitution, by a vote of 180,333 to 73,059.520
  • November 16, 1907: President Roosevelt issues Presidential Proclamation 780, admitting Oklahoma as the 46th state.521
  • Oregon Oregon: 33rd State

    Oregon Territory created August 14, 1848 (9 Stat. 323)

    Oregon admitted February 14, 1859 (11 Stat. 383)

    • October 20, 1818: U.S. envoys Albert Gallatin and Richard Rush sign a convention with Great Britain agreeing to jointly occupy the Oregon Territory.522
    • June 15, 1846: Secretary of State James Buchanan signs the Oregon Treaty with Great Britain, allowing the United States to acquire all land in the Oregon Territory south of the 49th parallel.523
    • February 9, 1848: Representative Caleb B. Smith of Indiana reports 30 H.R. 201, a bill to create a territorial government in Oregon, from the House Committee on Territories.524
    • August 2, 1848: House passes an amended version of the Oregon Territory Act (30 H.R. 201).525
    • August 12, 1848: Senate agrees to the House version of the Oregon Territory Act, voting 31-23 and 29-25 after the question was divided.526
    • August 14, 1848: President James Polk signs the Oregon Territory Act, creating the Oregon territory.527
    • June 1857: The eligible voters of the Oregon Territory support statehood in a referendum by a vote of 7,617 to 1,679.528
    • August 17-September 18, 1857: Elected territorial delegates convene at the courthouse in Salem to draft a state constitution.529
    • September 18, 1857: The convention delegates approve the draft constitution by a vote of 35-10.530
    • November 9, 1857: The Oregon Territory's electorate approves the state constitution by a vote of 7,195 to 3,215.531
    • April 5, 1858: Senator Stephen Douglas of Illinois reports 35 S. 239, a bill to admit Oregon into the Union, from the Senate Committee on Territories.532
    • May 18, 1858: Senate passes 35 S. 239 by a vote of 35-17.533
    • February 12, 1859: House passes 35 S. 239 by a vote of 114-103.534
    • February 14, 1859: President James Buchanan signs 35 S. 239, admitting Oregon into the Union as the 33rd state.535
    Pennsylvania Pennsylvania: Second State

    Pennsylvania ratified Constitution December 12, 1787

    • 1681: King Charles II grants a charter to William Penn to create a colony in a portion of present-day Pennsylvania.536
    • July 4, 1776: Pennsylvania joins 12 other colonies in declaring independence from Great Britain.537
    • July 9, 1778: Pennsylvania's delegates sign and ratify the Articles of Confederation.538
    • May 14-September 17, 1787: Pennsylvania's eight delegates participate in the Constitutional Convention.539
    • December 12, 1787: Pennsylvania convention ratifies the Constitution by a vote of 46-23.540
    Rhode Island Rhode Island: 13th State

    Rhode Island ratified Constitution May 29, 1790

    • July 15, 1663: King Charles II grants a charter to create the Colony of Rhode Island and Providence Plantations.541
    • July 4, 1776: Rhode Island joins 12 other colonies in declaring independence from Great Britain.542
    • July 9, 1778: Delegates of the State of Rhode Island and Providence Plantations sign and ratify the Articles of Confederation.543
    • May 14-September 17, 1787: Rhode Island does not send delegates to participate in the Constitutional Convention.544
    • May 29, 1790: Rhode Island's convention ratifies the Constitution by a vote of 34-32, after a number of failed attempts.545
    South Carolina South Carolina: Eighth State

    South Carolina ratified Constitution May 23, 1788

    • March 24, 1663: King Charles II grants a charter to eight men, later known as the "Lords Proprietors," to create the Carolina colony.546 In the early 18th century, the colony would split into North and South Carolina.547
    • July 25, 1729: Seven of the Lords Proprietors sell South Carolina to King George II.548
    • July 4, 1776: South Carolina joins 12 other colonies in declaring independence from Great Britain.549
    • July 9, 1778: South Carolina signs and ratifies the Articles of Confederation.550
    • May 14-September 17, 1787: Four of South Carolina's five delegates participate in the Constitutional Convention.551
    • May 23, 1788: South Carolina convention ratifies the Constitution by a vote of 149-73.552
    South Dakota

    South Dakota: 40th State

    Dakota Territory created March 2, 1861 (12 Stat. 239)

    Enabling and statehood law enacted February 22, 1889 (25 Stat. 676)

    South Dakota admitted November 2, 1889 (26 Stat. 1549)

    • April 30, 1803: The United States acquires part of the land that will become South Dakota from France in the Louisiana Purchase, with additional territory acquired in 1818 from Great Britain.553
    • February 14, 1861: Senator James S. Green of Missouri reports 36 S. 562, a bill to create the Territory of Dakota, from the Senate Committee on Territories.554
    • February 26, 1861: Senate passes an amended version of 36 S. 562 without a recorded vote.555
    • March 1, 1861: House passes 36 S. 562 without a recorded vote.556
    • March 2, 1861: President James Buchanan signs 36 S. 562, creating the Territory of Dakota.557
    • November 8, 1887: Dakota Territory voters endorse splitting the territory into northern and southern entities, with 37,784 voting in favor of division and 32,913 voting against division.558
    • December 12, 1887: Senator Charles F. Manderson of Nebraska introduces 50 S. 185, a bill to admit southern Dakota Territory as the State of Dakota and create a new Territory of Lincoln in northern Dakota Territory.559
    • April 19, 1888: Senate votes 26-23 to pass an amended version of 50 S. 185 that would create a State of South Dakota and a new Territory of North Dakota.560
    • January 18, 1889: Houses votes 145-98 to pass an amended version of 50 S. 185. This new version would clear the way to admit Montana, New Mexico, Washington, and—depending on the results of a referendum on division—either a combined state of Dakota or separate states of North Dakota and South Dakota.561
    • February 20, 1889: House and Senate agree to a compromise version of 50 S. 185 that allows the creation and admission of four new states: Montana, North Dakota, South Dakota, and Washington. Both chambers pass the bill without recorded votes.562
    • February 22, 1889: President Grover Cleveland signs 50 S. 185, enabling statehood for Montana, North Dakota, South Dakota, and Washington.563
    • July 4, 1889: Delegates gather in Sioux Falls to write a state constitution for South Dakota.564
    • August 5, 1889: Delegates to the Sioux Falls convention vote 72-0 to adopt a state constitution for South Dakota.565
    • October 1, 1889: South Dakota voters ratify the state constitution, 70,131 to 3,267.566
    • November 2, 1889: President Benjamin Harrison issues a proclamation admitting South Dakota as the 40th state.567
    Tennessee Tennessee: 16th State

    Southwest Territory created May 26, 1790 (1 Stat. 123)

    Tennessee admitted June 1, 1796 (1 Stat. 491)

    • September 3, 1783: Great Britain cedes territory, including the land that will become the state of Tennessee, to the United States in the Treaty of Paris.568
    • December 22, 1789: North Carolina General Assembly agrees to cede its western lands to the U.S. government.569
    • April 2, 1790: Congress accepts the western lands ceded by North Carolina to the newly-formed federal government.570
    • April 7, 1790: Senate forms a select committee to "bring in a bill for the government of the territory of the United States south of the river Ohio."571
    • April 9, 1790: Senate select committee reports "A bill for the government of the territory of the United States south of the river Ohio."572
    • April 27, 1790: Senate passes the bill without a recorded vote.573
    • April 29, 1790: House passes an amended version of the bill without a recorded vote.574
    • May 4, 1790: Senate rejects the House-amended version of the territorial bill without a recorded vote.575
    • May 5, 1790: House agrees to the Senate-passed version of the territorial bill without a recorded vote.576
    • May 26, 1790: President George Washington signs the bill to organize the western lands ceded to the federal government by North Carolina into the "territory of the United States, south of the river Ohio" (often shortened to "the Southwest Territory").577
    • September 15-November 15, 1795: A census conducted in the Southwest Territory polls free adult males on the following question: "Is it your wish if, on taking the enumeration, there should prove to be less than sixty thousand inhabitants, that the Territory shall be admitted as a State in to the Federal Union with such less number or not?" Those polled affirmed the population's desire to join the Union by a vote of 6,504 to 2,562. Voters also agree to hold a Constitutional Convention, should the census count a minimum of 60,000 inhabitants.578
    • November 28, 1795: Governor William Blount calls for the election of delegates to a constitutional convention.579
    • January 11, 1796: Elected delegates convene a constitutional convention in Knoxville.580
    • February 6, 1796: The convention unanimously approves the state constitution drafted during the convention.581
    • May 18, 1796: Senator Rufus King of New York reports a statehood bill from committee.582
    • May 26, 1796: Senate passes an amended version of the statehood bill by a vote of 15-8.583
    • May 30, 1796: House passes an amended version of the bill without a recorded vote.584
    • May 31, 1796: Senate agrees to the House version of the bill without a recorded vote.585
    • June 1, 1796: President Washington signs the bill, bringing Tennessee into the Union as the 16th state.586
    Texas

    Texas: 28th State

    Annexation law enacted March 1, 1845 (5 Stat. 797)

    Texas admitted December 29, 1845 (9 Stat. 108)

    April 30, 1803: The United States acquires northern portions of the land that will become the state of Texas from France via the Louisiana Purchase.587
  • March 1-17, 1836: Fifty-nine delegates representing settlements in Texas meet in Washington-on-the-Brazos for a general convention to draft a declaration of independence from Mexico and form a government for the independent Republic of Texas.588
  • March 2, 1836: The delegates to the general convention sign the Texas Declaration of Independence.589
  • March 16, 1836: The delegates in Washington-on-the-Brazos finalize and adopt a constitution for the Republic of Texas.590
  • April 21, 1836: The Republic of Texas wins independence from Mexico after defeating Mexican forces in a final battle along the San Jacinto River.591
  • September 1836: Eligible voters ratify the Republic's constitution and vote 3,277 to 91 in favor of Texas joining the United States.592
  • March 3, 1837: The U.S. government officially recognizes the Republic of Texas when President Andrew Jackson appoints Alcée Louis La Branche as Chargé d'Affaires in Houston.593
  • January 25, 1845: House passes a joint resolution (28 H.J.Res. 46) to annex Texas by a vote of 120-98.594
  • February 27, 1845: Senate passes an amended version of the annexation resolution following a preliminary vote of 27-25.595
  • February 28, 1845: House passes the Senate version of the resolution.596
  • March 1, 1845: President John Tyler signs the joint resolution to annex Texas to the United States.597
  • July 4, 1845: A special convention of delegates elected by the people of the Republic of Texas meet to consider the joint resolution offered by the U.S. Congress to annex the Republic. The delegates vote to accept the U.S. government's offer of annexation and membership into the Union.598
  • July 4-August 28, 1845: Delegates meet in Austin to draft a state constitution.599
  • August 28, 1845: Delegates sign the new Texas state constitution.600
  • October 13, 1845: In a popular referendum, Texas voters approve annexation by a vote of 7,664 to 430 and approve the state constitution by a vote of 7,527 to 536.601
  • December 10, 1845: House Committee on Territories reports a joint resolution, 29 H.J.Res. 2, "for the admission of the State of Texas to the Union."602
  • December 16, 1845: House approves the joint resolution to admit Texas to the Union.603
  • December 22, 1845: Senate passes the joint resolution to admit Texas.604
  • December 29, 1845: President James K. Polk signs the resolution admitting Texas into the Union as the 28th state.605
  • Utah

    Utah: 45th State

    Utah Territory created September 9, 1850 (9 Stat. 453)

    Enabling and statehood law enacted July 16, 1894 (28 Stat. 107)

    Utah admitted January 4, 1896 (29 Stat. 876)

    February 2, 1848: The United States, through the Treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo, acquires from Mexico the land that will become Utah.606
  • January 29, 1850: Senator Henry Clay of Kentucky proposes what will later become the Compromise of 1850. While not part of his original proposal, the eventual legislative package includes organizing a territorial government for Utah.607
  • May 8, 1850: The "Senate Select Committee of Thirteen" reports 31 S. 225, a bill that would admit California to statehood, create territorial governments for New Mexico and Utah, and revise the borders of Texas.608
  • August 1, 1850: Senate passes an amended version of the bill with no recorded vote on final passage. It is now a narrower piece of legislation that would create the Territory of Utah.609
  • September 7, 1850: The House passes the Utah Territory bill by a vote of 97-85.610
  • September 9, 1850: President Millard Fillmore signs the Utah Territory bill into law. It is one of five bills that make up the Compromise of 1850.611
  • September 6, 1893: Delegate Joseph L. Rawlins of Utah introduces a bill for Utah's admission to the Union (53 H.R. 352).612 It is the latest in decades of attempts by Utah to secure statehood.613
  • December 13, 1893: House Committee on Territories reports the bill favorably with amendments. The House agrees to the amendments and passes the bill without a recorded vote.614
  • July 10, 1894: The Senate passes the Utah bill without a recorded vote.615
  • July 16, 1894: President Grover Cleveland signs the Utah Enabling Act into law.616
  • November 1894: Eligible voters in Utah select 107 delegates to a constitutional convention.617
  • March 4-May 8, 1895: The delegates meet in Salt Lake City to write the state constitution.618
  • May 8, 1895: The delegates approve the constitution by a vote of 99 to 0.619
  • November 5, 1895: Utah's eligible voters approve the constitution 31,305 to 7,607.620
  • January 4, 1896: President Cleveland issues a proclamation of statehood, and Utah is admitted to the Union as the 45th state.621
  • Vermont

    Vermont: 14th State

    Vermont admitted March 4, 1791 (1 Stat. 191)

    • July 20, 1764: King George III, in a King-in-Council order, declares the Connecticut River is the border between New York and New Hampshire, leaving the disputed territory known as the New Hampshire Grants inside the borders of New York.622
    • January 15, 1777: Delegates meeting in Westminster declare the New Hampshire Grants are a "free and independent state."623
    • July 2-8, 1777: Delegates meet in Windsor and write a constitution for the "Commonwealth or State of Vermont."624
    • August 20-21, 1781: Congress, operating under the Articles of Confederation, says it will consider admitting Vermont as a state only after settlement of its borders.625 During this period, Vermont "existed in something of a political netherworld, not really a state, and not really an independent country."626
    • October 28, 1790: Vermont agrees to settle land claims and its border dispute with New York.627
    • January 10, 1791: Delegates in Bennington vote 105-4 to ratify the U.S. Constitution.628
    • February 9, 1791: President George Washington sends to Congress copies of "authentic documents, expressing the consent of the Legislatures of New York and of the territory of Vermont, that the said territory shall be admitted to be a distinct member of our Union." Senate and House each refer the papers to a select committee for consideration.629
    • February 10, 1791: Senator Rufus King of New York reports from the Senate select committee a bill admitting Vermont "as a new and entire member of the United States of America."630
    • February 12, 1791: Senate passes the Vermont bill without a recorded vote.631
    • February 14, 1791: House passes the Vermont bill without a recorded vote.632
    • February 18, 1791: President Washington signs the Vermont bill, making its admission effective on March 4.633
    • March 4, 1791: Vermont becomes the 14th state.634
    Virginia Virginia: 10th State

    Virginia ratified Constitution June 25, 1788

    • April 10, 1606: King James I grants a charter to the Virginia Company to create a colony in "that part of America commonly called Virginia."635
    • July 4, 1776: Virginia joins 12 other colonies in declaring independence from Great Britain.636
    • July 9, 1778: Virginia signs the Articles of Confederation.637
    • May 14-September 17, 1787: Seven of Virginia's 10 delegates participate in the Constitutional Convention.638
    • June 25, 1788: Virginia's convention ratifies the Constitution by a vote of 89-79.639
    Washington

    Washington: 42nd State

    Washington Territory created March 2, 1853 (10 Stat. 172)

    Enabling and statehood law enacted February 22, 1889 (25 Stat. 676)

    Washington admitted November 11, 1889 (26 Stat. 1552)

    October 20, 1818: U.S. envoys Albert Gallatin and Richard Rush sign a convention with Great Britain agreeing to jointly occupy the Oregon Territory. This area includes land that will become the state of Washington.640
  • June 15, 1846: Secretary of State James Buchanan signs the Oregon Treaty with Great Britain, allowing the United States to acquire all land in the Oregon Territory south of the 49th parallel.641
  • November 25-28, 1852: Forty-four delegates meet in Monticello, at the mouth of the Cowlitz River in the Oregon Territory, to draft and sign a memorial petitioning Congress to divide the Oregon Territory and create the separate territory of Columbia.642
  • January 25, 1853: Representative Charles Stuart of Michigan reports, from the House Committee on Territories, a bill (32 H.R. 348) to establish a new Columbia Territory.643
  • February 10, 1853: House passes 32 H.R. 348, amended to change the new territory's name to Washington.644
  • March 2, 1853: Senate passes 32 H.R. 348 without a recorded vote.645 President Millard Fillmore signs it into law.646
  • December 12, 1887: Senator Charles F. Manderson of Nebraska introduces 50 S. 185, a bill to "provide for the division of Dakota into two States and to enable the people of North Dakota, South Dakota, Montana, and Washington to form constitutions and State governments and to be admitted into the Union."647
  • April 19, 1888: Senate votes 26-23 to pass an amended version of 50 S. 185 that would enable the Washington Territory to create a constitution, form a state government, and join the Union.648
  • January 18, 1889: The House votes 145-98 to pass an amended version of 50 S. 185. This new version would clear the way to admit Montana, New Mexico, Washington, and—depending on the results of a referendum on division—either a combined state of Dakota or separate states of North Dakota and South Dakota.649
  • February 20, 1889: The House and Senate agree to a compromise version of 50 S. 185 that allows the creation and admission of four new states: Montana, North Dakota, South Dakota, and Washington. Both chambers pass the bill without recorded votes.650
  • February 22, 1889: President Grover Cleveland signs 50 S. 185, enabling statehood for Montana, North Dakota, South Dakota, and Washington.651
  • July 4-August 22, 1889: Seventy-five delegates convene a Constitutional Convention in the Territorial Capitol Building in Olympia to draft a state's constitution for Washington.652
  • October 1, 1889: Eligible voters approve the state constitution, by a vote of 40,152 in favor and 11,879 opposed.653
  • November 11, 1889: President Benjamin Harrison issues a proclamation declaring Washington's admission into the Union as the 42nd state.654
  • West Virginia

    West Virginia: 35th State

    Admission law enacted December 31, 1862 (12 Stat. 633)

    West Virginia admitted June 20, 1863 (13 Stat. 731)

    April 17, 1861: Delegates to a Virginia state convention adopt an Ordinance of Secession to repeal Virginia's 1788 ratification of the Constitution and secede from the Union.655
  • May 13-15, 1861: Delegates from a number of counties in western Virginia assemble for the First Wheeling Convention to consider action on the Ordinance of Secession, and resolve to work to defeat passage of the ordinance. The delegates agree that if voters approve the ordinance, delegates from the western counties will elect delegates to a Second Wheeling Convention, to be convened on June 11, 1861.656
  • May 23, 1861: Virginia's eligible voters ratify the Ordinance of Secession by a vote of 125,950 to 20,373.657
  • June 11-25, 1861: Delegates from Virginia's western region meet in the Second Wheeling Convention to form Virginia's "Restored Government" and officially declare allegiance to the Union.658
  • July 1861: The U.S. government recognizes the Restored Government as Virginia's legitimate governing body and allows representatives from the region to fill seats in Congress vacated when Virginia adopted its secession ordinance.659
  • August 6-21, 1861: The Second Wheeling Convention reconvenes. On August 20, the convention approves a proposal to create a new state of "Kanawha."660
  • October 24, 1861: Eligible voters approve the "Ordinance to Provide for the Formation of a New State out of a Portion of the Territory of this State," by a vote of 18,408 to 781.661
  • November 26, 1861-February 20, 1862: Delegates meet in Wheeling to write the constitution for the new state of Kanawha. They change the name of the new state to West Virginia.662
  • February 18, 1862: Delegates to the Constitutional Convention unanimously approve the state constitution.663
  • May 13, 1862: The General Assembly of the Restored Government of Virginia passes an "Act of the Reorganized Government of Virginia Granting Permission for Creation of New State."664
  • May 29, 1862: Senator Waitman T. Willey of Virginia665 presents a petition to the U.S. Senate for the admission of West Virginia to the Union.666
  • June 23, 1862: The Senate Committee on Territories reports a bill (37 S. 365) providing for the admission of West Virginia into the Union.667
  • July 14, 1862: Senate passes an amended version of the bill that includes an amendment to provide for gradual emancipation of slaves in West Virginia. The Senate approves, by a vote of 23 to 17, West Virginia's statehood on the condition that it makes the necessary amendment to the state constitution.668
  • December 10, 1862: House passes the West Virginia statehood bill.669
  • December 31, 1862: President Abraham Lincoln signs the West Virginia statehood bill.670
  • February 12-20, 1863: West Virginia's Constitutional Convention reconvenes and approves the emancipation amendment on February 17, by a vote of 54 to zero. The convention approves the amended constitution the next day, 52 to zero.671
  • March 26, 1863: Eligible voters ratify the revised state constitution by a vote of 28,321 to 572.672
  • April 20, 1863: President Lincoln issues a proclamation admitting West Virginia into the Union.673
  • June 20, 1863: West Virginia is admitted into the Union as the 35th state, 60 days after the presidential proclamation.674
  • Wisconsin Wisconsin: 30th State

    Wisconsin Territory created July 3, 1836 (5 Stat. 10)

    Enabling law enacted August 6, 1846 (9 Stat. 56)

    Wisconsin admitted May 29, 1848 (9 Stat. 233)

    • September 3, 1783: The United States acquires the land that will become Wisconsin in the Treaty of Paris.675
    • January 21, 1836: Senator John M. Clayton of Delaware introduces 24 S. 92, a bill to create the Wisconsin Territory.676
    • March 29, 1836: Senate passes 24 S. 92 without a recorded vote.677
    • April 8, 1836: House passes an amended version of 24 S. 92 without a recorded vote.678
    • April 11, 1836: Senate concurs in two of the House's three amendments and sends 24 S. 92 back to the House without a recorded vote.679
    • April 14, 1836: House insists on its remaining amendment, sending 24 S. 92 back to the Senate without a recorded vote.680
    • April 18, 1836: Senate accepts the House version of 24 S. 92 without a recorded vote.681
    • April 20, 1836: President Andrew Jackson signs 24 S. 92, creating the Wisconsin Territory as of July 3, 1836.682
    • January 13, 1846: Delegate Morgan L. Martin of Wisconsin introduces 29 H.R. 105, a bill that would enable Wisconsin residents to write a constitution and form a government ahead of statehood.683
    • June 9, 1846: House amends and passes 29 H.R. 105 without a recorded vote.684
    • June 10, 1846: House votes to reconsider its vote to pass 29 H.R. 105, then amends and passes it without a recorded vote.685
    • August 5, 1846: Senate passes 29 H.R. 105 without a recorded vote.686
    • August 6, 1846: President James K. Polk signs 29 H.R. 105, enabling Wisconsin residents to write a constitution and form a state government.687
    • October 5, 1846: Delegates gather in Madison to write a state constitution.688
    • December 16, 1846: The Madison convention adjourns after completing work on a state constitution.689
    • April 6, 1847: Wisconsin voters reject ratification of the state constitution, 20,233 to 14,119.690
    • December 15, 1847: Delegates gather in Madison for a second constitutional convention.691
    • February 1, 1848: Delegates at the second Madison convention approve a new state constitution by a vote of 60 to 1.692
    • March 13, 1848: Wisconsin voters ratify the new state constitution, 16,759 to 6,384.693
    • April 13, 1848: Representative Caleb B. Smith of Indiana reports 30 H.R. 397, a bill to admit Wisconsin as a state, from the House Committee on Territories.694
    • May 11, 1848: House amends 30 H.R. 397 and passes it without a recorded vote.695
    • May 19, 1848: Senate passes 30 H.R. 397 without a recorded vote.696
    • May 29, 1848: President Polk signs 30 H.R. 397, admitting Wisconsin into the Union as the 30th state.697
    Wyoming

    Wyoming: 44th State

    Wyoming Territory created July 25, 1868 (15 Stat. 178)

    Wyoming admitted July 10, 1890 (26 Stat. 222)

    February 2, 1848: The United States, in the Treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo, acquires from Mexico part of the land that will become Wyoming , adding to territory acquired earlier in the Louisiana Purchase of 1803, the annexation of Texas in 1845, and the Oregon Treaty of 1846.698
  • February 13, 1868: Senator Richard Yates of Illinois introduces 40 S. 357, a bill to create the Wyoming Territory.699
  • June 3, 1868: Senate amends 40 S. 357 and passes it without a recorded vote.700
  • July 22, 1868: House passes 40 S. 357 by a 106-50 vote.701
  • July 25, 1868: President Andrew Johnson signs 40 S. 357, creating the Wyoming Territory.702
  • June 3, 1889: Territorial Governor Francis E. Warren sets a July election for delegates to a constitutional convention that will meet in Cheyenne.703
  • September 2, 1889: Delegates gather in Cheyenne to write a state constitution.704
  • September 30, 1889: Delegates at the Cheyenne convention vote 37-0 to adopt a state constitution for Wyoming.705
  • November 5, 1889: Wyoming voters ratify the new state constitution, 6,272 to 1,923.706
  • December 18, 1889: Delegate Joseph M. Carey of Wyoming introduces 51 H.R. 982, a bill to admit Wyoming as a state.707
  • March 26, 1890: House amends and passes 51 H.R. 982 by a 139-127 vote.708
  • June 27, 1890: Senate amends and passes 51 H.R. 982 by a 29-18 vote.709
  • July 8, 1890: House passes the Senate-amended version of 51 H.R. 982 without a recorded vote.710
  • July 10, 1890: President Benjamin Harrison signs 51 H.R. 982, admitting Wyoming into the Union as the 44th state.711
  • Footnotes

    1.

    Article IV, Section 3, Clause 1.

    2.

    Congress, operating under the Articles of Confederation, established the Territory of the United States North West of the River Ohio in 1787. It included all or part of six future states: Indiana, Illinois, Michigan, Minnesota, Ohio, and Wisconsin. See the "Ohio" timeline for details.

    3.

    4 U.S.C. §§1-2.

    4.

    Many territories were created out of existing territories, and territorial boundaries changed over time. Illinois Territory, for example, was initially part of the Northwest Territory and then part of Indiana Territory. For simplicity, the timelines in this report generally omit territorial affiliations before legislation that created a separate and distinct territory that would later achieve statehood.

    5.

    For example, the "Hawaii" timeline does not include multiple attempts to achieve statehood before 1959.

    6.

    Information about these subjects is available in other CRS products, including CRS In Focus IF11792, Statehood Process and Political Status of U.S. Territories: Brief Policy Background, by R. Sam Garrett; CRS Report R44721, Political Status of Puerto Rico: Brief Background and Recent Developments for Congress, by R. Sam Garrett; CRS In Focus IF11443, District of Columbia Statehood and Voting Representation, by Joseph V. Jaroscak; and CRS Report R47101, DC Statehood: Constitutional Considerations for Proposed Legislation, by Mainon A. Schwartz.

    7.

    See CRS Report R43434, Policy and Legislative Research for Congressional Staff: Finding Documents, Analysis, News, and Training, by Sarah W. Caldwell, Ellen M. Lechman, and Michele L. Malloy.

    8.

    Bibliographic information is available from the University of Wisconsin-Madison's Center for the Study of the American Constitution at https://csac.history.wisc.edu.

    9.

    Twenty-eight volumes, printed by the U.S. Government Printing Office (GPO), 1934-1975.

    10.

    Seven volumes, edited by Francis Newton Thorpe and printed by GPO, 1909.

    11.

    Available at https://www.loc.gov/collections/century-of-lawmaking.

    12.

    Available at https://www.presidency.ucsb.edu.

    13.

    Available at https://www.govinfo.gov.

    14.

    Available at https://www.hathitrust.org.

    15.

    Available at https://www.loc.gov/research-centers/law-library-of-congress.

    16.

    Available at https://llmc.com.

    17.

    Available at https://avalon.law.yale.edu.

    18.

    Two volumes, edited by Michael Chiorazzi and Marguerite Most (The Haworth Information Press, 2005).

    19.

    Three volumes, edited by Benjamin F. Shearer (Greenwood Press, 2004).

    20.

    Harriet E. Amos Doss, "The State of Alabama," in The Uniting States: The Story of Statehood for the Fifty United States, vol. 1, ed. Benjamin F. Shearer (Greenwood Press, 2004), pp. 24-53.

    21.

    Journal of the Senate of the United States of America (Senate Journal), 14th Cong., 2nd sess. (January 17, 1817), p. 123; The Debates and Proceedings in the Congress of the United States (Annals of Congress), vol. 30, 14th Cong., 2nd sess. (January 17, 1817), p. 71. See the "Mississippi" timeline for information on the latter bill.

    22.

    Senate Journal, 14th Cong., 2nd sess. (February 21, 1817), pp. 273-274; Annals of Congress, vol. 30, 14th Cong., 2nd sess. (February 21, 1817), p. 139.

    23.

    Journal of the House of Representatives of the United States (House Journal), 14th Cong., 2nd sess. (March 3, 1817), p. 545; Annals of Congress, vol. 30, 14th Cong., 2nd sess. (March 3, 1817), p. 1066.

    24.

    3 Stat. 371.

    25.

    Senate Journal, 15th Cong., 2nd sess. (December 11, 1818), p. 70; Annals of Congress, vol. 33, 15th Cong., 2nd sess. (December 11, 1818), p. 66.

    26.

    Senate Journal, 15th Cong., 2nd sess. (December 18, 1818), p. 86; Annals of Congress, vol. 33, 15th Cong., 2nd sess. (December 18, 1818), p. 75.

    27.

    Senate Journal, 15th Cong., 2nd sess. (January 12, 1819), p. 143; Annals of Congress, vol. 33, 15th Cong., 2nd sess. (January 12, 1819), p. 121.

    28.

    House Journal, 15th Cong., 2nd sess. (February 19, 1819), pp. 290-291; Annals of Congress, vol. 34, 15th Cong., 2nd sess. (February 19, 1819), p. 1272.

    29.

    Senate Journal, 15th Cong., 2nd sess. (February 23, 1819), p. 295; Annals of Congress, vol. 33, 15th Cong., 2nd sess. (February 23, 1819), p. 253.

    30.

    3 Stat. 489.

    31.

    Journal of the Convention of the Alabama Territory Begun July 5, 1819 (Huntsville, AL: John Boardman, 1819), pp. 3-4.

    32.

    Journal of the Convention of the Alabama Territory, pp. 38-39.

    33.

    Senate Journal, 16th Cong., 1st sess. (December 8, 1819), p. 21; Annals of Congress, vol. 35, 16th Cong., 1st sess. (December 8, 1819), p. 20-21.

    34.

    House Journal, 16th Cong., 1st sess. (December 8, 1819), p. 22; Annals of Congress, vol. 35, 16th Cong., 1st sess. (December 8, 1819), p. 710.

    35.

    3 Stat. 608.

    36.

    William S. Hanable, "The State of Alaska," in Shearer, Uniting States, vol. 1, pp. 54-78.

    37.

    23 Stat. 24. District status gave Alaska a governor and federal court, but no territorial legislature. See Jessica Van Buren, "Alaska Prestatehood Legal Research Resources," in Prestatehood Legal Materials: A Fifty-State Research Guide, Including New York City and the District of Columbia, vol. 1, eds. Michael Chiorazzi and Marguerite Most (The Haworth Information Press, 2005), pp. 31-50.

    38.

    Throughout this report, bills and resolutions are presented with the Congress number preceding the bill citation. In this instance, 62 H.R. 38 is H.R. 38 during the 62nd Congress.

    39.

    House Journal, 62nd Cong., 1st sess. (April 4, 1911), p. 15; Congressional Record, vol. 47, part 1 (April 4, 1911), p. 22.

    40.

    House Journal, 62nd Cong., 2nd sess. (April 24, 1912), pp. 598-599; Congressional Record, vol. 48, part 6 (April 24, 1912), pp. 5260-5303.

    41.

    Senate Journal, 62nd Cong., 2nd sess. (July 24, 1912), p. 479; Congressional Record, vol. 48, part 10 (July 24, 1912), pp. 9535-9540.

    42.

    Senate Journal, 62nd Cong., 2nd sess. (August 17, 1912), pp. 559-560; Congressional Record, vol. 48, part 11 (August 17, 1912), pp. 11164-11165.

    43.

    House Journal, 62nd Cong., 2nd sess. (August 20, 1912), p. 994; Congressional Record, vol. 48, part 11 (August 20, 1912), pp. 11393-11394.

    44.

    37 Stat. 512.

    45.

    Ernest Gruening, Annual Report of the Governor of Alaska to the Secretary of the Interior (GPO, 1947), p. 1.

    46.

    Minutes of the Daily Proceedings, Alaska Constitutional Convention, vol. 1 (Alaska Legislative Council, 1965), p. 1.

    47.

    Minutes of the Daily Proceedings, Alaska Constitutional Convention, vol. 5, pp. 3938-3939.

    48.

    B. Frank Heintzleman, 1956 Annual Report, Governor of Alaska to the Secretary of the Interior (GPO, 1956), p. 1.

    49.

    House Journal, 85th Cong., 1st sess. (June 7, 1957), p. 512; Congressional Record, vol. 103, part 7 (June 7, 1957), p. 8564.

    50.

    House Journal, 85th Cong., 2nd sess. (May 28, 1958), pp. 408-409; Congressional Record, vol. 104, part 7 (May 28, 1958), pp. 9756-9757.

    51.

    Senate Journal, 85th Cong., 2nd sess. (June 30, 1958), p. 435; Congressional Record, vol. 104, part 10 (June 30, 1958), p. 12650.

    52.

    72 Stat. 339.

    53.

    Alaska Division of Elections, Statehood Election: Final Results of Special Referendum Election, at https://www.elections.alaska.gov/Core/Archive/58STATE/1958-statehood.pdf.

    54.

    73 Stat. c16.

    55.

    Valerie L. Adams, "The State of Arizona," in Shearer, Uniting States, vol. 1, pp. 79-105.

    56.

    House Journal, 37th Cong., 2nd sess. (March 12, 1862), p. 439; Congressional Globe, 37th Cong., 2nd sess. (March 12, 1862), p. 1193.

    57.

    The House Journal reported the vote on tabling the bill as 72-50, while the Congressional Globe reported the vote as 72-52. See House Journal, 37th Cong., 2nd sess. (May 8, 1862), pp. 657-659, and Congressional Globe, 37th Cong., 2nd sess. (May 8, 1862), pp. 2023-2030.

    58.

    Senate Journal, 37th Cong., 3rd sess. (February 20, 1863), p. 300; Congressional Globe, 37th Cong., 3rd sess. (February 20, 1863), pp. 1125-1128.

    59.

    12 Stat. 664.

    60.

    House Journal, 61st Cong., 2nd sess. (January 14, 1910), p. 168; Congressional Record, vol. 45, part 1 (January 14, 1910), p. 654.

    61.

    House Journal, 61st Cong., 2nd sess. (January 17, 1910), pp. 175-176; Congressional Record, vol. 45, part 1 (January 17, 1910), pp. 702-714.

    62.

    Senate Journal 61st Cong., 2nd sess. (June 16, 1910), pp. 452-453; Congressional Record, vol. 45, part 8 (June 16, 1910), pp. 8225-8237.

    63.

    House Journal, 61st Cong., 2nd sess. (June 18, 1910), p. 803; Congressional Record, vol. 45, part 8 (June 18, 1910), pp. 8485-8487.

    64.

    36 Stat. 557.

    65.

    Minutes of the Constitutional Convention of the Territory of Arizona (Press of Phoenix Printing Co., 1910), p. 5.

    66.

    Minutes of the Constitutional Convention of the Territory of Arizona, pp. 433-434.

    67.

    Richard E. Sloan, Report of the Governor of Arizona to the Secretary of the Interior For the Fiscal Year Ended June 30, 1911 (GPO, 1911), p. 5.

    68.

    William Howard Taft, Special Message of the President of the United States Returning Without Approval House Joint Resolution No. 14, H. Doc. 62-106 (GPO, 1911).

    69.

    Senate Journal, 62nd Cong., 1st sess. (August 17, 1911), p. 178; Congressional Record, vol. 47, part 4 (August 17, 1911), p. 4061.

    70.

    Senate Journal, 62nd Cong., 1st sess. (August 18, 1911), p. 185; Congressional Record, vol. 47, part 4 (August 18, 1911), pp. 4118-4141.

    71.

    House Journal, 62nd Cong., 1st sess. (August 19, 1911), p. 390; Congressional Record, vol. 47, part 5 (August 19, 1911), pp. 4217-4242.

    72.

    37 Stat. 39. See "New Mexico" timeline for details on its admission.

    73.

    Voters would restore the provision in November 1912. See David R. Berman, Arizona Politics and Government: The Quest for Autonomy, Democracy, and Development (University of Nebraska Press, 1998), p. 35.

    74.

    37 Stat. 1728.

    75.

    William D. Baker, "The State of Arkansas," in Shearer, Uniting States, vol. 1, pp. 106-133.

    76.

    House Journal, 15th Cong., 2nd sess. (December 16, 1818), pp. 107-108; Annals of Congress, vol. 33, 15th Cong., 2nd sess. (December 16, 1818), p. 413-414.

    77.

    House Journal, 15th Cong., 2nd sess. (December 21, 1818), p. 119; Annals of Congress, vol. 33, 15th Cong., 2nd sess. (December 21, 1818), p. 422.

    78.

    House Journal, 15th Cong., 2nd sess. (February 20, 1819), p. 296; Annals of Congress, vol. 34, 15th Cong., 2nd sess. (February 20, 1819), p. 1283.

    79.

    Senate Journal, 15th Cong., 2nd sess. (March 1, 1819), pp. 324-325; Annals of Congress, vol. 33, 15th Cong., 2nd sess. (March 1, 1819), p. 274.

    80.

    3 Stat. 493.

    81.

    D.A. Stokes Jr., "The First State Elections in 1836," Arkansas Historical Quarterly 20, no. 2 (Summer 1961), 126-150.

    82.

    Journal of the Proceedings of the Convention Met to Form a Constitution and System of State Government for the People of Arkansas (Little Rock, AR: Albert Pike, 1836), p. 3.

    83.

    Journal of the Proceedings of the Convention Met to Form a Constitution ... for the People of Arkansas, p. 51.

    84.

    Senate Journal, 24th Cong., 1st sess. (March 10, 1836), pp. 210-211; Congressional Globe, 24th Cong., 1st sess. (March 10, 1836), pp. 240.

    85.

    Senate Journal, 24th Cong., 1st sess. (March 22, 1836), pp. 236-237; Congressional Globe, 24th Cong., 1st sess. (March 22, 1836), p. 275.

    86.

    Senate Journal, 24th Cong., 1st sess. (April 4, 1836), pp. 266-267; Congressional Globe, 24th Cong., 1st sess. (April 4, 1836), pp. 315-316.

    87.

    House Journal, 24th Cong., 1st sess. (June 13, 1836), pp. 997-1004; Congressional Globe, 24th Cong., 1st sess. (June 13, 1836), pp. 550-551.

    88.

    5 Stat. 50.

    89.

    Anne Woo-Sam, "The State of California," in Shearer, Uniting States, vol. 1, pp. 134-160.

    90.

    J. Ross Browne, Report of the Debates in the Convention of California, on the Formation of the State Constitution, in September and October, 1849 (Washington: John T. Towers, 1850), pp. 3-5.

    91.

    Browne, Report of the Debates in the Convention of California, p. 7.

    92.

    Browne, Report of the Debates in the Convention of California, p. 23.

    93.

    Browne, Report of the Debates in the Convention of California, p. 476.

    94.

    Francis Newton Thorpe (ed.), The Federal and State Constitutions, Colonial Charters, and Other Organic Laws of the States, Territories, and Colonies Now or Heretofore Forming the United States of America, vol. 1 (GPO, 1909), p. 391.

    95.

    James McPherson, Battle Cry of Freedom: The Civil War Era (Oxford University Press, 1988), pp. 70-75.

    96.

    House Journal, 31st Cong., 1st sess. (February 13, 1850), pp. 529-530; Senate Journal, 31st Cong., 1st sess. (February 13, 1850), pp. 148; Congressional Globe, 31st Cong., 1st sess. (February 13, 1850), pp. 347-350 and 355.

    97.

    Senate Journal, 31st Cong., 1st sess. (March 25, 1850), p. 234; Congressional Globe, 31st Cong., 1st sess. (March 25, 1850), p. 592.

    98.

    Senate Journal, 31st Cong., 1st sess. (August 13, 1850), p. 557; Congressional Globe, 31st Cong., 1st sess. (August 13, 1850), p. 1573.

    99.

    House Journal, 31st Cong., 1st sess. (September 7, 1850), pp. 1415-1424; Congressional Globe, 31st Cong., 1st sess. (September 7, 1850), pp. 1769-1772.

    100.

    9 Stat. 452.

    101.

    William Virden, "The State of Colorado," in Shearer, Uniting States, vol. 1, pp. 161-190.

    102.

    Senate Journal, 36th Cong., 1st sess. (April 3, 1860), p. 335; Congressional Globe, 36th Cong., 1st sess. (April 3, 1860), pp. 1502.

    103.

    Senate Journal, 36th Cong., 2nd sess. (February 4, 1861), p. 184; Congressional Globe, 36th Cong., 2nd sess. (February 4, 1861), pp. 728-729.

    104.

    House Journal, 36th Cong., 2nd sess. (February 18, 1861), pp. 345-348; Congressional Globe, 36th Cong., 2nd sess. (February 18, 1861), pp. 1003-1005.

    105.

    Senate Journal, 36th Cong., 2nd sess. (February 26, 1861), pp. 313-314; Congressional Globe, 36th Cong., 2nd sess. (February 26, 1861), pp. 1205-1206.

    106.

    12 Stat. 172.

    107.

    Ben: Perley Poore (ed.), Veto Messages of the Presidents of the United States, with the Action of Congress Thereon (Washington: GPO, 1886), pp. 305-308 and 331-337.

    108.

    House Journal, 43rd Cong., 1st sess. (December 8, 1873), p. 80; Congressional Record, vol. 2, part 1 (December 8, 1873), p. 89.

    109.

    The House Journal reported the vote as 170-66, while the Congressional Record reported the vote as 171-66. See House Journal, 43rd Cong., 1st sess. (June 8, 1874), pp. 1132-1133, and Congressional Record, vol. 2, part 5 (June 8, 1874), pp. 4691-4692.

    110.

    The Senate Journal reported the vote as 43-13, while the Congressional Record reported the vote as 42-12. See Senate Journal, 43rd Cong., 2nd sess. (February 24, 1875), pp. 337-339, and Congressional Record, vol. 3, part 3 (February 24, 1875), pp. 1671-1690.

    111.

    House Journal, 43rd Cong., 2nd sess. (March 3, 1875), pp. 644-645; Congressional Record, vol. 3, part 3 (March 3, 1875), pp. 2238-2239.

    112.

    18 Stat. 474.

    113.

    Proceedings of the Constitutional Convention Held in Denver, December 20, 1875 to Frame a Constitution for the State of Colorado (Smith-Brooks Press, 1907), p. 15.

    114.

    Proceedings of the Constitutional Convention ... for the State of Colorado, p. 708.

    115.

    J. Warner Mills and John H. Gabriel, Mills Annotated Statutes of the State of Colorado, revised ed., vol. 1 (Mills Publishing Co., 1912), p. c24.

    116.

    19 Stat. 665.

    117.

    Thorpe, Federal and State Constitutions, vol. 1, pp. 529-536.

    118.

    Worthington Chauncey Ford (ed.), Journals of the Continental Congress, 1774-1789, vol. 5 (GPO, 1906) (July 4, 1776), pp. 510-516.

    119.

    Journals of the Continental Congress, vol. 11 (July 9, 1778), p. 677.

    120.

    Max Farrand (ed.), The Records of the Federal Convention of 1787, vol. 3 (Yale University Press, 1911), p. 557.

    121.

    Jonathan Elliot (ed.), The Debates in the Several State Conventions on the Adoption of the Federal Constitution, vol. 1 (Washington: Printed For the Author, 1836), pp. 321-322; Merrill Jensen (ed.), The Documentary History of the Ratification of the Constitution, vol. 3 (State Historical Society of Wisconsin, 1978), pp. 554-562.

    122.

    "The Duke of York's Deed of Feoffment of Newcastle, and Twelve Miles Circle, to William Penn, August 24, 1682," in Votes and Proceedings of the House of Representatives of the Province of Pennsylvania, vol. 1, part 1 (Philadelphia: B. Franklin and D. Hall, 1752), pp. xxxvi-xxxvii.

    123.

    Eileen B. Cooper, David King, and Mary Jane Mallonee, "Colonial Delaware Legal Bibliography," in Chiorazzi and Most, Prestatehood Legal Materials, vol. 1, pp. 175-217.

    124.

    Journals of the Continental Congress, vol. 5 (July 4, 1776), pp. 510-516.

    125.

    Journals of the Continental Congress, vol. 14 (May 5, 1779), p. 548.

    126.

    Farrand, Records, vol. 3, p. 558.

    127.

    Elliot, Debates, vol. 1, p. 319; Documentary History of the Ratification of the Constitution, vol. 3, pp. 105-113.

    128.

    Andrew K. Frank, "The State of Florida," in Shearer, Uniting States, vol. 1, pp. 245-270.

    129.

    Senate Journal, 17th Cong., 1st sess. (February 6, 1822), p. 115; Annals of Congress, vol. 38, 17th Cong., 1st sess. (February 6, 1822), p. 182.

    130.

    Senate Journal, 17th Cong., 1st sess. (March 8, 1822), p. 176; Annals of Congress, vol. 38, 17th Cong., 1st sess. (March 8, 1822), p. 279.

    131.

    The Annals of Congress states that the "question on the passage of the bill was…carried without opposition," while the House Journal does not describe the vote. See House Journal, 17th Cong., 1st sess. (March 27, 1822), p. 404 and Annals of Congress, vol. 39, 17th Cong., 1st sess. (March 27, 1822), p. 1379.

    132.

    Senate Journal, 17th Cong., 1st sess. (March 27, 1822), p. 229; Annals of Congress, vol. 38, 17th Cong., 1st sess. (March 27, 1822), p. 344.

    133.

    3 Stat. 654.

    134.

    R.K. Call, "Proclamation of Governor Call and Returns of the 1837 Election," in Florida Becomes a State, ed. Dorothy Dodd (Florida Centennial Commission, 1945), pp. 109-112.

    135.

    Journal of the Proceedings of a Convention of Delegates to Form a Constitution for the People of Florida, Held at St. Joseph, December, 1838 (St. Joseph, FL: Printed at the "Times" Office, 1839), p. 3.

    136.

    Journal of the Proceedings of a Convention ... to Form a Constitution for the People of Florida, p. 117.

    137.

    Dodd, Florida Becomes a State, pp. 69-70; Robert Raymond Reid, "Proclamation of President of the Constitutional Convention," in Dodd, Florida Becomes a State, p. 340; Reid, "Statement of the Votes For and Against the Constitution," in Dodd, Florida Becomes a State, pp. 376-378.

    138.

    House Journal, 28th Cong., 2nd sess. (January 7, 1845), p. 177; Congressional Globe, 28th Cong., 2nd sess. (January 7, 1845), p. 104.

    139.

    The House Journal reported the vote as 144-48, while the Congressional Globe reported the vote as 145-46. See House Journal, 28th Cong., 2nd sess. (February 13, 1845), pp. 375-381, and Congressional Globe, 28th Cong., 2nd sess. (February 13, 1845), pp. 282-286.

    140.

    Senate Journal, 28th Cong., 2nd sess. (March 1, 1845), pp. 232-233; Congressional Globe, 28th Cong., 2nd sess. (March 1, 1845), pp. 377-383.

    141.

    5 Stat. 742. See the "Iowa" timeline for details on its admission process.

    142.

    Thorpe, Federal and State Constitutions, vol. 2, pp. 765-777.

    143.

    Journals of the Continental Congress, vol. 5 (July 4, 1776), pp. 510-516.

    144.

    Journals of the Continental Congress, vol. 11 (July 24, 1778), p. 716.

    145.

    Farrand, Records, vol. 3, p. 559.

    146.

    Documentary History of the Ratification of the Constitution, vol. 3, pp. 269-284.

    147.

    Elliot, Debates, vol. 1, pp. 323-324.

    148.

    J.D. Bowers, "The State of Hawaii," in Shearer, Uniting States, vol. 1, pp. 295-324.

    149.

    Senate Journal, 56th Cong., 1st sess. (December 6, 1899), p. 29; Congressional Record, vol. 33, part 1 (December 6, 1899), p. 89.

    150.

    Senate Journal, 56th Cong., 1st sess. (March 1, 1900), p. 170; Congressional Record, vol. 33, part 3 (March 1, 1900), pp. 2438-2449.

    151.

    The House Journal did not report the vote, but it appears in the Congressional Record. See House Journal, 56th Cong., 1st sess. (April 6, 1900), p. 443, and Congressional Record, vol. 33, part 4 (April 6, 1900), pp. 3851-3866.

    152.

    Senate Journal, 56th Cong., 1st sess. (April 25, 1900), pp. 304-305; Congressional Record, vol. 33, part 5 (April 25, 1900), pp. 4648-4651.

    153.

    House Journal, 56th Cong., 1st sess. (April 27, 1900), p. 512; Congressional Record, vol. 33, part 5 (April 27, 1900), pp. 4766-4767.

    154.

    31 Stat. 141.

    155.

    Roger Bell, Last Among Equals: Hawaiian Statehood and American Politics (University of Hawai'i Press, 1984), pp. 71-78 and 353.

    156.

    Proceedings of the Constitutional Convention of Hawaii, 1950, vol. 1 (State of Hawaii, 1960), p. 1.

    157.

    Proceedings of the Constitutional Convention of Hawaii, vol. 1, p. 139.

    158.

    U.S. Congress, Senate Committee on Interior and Insular Affairs, State Constitution of Hawaii, committee print, 85th Cong., 1st sess., March 28, 1957, p. iii.

    159.

    Senate Journal, 86th Cong., 1st sess. (January 9, 1959), p. 26; Congressional Record, vol. 105, part 1 (January 9, 1959), p. 228.

    160.

    Senate Journal, 86th Cong., 1st sess. (March 11, 1959), p. 175; Congressional Record, vol. 105, part 3 (March 11, 1959), p. 3890.

    161.

    House Journal, 86th Cong., 1st sess. (March 12, 1959), p. 284; Congressional Record, vol. 105, part 3 (March 12, 1959), pp. 4038-4039.

    162.

    73 Stat. 4.

    163.

    Letter from William F. Quinn, Governor of the Territory of Hawaii, to Dwight Eisenhower, President of the United States of America, July 2, 1959, at https://www.eisenhowerlibrary.gov/sites/default/files/research/online-documents/hawaii-statehood/1959-07-02-quinn-to-dde.pdf.

    164.

    73 Stat. c74.

    165.

    Katherine G. Aiken, "The State of Idaho," in Shearer, Uniting States, vol. 1, pp. 325-356.

    166.

    The Congressional Globe reported the bill number as H.R. 626. See House Journal, 37th Cong., 3rd sess. (February 11, 1863), p. 369, and Congressional Globe, 37th Cong., 3rd sess. (February 11, 1863), pp. 884-885.

    167.

    The House Journal records the vote as 86-40, while the Congressional Globe records the vote as 85-39. See House Journal, 37th Cong., 3rd sess. (February 12, 1863), pp. 379-381, and Congressional Globe, 37th Cong., 3rd sess. (February 12, 1863), p. 914.

    168.

    Senate Journal, 37th Cong., 3rd sess. (March 3, 1863), pp. 415-416; Congressional Globe, 37th Cong., 3rd sess. (March 3, 1863), pp. 1507-1509.

    169.

    The House Journal did not report the vote, but it appears in the Congressional Globe. See House Journal, 37th Cong., 3rd sess. (March 3, 1863), pp. 587, and Congressional Globe, 37th Cong., 3rd sess. (March 3, 1863), p. 1542.

    170.

    12 Stat. 808.

    171.

    E.A. Stevenson, "Proclamation," April 2, 1889, Idaho State Archives, at https://idahohistory.contentdm.oclc.org/digital/collection/p16281coll38/id/52.

    172.

    I.W. Hart (ed.), Proceedings and Debates of the Constitutional Convention of Idaho, 1889, vol. 1 (Caxton Printers, 1912), p. 1.

    173.

    Proceedings and Debates of the Constitutional Convention of Idaho, vol. 2, p. 2037.

    174.

    George L. Shoup, Report of the Governor of Idaho to the Secretary of the Interior, 1890 (Washington: GPO, 1890), p. 88.

    175.

    According to the Congressional Record, Rep. Edwin H. Conger of Iowa introduced the bill on behalf of Rep. Struble, who was "absent on account of sickness." See House Journal, 51st Cong., 1st sess. (January 13, 1890), p. 110, and Congressional Record, vol. 21, part 1 (January 13, 1890), p. 523.

    176.

    House Journal, 51st Cong., 1st sess. (April 3, 1890), p. 430; Congressional Record, vol. 21, part 3 (April 3, 1890), pp. 3005-3006.

    177.

    Senate Journal, 51st Cong., 1st sess. (July 1, 1890), p. 411; Congressional Record, vol. 21, part 7 (July 1, 1890), p. 6834.

    178.

    26 Stat. 215.

    179.

    Michael E. Meagher, "The State of Illinois," in Shearer, Uniting States, vol. 1, pp. 357-382.

    180.

    House Journal, 10th Cong., 2nd sess. (December 31, 1808), p. 432; Annals of Congress, vol. 19, 10th Cong., 2nd sess. (December 31, 1808), pp. 971-973.

    181.

    House Journal, 10th Cong., 2nd sess. (January 18, 1809), pp. 477-478; Annals of Congress, vol. 19, 10th Cong., 2nd sess. (January 18, 1809), pp. 1093-1095.

    182.

    Senate Journal, 10th Cong., 2nd sess. (January 31, 1809), p. 336; Annals of Congress, vol. 19, 10th Cong., 2nd sess. (January 31, 1809), p. 339.

    183.

    2 Stat. 514.

    184.

    House Journal, 15th Cong., 1st sess. (January 23, 1818), p. 174; Annals of Congress, vol. 31, 15th Cong., 1st sess. (January 23, 1818), p. 814.

    185.

    House Journal, 15th Cong., 1st sess. (April 6, 1818), p. 428; Annals of Congress, vol. 32, 15th Cong., 1st sess. (April 6, 1818), p. 1681.

    186.

    Senate Journal, 15th Cong., 1st sess. (April 14, 1818), pp. 357-358; Annals of Congress, vol. 31, 15th Cong., 1st sess. (April 14, 1818), p. 365.

    187.

    House Journal, 15th Cong., 1st sess. (April 15, 1818), pp. 466-467; Annals of Congress, vol. 32, 15th Cong., 1st sess. (April 15, 1818), p. 1738.

    188.

    3 Stat. 428.

    189.

    Richard V. Carpenter, "The Illinois Constitutional Convention of 1818," Journal of the Illinois State Historical Society 6, no. 3 (October 1913), pp. 327-424; Illinois Legislative Reference Bureau, Constitutional Conventions in Illinois (Illinois State Journal Co., 1918), pp. 9-11.

    190.

    House Journal, 15th Cong., 2nd sess. (November 20, 1818), p. 25; Annals of Congress, vol. 33, 15th Cong., 2nd sess. (November 20, 1818), pp. 297-298.

    191.

    House Journal, 15th Cong., 2nd sess. (November 23, 1818), pp. 30-31; Annals of Congress, vol. 33, 15th Cong., 2nd sess. (November 23, 1818), pp. 305-311.

    192.

    Senate Journal, 15th Cong., 2nd sess. (December 1, 1818), p. 43; Annals of Congress, vol. 33, 15th Cong., 2nd sess. (December 1, 1818), p. 32.

    193.

    3 Stat. 536.

    194.

    John P. Hundley, "The State of Indiana," in Shearer, Uniting States, vol. 1, pp. 383-409.

    195.

    House Journal, 6th Cong., 1st sess. (March 20, 1800), p. 635; Annals of Congress, vol. 10, 6th Cong. (March 20, 1800), 1st sess., p. 635.

    196.

    House Journal, 6th Cong., 1st sess. (March 31, 1800), p. 646; Annals of Congress, vol. 10, 6th Cong., 1st sess. (March 31, 1800), p. 649.

    197.

    Senate Journal, 6th Cong., 1st sess. (April 21, 1800), p. 77; Annals of Congress, vol. 10, 6th Cong., 1st sess. (April 21, 1800), p. 164.

    198.

    House Journal, 6th Cong., 1st sess. (May 3, 1800), p. 695; Annals of Congress, vol. 10, 6th Cong., 1st sess. (May 3, 1800), pp. 698-699.

    199.

    Senate Journal, 6th Cong., 1st sess. (May 5, 1800), p. 86; Annals of Congress, vol. 10, 6th Cong., 1st sess. (May 5, 1800), p. 173.

    200.

    2 Stat. 58.

    201.

    House Journal, 14th Cong., 1st sess. (January 5, 1816), p. 128; Annals of Congress, vol. 29, 14th Cong., 1st sess. (January 5, 1816), pp. 459-461.

    202.

    House Journal, 14th Cong., 1st sess. (March 30, 1816), pp. 554-555; Annals of Congress, vol. 29, 14th Cong., 1st sess. (March 30, 1816), p. 1300.

    203.

    Senate Journal, 14th Cong., 1st sess. (April 13, 1816), p. 450; Annals of Congress, vol. 29, 14th Cong., 1st sess. (April 13, 1816), p. 315.

    204.

    House Journal, 14th Cong., 1st sess. (April 15, 1816), p. 651; Annals of Congress, vol. 29, 14th Cong., 1st sess. (April 15, 1816), p. 1373.

    205.

    3 Stat. 289.

    206.

    Journal of the Convention of the Indiana Territory (Louisville: Butler & Wood, 1816), pp. 3 and 68-69.

    207.

    Senate Journal, 14th Cong., 2nd sess. (December 2, 1816), p. 5; Annals of Congress, vol. 30, 14th Cong., 2nd sess. (December 2, 1816), pp. 9-10.

    208.

    Senate Journal, 14th Cong., 2nd sess. (December 4, 1816), pp. 27-28; Annals of Congress, vol. 30, 14th Cong., 2nd sess. (December 4, 1816), p. 18.

    209.

    Senate Journal, 14th Cong., 2nd sess. (December 6, 1816), pp. 33-34; Annals of Congress, vol. 30, 14th Cong., 2nd sess. (December 6, 1816), pp. 20-21.

    210.

    The House Journal did not report a specific vote count, while the Annals of Congress reported that the vote was unanimous. See House Journal, 14th Cong., 2nd sess. (December 9, 1816), p. 44, and Annals of Congress, vol. 30, 14th Cong., 2nd sess. (December 9, 1816), p. 254.

    211.

    3 Stat. 399.

    212.

    William Roba, "The State of Iowa," in Shearer, Uniting States, vol. 1, pp. 410-433.

    213.

    Senate Journal, 25th Cong., 2nd sess. (March 14, 1838), pp. 290-291; Congressional Globe, 25th Cong., 2nd sess. (March 14, 1838), p. 239.

    214.

    Senate Journal, 25th Cong., 2nd sess. (June 1, 1838), pp. 440-441. The Congressional Globe did not report passage of the bill.

    215.

    House Journal, 25th Cong., 2nd sess. (June 6, 1838), pp. 1042-1044; Congressional Globe, 25th Cong., 2nd sess. (June 6, 1838), p. 432.

    216.

    Senate Journal, 25th Cong., 2nd sess. (June 6, 1838), pp. 448-449; Congressional Globe, 25th Cong., 2nd sess. (June 6, 1838), pp. 434-435.

    217.

    5 Stat. 235.

    218.

    Roba, "The State of Iowa," p. 423.

    219.

    Journal of the Convention for the Formation of a Constitution for the State of Iowa, Begun and Held at Iowa City, on the First Monday of October, Eighteen Hundred and Forty-Four (Iowa City, IA: Jesse Williams, 1845), pp. 3 and 211.

    220.

    5 Stat. 742; see the "Florida" timeline for additional details on this legislation.

    221.

    Roba, "The State of Iowa," p. 424.

    222.

    Journal of the Convention for the Formation of a Constitution for the State of Iowa, Begun and Held at Iowa City, on the First Monday of May, Eighteen Hundred and Forty-Six (Iowa City, IA: Abraham M. Palmer, 1846), pp. 23 and 109; James Alton James, Constitution and Admission of Iowa Into the Union (Baltimore, MD: Johns Hopkins Press, 1900), pp. 33-34.

    223.

    James Clarke, "Proclamation by the Governor of the Territory of Iowa" (September 9, 1846) in U.S. Congress, House, Constitution of Iowa, 29th Cong., 2nd sess., December 15, 1846, H.Doc. 29-16, p. 17.

    224.

    9 Stat. 52; James, Constitution and Admission of Iowa Into the Union, pp. 37-39.

    225.

    House Journal, 29th Cong., 2nd sess. (December 17, 1846), p. 62; Congressional Globe, 29th Cong., 2nd sess. (December 17, 1846), p. 53.

    226.

    House Journal, 29th Cong., 2nd sess. (December 21, 1846), p. 81; Congressional Globe, 29th Cong., 2nd sess. (December 21, 1846), pp. 57-58.

    227.

    Senate Journal, 29th Cong., 2nd sess. (December 24, 1846), pp. 69-70; Congressional Globe, 29th Cong., 2nd sess. (December 24, 1846), pp. 79-82.

    228.

    9 Stat. 117.

    229.

    M.H. Hoeflich, "The State of Kansas," in Shearer, Uniting States, vol. 1, pp. 434-459.

    230.

    Senate Journal, 33rd Cong., 1st sess. (December 14, 1853), p. 44; Congressional Globe, 33rd Cong., 1st sess. (December 14, 1853), p. 44.

    231.

    House Journal, 33rd Cong., 1st sess. (January 31, 1854), p. 296; Congressional Globe, 33rd Cong., 1st sess. (January 31, 1854), pp. 294-297.

    232.

    Senate Journal, 33rd Cong., 1st sess. (March 3, 1854), pp. 236-237; Congressional Globe, 33rd Cong., 1st sess. (March 3, 1854), pp. 531-532.

    233.

    House Journal, 33rd Cong., 1st sess. (May 22, 1854), pp. 923-924; Congressional Globe, 33rd Cong., 1st sess. (May 22, 1854), p. 1254.

    234.

    Senate Journal, 33rd Cong., 1st sess. (May 25, 1854), pp. 412-413; Congressional Globe, 33rd Cong., 1st sess. (May 25, 1854), p. 1321.

    235.

    10 Stat. 277. Additional documents related to the Kansas-Nebraska Act are available in the Library of Congress research guide "Kansas-Nebraska Act: Primary Documents in American History," at https://guides.loc.gov/kansas-nebraska-act.

    236.

    McPherson, Battle Cry of Freedom, pp. 167-169; 11 Stat. 269.

    237.

    Kansas Historical Society, "Kansas Constitutions," in Kansapedia, at https://www.kshs.org/kansapedia/kansas-constitutions/16532.

    238.

    Harry G. Larimer (ed.), Kansas Constitutional Convention: A Reprint of the Proceedings and Debates of the Convention Which Framed the Constitution of Kansas at Wyandotte in July, 1859 (Kansas State Printing Plant, 1920), pp. 570-571.

    239.

    Samuel Medary, "Proclamation" (November 1, 1859) in U.S. Congress, House Committee on Territories, Kansas, report to accompany H.R. 23, 36th Cong., 1st sess., H.Rept. 36-255, March 29, 1860, pp. 20-21.

    240.

    House Journal, 36th Cong., 1st sess. (February 15, 1860), p. 294; Congressional Globe, 36th Cong., 1st sess. (February 15, 1860), p. 795.

    241.

    The House Journal reported the vote as 135-72, while the Congressional Globe reported the vote as 134-73. See House Journal, 36th Cong., 1st sess. (April 11, 1860), pp. 707-708, and Congressional Globe, 36th Cong., 1st sess. (April 11, 1860), p. 1672.

    242.

    Senate Journal, 36th Cong., 2nd sess. (January 21, 1861), pp. 127-128; Congressional Globe, 36th Cong., 2nd sess. (January 21, 1861), pp. 487-489.

    243.

    House Journal, 36th Cong., 2nd sess. (January 28, 1861), pp. 236-237; Congressional Globe, 36th Cong., 2nd sess. (January 28, 1861), pp. 603-604.

    244.

    12 Stat. 126.

    245.

    William Waller Hening (ed.), The Statutes at Large; Being a Collection of All the Laws of Virginia, From the First Session of the Legislature, in the Year 1619, vol. 9 (Richmond, VA: J&G Cochran, Printers, 1821), pp. 257-261.

    246.

    Hening, Statutes at Large, vol. 10, pp. 315-317 and 436.

    247.

    Journals of the Continental Congress, vol. 34 (July 3, 1788), pp. 287-294.

    248.

    Hening, Statutes at Large, vol. 13, pp. 17-21.

    249.

    Letter from George Muter, President of the Ninth Kentucky Convention, to George Washington, President of the United States of America, October 4, 1790, at https://founders.archives.gov/documents/Washington/05-06-02-0250.

    250.

    Washington, "Second Annual Address to Congress" (December 8, 1790), American Presidency Project (University of California, Santa Barbara), at https://www.presidency.ucsb.edu/node/203719.

    251.

    Senate Journal, 1st Cong., 3rd sess. (December 14, 1790), p. 222; Annals of Congress, vol. 2, 1st Cong., 3rd sess. (December 14, 1790), p. 1777.

    252.

    Senate Journal, 1st Cong., 3rd sess. (January 3, 1791), pp. 228-229; Annals of Congress, vol. 2, 1st Cong., 3rd sess. (January 3, 1791), pp. 1784-1785.

    253.

    Senate Journal, 1st Cong., 3rd sess. (January 4, 1791), p. 229; Annals of Congress, vol. 2, 1st Cong., 3rd sess. (January 4, 1791), p. 1785.

    254.

    Senate Journal, 1st Cong., 3rd sess. (January 12, 1791), p. 232; Annals of Congress, vol. 2, 1st Cong., 3rd sess. (January 12, 1791), p. 1788.

    255.

    House Journal, 1st Cong., 3rd sess. (January 28, 1791), p. 366; Annals of Congress, vol. 2, 1st Cong., 3rd sess. (January 28, 1791), p. 1934.

    256.

    1 Stat. 189.

    257.

    Journal of the First Constitutional Convention of Kentucky (State Bar Association of Kentucky, 1942), p. 1.

    258.

    Journal of the First Constitutional Convention of Kentucky, p. 22.

    259.

    Stephen Asperheim, "The Commonwealth of Kentucky," in Shearer, Uniting States, vol. 1, pp. 460-485.

    260.

    8 Stat. 200.

    261.

    Senate Journal, 8th Cong., 1st sess. (October 20, 1803), p. 450. This does not appear in the Annals of Congress.

    262.

    Senate Journal, 8th Cong., 1st sess. (December 30, 1803), p. 331; Annals of Congress, vol. 13, 8th Cong., 1st sess. (December 30, 1803), p. 223.

    263.

    Senate Journal, 8th Cong., 1st sess. (February 18, 1804), p. 360; Annals of Congress, vol. 13, 8th Cong., 1st sess. (February 18, 1804), p. 255.

    264.

    House Journal, 8th Cong., 1st sess. (March 17, 1804), pp. 661-662; Annals of Congress, vol. 13, 8th Cong., 1st sess. (March 17, 1804), p. 1199.

    265.

    Senate Journal, 8th Cong., 1st sess. (March 20, 1804), pp. 384-385; Annals of Congress, vol. 13, 8th Cong., 1st sess. (March 20, 1804), pp. 288-290.

    266.

    House Journal, 8th Cong., 1st sess. (March 21, 1804), p. 661; Annals of Congress, vol. 13, 8th Cong., 1st sess. (March 21, 1804), pp. 1206-1208.

    267.

    House Journal, 8th Cong., 1st sess. (March 23, 1804), pp. 678-679; Annals of Congress, vol. 13, 8th Cong., 1st sess. (March 23, 1804), pp. 1229-1230.

    268.

    Senate Journal, 8th Cong., 1st sess. (March 23, 1804), p. 391; Annals of Congress, vol. 13, 8th Cong., 1st sess. (March 23, 1804), pp. 296-297.

    269.

    2 Stat. 283. The District of Louisiana will later become the Louisiana Territory and, in 1812, the Missouri Territory. See the "Missouri" timeline for details.

    270.

    House Journal, 11th Cong., 3rd sess. (December 27, 1810), p. 464; Annals of Congress, vol. 22, 11th Cong., 3rd sess. (December 27, 1810), p. 466.

    271.

    House Journal, 11th Cong., 3rd sess. (January 15, 1811), pp. 483-485; Annals of Congress, vol. 22, 11th Cong., 3rd sess. (January 15, 1811), p. 577.

    272.

    Senate Journal, 11th Cong., 3rd sess. (February 7, 1811), p. 564; Annals of Congress, vol. 22, 11th Cong., 3rd sess. (February 7, 1811), p. 127.

    273.

    House Journal, 11th Cong., 3rd sess. (February 13, 1811), pp. 549-551; Annals of Congress, vol. 22, 11th Cong., 3rd sess. (February 13, 1811), p. 964.

    274.

    2 Stat. 641.

    275.

    Journal de la Convention d'Orléans de 1811-12 (Jackson, LA: Jerome Bayon, 1844), p. 1.

    276.

    Constitution or Form of Government of the State of Louisiana (New Orleans: Jo. Bar. Baird, 1812), p. 30.

    277.

    House Journal, 12th Cong., 1st sess. (March 16, 1812), p. 248; Annals of Congress, vol. 24, 12th Cong., 1st sess. (March 16, 1812), p. 466.

    278.

    House Journal, 12th Cong., 1st sess. (March 20, 1812), pp. 257-258; Annals of Congress, vol. 24, 12th Cong., 1st sess. (March 20, 1812), p. 1227.

    279.

    Senate Journal, 12th Cong., 1st sess. (April 1, 1812), pp. 90-91; Annals of Congress, vol. 23, 12th Cong., 1st sess. (April 1, 1812), p. 186.

    280.

    House Journal, 12th Cong., 1st sess. (April 6, 1812), p. 276; Annals of Congress, vol. 24, 12th Cong., 1st sess. (April 6, 1812), p. 1254.

    281.

    2 Stat. 701.

    282.

    "The Charter of Massachusetts Bay—1691," in Thorpe, Federal and State Constitutions, vol. 3, pp. 1870-1886; M.H. Hoeflich, "The State of Maine," in Shearer, Uniting States, vol. 2, p. 513-538.

    283.

    "An Act relating to the Separation of the District of Maine from Massachusetts Proper, and forming the same into a Separate and Independent State," in Laws of the Commonwealth of Massachusetts, Passed at the Several Sessions of the General Court, Beginning May, 1818 and Ending February, 1822 (Boston: Russell and Gardner, 1822), pp. 248-260, at https://archives.lib.state.ma.us/handle/2452/110107.

    284.

    Stephanie Kermes, Creating an American Identity: New England, 1789-1825 (Palgrave Macmillan, 2008), p. 158; Appendix V in Ronald F. Banks, Maine Becomes a State: The Movement to Separate Maine from Massachusetts, 1785-1820 (Wesleyan University Press, 1970).

    285. Journal of the Constitutional Convention of the District of Maine: With the Articles of Separation, and Governor Brooks' Journal of the Constitutional Convention of the District of Maine: With the Articles of Separation, and Governor Brooks’ Proclamation, Prefixed (Augusta, ME: Fuller & Fuller, 1856).

    286 286. Maine State Legislature, Amendments to the Maine Constitution, 1820-Present, November 2021, at https://www.maine.gov/legis/lawlib/lldl/constitutionalamendments; Journal of the Constitutional Convention of the District of Maine, p. 98. This is the tally for votes "legally and seasonably returned.

    287" 287. House Journal, 16th16th Cong., 1st1st sess. (December 21, 1819), p. 60; Annals of Congress, vol. 35, 16th16th Cong., 1st1st sess. (December 21, 1819), p. 749.

    288 288. House Journal, 16th16th Cong., 1st1st sess. (January 3, 1820), p. 99; Annals of Congress, vol. 35, 16th16th Cong., 1st1st sess. (January 3, 1820), p. 849.

    289 289. Senate Journal, 16th16th Cong., 1st1st sess. (February 18, 1820), pp. 169-170; Annals of Congress, vol. 35, 16th16th Cong., 1st1st sess. (February 18, 1820), p. 430.

    290 290. House Journal, 16th16th Cong., 1st1st sess. (March 3, 1820), p. 283; Senate Journal, 16th16th Cong., 1st1st sess. (March 3, 1820), pp. 206-207; Annals of Congress, vol. 36, 16th Cong., 1st sess. (March 3, 1820), p. 1589; Annals of Congress, vol. 35, 16th Cong., 1st sess. (March 3, 1820), pp. 471-472.

    291 3 Stat. 544.

    292 See the “Missouri” timeline for additional information.

    Maryland: Seventh State

    Admission of States to the Union: A Historical Reference Guide

    Congressional Research Service 41

    June 20, 1632: King Charles I grants the charter for the colony of Maryland to Cecil Calvert.293

    July 4, 1776: Maryland joins 12 other colonies in declaring independence from Great Britain.294

    March 1, 1781: Maryland signs and ratifies the Articles of Confederation.295

    May 14-September 17, 1787: Maryland’s five delegates participate in the Constitutional Convention.296

    April 28, 1788: Maryland’s convention formally ratifies the Constitution, following a 63-11 vote on April 26.297

    Massachusetts

    March 4, 1629: A charter is given to the “Governor and Company of the Massachusetts Bay in New England” by King Charles I.298

    October 7, 1691: A new charter, given by King William and Queen Mary, enlarges Massachusetts “to include the old colony of Massachusetts Bay, Plymouth Colony, Martha’s Vineyard and Nantucket, Maine, and parts of Nova Scotia.”299

    July 4, 1776: Massachusetts joins 12 other colonies in declaring independence from Great Britain.300

    July 9, 1778: Massachusetts signs and ratifies the Articles of Confederation.301

    May 14-September 17, 1787: Massachusetts’s four delegates participate in the Constitutional Convention.302

    February 6, 1788: Massachusetts’s convention ratifies the Constitution by a vote of 187-168.303

    293 “ 291.

    3 Stat. 544.

    292.

    See the "Missouri" timeline for additional information.

    293. "The Charter of Maryland, June 20, 1632," in Maryland State Archives, Archives of Maryland, vol. 549, p. 5, at https://msa.maryland.gov/megafile/msa/speccol/sc2900/sc2908/000001/000549/html/am549--5.html.

    294. 294. Journals of the Continental Congress, vol. 5 (July 4, 1776), pp. 510-516.

    295 295. Journals of the Continental Congress, vol. 19 (March 1, 1781), pp. 213-214.

    296 296. Farrand, Records, vol. 3, p. 558.

    297 297. Elliot, Debates, vol. 1, pp. 324-325; Documentary History of the Ratification of the Constitution, vol. 12, pp. 647- 655.

    298 “655. 298. "The Charter of Massachusetts—1629," in Thorpe, Federal and State Constitutions, vol. 3, pp. 1846-1860.

    299 “ 299. "The Charter of Massachusetts Bay—1691," in Thorpe, Federal and State Constitutions, vol. 3, pp. 1870-1886; Secretary of the Commonwealth of Massachusetts, Massachusetts Archives Collection, at https://www.sec.state.ma.us/divisions/archives/collections/mass-archives-collection.htm.

    300. 300. Journals of the Continental Congress, vol. 5 (July 4, 1776), pp. 510-516.

    301 301. Journals of the Continental Congress, vol. 11 (July 9, 1778), p. 677.

    302 302. Farrand, Records, vol. 3, p. 558.

    303 303. Elliot, Debates, vol. 1, pp. 322-323; Documentary History of the Ratification of the Constitution, vol. 6, pp. 1461- 1462.

    Maryland ratified Constitution April 28, 1788

    Massachusetts: Sixth State

    Massachusetts ratified Constitution February 6, 1788

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    Congressional Research Service 42

    Michigan

    September 3, 1783: The United States acquires the land that will become Michigan from Great Britain in the Treaty of Paris.304

    December 14, 1804: Senator Thomas Worthington of Ohio reports, from a committee on the subject, a bill that would divide the Indiana Territory into two separate territories.305

    December 24, 1804: Senate amends and passes the Indiana Territory bill without a recorded vote.306

    January 7, 1805: House passes an amended version of the Indiana Territory bill without a recorded vote.307

    January 8, 1805: Senate passes the House-amended territorial bill without a recorded vote.308

    January 11, 1805: President Thomas Jefferson signs the act to split the Indiana Territory in two, creating the Michigan Territory as of June 30, 1805.309

    October 5-6, 1835: Michigan’s constitution, drafted by a convention meeting in Detroit from May 11 to June 24, 1835, is adopted by a vote of 6,752 to 1,374.310

    March 22, 1836: Senator Thomas Hart Benton of Missouri reports 24 S. 177, a bill that would establish the northern border of Ohio and admit Michigan as a state, from a select committee studying the issue.311

    April 2, 1836: Senate votes to pass 24 S. 177.312

    June 13, 1836: House passes 24 S. 177 without a recorded vote on final passage, following a 153-45 procedural vote.313

    June 15, 1836: President Andrew Jackson signs 24 S. 177 into law, admitting Michigan as a state on the condition that it accept newly defined borders.314

    304 304. Jim Schwartz, "The State of Michigan," in Shearer, Uniting States, vol. 2, pp. 592-618.

    305 305. Senate Journal, 8th8th Cong., 2nd2nd sess. (December 14, 1804), p. 423; Annals of Congress, vol. 14, 8th8th Cong., 2nd2nd sess. (December 14, 1804), p. 23.

    306 306. Senate Journal. 8th8th Cong., 2nd2nd sess. (December 24, 1804), p. 426; Annals of Congress, vol. 14, 8th8th Cong., 2nd2nd sess. (December 24, 1804), p. 26.

    307 307. House Journal, 8th8th Cong., 2nd2nd sess. (January 7, 1805), p. 79; Annals of Congress, vol. 14, 8th8th Cong., 2nd2nd sess. (January 7, 1805), p. 872.

    308 308. Senate Journal, 8th8th Cong., 2nd2nd sess. (January 8, 1805), p. 431; Annals of Congress, vol. 14, 8th8th Cong., 2nd2nd sess. (January 8, 1805), p. 32.

    309 2 Stat. 309.

    310 309.

    2 Stat. 309.

    310. Legislative Service Bureau, The Constitution of the State of Michigan, at https://www.legislature.mi.gov/(S(hybaug5jzbffgrpwwukidlqp))/documents/mcl/pdf/michiganconstitution1963asratifie d.pdf.

    311 Senate Journal, 24th Cong., 1stmichiganconstitution1963asratified.pdf. 311. Senate Journal, 24th Cong., 1st sess. (March 22, 1836), p. 236; Congressional Globe, 24th24th Cong., 1st1st sess. (March 22, 1836), p. 275.

    312 312. The vote was reported as 24-18 in the Senate Journal and 24-17 in the Congressional Globe. See Senate Journal, 24th Cong., 1st sess. (April 2, 1836), pp. 263-264, and Congressional Globe, 24th Cong., 1st sess. (April 2, 1836), p. 313.

    313 313. House Journal, 24th24th Cong., 1st1st sess. (June 13, 1836), pp. 993-997 and 1002; Congressional Globe, 24th24th Cong., 1st1st sess. (June 13, 1836), pp. 550-551.

    314 5 Stat. 49.

    Michigan: 26th State

    Michigan Territory created June 30, 1805 (2 Stat. 309) Enabling law enacted June 15, 1836 (5 Stat. 49) Michigan admitted January 26, 1837 (5 Stat. 144)

    Admission of States to the Union: A Historical Reference Guide

    Congressional Research Service 43

    Under the proposed compromise, Michigan would cede the disputed city of Toledo to Ohio but acquire much of the Upper Peninsula.315

    September 26-30, 1836: Delegates elected to a state convention vote 28-21 to reject the congressional compromise over Michigan’s borders.316

    December 14-15, 1836: Delegates elected to a second state convention, known as the “Frostbitten Convention,” vote unanimously to accept Congress’s conditions for statehood.317

    December 29, 1836: Senator Felix Grundy of Tennessee reports 24 S. 81, a bill to admit Michigan as a state, from the Senate Judiciary Committee.318

    January 5, 1837: Senate votes 25-10 to pass 24 S. 81.319

    January 25, 1837: House votes 132-43 to pass 24 S.81.320

    January 26, 1837: President Jackson signs 24 S. 81 into law, admitting Michigan to the Union.321

    Minnesota

    October 20, 1818: The United States acquires part of the land that will become Minnesota from Great Britain, adding to territory obtained in the Treaty of Paris (1783) and the Louisiana Purchase (1803).322

    February 23, 1848: Senator Stephen A. Douglas of Illinois introduces 30 S. 152, a bill to create the Minnesota Territory.323

    January 19, 1849: Senate passes an amended version of the Minnesota Territory bill without a recorded vote.324

    315 Schwartz, “The State of Michigan,” pp. 610-611.

    316 “ 314.

    5 Stat. 49.

    315.

    Schwartz, "The State of Michigan," pp. 610-611.

    316. "First Convention of Assent of the Territory of Michigan," in Michigan Manual 2015-2016 (Lansing, MI: Legislative Service Bureau, 2016), at https://www.legislature.mi.gov/(S(khjikt3ukugbvxxz5sicivm3))/documents/2015- 2016/michiganmanual/2015-MM-p0021-p0024.pdf.

    317 “. 317. "Second Convention of Assent of the Territory of Michigan," in Michigan Manual 2015-2016, at https://www.legislature.mi.gov/(S(khjikt3ukugbvxxz5sicivm3))/documents/2015-2016/michiganmanual/2015-MM- p0021-p0024.pdf.

    318. 318. Senate Journal, 24th24th Cong., 2nd2nd sess. (December 29, 1836), p. 72; Congressional Globe, 24th24th Cong. , 2nd2nd sess. (December 29, 1836), p. 59.

    319 319. Senate Journal, 24th24th Cong., 2nd2nd sess. (January 5, 1837), pp. 93-94; Congressional Globe, 24th24th Cong., 2nd2nd sess. (January 5, 1837), p. 73.

    320 House Journal, 24th Cong, 2nd 320. House Journal, 24th Cong, 2nd sess. (January 25, 1837), pp. 284-285; Congressional Globe, 24th24th Cong., 2nd2nd sess. (January 25, 1837), p. 125.

    321 5 Stat. 144.

    322 321.

    5 Stat. 144.

    322. Jonathan Kasparek, "The State of Minnesota," in Shearer, Uniting States, vol. 2, pp. 619-641.

    323 323. Senate Journal, 30th30th Cong., 1st1st sess. (February 23, 1848), p. 187. The bill's introduction does not appear in the Congressional Globe.

    324 324. Congressional Globe, 30th30th Cong. (January 19, 1849), 2nd2nd sess., pp. 298-299. The bill's passage does not appear in the Senate Journal.

    Minnesota: 32nd State

    Minnesota Territory created March 3, 1849 (9 Stat. 403) Enabling law enacted February 26, 1857 (11 Stat. 166) Minnesota admitted May 11, 1858 (11 Stat. 285)

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    February 28, 1849: House passes an amended version of the Minnesota Territory bill without a recorded vote.325

    March 1, 1849: Senate accepts most of the House’s amendments to the Minnesota Territory bill, but rejects one on a 30-18 vote.326

    March 3, 1849: House votes 107-70 to accept the Senate’s version of 30 S. 152.327 President James K. Polk signs the Minnesota Territory bill into law.328

    December 24, 1856: Delegate Henry Rice of Minnesota introduces 34 H.R. 642, a bill authorizing Minnesota Territory residents to hold a constitutional convention in preparation for statehood.329

    January 31, 1857: House votes 97-75 to pass an amended version of 34 H.R. 642.330

    February 21, 1857: Senate votes 47-1 to pass an amended version of 34 H.R. 642.331

    February 25, 1857: Senate reconsiders its amendment and votes 31-22 to approve the House-passed version.332

    February 26, 1857: President James Buchanan signs the Minnesota enabling act into law.333

    July 13-August 29, 1857: Elected delegates assemble in St. Paul to draft the state constitution, but the Democratic and Republican parties are so divided that two separate conventions are held and two constitutions are drafted. Eventually, a conference committee drafts a compromise document.334

    October 13, 1857: Minnesota voters ratify the new state constitution, 30,055 to 571.335

    325 House Journal, 30th Cong., 2nd 325. House Journal, 30th Cong., 2nd sess. (February 28, 1849), pp. 558-559; Congressional Globe, 30th30th Cong., 2nd2nd sess. (February 28, 1849), p. 617.

    326 326. Senate Journal, 30th30th Cong., 2nd2nd sess. (March 1, 1849), pp. 288-289; Congressional Globe, 30th30th Cong., 2nd2nd sess. (March 1, 1849), pp. 635-637.

    327 327. House Journal, 30th30th Cong., 2nd2nd sess. (March 3, 1849), pp. 620-621; Congressional Globe, 30th30th Cong., 2nd2nd sess. (March 3, 1849), p. 693. A vote tally does not appear in the Congressional Globe.

    328 9 Stat. 403.

    329 House Journal, 34th Cong., 3rd 328.

    9 Stat. 403.

    329. House Journal, 34th Cong., 3rd sess. (December 24, 1856), p. 163; Congressional Globe, 34th34th Cong., 3rd3rd sess. (December 24, 1856), p. 201.

    330 330. House Journal, 34th34th Cong., 3rd3rd sess. (January 31, 1857), pp. 328-329; Congressional Globe, 34th34th Cong., 3rd3rd sess. (January 31, 1857), p. 519.

    331 331. Senate Journal, 34th34th Cong., 3rd3rd sess. (February 21, 1857), p. 237; Congressional Globe, 34th34th Cong., 3rd3rd sess. (February 21, 1857), p. 814.

    332 332. Senate Journal, 34th34th Cong., 3rd3rd sess. (February 25, 1857), p. 252; Congressional Globe, 34th34th Cong., 3rd3rd sess. (February 25, 1857), p. 877.

    333 11 Stat. 166.

    334 333.

    11 Stat. 166.

    334. Office of the Minnesota Secretary of State, Minnesota Constitution 1858, at https://www.sos.state.mn.us/about- minnesota/minnesota-government/minnesota-constitution-1858.

    335 Minnesota Constitution 1858..

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    January 26, 1858: Senator Douglas reports 35 S. 86, a bill “for the admission of the State of Minnesota into the Union,” from the Senate Committee on Territories.336

    April 7, 1858: Senate votes 49-3 to admit Minnesota as a state.337

    May 11, 1858: House votes to admit Minnesota as a state.338 President Buchanan signs 35 S. 86 into law, and Minnesota became a state.339

    Mississippi

    September 3, 1783: The United States acquires the the land that will become Mississippi from Great Britain in the Treaty of Paris.340

    February 23, 1798: Senator James Ross of Pennsylvania reports, from a committee looking into the area south and west of Georgia, a bill to establish a new Mississippi Territory.341

    March 5, 1798: The Senate passes the Mississippi Territory bill, 20-8.342

    March 27, 1798: The House passes an amended version of the Mississippi Territory bill without a recorded vote.343

    March 29, 1798: The Senate agrees to the House amendments without a recorded vote.344

    April 7, 1798: President John Adams signs the Mississippi Territory bill into law.345

    January 17, 1817: Senator Charles Tait of Georgia reports, from a select committee studying the issue, a bill that would enable the western part of the Mississippi Territory to prepare for statehood.346

    336 Senate Journal, 35th Cong., 1st 335.

    Minnesota Constitution 1858.

    336. Senate Journal, 35th Cong., 1st sess. (January 26, 1858), p. 133; Congressional Globe, 35th35th Cong., 1st1st sess. (January 26, 1858), p. 405.

    337 337. Senate Journal, 35th35th Cong., 1st1st sess. (April 7, 1858), p. 326; Congressional Globe, 35th35th Cong., 1st1st sess. (April 7, 1858), pp. 1511-1516.

    338 338. The vote was reported as 157-39 in the House Journal and 157-38 in the Congressional Globe. See House Journal, 35th Cong., 1st sess. (May 11, 1858), p. 777, and Congressional Globe, 35th Cong., 1st sess. (May 11, 1858), pp. 2057- 2061.

    339 11 Stat. 285.

    3402061. 339.

    11 Stat. 285.

    340. Deanne Stephens Nuwer, "The State of Mississippi," in Shearer, Uniting States, vol. 2, pp. 642-669.

    341 341. Senate Journal, 5th5th Cong., 2nd2nd sess. (February 23, 1798), p. 445; Annals of Congress, vol. 7, 5th5th Cong., 2nd2nd sess. (February 23, 1798), p. 511.

    342 342. Senate Journal, 5th5th Cong., 2nd2nd sess. (March 5, 1798), p. 449; Annals of Congress, vol. 7, 5th5th Cong., 2nd2nd sess. (March 5, 1798), p. 515.

    343 343. House Journal, 5th5th Cong., 2nd2nd sess. (March 27, 1798), p. 240; Annals of Congress, vol. 8, 5th5th Cong., 2nd2nd sess. (March 27, 1798), p. 1318.

    344 344. Senate Journal, 5th5th Cong., 2nd2nd sess. (March 29, 1798), p. 465; Annals of Congress, vol. 7, 5th5th Cong., 2nd2nd sess. (March 29, 1798), p. 533.

    345 1 Stat. 549.

    346 Senate Journal, 14th Cong., 2nd 345.

    1 Stat. 549.

    346. Senate Journal, 14th Cong., 2nd sess. (January 17, 1817), p. 123; Annals of Congress, vol. 30, 14th14th Cong., 2nd2nd sess. (January 17, 1817), p. 71. The eastern part of Mississippi Territory became the Alabama Territory.

    Mississippi: 20th State

    Mississippi Territory created April 7, 1798 (1 Stat 549) Enabling law enacted March 1, 1817 (3 Stat 348) Mississippi admitted December 10, 1817 (3 Stat. 472.)

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    January 31, 1817: Senate passes an amended version of the Mississippi Territory enabling bill without a recorded vote.347

    February 26, 1817: House amends and passes the Mississippi Territory enabling bill without a recorded vote.348

    February 27, 1817: Senate concurs in the House’s amendments without a recorded vote.349

    March 1, 1817: President James Madison signs the enabling act for Mississippi statehood.350

    July-August 1817: Forty-eight delegates meet to form a constitutional convention.351

    August 15, 1817: The delegates approve the final draft of the Mississippi Constitution.352

    December 3, 1817: Senator James Barbour of Virginia reports, from a select committee studying the issue, a resolution to admit Mississippi as a state. It passes the Senate without a recorded vote.353

    December 8, 1817: The House passes the resolution “on the admission of the state of Mississippi into the Union” without a recorded vote.354

    December 10, 1817: President James Monroe signs the resolution into law and Mississippi becomes the 20th state.355

    Missouri

    April 30, 1803: The United States acquires the land that will become Missouri from France in the Louisiana Purchase. It will become part of the Louisiana Territory, while the land that will become Louisiana is governed as the Orleans Territory.356

    347 Senate Journal, 14th Cong., 2nd 347. Senate Journal, 14th Cong., 2nd sess. (January 31, 1817), pp. 173-174; Annals of Congress, vol. 30, 14th14th Cong., 2nd2nd sess. (January 31, 1817), p. 91.

    348 348. House Journal, 14th14th Cong., 2nd2nd sess. (February 26, 1817), p. 473-474; Annals of Congress, vol. 30, 14th14th Cong., 2nd2nd sess. (February 26, 1817), p. 1034.

    349 349. Senate Journal, 14th14th Cong., 2nd2nd sess. (February 27, 1817), p. 330-331; Annals of Congress, vol. 30, 14th14th Cong., 2nd2nd sess. (February 27, 1817), p. 184.

    350 3 Stat. 348.

    351 Nuwer, “ 350.

    3 Stat. 348.

    351. Nuwer, "The State of Mississippi," p. 663. 352.

    Ibid.

    353.
    p. 663.

    352 Ibid.

    353 Senate Journal, 15th15th Cong., 1st1st sess. (December 3, 1817), pp. 20-21; Annals of Congress, vol. 31, 15th15th Cong. (December 3, 1817), 1st sess., p. 20.

    354 354. House Journal, 15th15th Cong., 1st1st sess. (December 8, 1817), p. 30; Annals of Congress, vol. 31, 15th15th Cong., 1st1st sess. (December 8, 1817), p. 409.

    355 3 Stat. 472.

    356 William L. Olbrich Jr., “The State of Missouri,” in Shearer, Uniting States, vol. 2, pp. 670-701.

    Missouri: 24th State

    Missouri Territory created June 4, 1812 (2 Stat. 743) Enabling law enacted March 6, 1820 (3 Stat. 545) Admission law enacted March 2, 1821 (3 Stat. 645) Missouri admitted August 10, 1821 (3 Stat. 797)

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    November 14, 1811: Representative John Rhea of Tennessee reports, from a select committee, a bill on the Louisiana Territory’s government.357

    April 9, 1812: House passes the Louisiana Territory bill without a recorded vote.358

    May 19, 1812: Senate passes an amended version of the Louisiana Territory bill without a recorded vote.359

    May 21, 1812: House amends and passes the Senate-amended version of the Louisiana Territory bill without a recorded vote.360 Senate then approves the House-amended version without a recorded vote.361

    June 4, 1812: President James Madison signs the act reorganizing the government of Louisiana Territory and giving it a new name: Missouri Territory.362

    February 13, 1819: Representative James Tallmadge of New York proposes gradual emancipation in Missouri as a condition for statehood, setting off a sectional controversy over slavery. The eventual resolution, known as the Missouri Compromise, includes the admission of Maine as a free state, the admission of Missouri as a slave state, and the prohibition of slavery in the remainder of the Louisiana Purchase north of Missouri’s southern boundary (36° 30’ north latitude).363

    March 1, 1820: House passes a bill, by a vote of 91 to 82, enabling Missouri to prepare a state constitution and government.364

    March 2, 1820: Senate amends and passes the Missouri enabling bill without a recorded vote on final passage.365 House agrees to the Senate’s amendments by votes of 90-87 and 134-42 after the question was divided.366

    March 6, 1820: President James Monroe signs the act enabling Missouri residents to write a constitution and form a state government.367

    357 House Journal, 12th Cong., 1st 355.

    3 Stat. 472.

    356.

    William L. Olbrich Jr., "The State of Missouri," in Shearer, Uniting States, vol. 2, pp. 670-701.

    357. House Journal, 12th Cong., 1st sess. (November 14, 1811), p. 23; Annals of Congress, vol. 23, 12th12th Cong., 1st1st sess. (November 14, 1811), p. 348.

    358 358. House Journal, 12th12th Cong., 1st1st sess. (April 9, 1812), p. 284; Annals of Congress, vol. 24, 12th12th Cong., 1st1st sess. (April 9, 1812), p. 1279.

    359 359. Senate Journal, 12th12th Cong., 1st1st sess. (May 19, 1812), p. 133; Annals of Congress, vol. 23, 12th12th Cong., 1st1st sess. (May 19, 1812), pp. 242-243.

    360 360. House Journal, 12th12th Cong., 1st1st sess. (May 21, 1812), p. 347; Annals of Congress, vol. 24, 12th12th Cong., 1st1st sess. (May 21, 1812), p. 1434.

    361 361. Senate Journal, 12th12th Cong., 1st1st sess. (May 21, 1812), p. 134; Annals of Congress, vol. 23, 12th12th Cong., 1st1st sess. (May 21, 1812), p. 244.

    362 2 Stat. 743.

    363 362.

    2 Stat. 743.

    363. Daniel Walker Howe, What Hath God Wrought: The Transformation of America, 1815-1848 (Oxford, UK: Oxford University Press, 2007), pp. 147-155.

    364 364. House Journal, 16th16th Cong., 1st1st sess. (March 1, 1820), pp. 269-270; Annals of Congress, vol. 36, 16th16th Cong., 1st1st sess. (March 1, 1820), pp. 1572-1573.

    365 365. Senate Journal, 16th16th Cong., 1st1st sess. (March 2, 1820), pp. 200-203; Annals of Congress, vol. 35, 16th16th Cong. (March 2, 1820), 1st sess., pp. 467-469.

    366 366. House Journal, 16th16th Cong., 1st1st sess. (March 2, 1820), pp. 274-279; Annals of Congress, vol. 36, 16th16th Cong., 1st1st sess. (March 2, 1820), pp. 1576-1588.

    367 3 Stat. 545.

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    June 12, 1820: Delegates gather in St. Louis to draft a state constitution.368

    July 17, 1820: Delegates at the St. Louis convention vote 39-1 to approve a new state constitution, which they sign two days later.369

    February 26, 1821: Representative Henry Clay of Kentucky reports, from a joint committee appointed to consider Missouri statehood, a resolution granting conditional admission to Missouri. The House approves the resolution by a vote of 87 to 81.370

    February 28, 1821: Senate approves the resolution for conditional admission of Missouri by a 28-14 vote.371

    March 2, 1821: President Monroe signs the resolution granting statehood to Missouri, on the condition that its legislature agree the state constitution “shall never be construed to authorize the passage of any law, and that no law shall be passed in conformity thereto, by which any citizen … shall be excluded from the enjoyment of any of the privileges and immunities to which such citizen is entitled under the constitution of the United States.”372

    August 10, 1821: President Monroe issues a proclamation admitting Missouri as the 24th state.373

    Montana

    June 15, 1846: United States acquires part of the land that will become Montana from Great Britain in the Oregon Treaty, adding to land acquired from France in 1803 via the Louisiana Purchase.374

    December 14, 1863: Representative James M. Ashley of Ohio introduces 38 H.R. 15, a bill to create a new Territory of Montana.375

    March 17, 1864: House amends and passes 38 H.R. 15 without a recorded vote.376

    368 367.

    3 Stat. 545.

    368. Journal of the Missouri State Convention (St. Louis, MO: I.N. Henry and Co., 1820), p. 3.

    369 369. Journal of the Missouri State Convention, pp. 46-48.

    370 370. House Journal, 16th16th Cong., 2nd2nd sess. (February 26, 1821), pp. 270-271 and 274-278; Annals of Congress, vol. 37, 16th Cong., 2nd sess. (February 26, 1821), pp. 1228 and 1236-1240.

    371 371. Senate Journal, 16th16th Cong., 2nd2nd sess. (February 28, 1821), pp. 239-240; Annals of Congress, vol. 37, 16th16th Cong., 2nd2nd sess. (February 28, 1821), p. 390.

    372 3 Stat. 645.

    373 3 Stat. 797.

    374 Harry W. Fritz, “The State of Montana,” 372.

    3 Stat. 645.

    373.

    3 Stat. 797.

    374. Harry W. Fritz, "The State of Montana," in Shearer, Uniting States, vol. 2, pp. 702-724.

    375 375. House Journal, 38th38th Cong., 1st1st sess. (December 14, 1863), p. 44; Congressional Globe, 38th38th Cong., 1st1st sess. (December 14, 1863), p. 20.

    376 376. House Journal, 38th38th Cong., 1st1st sess. (March 17, 1864), p. 400; Congressional Globe, 38th38th Cong., 1st1st sess. (March 17, 1864), pp. 1168-1169.

    Montana: 41st State

    Montana Territory created May 26, 1864 (13 Stat. 85) Enabling and statehood law enacted February 22, 1889 (25 Stat. 676) Montana admitted November 8, 1889 (26 Stat. 1551)

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    March 31, 1864: Senate amends 38 H.R. 15 and votes 29-8 to pass it.377

    May 19, 1864: Senate votes 26-13 to approve a compromise version of 38 H.R. 15.378

    May 20, 1864: House votes 102-26 to approve a compromise version of 38 H.R. 15.379

    May 26, 1864: President Abraham Lincoln signs 38 H.R. 15 into law, creating the Montana Territory.380

    December 12, 1887: Senator Charles F. Manderson of Nebraska introduces 50 S. 185, a bill to admit southern Dakota Territory as the State of Dakota and create a new Territory of Lincoln in northern Dakota Territory.381

    April 19, 1888: Senate votes 26-23 to pass an amended version of 50 S. 185 that would create a State of South Dakota and a new Territory of North Dakota.382

    January 18, 1889: Houses votes 145-98 to pass an amended version of 50 S. 185. This new version would clear the way to admit Montana, New Mexico, Washington, and—depending on the results of a referendum on division—either a combined state of Dakota or separate states of North Dakota and South Dakota.383

    February 20, 1889: House and Senate agree to a compromise version of 50 S. 185 that allows the creation and admission of four new states: Montana, North Dakota, South Dakota, and Washington. Both chambers pass the bill without recorded votes.384

    February 22, 1889: President Grover Cleveland signs 50 S. 185, enabling statehood for Montana, North Dakota, South Dakota, and Washington.385

    July 4, 1889: Delegates gather in Helena to write a state constitution for Montana.386

    August 17, 1889: Delegates to the Helena convention vote 61-2 to adopt the new Montana state constitution.387

    377 Senate Journal, 38th Cong., 1st 377. Senate Journal, 38th Cong., 1st sess. (March 31, 1864), p. 290; Congressional Globe, 38th38th Cong., 1st1st sess. (March 31, 1864), pp. 1361-1364.

    378 378. Senate Journal, 38th38th Cong., 1st1st sess. (May 19, 1864), pp. 455-456; Congressional Globe, 38th38th Cong., 1st1st sess. (May 19, 1864), pp. 2347-2351.

    379 379. House Journal, 38th38th Cong., 1st1st sess. (May 20, 1864), pp. 680-681; Congressional Globe, 38th38th Cong., 1st1st sess. (May 20, 1864), pp. 2385-2386.

    380 13 Stat. 85.

    381 Senate Journal, 50th Cong., 1st 380.

    13 Stat. 85.

    381. Senate Journal, 50th Cong., 1st sess. (December 12, 1887), p. 33; Congressional Record, vol. 19, part 1 (December 12, 1887), p. 22.

    382 382. Senate Journal, 50th50th Cong., 1st1st sess. (April 19, 1888), pp. 695-696; Congressional Record, vol. 19, part 4 (April 19, 1888), pp. 3139-3140.

    383 383. House Journal, 50th50th Cong., 2nd2nd sess. (January 18, 1889), pp. 290-298; Congressional Record, vol. 20, part 1 (January 18, 1889), pp. 951-952.

    384 384. House Journal, 50th50th Cong., 2nd2nd sess. (February 20, 1889), pp. 561-570; Senate Journal, 50th50th Cong., 2nd2nd sess. (February 20, 1889), pp. 357-366; Congressional Record, vol. 20, part 3 (February 20, 1889), pp. 2104 and 2116.

    385 25 Stat. 676.

    386 385.

    25 Stat. 676.

    386. Proceedings and Debates of the Constitutional Convention Held in the City of Helena, Montana, July 4th4th, 1889, August 17th, 1889 (Helena, MT: State Publishing Co., 1921), p. 13.

    387 387. Proceedings and Debates of the Constitutional Convention Held in the City of Helena, p. 971.

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    October 1, 1889: Montana voters ratify the new state constitution, 24,676 to 2,274.388

    November 8, 1889: President Benjamin Harrison issues a proclamation admitting Montana as the 41st state.389

    Nebraska

    April 30, 1803: United States acquires the land that will become Nebraska from France in the Louisiana Purchase.390

    December 14, 1853: Senator Augustus Caesar Dodge of Iowa introduces 33 S. 22, a bill to create a new Nebraska Territory.391

    January 31, 1854: Representative William A. Richardson of Illinois reports 33 H.R. 236, a bill creating new territorial governments for Kansas and Nebraska, from the House Committee on Territories.392

    March 3, 1854: Senate votes 37-14 to pass 33 S. 22, which as amended would create two new territories, Kansas and Nebraska.393

    May 22, 1854: House passes an amended version of 33 H.R. 236 on a 113-100 vote, in lieu of voting on the Senate-passed 33 S. 22.394

    May 25, 1854: Senate passes 33 H.R. 236 on a 35-13 vote.395

    May 30, 1854: President Franklin Pierce signs 33 H.R. 236 into law, creating the Kansas and Nebraska territories and repealing the 1820 Missouri Compromise that would have barred slavery there. Instead, the Kansas-Nebraska Act leaves residents of the two territories “perfectly free to form and regulate their domestic institutions in their own way.”396

    388 388. Ellis L. Waldron, Montana Politics Since 1864: An Atlas of Elections (Missoula, MT: Montana State University Press, 1958), p. 54.

    389 26 Stat. 1551.

    390 Mark R. Ellis, “The State of Nebraska,” 389.

    26 Stat. 1551.

    390. Mark R. Ellis, "The State of Nebraska," in Shearer, Uniting States, vol. 2, pp. 725-752.

    391 391. Senate Journal, 33rd33rd Cong., 1st1st sess. (December 14, 1853), p. 44; Congressional Globe, 33rd33rd Cong., 1st1st sess. (December 14, 1853), p. 44.

    392 392. House Journal, 33rd33rd Cong., 1st1st sess. (January 31, 1854), p. 296; Congressional Globe, 33rd33rd Cong., 1st1st sess. (January 31, 1854), pp. 294-297.

    393 393. Senate Journal, 33rd33rd Cong., 1st1st sess. (March 3, 1854), pp. 236-237; Congressional Globe, 33rd33rd Cong., 1st1st sess. (March 3, 1854), pp. 531-532.

    394 394. House Journal, 33rd33rd Cong., 1st1st sess. (May 22, 1854), pp. 923-924; Congressional Globe, 33rd33rd Cong., 1st1st sess. (May 22, 1854), p. 1254.

    395 395. Senate Journal, 33rd33rd Cong., 1st1st sess. (May 25, 1854), pp. 412-413; Congressional Globe, 33rd33rd Cong., 1st1st sess. (May 25, 1854), p. 1321.

    396 396. 10 Stat. 277. Additional documents related to the Kansas-Nebraska Act are available in the Library of Congress research guide "Kansas-Nebraska Act: Primary Documents in American History," at https://guides.loc.gov/kansas- nebraska-act.

    Nebraska: 37th State

    Nebraska Territory created May 30, 1854 (10 Stat. 277) Enabling law enacted April 19, 1864 (13 Stat. 47) Admission law enacted February 9, 1867 (14 Stat. 391) Nebraska admitted March 1, 1867 (14 Stat. 820)

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    December 14, 1863: Representative James M. Ashley of Ohio introduces 38 H.R. 14½, a bill to enable the people of Nebraska to write a constitution and form a state government.397

    March 17, 1864: House passes 38 H.R. 14½ without a recorded vote.398

    April 14, 1864: Senate passes 38 H.R. 14½ without a recorded vote.399

    April 19, 1864: President Abraham Lincoln signs the Nebraska enabling act into law.400

    June 2, 1866: Following an abortive constitutional convention in 1864, Nebraska voters ratify a state constitution written by the territorial legislature, 3,938 to 3,838.401

    December 5, 1866: Senator Benjamin Wade of Ohio introduces 39 S. 456, a bill to admit Nebraska as a state.402

    January 9, 1867: Senate votes 24-15 to pass an amended version of 39 S. 456.403

    January 15, 1867: House votes 103-55 to pass an amended version of 39 S. 456.404

    January 16, 1867: Senate votes 28-14 to accept the House’s version of 39 S. 456.405

    January 30, 1867: President Andrew Johnson vetoes 39 S. 456, the Nebraska statehood act. He objected to its requirement that “there shall be no denial of the elective franchise, or of any other right, to any person, by reason of race or color” in Nebraska.406

    February 8, 1867: Senate overrides President Johnson’s veto of 39 S. 456 by a 31-9 vote.407

    397 House Journal, 38th Cong., 1stnebraska-act. 397. House Journal, 38th Cong., 1st sess. (December 14, 1863), p. 44; Congressional Globe, 38th38th Cong., 1st1st sess. (December 14, 1863), pp. 19-20.

    398 398. House Journal, 38th38th Cong., 1st1st sess. (March 17, 1864), pp. 399-400; Congressional Globe, 38th38th Cong., 1st1st sess. (March 17, 1864), p. 1167.

    399 399. Senate Journal, 38th38th Cong., 1st1st sess. (April 14, 1864), p. 324; Congressional Globe, 38th38th Cong., 1st1st sess. (April 14, 1864), p. 1607.

    400 13 Stat. 47.

    401 400.

    13 Stat. 47.

    401. Addison E. Sheldon (ed.), Nebraska Constitutions of 1866, 1871 & 1875 and Proposed Amendments Submitted to the People September 21, 1920 (Lincoln, NE: Nebraska Legislative Reference Bureau and Nebraska State Historical Society, 1920), p. 2.

    402 402. Senate Journal, 39th39th Cong., 2nd2nd sess. (December 5, 1866), p. 19; Congressional Globe, 39th39th Cong., 2nd2nd sess. (December 5, 1866), p. 13.

    403 403. Senate Journal, 39th39th Cong., 2nd2nd sess. (January 9, 1867), pp. 81-83; Congressional Globe, 39th39th Cong., 2nd2nd sess. (January 9, 1867), p. 360.

    404 404. House Journal, 39th39th Cong., 2nd2nd sess. (January 15, 1867), pp. 172-174; Congressional Globe, 39th39th Cong., 2nd2nd sess. (January 15, 1867), p. 481.

    405 405. Senate Journal, 39th39th Cong., 2nd2nd sess. (January 16, 1867), pp. 104-106; Congressional Globe, 39th39th Cong., 2nd2nd sess. (January 16, 1867), pp. 484-487.

    406 Poore, Veto Messages, p. 337-340.

    407 Senate Journal, 39th Cong., 2nd 406.

    Poore, Veto Messages, p. 337-340.

    407. Senate Journal, 39th Cong., 2nd sess. (February 8, 1867), p. 228; Congressional Globe, 39th39th Cong., 2nd2nd sess. (February 8, 1867), p. 1096.

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    February 9, 1867: House overrides President Johnson’s veto of 39 S. 456 by a 120-44 vote, enacting it into law.408

    March 1, 1867: President Johnson issues a proclamation admitting Nebraska as the 37th state.409

    Nevada

    February 2, 1848: The United States acquires the land that will become Nevada from Mexico in the Treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo.410

    February 14, 1861: Senator James S. Green of Missouri reports 36 S. 563, a bill creating the Nevada Territory, from the Senate Committee on Territories.411

    February 26, 1861: Senate amends 36 S. 563 and passes it without a recorded vote.412

    March 1, 1861: House votes to pass 36 S. 563.413

    March 2, 1861: President James Buchanan signs 36 S. 563, creating the Nevada Territory.414

    February 8, 1864: Senator James R. Doolittle of Wisconsin introduces 38 S. 96, a bill that would enable Nevada residents to write a constitution and form a state government, followed by its admission as a state.415

    February 24, 1864: Senate amends and passes 38 S. 96 without a recorded vote.416

    March 17, 1864: House passes 38 S. 96 without a recorded vote.417

    March 21, 1864: President Abraham Lincoln signs 38 S. 96 into law.418

    408 House Journal, 39th Cong., 2nd 408. House Journal, 39th Cong., 2nd sess. (February 9, 1867), p. 354; Congressional Globe, 39th39th Cong., 2nd2nd sess. (February 9, 1867), pp. 1120-1122; 14 Stat. 391.

    409 14 Stat. 820.

    410 409.

    14 Stat. 820.

    410. Jeffrey M. Kintop, "The State of Nevada," in Shearer, Uniting States, vol. 2, pp. 753-788.

    411 411. Senate Journal, 36th36th Cong., 2nd2nd sess. (February 14, 1861), p. 228; Congressional Globe, 36th36th Cong., 2nd2nd sess. (February 14, 1861), p. 897.

    412 412. Senate Journal, 36th36th Cong., 2nd2nd sess. (February 26, 1861), pp. 314-316; Congressional Globe, 36th36th Cong., 2nd2nd sess. (February 26, 1861), pp. 1206-1207.

    413 413. The House Journal reports the vote as 92-52, while the Congressional Globe reports the vote as 91-52. See House Journal, 36th Cong., 2nd sess. (March 1, 1861), pp. 450-452, and Congressional Globe, 36th Cong., 2nd sess. (March 1, 1861), p. 1334.

    414 12 Stat. 209.

    415 Senate Journal, 38th Cong., 1st 414.

    12 Stat. 209.

    415. Senate Journal, 38th Cong., 1st sess. (February 8, 1864), p. 133; Congressional Globe, 38th38th Cong., 1st1st sess. (February 8, 1864), p. 521.

    416 416. Senate Journal, 38th38th Cong., 1st1st sess. (February 24, 1864), p. 184; Congressional Globe, 38th38th Cong., 1st1st sess. (February 24, 1864), pp. 787-788.

    417 417. House Journal, 38th38th Cong., 1st1st sess. (March 17, 1864), p. 398; Congressional Globe, 38th38th Cong., 1st1st sess. (March 17, 1864), p. 1166.

    418 13 Stat. 30.

    Nevada: 36th State

    Nevada Territory created March 2, 1861 (12 Stat. 209) Enabling and admission law enacted March 21, 1864 (13 Stat. 30) Nevada admitted October 31, 1864 (13 Stat. 749)

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    July 4, 1864: Delegates gather in Carson City to write a state constitution for Nevada.419

    July 27, 1864: Delegates at the Carson City convention vote 19-2 to approve the state constitution.420

    September 7, 1864: Nevada voters ratify the state constitution, 10,375-1,284.421

    October 31, 1864: President Lincoln issues a proclamation admitting Nevada as the 36th state.422

    New Hampshire

    September 18, 1679: King Charles II appoints a government for the “Province of New-Hampshire.”423

    July 4, 1776: New Hampshire joins 12 other colonies in declaring independence from Great Britain.424

    July 9, 1778: New Hampshire signs the Articles of Confederation.425

    May 14-September 17, 1787: Two of New Hampshire’s four delegates participate in the Constitutional Convention.426

    June 21, 1788: New Hampshire’s convention ratifies the Constitution by a 57-47 vote, achieving Article VII’s nine-state threshold for implementation.427

    New Jersey

    April 17, 1702: Queen Anne establishes British royal control over New Jersey.428

    July 4, 1776: New Jersey joins 12 other colonies in declaring independence from Great Britain.429

    419 418.

    13 Stat. 30.

    419. Andrew J. Marsh, Official Report of the Debates and Proceedings in the Constitutional Convention of the State of Nevada, Assembled at Carson City, July 4th 1864, to Form a Constitution and State Government (San Francisco: Frank Eastman, 1866), p. 1.

    420 Marsh, Official Report, p. 827.

    421 420.

    Marsh, Official Report, p. 827.

    421. Russell R. Elliott with the assistance of William D. Rowley, History of Nevada, 2nd ed. (Lincoln, NE: 2nd ed. (University of Nebraska Press, 1987), p. 88.

    422 13 Stat. 749.

    423 “ 422.

    13 Stat. 749.

    423. "The Commission Constituting a President and Council for the Province of New-Hampshire, in New England," in Provincial Papers. Documents and Records Relating to the Province of New-Hampshire, From the Earliest Period of Its Settlement: 1623-1686, vol. 1, ed. Nathaniel Bouton (Concord, NH: George E. Jenks, 1867), pp. 373-382.

    424 424. Journals of the Continental Congress, vol. 5 (July 4, 1776), pp. 510-516.

    425 425. Journals of the Continental Congress, vol. 11 (July 9, 1778), p. 677.

    426 426. Farrand, Records, vol. 3, p. 557.

    427 427. Elliot, Debates, vol. 1, pp. 325-327; Documentary History of the Ratification of the Constitution, vol. 28, pp. 375- 376.

    428 “The Queen’376. 428. "The Queen's Acceptance of the Surrender of Government" and "Surrender from the Proprietors of East and West New Jersey, of Their Pretended Right of Government to Her Majesty," in Thorpe, Federal and State Constitutions, vol. 5, pp. 2584-2590.

    429 429. Journals of the Continental Congress, vol. 5 (July 4, 1776), pp. 510-516.

    New Hampshire: Ninth State

    New Hampshire ratified Constitution June 21, 1788

    New Jersey: Third State

    New Jersey ratified Constitution December 18, 1787

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    November 26, 1778: New Jersey signs the Articles of Confederation.430

    May 14-September 17, 1787: Five of New Jersey’s seven delegates participate in the Constitutional Convention.431

    December 18, 1787: New Jersey’s convention votes 38-0 to ratify the Constitution, making it the third state to join the new federal government.432

    New Mexico

    December 29, 1845: The United States acquires part of the land that will become New Mexico through the annexation of Texas, with additional territory to come in the 1848 Treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo and the 1854 Gadsden Purchase.433

    January 29, 1850: Senator Henry Clay of Kentucky proposes what becomes the Compromise of 1850, a legislative package that includes organizing a territorial government for New Mexico and settling the Texas-New Mexico border.434

    August 5, 1850: Senator James A. Pearce of Maryland introduces 31 S. 307, a bill to settle the northern and western borders of Texas.435

    August 9, 1850: Senate amends and passes 31 S. 307 by a vote of 30 to 20.436

    September 6, 1850: House votes 108-97 to pass an amended version of 31 S. 307, adding language to create the New Mexico Territory.437

    September 9, 1850: Senate endorses the House’s amendment to 31 S. 307 on a 31-10 vote.438 President Millard Fillmore signs 31 S. 307 into law, creating the New Mexico Territory.439

    430 430. Journals of the Continental Congress, vol. 12 (November 26, 1778), p. 1164.

    431 431. Farrand, Records, vol. 3, p. 557.

    432 432. Elliot, Debates, vol. 1, pp. 320-321; Documentary History of the Ratification of the Constitution, vol. 3, pp. 177- 191.

    433191. 433. Agnesa Reeve, "The State of New Mexico," in Shearer, Uniting States, vol. 2, pp. 842-869.

    434 434. McPherson, Battle Cry of Freedom, pp. 70-75.

    435 435. Senate Journal, 31st31st Cong., 1st1st sess. (August 5, 1850), p. 522; Congressional Globe, 31st31st Cong., 1st1st sess. (August 5, 1850), pp. 1520-1521.

    436 436. Senate Journal, 31st31st Cong., 1st1st sess. (August 9, 1850), pp. 538-543; Congressional Globe, 31st31st Cong., 1st1st sess. (August 9, 1850), pp. 1554-1556.

    437 437. House Journal, 31st31st Cong., 1st1st sess. (September 6, 1850), pp. 1404-1413; Congressional Globe, 31st31st Cong., 1st1st sess. (September 6, 1850), pp. 1762-1765.

    438 438. Senate Journal, 31st31st Cong., 1st1st sess. (September 9, 1850), pp. 606-613; Congressional Globe, 31st31st Cong., 1st1st sess. (September 9, 1850), p. 1784.

    439 9 Stat. 446.

    New Mexico: 47th State

    New Mexico Territory created September 9, 1850 (9 Stat. 446) Enabling law enacted June 20, 1910 (36 Stat. 557) Admission law enacted August 21, 1911 (37 Stat. 39) New Mexico admitted January 6, 1912 (37 Stat. 1723)

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    January 14, 1910: Representative Edward L. Hamilton of Michigan introduces 61 H.R. 18166, which would enable Arizona and New Mexico to write constitutions in preparation for statehood.440

    January 17, 1910: House suspends the rules and passes 61 H.R. 18166 without a recorded vote.441

    June 16, 1910: Senate amends 61 H.R. 18166, then passes it on a 65-0 vote.442

    June 18, 1910: House passes Senate-amended version of 61 H.R. 18166 without a recorded vote.443

    June 20, 1910: President William Howard Taft signs 61 H.R. 18166 into law, enabling Arizona and New Mexico to form constitutions and state governments.444

    October 3, 1910: Delegates gather in Santa Fe to write a state constitution for New Mexico.445

    November 21, 1910: Delegates to the Santa Fe convention vote 79-18 to adopt a state constitution.446

    January 21, 1911: New Mexico voters ratify the state constitution by a vote of 31,742 to 13,399.447

    August 15, 1911: President Taft vetoes 62 H.J.Res. 14, a joint resolution to admit Arizona and New Mexico as states, objecting to the provision of Arizona’s constitution that allows voters to recall judges.448

    August 17, 1911: Senator William A. Smith of Michigan reports 62 S.J.Res. 57 from the Senate Committee on Territories. This joint resolution would admit Arizona and New Mexico as states but would first require Arizona to remove judicial recall from its state constitution.449

    August 18, 1911: Senate debates and passes 62 S.J.Res. 57 on a 53-9 vote.450

    440 House Journal, 61st Cong., 2nd 439.

    9 Stat. 446.

    440. House Journal, 61st Cong., 2nd sess. (January 14, 1910), p. 168; Congressional Record, vol. 45, part 1 (January 14, 1910), p. 654.

    441 441. House Journal, 61st61st Cong., 2nd2nd sess. (January 17, 1910), pp. 175-176; Congressional Record, vol. 45, part 1 (January 17, 1910), pp. 702-714.

    442 442. Senate Journal, 61st61st Cong., 2nd2nd sess. (June 16, 1910), pp. 452-453; Congressional Record, vol. 45, part 8 (June 16, 1910), pp. 8225-8237.

    443 443. House Journal, 61st61st Cong., 2nd2nd sess. (June 18, 1910), p. 803; Congressional Record, vol. 45, part 8 (June 18, 1910), pp. 8485-8487.

    444 36 Stat. 557.

    445 444.

    36 Stat. 557.

    445. Proceedings of the Constitutional Convention of the Proposed State of New Mexico Held at Santa Fe, New Mexico (Albuquerque, NM: Press of the Morning Journal, 1910), p. 3.

    446 446. Proceedings of the Constitutional Convention of the Proposed State of New Mexico, p. 252.

    447 447. William J. Mills, Report of the Governor of New Mexico to the Secretary of the Interior for the Fiscal Year Ended June 30, 1911 (Washington: GPO, 1911), p. 9.

    448 448. Taft, Special Message of the President of the United States Returning Without Approval House Joint Resolution No. 14, H. Doc. 62-106 (Washington: GPO, 1911).

    449 449. Senate Journal, 62nd62nd Cong., 1st1st sess. (August 17, 1911), p. 178; Congressional Record, vol. 47, part 4 (August 17, 1911), p. 4061.

    450 450. Senate Journal, 62nd62nd Cong., 1st1st sess. (August 18, 1911), p. 185; Congressional Record, vol. 47, part 4 (August 18, 1911), pp. 4118-4141.

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    August 19, 1911: House debates and passes 62 S.J.Res. 57 without a recorded vote.451

    August 21, 1911: President Taft signs 62 S.J.Res. 57 into law, admitting New Mexico and Arizona as states once certain conditions have been met, including a vote on a change to the New Mexico constitution’s amendment process.452

    November 7, 1911: New Mexico voters approve the congressionally-proposed constitutional amendment by a vote of 34,897 to 22,831.453

    January 6, 1912: President Taft issues a proclamation formally admitting New Mexico as the 47th state.454

    New York

    September 8, 1664: English forces capture New Amsterdam, renaming it New York, during the Second Anglo- Dutch War. The Treaty of Breda in 1667 confirms English control of the New Netherland colony.455

    July 15, 1776: New York, after earlier abstaining, informs the Continental Congress that it joins its 12 fellow colonies in declaring independence from Great Britian.456

    July 9, 1778: New York signs the Articles of Confederation.457

    May 14-September 17, 1787: New York’s three delegates participate in the Constitutional Convention.458

    July 26, 1788: New York’s convention ratifies the Constitution by a 30-27 vote, making it the 11th state to join the new federal government.459

    North Carolina

    March 24, 1663: King Charles II grants a charter to eight men, later known as the “Lords Proprietors,”

    451 House Journal, 62nd Cong., 1st 451. House Journal, 62nd Cong., 1st sess. (August 19, 1911), p. 390; Congressional Record, vol. 47, part 5 (August 19, 1911), pp. 4217-4242.

    452 37 Stat. 39.

    453 452.

    37 Stat. 39.

    453. Annotations for Article XIX (Amendments) in Constitution of the State of New Mexico, New Mexico Compilation Commission, at https://nmonesource.com/nmos/c/en/item/5916/index.do#!fragment/undefined/BQCwhgziBcwMYgK4DsDWsBGB7L qC2YATqgJIAm0YAGiVQJQA0yWALgKYQCKibhAntADkghhDZEE3XgOGjxhBAGUshFgCEBAJQCiAGW0A1 AIIA5AMLaGLMBmgsscOnSA.

    454 37 Stat. 1723.

    455 Charles T. Gehring, “New Netherland, Surrender of (1664),”BQCwhgziBcwMYgK4DsDWsBGB7LqC2YATqgJIAm0YAGiVQJQA0yWALgKYQCKibhAntADkghhDZEE3XgOGjxhBAGUshFgCEBAJQCiAGW0A1AIIA5AMLaGLMBmgsscOnSA. 454.

    37 Stat. 1723.

    455. Charles T. Gehring, "New Netherland, Surrender of (1664)," in Colonial Wars of North America, 1512-1763: An Encyclopedia, ed. Alan Gallay (New York and London: Garland Publishing, 1996), pp. 489-491.

    456 456. Journals of the Continental Congress, vol. 5 (July 4 and July 15, 1776), pp. 516 and 560.

    457 457. Journals of the Continental Congress, vol. 11 (July 9, 1778), p. 677.

    458 458. Farrand, Records, vol. 3, p. 557.

    459 459. Elliot, Debates, vol. 1, pp. 327-331; Documentary History of the Ratification of the Constitution, vol. 23, pp. 2321- 2326.

    New Y ork: 11th State

    New York ratified Constitution July 26, 1788

    North Carolina: 12th State

    North Carolina ratified Constitution November 21, 1789

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    to create the Carolina colony.460 In the early 18th century, the colony splits into North and South Carolina.461

    July 25, 1729: Seven of the Lords Proprietors sell North Carolina to King George II.462

    July 4, 1776: North Carolina joins 12 other colonies in declaring independence from Great Britain.463

    July 21, 1778: North Carolina signs and ratifies the Articles of Confederation.464

    May 14-September 17, 1787: Five delegates from North Carolina participate in the Constitutional Convention.465

    August 2, 1788: North Carolina’s ratification convention votes 184-83 to demand amendments to the Constitution, including a declaration of rights.466

    November 21, 1789: At a second convention, North Carolina delegates vote 194- 77 to ratify the Constitution and join the new government as the 12th state.467

    North Dakota

    April 30, 1803: The United States acquires part of the land that will become North Dakota from France in the Louisiana Purchase, with additional territory acquired in 1818 from Great Britain.468

    February 14, 1861: Senator James S. Green of Missouri reports 36 S. 562, a bill to create the Territory of Dakota, from the Senate Committee on Territories.469

    February 26, 1861: Senate passes an amended version of 36 S. 562 without a recorded vote.470

    March 1, 1861: House passes 36 S. 562 without a recorded vote.471

    460 “Charter of Carolina,” in Thorpe, Federal and State Constitutions, vol. 5, pp. 2743-2753.

    461 Chad Morgan, “The State of North Carolina,” 460.

    "Charter of Carolina," in Thorpe, Federal and State Constitutions, vol. 5, pp. 2743-2753.

    461. Chad Morgan, "The State of North Carolina," in Shearer, Uniting States, vol. 2, pp. 898-920.

    462 “ 462. "Grant From King George the Second, to John Lord Carteret, Afterwards Earl Granville," in The Revised Statutes of the State of North Carolina, vol. 2, eds. Frederick Nash, James Iredell, and William H. Battle (Raleigh, NC: Turner and Hughes, 1837), pp. 15-30.

    463 463. Journals of the Continental Congress, vol. 5 (July 4, 1776), pp. 510-516.

    464 464. Journals of the Continental Congress, vol. 11 (July 21, 1778), p. 709.

    465 465. Farrand, Records, vol. 3, p. 559.

    466 466. Elliot, Debates, vol. 1, pp. 331-332; Documentary History of the Ratification of the Constitution, vol. 30, pp. 463- 471.

    467471. 467. Elliot, Debates, vol. 1, p. 333; Documentary History of the Ratification of the Constitution, vol. 31, pp. 762-773.

    468 468. David B. Danbom, "The State of North Dakota," in Shearer, Uniting States, vol. 2, pp. 921-940.

    469 469. Senate Journal, 36th36th Cong., 2nd2nd sess. (February 14, 1861), p. 228; Congressional Globe, 36th36th Cong., 2nd2nd sess. (February 14, 1861), p. 897.

    470 470. Senate Journal, 36th36th Cong., 2nd2nd sess. (February 26, 1861), pp. 316-317; Congressional Globe, 36th36th Cong., 2nd2nd sess. (February 26, 1861), pp. 1207-1208.

    471 471. House Journal, 36th36th Cong., 2nd2nd sess. (March 1, 1861), p. 452; Congressional Globe, 36th36th Cong., 2nd2nd sess. (March 1, 1861), pp. 1334-1335.

    North Dakota: 39th State

    Dakota Territory created March 2, 1861 (12 Stat. 239) Enabling and statehood law enacted February 22, 1889 (25 Stat. 676) North Dakota admitted November 2, 1889 (26 Stat. 1548)

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    March 2, 1861: President James Buchanan signs 36 S. 562, creating the Territory of Dakota.472

    November 8, 1887: Dakota Territory voters endorse splitting the territory into northern and southern entities, with 37,784 voting in favor of division and 32,913 voting against division.473

    December 12, 1887: Senator Charles F. Manderson of Nebraska introduces 50 S. 185, a bill to admit the southern Dakota Territory as the State of Dakota and create a new Territory of Lincoln in northern Dakota Territory.474

    April 19, 1888: Senate votes 26-23 to pass an amended version of 50 S. 185 that would create a State of South Dakota and a new Territory of North Dakota.475

    January 18, 1889: House votes 145-98 to pass an amended version of 50 S. 185. This new version would clear the way to admit Montana, New Mexico, Washington, and—depending on the results of a referendum on division—either a combined state of Dakota or separate states of North Dakota and South Dakota.476

    February 20, 1889: House and Senate agree to a compromise version of 50 S. 185 that allows the creation and admission of four new states: Montana, North Dakota, South Dakota, and Washington. Both chambers pass the bill without recorded votes.477

    February 22, 1889: President Grover Cleveland signs 50 S. 185, enabling statehood for Montana, North Dakota, South Dakota, and Washington.478

    July 4, 1889: Delegates gather in Bismarck to write a state constitution for North Dakota.479

    August 17, 1889: Delegates to the Bismarck convention vote 40-23 to adopt a state constitution for North Dakota.480

    October 1, 1889: North Dakota voters ratify the state constitution, 27,441 to 8,107.481

    472 12 Stat. 239.

    473 Louis K. Church, “ 472.

    12 Stat. 239.

    473. Louis K. Church, "A Proclamation. By the Governor of the Territory of Dakota" (January 12, 1888) in Bismarck Weekly Tribune, January 20, 1888, p. 6.

    474 474. Senate Journal, 50th50th Cong., 1st1st sess. (December 12, 1887), p. 33; Congressional Record, vol. 19, part 1 (December 12, 1887), p. 22.

    475 475. Senate Journal, 50th50th Cong., 1st1st sess. (April 19, 1888), pp. 695-696; Congressional Record, vol. 19, part 4 (April 19, 1888), pp. 3139-3140.

    476 476. House Journal, 50th50th Cong., 2nd2nd sess. (January 18, 1889), pp. 290-298; Congressional Record, vol. 20, part 1 (January 18, 1889), pp. 951-952.

    477 477. House Journal, 50th50th Cong., 2nd2nd sess. (February 20, 1889), pp. 561-570; Senate Journal, 50th50th Cong., 2nd2nd sess. (February 20, 1889), pp. 357-366; Congressional Record, vol. 20, part 3 (February 20, 1889), pp. 2104 and 2116.

    478 25 Stat. 676.

    479 478.

    25 Stat. 676.

    479. Journal of the Constitutional Convention for North Dakota, Held at Bismarck, Thursday, July 4 to Aug. 17, 1889, Together With the Enabling Act of Congress and the Proceedings of the Joint Commission Appointed for the Equitable Division of Territorial Property (Bismarck, ND: Tribune, 1889), p. 1.

    480 480. Journal of the Constitutional Convention for North Dakota, pp. 399-400.

    481 481. Laws Passed at the First Session of the Legislative Assembly of the State of North Dakota (Bismarck, ND: Tribune, 1890), p. 15.

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    November 2, 1889: President Benjamin Harrison issues a proclamation admitting North Dakota.482

    Ohio

    September 3, 1783: The United States acquires the land that will become Ohio from Great Britain in the Treaty of Paris.483

    July 13, 1787: Congress, operating under the Articles of Confederation, passes the Northwest Ordinance, establishing the Territory of the United States North West of the River Ohio (often shortened to “the Northwest Territory”).484

    July 21, 1789: With the Constitution in effect, the House passes a bill, without a recorded vote, to keep the Northwest Ordinance of 1787 in effect.485

    August 4, 1789: The Senate amends and passes the Northwest Ordinance bill without a recorded vote.486

    August 5, 1789: House agrees to the Senate’s amendments on the Northwest Ordinance bill without a recorded vote.487

    August 7, 1789: President George Washington signs the act to keep the Northwest Ordinance of 1787 in effect.488

    April 2, 1802: Representative William B. Giles of Virginia introduces a bill enabling residents in the eastern part of the Northwest Territory to write a constitution and form a state government.489

    April 9, 1802: House passes the Northwest Territory enabling bill on a 47-29 vote.490

    April 28, 1802: Senate passes an amended version of the Northwest Territory enabling bill on a 16-6 vote.491

    482 26 Stat. 1548.

    483 482.

    26 Stat. 1548.

    483. Michael Mangus and Susan Mangus, "The State of Ohio," in Shearer, Uniting States, vol. 2, pp. 941-966.

    484 484. Journals of the Continental Congress, vol. 32 (July 13, 1787), pp. 334-343. For more information, see Peter S. Onuf, Statehood and Union: A History of the Northwest Ordinance (Bloomington, IN: Indiana University Press, 1987).

    485 485. House Journal, 1st1st Cong., 1st1st sess. (July 21, 1789), p. 63; Annals of Congress, vol. 1, 1st1st Cong., 1st1st sess. (July 21, 1789), p. 685.

    486 486. Senate Journal, 1st1st Cong., 1st1st sess. (August 4, 1789), p. 52; Annals of Congress, vol. 1, 1st1st Cong., 1st1st sess. (August 4, 1789), p. 57.

    487 487. House Journal, 1st1st Cong., 1st1st sess. (August 5, 1789), pp. 71-72; Annals of Congress, vol. 1, 1st1st Cong., 1st1st sess. (August 5, 1789), p. 702.

    488 1 Stat. 50.

    489 House Journal, 7th Cong., 1st 488.

    1 Stat. 50.

    489. House Journal, 7th Cong., 1st sess. (April 2, 1802), p. 174; Annals of Congress, vol. 11, 7th7th Cong., 1st1st sess. (April 2, 1802), p. 1128.

    490 490. House Journal, 7th7th Cong., 1st1st sess. (April 9, 1802), pp. 188-189; Annals of Congress, vol. 11, 7th7th Cong., 1st1st sess. (April 9, 1802), pp. 1161-1162.

    491 491. Senate Journal, 7th7th Cong., 1st1st sess. (April 28, 1802), pp. 225-226; Annals of Congress, vol. 11, 7th7th Cong., 1st1st sess. (April 28, 1802), pp. 296-297.

    Ohio: 17th State

    Northwest Territory created July 13, 1787 (1 Stat. 50) Enabling law enacted April 30, 1802 (2 Stat. 173) Ohio admitted March 1, 1803 (67 Stat. 407)

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    April 29, 1802: House passes the Senate-amended version of the Northwest Territory enabling bill without a recorded vote.492

    April 30, 1802: President Thomas Jefferson signs the act, enabling residents in the eastern part of the Northwest Territory to write a constitution and form a state government.493

    November 1, 1802: Delegates gather in Chillicothe to write a state constitution.494

    November 29, 1802: Delegates at the Chillicothe convention approve a state constitution for Ohio.495

    February 19, 1803: President Jefferson signs an act to enforce federal law in the new state of Ohio. However, it does not explicitly enact Ohio’s admission as a state.496

    March 1, 1803: Ohio marks its admission as the 17th state.497 This statehood date is retroactively established 150 years later by P.L. 83-204.498

    January 13, 1953: Representative George H. Bender of Ohio introduces 83 H.J.Res 121, resolving that “the State of Ohio, shall be one, and is hereby declared to be one, of the United States of America, and is admitted into the Union on an equal footing with the original States, in all respects whatever”— with an effective date of March 1, 1803.499

    May 19, 1953: House adopts 83 H.J.Res. 121 without a recorded vote.500

    August 1, 1953: Senate adopts 83 H.J.Res. 121 without a recorded vote.501

    August 7, 1953: President Dwight Eisenhower signs 83 H.J.Res. 121 into law.502

    492 House Journal, 7th Cong., 1st 492. House Journal, 7th Cong., 1st sess. (April 29, 1802), p. 226; Annals of Congress, vol. 11, 7th7th Cong., 1st1st sess. (April 29, 1802), p. 1252.

    493 2 Stat. 173.

    494 493.

    2 Stat. 173.

    494. Journal of the Convention of the Territory of the United States North-west of the Ohio, Begun and Held at Chillicothe, on Monday the First Day of November, A.D. One Thousand Eight Hundred and Two, and of the Independence of the United States the Twenty-Seventh (Chillicothe, OH: N. Willis, 1802), p. 3.

    495 495. Journal of the Convention of the Territory of the United States North-west of the Ohio, p. 45.

    496 496. 2 Stat. 201. For discussion, see Allan Walker Vestal, "Were the Tax Protesters Right About Ohio Statehood?," University of Pittsburgh Law Review, vol. 83, no. 4 (Summer 2022), pp. 731-778.

    497 “ 497. "The date of March 1, 1803 was when the Ohio legislature met for the first time," according to National Archives and Records Administration (NARA), Center for Legislative Archives, 200th Anniversary of Ohio Statehood, at https://www.archives.gov/legislative/features/ohio-statehood.

    498 67 Stat. 407.

    499 House Journal, 83rd Cong., 1st. 498.

    67 Stat. 407.

    499. House Journal, 83rd Cong., 1st sess. (January 13, 1953), p. 102; Congressional Record, vol. 99, part 1 (January 13, 1953), p. 380. The intention was "to end confusion as to the exact date on which Ohio entered the Union," according to U.S. Congress, House Committee on Interior and Insular Affairs, Admitting the State of Ohio into the Union, report to accompany H.J.Res. 121, 83rd Cong., 1st sess., H.Rept. 83-343, May 5, 1953, p. 1.

    500 500. House Journal, 83rd83rd Cong., 1st1st sess. (May 19, 1953), p. 367; Congressional Record, vol. 99, part 4 (May 19, 1953), pp. 5119-5120.

    501 501. Senate Journal, 83rd83rd Cong., 1st1st sess. (August 1, 1953), p. 570; Congressional Record, vol. 99, part 8 (August 1, 1953), pp. 10799-10800.

    502 67 Stat. 407.

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    Oklahoma

    April 30, 1803: The United States acquires territory from France that includes a portion of the land that will become the state of Oklahoma through the Louisiana Purchase.503

    1820s: The U.S. government sets aside land in the current states of Oklahoma, Kansas, and Nebraska to form an “Indian Country” (or “Indian Territory”). Many American Indians are relocated to this territory through various actions, including the Indian Removal Act, passed by Congress in 1830 (4 Stat. 411).504

    December 29, 1845: Through the annexation of Texas, the United States obtains additional lands, known as the Oklahoma Panhandle, that will later comprise the seventh county of the Oklahoma Territory.505

    February 2, 1848: Representatives of the United States and Mexico sign the Treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo, through which Mexico officially recognizes the annexation of Texas that occurred nearly three years prior.506

    December 9, 1889: Senator Orville Platt of Connecticut introduces 51 S. 895, a bill to create the Oklahoma Territory.507

    February 13, 1890: Senate amends and passes 51 S. 895 without a recorded vote.508

    April 21, 1890: House passes, without a recorded vote, a compromise version of the Oklahoma Organic Act (51 S. 895) to form the Territory of Oklahoma from the western portion of the Indian Territory.509

    April 23, 1890: Senate agrees to the conference report on 51 S. 895 by a vote of 50-5.510

    503 Kerry Wynn, “ 502.

    67 Stat. 407.

    503. Kerry Wynn, "The State of Oklahoma," in Shearer, Uniting States, vol. 3, p. 968; 8 Stat. 200.

    504 Wynn, “ 504. Wynn, "The State of Oklahoma," p. 971.

    505 Wynn, “ 505. Wynn, "The State of Oklahoma," p. 968; "The Annexation of Texas, the Mexican-American War, and the Treaty of Guadalupe-Hidalgo, 1845-1848," in U.S. State Department, Office of the Historian, Milestones in the History of U.S. Foreign Relations, at https://history.state.gov/milestones/1830-1860/texas-annexation.

    506. 506. 9 Stat. 922; David Pletcher, "Treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo," in Texas State Historical Association, Handbook of Texas, at https://www.tshaonline.org/handbook/entries/treaty-of-guadalupe-hidalgo; Judith Morgan, "A Bibliographic Essay on Prestatehood Legal Research for the State of Oklahoma," in Chiorazzi and Most, Prestatehood Legal Materials, vol. 2, pp. 897-956.

    507 507. Senate Journal, 51st51st Cong., 1st1st sess. (December 9, 1889), p. 31; Congressional Record, vol. 21, part 1 (December 9, 1889), p. 123.

    508 508. Senate Journal, 51st51st Cong., 1st1st sess. (February 13, 1890), p. 118; Congressional Record, vol. 21, part 2 (February 13, 1890), p. 1279.

    509 509. House Journal, 51st51st Cong., 1st1st sess. (April 21, 1890), p. 503; Congressional Record, vol. 21, part 4 (April 21, 1890), p. 3628; Wynn, "The State of Oklahoma," p. 970.

    510 510. Senate Journal, 51st51st Cong., 1st1st sess. (April 23, 1890), p. 256; Congressional Record, vol. 21, part 4 (April 23, 1890), pp. 3708-3721.

    Oklahoma: 46th State

    Oklahoma Territory created May 2, 1890 (26 Stat. 81) Enabling and admission law enacted June 16, 1906 (34 Stat. 267) Oklahoma admitted November 16, 1907 (35 Stat. 2160)

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    May 2, 1890: President Benjamin Harrison signs the Oklahoma Organic Act into law, formally creating the Territory of Oklahoma.511

    November 7, 1905: The people of the remaining Indian Territory vote to approve a constitution written by delegates to create the state of Sequoyah—separate from the newly formed Oklahoma Territory—by a vote of 56,279 to 9,073.512

    December 1905-January 1906: Bills are introduced in the House (59 H.R. 79) and the Senate (59 S. 3680) “to provide for the admission of the State of Sequoyah into the Union,” but both bills are tabled.513

    January 22, 1906: Representative Edward Hamilton of Michigan introduces a bill (59 H.R. 12707) enabling the people of Oklahoma and the Indian Territory to form a constitution and state government and be admitted into the Union as one state.514

    June 13, 1906: Senate passes a compromise version of 59 H.R. 12707 without a recorded vote.515

    June 14, 1906: House passes the compromise version of 59 H.R. 12707 without a recorded vote.516

    June 16, 1906: President Theodore Roosevelt signs the enabling bill.517

    November 20, 1906-September 16, 1907: Elected delegates from the Oklahoma and Indian Territories convene the Oklahoma Constitutional Convention to draft a state constitution.518

    July 16, 1907: Eighty-six delegates to the convention sign an amended version of the Oklahoma state constitution.519

    September 17, 1907: The people of the Oklahoma and Indian Territories vote in favor of ratifying the state constitution, by a vote of 180,333 to 73,059.520

    November 16, 1907: President Roosevelt issues Presidential Proclamation 780, admitting Oklahoma as the 46th state.521

    511 26 Stat. 81.

    512 Morgan, “ 511.

    26 Stat. 81.

    512. Morgan, "Prestatehood Legal Research," pp. 926-927; Richard Mize, "Sequoyah Convention," in TheThe Encyclopedia of Oklahoma History and Culture, at https://www.okhistory.org/publications/enc/entry.php?entry=SE021; "; “Memorial from citizens of Indian Territory, praying for admission into Union as State of Sequoyah," S. Doc. 59-143, January 16, 1906, p. 26.

    513 Morgan, “ 513. Morgan, "Prestatehood Legal Research," p. 927; Congressional Record, vol. 40, part 1 (December 4, 1905), p. 47 and vol. 40, part 2 (January 25, 1906), p. 1527.

    514 514. House Journal, 59th59th Cong., 1st1st sess. (January 22, 1906), p. 314; Congressional Record, vol. 40, part 2 (January 22, 1906), p. 1407.

    515 515. Senate Journal, 59th59th Cong., 1st1st sess. (June 13, 1906), p. 606; Congressional Record, vol. 40, part 9 (June 13, 1906), p. 8403.

    516 516. House Journal, 59th59th Cong., 1st1st sess. (June 14, 1906), p. 1178; Congressional Record, vol. 40, part 9 (June 14, 1906), p. 8529.

    517 34 Stat. 267.

    518 517.

    34 Stat. 267.

    518. Proceedings of the Constitutional Convention of the proposed state of Oklahoma: held at Guthrie, Oklahoma, November 20, 1906 to November 16, 1907 (Muskogee, OK.: Muskogee Ptg Co., 1907), pp. 5 and 467.

    519 519. Albert H. Ellis, A History of the Constitutional Convention of the State of Oklahoma (Muskogee: Economy Printing Co., 1923), pp. 113-114.

    520 520. Ellis, History of the Constitutional Convention, p. 127; Morgan, "Prestatehood Legal Research," p. 939.

    521 “Presidential Proclamation 780 of November 16, 1907,” by President Theodore Roosevelt, declaring the state of (continued...)

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    Oregon

    October 20, 1818: U.S. envoys Albert Gallatin and Richard Rush sign a convention with Great Britain agreeing to jointly occupy the Oregon Territory.522

    June 15, 1846: Secretary of State James Buchanan signs the Oregon Treaty with Great Britain, allowing the United States to acquire all land in the Oregon Territory south of the 49th parallel.523

    February 9, 1848: Representative Caleb B. Smith of Indiana reports 30 H.R. 201, a bill to create a territorial government in Oregon, from the House Committee on Territories.524

    August 2, 1848: House passes an amended version of the Oregon Territory Act (30 H.R. 201).525

    August 12, 1848: Senate agrees to the House version of the Oregon Territory Act, voting 31-23 and 29-25 after the question was divided.526

    August 14, 1848: President James Polk signs the Oregon Territory Act, creating the Oregon territory.527

    June 1857: The eligible voters of the Oregon Territory support statehood in a referendum by a vote of 7,617 to 1,679.528

    August 17-September 18, 1857: Elected territorial delegates convene at the courthouse in Salem to draft a state constitution.529

    September 18, 1857: The convention delegates approve the draft constitution by a vote of 35-10.530

    November 9, 1857: The Oregon Territory’s electorate approves the state constitution by a vote of 7,195 to 3,215.531

    Oklahoma’ 521. "Presidential Proclamation 780 of November 16, 1907," by President Theodore Roosevelt, declaring the state of Oklahoma's admission to the Union, NARA, Record Group 11, Presidential Proclamations, at https://catalog.archives.gov/id/299964; 35 Stat. 2160.

    522 8 Stat. 248.

    523 522.

    8 Stat. 248.

    523. 9 Stat. 869; William L. Lang, "Oregon Treaty, 1846," in Oregon Historical Society, Oregon Encyclopedia, at https://www.oregonencyclopedia.org/articles/oregon-treaty.

    524. 524. House Journal, 30th30th Cong., 1st1st sess. (February 9, 1848), p. 382; Congressional Globe, 30th30th Cong., 1st1st sess. (February 9, 1848), p. 322.

    525 525. The House Journal reported the vote as 128-71, while the Congressional Globe reported it as 129-71. See House Journal, 30th Cong., 1st sess. (August 2, 1848), p. 1155, and Congressional Globe, 30th Cong., 1st sess. (August 2, 1848), p. 1027.

    526 526. Senate Journal, 30th30th Cong., 1st1st sess. (August 12, 1848), pp. 589-590; Congressional Globe, 30th30th Cong., 1st1st sess. (August 12, 1848), p. 1078.

    527 9 Stat. 323.

    528 527.

    9 Stat. 323.

    528. Charles Henry Carey (ed.), The Oregon Constitution and Proceedings and Debates of the Constitutional Convention of 1857 (Salem, OR: Oregon Historical Society, 1926), pp. 21 and 26.

    529 Carey, Oregon Constitution, p. 27.

    530 Carey, Oregon Constitution, p. 397.

    531 529. Carey, Oregon Constitution, p. 27.

    Oregon: 33rd State

    Oregon Territory created August 14, 1848 (9 Stat. 323) Oregon admitted February 14, 1859 (11 Stat. 383)

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    April 5, 1858: Senator Stephen Douglas of Illinois reports 35 S. 239, a bill to admit Oregon into the Union, from the Senate Committee on Territories.532

    May 18, 1858: Senate passes 35 S. 239 by a vote of 35-17.533

    February 12, 1859: House passes 35 S. 239 by a vote of 114-103.534

    February 14, 1859: President James Buchanan signs 35 S. 239, admitting Oregon into the Union as the 33rd state.535

    Pennsylvania

    1681: King Charles II grants a charter to William Penn to create a colony in a portion of present-day Pennsylvania.536

    July 4, 1776: Pennsylvania joins 12 other colonies in declaring independence from Great Britain.537

    July 9, 1778: Pennsylvania’s delegates sign and ratify the Articles of Confederation.538

    May 14-September 17, 1787: Pennsylvania’s eight delegates participate in the Constitutional Convention.539

    December 12, 1787: Pennsylvania convention ratifies the Constitution by a vote of 46-23.540

    Rhode Island

    July 15, 1663: King Charles II grants a charter to create the Colony of Rhode Island and Providence Plantations.541

    July 4, 1776: Rhode Island joins 12 other colonies in declaring independence from Great Britain.542

    532 Senate Journal, 35th Cong., 1st 530.

    Carey, Oregon Constitution, p. 397.

    531.

    Carey, Oregon Constitution, p. 27.

    532. Senate Journal, 35th Cong., 1st sess. (April 5, 1858), pp. 318-319; Congressional Globe, 35th35th Cong., 1st1st sess. (April 5, 1858), p. 1474.

    533 533. Senate Journal, 35th35th Cong., 1st1st sess. (May 18, 1858), p. 477; Congressional Globe, 35th35th Cong., 1st1st sess. (May 18, 1858), p. 2209.

    534 534. House Journal, 35th35th Cong., 2nd2nd sess. (February 12, 1859), pp. 398-399; Congressional Globe, 35th35th Cong., 2nd2nd sess. (February 12, 1859), p. 1011.

    535 11 Stat. 383.

    536 “ 535.

    11 Stat. 383.

    536. "Charter for the Province of Pennsylvania—1681," in Thorpe, Federal and State Constitutions, vol. 5, pp. 3035- 3044.

    537 537. Journals of the Continental Congress, vol. 5 (July 4, 1776), pp. 510-516.

    538 538. Journals of the Continental Congress, vol. 11 (July 9, 1778), p. 677.

    539 539. Farrand, Records, vol. 3, pp. 557-558.

    540 540. Elliot, Debates, vol. 1, pp. 319-320; Documentary History of the Ratification of the Constitution, vol. 2, pp. 590- 591.

    541 “591. 541. "Charter of Rhode Island and Providence Plantations—1663," in Thorpe, Federal and State Constitutions, vol. 6, pp. 3211-3222.

    542 542. Journals of the Continental Congress, vol. 5 (July 4, 1776), pp. 510-516.

    Pennsylvania: Second State

    Pennsylvania ratified Constitution December 12, 1787

    Rhode Island: 13th State

    Rhode Island ratified Constitution May 29, 1790

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    July 9, 1778: Delegates of the State of Rhode Island and Providence Plantations sign and ratify the Articles of Confederation.543

    May 14-September 17, 1787: Rhode Island does not send delegates to participate in the Constitutional Convention.544

    May 29, 1790: Rhode Island’s convention ratifies the Constitution by a vote of 34-32, after a number of failed attempts.545

    South Carolina

    March 24, 1663: King Charles II grants a charter to eight men, later known as the “Lords Proprietors,” to create the Carolina colony.546 In the early 18th century, the colony would split into North and South Carolina.547

    July 25, 1729: Seven of the Lords Proprietors sell South Carolina to King George II.548

    July 4, 1776: South Carolina joins 12 other colonies in declaring independence from Great Britain.549

    July 9, 1778: South Carolina signs and ratifies the Articles of Confederation.550

    May 14-September 17, 1787: Four of South Carolina’s five delegates participate in the Constitutional Convention.551

    May 23, 1788: South Carolina convention ratifies the Constitution by a vote of 149-73.552

    South Dakota

    April 30, 1803: The United States acquires part of the land that will become South Dakota from France in the Louisiana Purchase, with

    543 Journals of the Continental Congress, vol. 11 (July 9, 1778), p. 677.

    544 543.

    Journals of the Continental Congress, vol. 11 (July 9, 1778), p. 677.

    544. Farrand, Records, vol. 3, p. 557.

    545 545. Elliot, Debates, vol. 1, pp. 334-337; Documentary History of the Ratification of the Constitution, vol. 26, p. 989. For details on the yearslongyears-long debate over ratification in Rhode Island, see University of Wisconsin-Madison, Center for the Study of the American Constitution, Rhode Island Ratification, at https://csac.history.wisc.edu/states-and-ratification/ rhode-island.

    546 “. 546. "Charter of Carolina," in Thorpe, Federal and State Constitutions, vol. 5, pp. 2743-2753.

    547 547. Chad Morgan, "The State of North Carolina," in Shearer, Uniting States, vol. 2, pp. 898-920.

    548 “ 548. "Grant From King George the Second, to John Lord Carteret, Afterwards Earl Granville," in The Revised Statutes of the State of North Carolina, vol. 2, eds. Frederick Nash, James Iredell, and William H. Battle (Raleigh, NC: Turner and Hughes, 1837), pp. 15-30.

    549 549. Journals of the Continental Congress, vol. 5 (July 4, 1776), pp. 510-516.

    550 550. Journals of the Continental Congress, vol. 11 (July 9, 1778), p. 677.

    551 551. Farrand, Records, vol. 3, p. 559.

    552 552. Elliot, Debates, vol. 1, p. 325; Documentary History of the Ratification of the Constitution, vol. 27, pp. 393-397.

    South Carolina: Eighth State

    South Carolina ratified Constitution May 23, 1788

    South Dakota: 40th State

    Dakota Territory created March 2, 1861 (12 Stat. 239) Enabling and statehood law enacted February 22, 1889 (25 Stat. 676) South Dakota admitted November 2, 1889 (26 Stat. 1549)

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    additional territory acquired in 1818 from Great Britain.553

    February 14, 1861: Senator James S. Green of Missouri reports 36 S. 562, a bill to create the Territory of Dakota, from the Senate Committee on Territories.554

    February 26, 1861: Senate passes an amended version of 36 S. 562 without a recorded vote.555

    March 1, 1861: House passes 36 S. 562 without a recorded vote.556

    March 2, 1861: President James Buchanan signs 36 S. 562, creating the Territory of Dakota.557

    November 8, 1887: Dakota Territory voters endorse splitting the territory into northern and southern entities, with 37,784 voting in favor of division and 32,913 voting against division.558

    December 12, 1887: Senator Charles F. Manderson of Nebraska introduces 50 S. 185, a bill to admit southern Dakota Territory as the State of Dakota and create a new Territory of Lincoln in northern Dakota Territory.559

    April 19, 1888: Senate votes 26-23 to pass an amended version of 50 S. 185 that would create a State of South Dakota and a new Territory of North Dakota.560

    January 18, 1889: Houses votes 145-98 to pass an amended version of 50 S. 185. This new version would clear the way to admit Montana, New Mexico, Washington, and—depending on the results of a referendum on division—either a combined state of Dakota or separate states of North Dakota and South Dakota.561

    February 20, 1889: House and Senate agree to a compromise version of 50 S. 185 that allows the creation and admission of four new states: Montana, North Dakota, South Dakota, and Washington. Both chambers pass the bill without recorded votes.562

    February 22, 1889: President Grover Cleveland signs 50 S. 185, enabling statehood for Montana, North Dakota, South Dakota, and Washington.563

    553 553. John E. Miller, "The State of South Dakota," in Shearer, Uniting States, vol. 3, pp. 1103-1128.

    554 554. Senate Journal, 36th36th Cong., 2nd2nd sess. (February 14, 1861), p. 228; Congressional Globe, 36th36th Cong., 2nd2nd sess. (February 14, 1861), p. 897.

    555 555. Senate Journal, 36th36th Cong., 2nd2nd sess. (February 26, 1861), pp. 316-317; Congressional Globe, 36th36th Cong., 2nd2nd sess. (February 26, 1861), pp. 1207-1208.

    556 556. House Journal, 36th36th Cong., 2nd2nd sess. (March 1, 1861), p. 452; Congressional Globe, 36th36th Cong., 2nd2nd sess. (March 1, 1861), pp. 1334-1335.

    557 12 Stat. 239.

    558 Louis K. Church, “ 557.

    12 Stat. 239.

    558. Louis K. Church, "A Proclamation. By the Governor of the Territory of Dakota" (January 12, 1888), in Bismarck Weekly Tribune, January 20, 1888, p. 6.

    559 559. Senate Journal, 50th50th Cong., 1st1st sess. (December 12, 1887), p. 33; Congressional Record, vol. 19, part 1 (December 12, 1887), p. 22.

    560 560. Senate Journal, 50th50th Cong., 1st1st sess. (April 19, 1888), pp. 695-696; Congressional Record, vol. 19, part 4 (April 19, 1888), pp. 3139-3140.

    561 561. House Journal, 50th50th Cong., 2nd2nd sess. (January 18, 1889), pp. 290-298; Congressional Record, vol. 20, part 1 (January 18, 1889), pp. 951-952.

    562 562. House Journal, 50th50th Cong., 2nd2nd sess. (February 20, 1889), pp. 561-570; Senate Journal, 50th50th Cong., 2nd2nd sess. (February 20, 1889), pp. 357-366; Congressional Record, vol. 20, part 3 (February 20, 1889), pp. 2104 and 2116.

    563 25 Stat. 676.

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    July 4, 1889: Delegates gather in Sioux Falls to write a state constitution for South Dakota.564

    August 5, 1889: Delegates to the Sioux Falls convention vote 72-0 to adopt a state constitution for South Dakota.565

    October 1, 1889: South Dakota voters ratify the state constitution, 70,131 to 3,267.566

    November 2, 1889: President Benjamin Harrison issues a proclamation admitting South Dakota as the 40th state.567

    Tennessee

    September 3, 1783: Great Britain cedes territory, including the land that will become the state of Tennessee, to the United States in the Treaty of Paris.568

    December 22, 1789: North Carolina General Assembly agrees to cede its western lands to the U.S. government.569

    April 2, 1790: Congress accepts the western lands ceded by North Carolina to the newly-formed federal government.570

    April 7, 1790: Senate forms a select committee to “bring in a bill for the government of the territory of the United States south of the river Ohio.”571

    April 9, 1790: Senate select committee reports “A bill for the government of the territory of the United States south of the river Ohio.”572

    April 27, 1790: Senate passes the bill without a recorded vote.573

    April 29, 1790: House passes an amended version of the bill without a recorded vote.574

    564 563.

    25 Stat. 676.

    564. Journal of the Constitutional Convention of South Dakota (Sioux Falls, SD: Brown & Saenger, 1889), p. 3.

    565 565. Journal of the Constitutional Convention of South Dakota, pp. 161-162.

    566 566. Official Vote of South Dakota by Counties From October, 1889, to November, 1914 (Sioux Falls, SD: Mark D. Scott Print, 1914), p. 5.

    567 26 Stat. 1549.

    568 “ 567.

    26 Stat. 1549.

    568. "Treaty of Paris (1783)," Milestone Documents, National Archives and Records Administration, https://www.archives.gov/milestone-documents/treaty-of-paris.

    569 “. 569. "An Act for the Purpose of Ceding to the United States of America, Certain Western Lands Therein Described," in Walter Clark (ed.), The State Records of North Carolina, vol. 25 (Goldsboro, NC: Nash Brothers, 1906), pp. 4-6; Lynn E. Murray, "Tennessee Prestatehood Legal Materials," in Chiorazzi and Most, Prestatehood Legal Materials, vol. 2, pp. 1175-1196; Territorial Papers of the United States, vol. 4, p. 3.

    570 1 Stat. 106.

    571 Senate Journal, 1st Cong., 2nd 570.

    1 Stat. 106.

    571. Senate Journal, 1st Cong., 2nd sess. (April 7, 1790), p. 130; Annals of Congress, vol. 2, 1st1st Cong., 2nd2nd sess. (April 7, 1790), p. 998.

    572 572. Senate Journal, 1st1st Cong., 2nd2nd sess. (April 9, 1790), p. 130; Annals of Congress, vol. 2, 1st1st Cong., 2nd2nd sess. (April 9, 1790), vol. 2, p. 999.

    573 573. Senate Journal, 1st1st Cong., 2nd2nd sess. (April 27, 1790), p. 132. The vote does not appear in the Annals of Congress.

    574 574. House Journal, 1st1st Cong., 2nd2nd sess. (April 29, 1790), p. 204; Annals of Congress, vol. 2, 1st1st Cong., 2nd2nd sess. (April 29, 1790), p. 1602.

    T ennessee: 16th State

    Southwest Territory created May 26, 1790 (1 Stat. 123) Tennessee admitted June 1, 1796 (1 Stat. 491)

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    May 4, 1790: Senate rejects the House-amended version of the territorial bill without a recorded vote.575

    May 5, 1790: House agrees to the Senate-passed version of the territorial bill without a recorded vote.576

    May 26, 1790: President George Washington signs the bill to organize the western lands ceded to the federal government by North Carolina into the “territory of the United States, south of the river Ohio” (often shortened to “the Southwest Territory”).577

    September 15-November 15, 1795: A census conducted in the Southwest Territory polls free adult males on the following question: “Is it your wish if, on taking the enumeration, there should prove to be less than sixty thousand inhabitants, that the Territory shall be admitted as a State in to the Federal Union with such less number or not?” Those polled affirmed the population’s desire to join the Union by a vote of 6,504 to 2,562. Voters also agree to hold a Constitutional Convention, should the census count a minimum of 60,000 inhabitants.578

    November 28, 1795: Governor William Blount calls for the election of delegates to a constitutional convention.579

    January 11, 1796: Elected delegates convene a constitutional convention in Knoxville.580

    February 6, 1796: The convention unanimously approves the state constitution drafted during the convention.581

    May 18, 1796: Senator Rufus King of New York reports a statehood bill from committee.582

    May 26, 1796: Senate passes an amended version of the statehood bill by a vote of 15-8.583

    575 Senate Journal, 1st Cong., 2nd 575. Senate Journal, 1st Cong., 2nd sess. (May 4, 1790), p. 137; Annals of Congress, vol. 2, 1st1st Cong., 2nd2nd sess. (May 4, 1790), p. 1006.

    576 576. House Journal, 1st1st Cong., 2nd2nd sess. (May 5, 1790), p. 209. The vote does not appear in the Annals of Congress.

    577 1 Stat. 123.

    578 577.

    1 Stat. 123.

    578. Results of the vote can be found in the "Census Schedule," in Territorial Papers of the United States, vol. 4, pp. 404-405. For the language of the census question, see "An Act for the Enumeration of the Inhabitants of the Territory of the United States of America South of the River Ohio," p. 8, in Tennessee Virtual Archive, Tennessee Founding and Landmark Documents, https://teva.contentdm.oclc.org/digital/collection/tfd/id/548.

    579 “. 579. "Proclamation by William Blount, November 28, 1795," in Territorial Papers of the United States, vol. 4, pp. 407- 408.

    580408. 580. Journal of the Proceedings of a Convention, Began and Held at Knoxville, on The Eleventh Day of January, One Thousand Seven Hundred and Ninety Six, for the Purpose of Forming a Constitution, or Form of Government, for the Permanent Government of the People, in LLMC Digital database, at https://discover.llmc.com/00102t, p. 3. 581. llmc.com/docDisplay5.aspx?set=00102t& volume=0001&part=001, p. 3.

    581 Journal of the Proceedings of a Convention, p. 37.

    582 582. Senate Journal, 4th4th Cong., 1st1st sess. (May 18, 1796), p. 264; Annals of Congress, vol. 5, 4th4th Cong., 1st1st sess. (May 18, 1796), p. 97.

    583 583. Senate Journal, 4th4th Cong., 1st1st sess. (May 26, 1796), p. 275; Annals of Congress, vol. 5, 4th4th Cong., 1st1st sess. (May 26, 1796), p. 109.

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    May 30, 1796: House passes an amended version of the bill without a recorded vote.584

    May 31, 1796: Senate agrees to the House version of the bill without a recorded vote.585

    June 1, 1796: President Washington signs the bill, bringing Tennessee into the Union as the 16th state.586

    Texas

    April 30, 1803: The United States acquires northern portions of the land that will become the state of Texas from France via the Louisiana Purchase.587

    March 1-17, 1836: Fifty-nine delegates representing settlements in Texas meet in Washington-on-the-Brazos for a general convention to draft a declaration of independence from Mexico and form a government for the independent Republic of Texas.588

    March 2, 1836: The delegates to the general convention sign the Texas Declaration of Independence.589

    March 16, 1836: The delegates in Washington-on-the-Brazos finalize and adopt a constitution for the Republic of Texas.590

    April 21, 1836: The Republic of Texas wins independence from Mexico after defeating Mexican forces in a final battle along the San Jacinto River.591

    September 1836: Eligible voters ratify the Republic’s constitution and vote 3,277 to 91 in favor of Texas joining the United States.592

    584 House Journal, 4th Cong., 1st 584. House Journal, 4th Cong., 1st sess. (May 30, 1796), p. 590; Annals of Congress, vol. 5, 4th4th Cong., 1st1st sess. (May 30, 1796), p. 1474.

    585 585. Senate Journal, 4th4th Cong., 1st1st sess. (May 31, 1796), p. 284; Annals of Congress, vol. 5, 4th4th Cong., 1st 1st sess. (May 31, 1796), p. 117.

    586 1 Stat. 491.

    587 “ 586.

    1 Stat. 491.

    587. "Louisiana Purchase Treaty (1803)," in NARA, Milestone Documents, at https://www.archives.gov/milestone- documents/louisiana-purchase-treaty.

    588. 588. Journals of the Convention of the Free, Sovereign, and Independent People of Texas, in General Convention, Assembled, 1836, in H.P.H. Gammel, The Laws of Texas, 1822-1897, vol. 1 (Austin, TX: Gammel Book Co., 1898), pp. 821-904; Texas State Library and Archives Commission, "Texas Declaration of Independence," at https://www.tsl.texas.gov/treasures/republic/declare-01.html.

    589 “Texas Declaration of Independence.”

    590 “. 589.

    "Texas Declaration of Independence."

    590. "Constitution of Republic of Texas," in Laws of the Republic of Texas, in Two Volumes, vol. 1 (Houston: Printed at the Office of the Telegraph, 1838), pp. 9-25.

    591 591. Texas State Library and Archives Commission, "The Public Treaty of Velasco," at https://www.tsl.texas.gov/ exhibits/texas175/velasco.html.

    592. 592. John Sayles, The Constitutions of the State of Texas, With The Reconstruction Acts of Congress, the Constitution of the Confederate States, and of the United States, Annotated, 4th ed. (St. Louis: Gilbert Book Co., 1893), p. 155; Eugene C. Barker, "The Annexation of Texas," The Southwestern Historical Quarterly, vol. 50, no. 1 (July 1946), pp. 49-74.

    T exas: 28th State

    Annexation law enacted March 1, 1845 (5 Stat. 797) Texas admitted December 29, 1845 (9 Stat. 108)

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    March 3, 1837: The U.S. government officially recognizes the Republic of Texas when President Andrew Jackson appoints Alcée Louis La Branche as Chargé d’Affaires in Houston.593

    January 25, 1845: House passes a joint resolution (28 H.J.Res. 46) to annex Texas by a vote of 120-98.594

    February 27, 1845: Senate passes an amended version of the annexation resolution following a preliminary vote of 27-25.595

    February 28, 1845: House passes the Senate version of the resolution.596

    March 1, 1845: President John Tyler signs the joint resolution to annex Texas to the United States.597

    July 4, 1845: A special convention of delegates elected by the people of the Republic of Texas meet to consider the joint resolution offered by the U.S. Congress to annex the Republic. The delegates vote to accept the U.S. government’s offer of annexation and membership into the Union.598

    July 4-August 28, 1845: Delegates meet in Austin to draft a state constitution.599

    August 28, 1845: Delegates sign the new Texas state constitution.600

    October 13, 1845: In a popular referendum, Texas voters approve annexation by a vote of 7,664 to 430 and approve the state constitution by a vote of 7,527 to 536.601

    December 10, 1845: House Committee on Territories reports a joint resolution, 29 H.J.Res. 2, “for the admission of the State of Texas to the Union.”602

    December 16, 1845: House approves the joint resolution to admit Texas to the Union.603

    593 593. U.S. Department of State, Office of the Historian, "A Guide to the United States' History of Recognition, Diplomatic, and Consular Relations, by Country, since 1776: Texas," at https://history.state.gov/countries/texas.

    594. 594. House Journal, 28th28th Cong., 2nd2nd sess. (January 25, 1845), p. 264; Congressional Globe, 28th28th Cong., 2nd2nd sess. (January 25, 1845), p. 194.

    595 595. Senate Journal, 28th28th Cong., 2nd2nd sess. (February 27, 1845), pp. 220-221; Congressional Globe, 28th28th Cong., 2nd2nd sess. (February 27, 1845), p. 362.

    596 596. The vote was reported as 134-77 in the House Journal and 132-76 in the Congressional Globe. See House Journal, 28th Cong., 2nd sess. (February 28, 1845), p. 527, and Congressional Globe, 28th Cong., 2nd sess. (February 28, 1845), p. 372.

    597 597. Texas State Library and Archives Commission, "Joint Resolution for Annexing Texas to the United States Approved March 1, 1845," at https://www.tsl.texas.gov/ref/abouttx/annexation/march1845.html; 5 Stat. 797.

    598 “ 598. "Ordinance of the Convention of Texas, July 4, 1845," Yale Law School, Avalon Project, at https://avalon.law.yale.edu/19th_century/texan03.asp; Ralph W. Steen, "Convention of 1845," in Handbook of Texas, at https://www.tshaonline.org/handbook/entries/convention-of-1845.

    599. 599. Journals of the Convention, assembled at the city of Austin on the Fourth of July, 1845, for the purpose of framing a constitution for the State of Texas (Austin, TX: Miner & Cruger, 1845).

    600 600. Journals of the Convention, pp. 366-367.

    601 601. Texas State Library and Archives Commission, "Ratification of Texas Annexation, 1845 Vote Totals," at https://www.tsl.texas.gov/treasures/earlystate/annex-doc.html.

    602. 602. House Journal, 29th29th Cong., 1st1st sess. (December 10, 1845), p. 71; Congressional Globe, 29th29th Cong., 1st1st sess. (December 10, 1845), pp. 39-40.

    603 603. The vote was reported as 141-57 in the House Journal and 141-56 in the Congressional Globe. See House Journal, 29th Cong., 1st sess. (December 16, 1845), p. 110, and Congressional Globe, 29th Cong., 1st sess. (December 16, 1845), p. 65.

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    December 22, 1845: Senate passes the joint resolution to admit Texas.604

    December 29, 1845: President James K. Polk signs the resolution admitting Texas into the Union as the 28th state.605

    Utah

    February 2, 1848: The United States, through the Treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo, acquires from Mexico the land that will become Utah.606

    January 29, 1850: Senator Henry Clay of Kentucky proposes what will later become the Compromise of 1850. While not part of his original proposal, the eventual legislative package includes organizing a territorial government for Utah.607

    May 8, 1850: The “Senate Select Committee of Thirteen” reports 31 S. 225, a bill that would admit California to statehood, create territorial governments for New Mexico and Utah, and revise the borders of Texas.608

    August 1, 1850: Senate passes an amended version of the bill with no recorded vote on final passage. It is now a narrower piece of legislation that would create the Territory of Utah.609

    September 7, 1850: The House passes the Utah Territory bill by a vote of 97- 85.610

    September 9, 1850: President Millard Fillmore signs the Utah Territory bill into law. It is one of five bills that make up the Compromise of 1850.611

    September 6, 1893: Delegate Joseph L. Rawlins of Utah introduces a bill for Utah’s admission to the Union (53 H.R. 352).612 It is the latest in decades of attempts by Utah to secure statehood.613

    604 604. The Congressional Globe records the vote to adopt the resolution as 31-14, but the Senate Journal does not record a vote. Instead, the Senate Journal records a vote of 31-13 to read the bill for a third time. Senate Journal, 29th Cong., 1st sess. (December 22, 1845), p. 64; Congressional Globe, 29th Cong., 1st sess. (December 22, 1845), p. 92.

    605 9 Stat. 108.

    606 “ 605.

    9 Stat. 108.

    606. "Treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo (1848)," in NARA, Milestone Documents, at https://www.archives.gov/milestone- documents/treaty-of-guadalupe-hidalgo; 9 Stat. 922.

    607 607. McPherson, Battle Cry of Freedom, pp. 70-75.

    608 608. U.S. Congress, Senate Committee of Thirteen, report to accompany S. 225 and S. 226, 31st31st Cong., 1st1st sess., S. Rept. 31-123, May 8, 1850; Congressional Globe, 31st Cong., 1st sess. (May 8, 1850), pp. 944-948.

    609 609. Senate Journal, 31st31st Cong., 1st1st sess. (August 1, 1850), p. 518; Congressional Globe, 31st31st Cong., 1st1st sess. (August 1, 1850), p. 1504.

    610 610. House Journal, 31st31st Cong., 1st1st sess. (September 7, 1850), p. 1425; Congressional Globe, 31st Cong. 1st31st Cong. 1st sess. (September 7, 1850), p. 1776.

    611 “ 611. "Introduction," in Library of Congress, Compromise of 1850: Primary Documents in American History, at https://guides.loc.gov/compromise-1850; 9 Stat. 453.

    612 612. House Journal, 53rd53rd Cong., 1st1st sess. (September 6, 1893), p. 37; Congressional Record, vol. 25, part 1 (September 6, 1893), p. 1276.

    613 613. Robert Lee Warthen, "Legal Research in the State of Deseret and the Utah Territory, 1847-1896," in Chiorazzi and Most, Prestatehood Legal Materials, vol. 2, pp. 1217-1270.

    Utah: 45th State

    Utah Territory created September 9, 1850 (9 Stat. 453) Enabling and statehood law enacted July 16, 1894 (28 Stat. 107) Utah admitted January 4, 1896 (29 Stat. 876)

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    December 13, 1893: House Committee on Territories reports the bill favorably with amendments. The House agrees to the amendments and passes the bill without a recorded vote.614

    July 10, 1894: The Senate passes the Utah bill without a recorded vote.615

    July 16, 1894: President Grover Cleveland signs the Utah Enabling Act into law.616

    November 1894: Eligible voters in Utah select 107 delegates to a constitutional convention.617

    March 4-May 8, 1895: The delegates meet in Salt Lake City to write the state constitution.618

    May 8, 1895: The delegates approve the constitution by a vote of 99 to 0.619

    November 5, 1895: Utah’s eligible voters approve the constitution 31,305 to 7,607.620

    January 4, 1896: President Cleveland issues a proclamation of statehood, and Utah is admitted to the Union as the 45th state.621

    Vermont

    July 20, 1764: King George III, in a King-in-Council order, declares the Connecticut River is the border between New York and New Hampshire, leaving the disputed territory known as the New Hampshire Grants inside the borders of New York.622

    January 15, 1777: Delegates meeting in Westminster declare the New Hampshire Grants are a “free and independent state.”623

    614 House Journal, 53rd Cong., 2nd 614. House Journal, 53rd Cong., 2nd sess. (December 13, 1893), p. 29; Congressional Record, vol. 26, part 1 (December 13, 1893), p. 220.

    615 615. Senate Journal, 53rd53rd Cong., 2nd2nd sess. (July 10, 1894), p. 283; Congressional Record, vol. 26, part 7 (July 10, 1894), p. 7251.

    616 28 Stat. 107.

    617 616.

    28 Stat. 107.

    617. Official Report of the Proceedings and Debates of the Convention Assembled at Salt Lake City on the Fourth Date of March, 1895, to Adopt A Constitution for the State of Utah, vol. 1 (Salt Lake City, UT: Star Printing Company, 1898), pp. 3-4.

    618 618. Official Report of the Proceedings and Debates, vols. 1-2.

    619 619. Official Report of the Proceedings and Debates, vol. 2, pp. 1850-1851.

    620 “ 620. "Utah State Constitution," in Utah Division of Archives and Records Service, Utah’s Road's Road to Statehood: 125 YerarsYears, https://archives.utah.gov/2021/01/04/utahs-road-to-statehood-125-years; Stanley S. Ivans, "A Constitution for Utah," Utah Historical Quarterly, vol. 25 (1957), pp. 94-116.

    621 29 Stat. 876.

    622 621.

    29 Stat. 876.

    622. Vermont v. New Hampshire, 289 U.S. 593 (1933), pp. 596 and 598-600.

    623 “ 623. "New-Hampshire Grants. Westminster Court-House, January 15th15th, 1777," and "The Declaration and Petition of the Inhabitants of the New-Hampshire Grants, to Congress, announcing the District to be a Free and Independent State," in Vermont State Papers; Being a Collection of Records and Documents, Connected with the Assumption and Establishment of Government by the People of Vermont, ed. William Slade Jr. (Middlebury, VT: J.W. Copeland, 1823), pp. 68-73.

    Vermont: 14th State

    Vermont admitted March 4, 1791 (1 Stat. 191)

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    July 2-8, 1777: Delegates meet in Windsor and write a constitution for the “Commonwealth or State of Vermont.”624

    August 20-21, 1781: Congress, operating under the Articles of Confederation, says it will consider admitting Vermont as a state only after settlement of its borders.625 During this period, Vermont “existed in something of a political netherworld, not really a state, and not really an independent country.”626

    October 28, 1790: Vermont agrees to settle land claims and its border dispute with New York.627

    January 10, 1791: Delegates in Bennington vote 105-4 to ratify the U.S. Constitution.628

    February 9, 1791: President George Washington sends to Congress copies of “authentic documents, expressing the consent of the Legislatures of New York and of the territory of Vermont, that the said territory shall be admitted to be a distinct member of our Union.” Senate and House each refer the papers to a select committee for consideration.629

    February 10, 1791: Senator Rufus King of New York reports from the Senate select committee a bill admitting Vermont “as a new and entire member of the United States of America.”630

    February 12, 1791: Senate passes the Vermont bill without a recorded vote.631

    February 14, 1791: House passes the Vermont bill without a recorded vote.632

    February 18, 1791: President Washington signs the Vermont bill, making its admission effective on March 4.633

    March 4, 1791: Vermont becomes the 14th state.634

    624 “ 624. "Constitution of Vermont" (1777) in Thorpe, Federal and State Constitutions, vol. 6, pp. 3737-3749.

    625 625. Journals of the Continental Congress, vol. 21 (August 20-21, 1781), pp. 887-888 and 892-893.

    626 626. Peverill Squire, The Evolution of American Legislatures: Colonies, Territories, and States, 1619-2009 (Ann Arbor, MI: The University of Michigan Press, 2012), p. 159.

    627 “ 627. "An Act directing the payment of thirty thousand Dollars to the State of Newyork, and declaring what shall be the Boundary line between the State of Vermont and State of Newyork—and declaring certain grants therein mentioned, extinguished," in Acts and Laws, Passed by the Legislature of the State of Vermont, at their session at Castleton, the second Thursday of October, 1790 (Windsor, VT: Alden Spooner, 1790), pp. 9-10.

    628 628. Elliot, Debates, vol. 1, pp. 337-338; "State of Vermont. In Convention of the Delegates of the people of the State of Vermont," in Slade, Vermont State Papers, pp. 194-195.

    629 629. There are slight differences in punctuation and capitalization of the presidential message in the various sources. See House Journal, 1st Cong., 3rd sess. (February 9, 1791), p. 373; Senate Journal, 1st Cong., 3rd sess. (February 9, 1791), pp. 241-246; and Annals of Congress, vol. 2, 1st Cong., 3rd sess. (February 9, 1791), pp. 1798 and 2013.

    630 630. Senate Journal, 1st1st Cong., 3rd3rd sess. (February 10, 1791), p. 247; Annals of Congress, vol. 2, 1st1st Cong., 3rd3rd sess. (February 10, 1791), p. 1798.

    631 631. Senate Journal, 1st1st Cong., 3rd3rd sess. (February 12, 1791), p. 262; Annals of Congress, vol. 2, 1st1st Cong., 3rd3rd sess. (February 12, 1791), p. 1800.

    632 632. House Journal, 1st1st Cong., 3rd3rd sess. (February 14, 1791), p. 378. The Annals of Congress does not report House passage of the bill.

    633 1 Stat. 191.

    634 633.

    1 Stat. 191.

    634. Samuel B. Hand and H. Nicholas Muller III, "The State of Vermont," in Shearer, Uniting States, vol. 3, pp. 1215- 1245.

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    Virginia

    April 10, 1606: King James I grants a charter to the Virginia Company to create a colony in “that part of America commonly called Virginia.”635

    July 4, 1776: Virginia joins 12 other colonies in declaring independence from Great Britain.636

    July 9, 1778: Virginia signs the Articles of Confederation.637

    May 14-September 17, 1787: Seven of Virginia’s 10 delegates participate in the Constitutional Convention.638

    June 25, 1788: Virginia’s convention ratifies the Constitution by a vote of 89-79.639

    Washington

    October 20, 1818: U.S. envoys Albert Gallatin and Richard Rush sign a convention with Great Britain agreeing to jointly occupy the Oregon Territory. This area includes land that will become the state of Washington.640

    June 15, 1846: Secretary of State James Buchanan signs the Oregon Treaty with Great Britain, allowing the United States to acquire all land in the Oregon Territory south of the 49th parallel.641

    November 25-28, 1852: Forty-four delegates meet in Monticello, at the mouth of the Cowlitz River in the Oregon Territory, to draft and sign a memorial petitioning Congress to divide the Oregon Territory and create the separate territory of Columbia.642

    January 25, 1853: Representative Charles Stuart of Michigan reports, from the House Committee on Territories, a bill (32 H.R. 348) to establish a new Columbia Territory.643

    635 “ 635. "The First Charter of Virginia—1606," in Thorpe, Federal and State Constitutions, vol. 7, pp. 3783-3789.

    636 636. Journals of the Continental Congress, vol. 5 (July 4, 1776), pp. 510-516.

    637 637. Journals of the Continental Congress, vol. 11 (July 9, 1778), p. 677.

    638 Farrand, Records, p. 558.

    639 638.

    Farrand, Records, p. 558.

    639. Elliot, Debates, vol 1., p. 327; Documentary History of the Ratification of the Constitution, vol. 10, pp. 1540-1545.

    640 8 Stat. 248.

    641 640.

    8 Stat. 248.

    641. 9 Stat. 869; Lang, "Oregon Treaty, 1846.

    642" 642. Dennis P. Weber, "The Creation of Washington: Securing Democracy North of the Columbia," Columbia: The Magazine of Northwest History, vol. 17, no. 3 (Fall 2003), pp. 27-34; Washington State Archives, Territorial Timeline, at https://wwwwww2.sos.wa.gov/archives/timeline/detail.aspx?id=214.

    643. 643. House Journal, 32nd32nd Cong., 2nd2nd sess. (January 25, 1853), p. 185; Congressional Globe, 32nd32nd Cong., 2nd2nd sess. (January 25, 1853), p. 402.

    Virginia: 10th State

    Virginia ratified Constitution June 25, 1788

    Washington: 42nd State

    Washington Territory created March 2, 1853 (10 Stat. 172) Enabling and statehood law enacted February 22, 1889 (25 Stat. 676) Washington admitted November 11, 1889 (26 Stat. 1552)

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    February 10, 1853: House passes 32 H.R. 348, amended to change the new territory’s name to Washington.644

    March 2, 1853: Senate passes 32 H.R. 348 without a recorded vote.645 President Millard Fillmore signs it into law.646

    December 12, 1887: Senator Charles F. Manderson of Nebraska introduces 50 S. 185, a bill to “provide for the division of Dakota into two States and to enable the people of North Dakota, South Dakota, Montana, and Washington to form constitutions and State governments and to be admitted into the Union.”647

    April 19, 1888: Senate votes 26-23 to pass an amended version of 50 S. 185 that would enable the Washington Territory to create a constitution, form a state government, and join the Union.648

    January 18, 1889: The House votes 145-98 to pass an amended version of 50 S. 185. This new version would clear the way to admit Montana, New Mexico, Washington, and—depending on the results of a referendum on division—either a combined state of Dakota or separate states of North Dakota and South Dakota.649

    February 20, 1889: The House and Senate agree to a compromise version of 50 S. 185 that allows the creation and admission of four new states: Montana, North Dakota, South Dakota, and Washington. Both chambers pass the bill without recorded votes.650

    February 22, 1889: President Grover Cleveland signs 50 S. 185, enabling statehood for Montana, North Dakota, South Dakota, and Washington.651

    July 4-August 22, 1889: Seventy-five delegates convene a Constitutional Convention in the Territorial Capitol Building in Olympia to draft a state’s constitution for Washington.652

    October 1, 1889: Eligible voters approve the state constitution, by a vote of 40,152 in favor and 11,879 opposed.653

    644 644. The House Journal reported the vote as 129-29, while the Congressional Globe reported the vote as 128-29. See House Journal, 32nd Cong., 2nd sess. (February 10, 1853), pp. 268-270, and Congressional Globe, 32nd Cong., 2nd sess. (February 10, 1853), p. 555.

    645 645. Senate Journal, 32nd32nd Cong., 2nd2nd sess. (March 2, 1853), p. 274; Congressional Globe, 32nd32nd Cong., 2nd2nd sess. (March 2, 1853), p. 1020.

    646 10 Stat. 172.

    647 Senate Journal, 50th Cong., 1st 646.

    10 Stat. 172.

    647. Senate Journal, 50th Cong., 1st sess. (December 12, 1887), p. 33; Congressional Record, vol. 19, part 1 (December 12, 1887), p. 22.

    648 648. Senate Journal, 50th50th Cong., 1st1st sess. (April 19, 1888), pp. 695-696; Congressional Record, vol. 19, part 4 (April 19, 1888), pp. 3139-3140.

    649 649. House Journal, 50th50th Cong., 2nd2nd sess. (January 18, 1889), pp. 290-298; Congressional Record, vol. 20, part 1 (January 18, 1889), pp. 951-952.

    650 650. House Journal, 50th50th Cong., 2nd2nd sess. (February 20, 1889), pp. 561-570; Senate Journal, 50th50th Cong., 2nd2nd sess. (February 20, 1889), pp. 357-366; Congressional Record, vol. 20, part 3 (February 20, 1889), pp. 2104 and 2116.

    651 25 Stat. 676.

    652 651.

    25 Stat. 676.

    652. Beverly Paulik Rosenow (ed.), The Journal of the Washington State Constitutional Convention, 1889 (Buffalo, NY: William S. Hein & Co., 1999); Washington State Archives, Washington State Constitution, at https://www.sos.wa.gov/ archives/state-constitution.aspx.

    653archives/explore-our-collection/washington-state-constitution. 653. Washington State Constitution; James Leonard Fitts, "The Washington Constitutional Convention of 1889" (master's thesis, University of Washington, 1951), at https://core.ac.uk/download/pdf/267983137.pdf, pp. 194-195.

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    November 11, 1889: President Benjamin Harrison issues a proclamation declaring Washington’s admission into the Union as the 42nd state.654

    West Virginia

    April 17, 1861: Delegates to a Virginia state convention adopt an Ordinance of Secession to repeal Virginia’s 1788 ratification of the Constitution and secede from the Union.655

    May 13-15, 1861: Delegates from a number of counties in western Virginia assemble for the First Wheeling Convention to consider action on the Ordinance of Secession, and resolve to work to defeat passage of the ordinance. The delegates agree that if voters approve the ordinance, delegates from the western counties will elect delegates to a Second Wheeling Convention, to be convened on June 11, 1861.656

    May 23, 1861: Virginia’s eligible voters ratify the Ordinance of Secession by a vote of 125,950 to 20,373.657

    June 11-25, 1861: Delegates from Virginia’s western region meet in the Second Wheeling Convention to form Virginia’s “Restored Government” and officially declare allegiance to the Union.658

    July 1861: The U.S. government recognizes the Restored Government as Virginia’s legitimate governing body and allows representatives from the region to fill seats in Congress vacated when Virginia adopted its secession ordinance.659

    August 6-21, 1861: The Second Wheeling Convention reconvenes. On August 20, the convention approves a proposal to create a new state of “Kanawha.”660

    654 26 Stat. 1552.

    655 “ 654.

    26 Stat. 1552.

    655. "Ordinance of Secession of the Commonwealth of Virginia," April 17, 1861, NARA, Record Group 59, Series: Records Relating to the Virginia Ordinance of Secession, at https://catalog.archives.gov/id/598395.

    656 “. 656. "Proceedings of the First Wheeling Convention," in West Virginia Department of Arts, Culture and History, A State of Convenience: The Creation of West Virginia, at https://archive.wvculture.org/history/statehood/ wheelingconvention1toc.html. See also "First Wheeling Convention," in State of Convenience, at https://archive.wvculture.org/history/statehood/statehood05.html,, and Kevin Fredette, "West Virginia—'One of a Kind,’”'" in Chiorazzi and Most, Prestatehood Legal Materials, vol. 2, pp. 1369-1386.

    657 “ 657. "Ratification of the Ordinance of Secession," in State of Convenience, at https://archive.wvculture.org/history/ statehood/statehood06.html; Richard H. Owens, Rogue State: The Unconstitutional Process of Establishing West Virginia Statehood (Lanham, MD: Rowman & Littlefield, 2013), p. 19.

    658 “ 658. "First Session of the Second Wheeling Convention," in State of Convenience, at https://archive.wvculture.org/ history/statehood/statehood07.html.

    659 Fredette, “West Virginia—‘One of a Kind,’” p. 1380; “. 659. Fredette, "West Virginia—'One of a Kind,'" p. 1380; "Memorial of the Commissioners Appointed by the Convention of West Virginia, Praying for the admission of that State into the Union," Senate Misc. Doc. No. 99, 37th Cong., 2nd sess., May 31, 1862, p. 9.

    660 “ 660. "Proceedings of the Second Session of the Second Wheeling Convention," in State of Convenience, at https://archive.wvculture.org/history/statehood/wheelingconvention20820.html; Fredette, "West Virginia—'One of a Kind,’”'" p. 1380; "Ordinance to Provide for the Formation of a New State out of a Portion of the Territory of this State," in Virginia Compacts, Virginia General Assembly LIS, at https://law.lis.virginia.gov/compacts/virginia-west-virginia- debt-agreement-of-1861/.

    West Virginia: 35th State

    Enabling and admission law enacted December 31, 1862 (12 Stat. 633) West Virginia admitted June 20, 1863 (13 Stat. 731)

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    October 24, 1861: Eligible voters approve the “Ordinance to Provide for the Formation of a New State out of a Portion of the Territory of this State,” by a vote of 18,408 to 781.661

    November 26, 1861-February 20, 1862: Delegates meet in Wheeling to write the constitution for the new state of Kanawha. They change the name of the new state to West Virginia.662

    February 18, 1862: Delegates to the Constitutional Convention unanimously approve the state constitution.663

    May 13, 1862: The General Assembly of the Restored Government of Virginia passes an “Act of the Reorganized Government of Virginia Granting Permission for Creation of New State.”664

    May 29, 1862: Senator Waitman T. Willey of Virginia665 presents a petition to the U.S. Senate for the admission of West Virginia to the Union.666

    June 23, 1862: The Senate Committee on Territories reports a bill (37 S. 365) providing for the admission of West Virginia into the Union.667

    July 14, 1862: Senate passes an amended version of the bill that includes an amendment to provide for gradual emancipation of slaves in West Virginia. The Senate approves, by a vote of 23 to 17, West Virginia’s statehood on the condition that it makes the necessary amendment to the state constitution.668

    December 10, 1862: House passes the West Virginia statehood bill.669

    December 31, 1862: President Abraham Lincoln signs the West Virginia statehood bill.670

    February 12-20, 1863: West Virginia’s Constitutional Convention reconvenes and approves the emancipation amendment on February 17, by a vote of 54 to

    661 Fredette, “West Virginia—‘One of a Kind,’” p. 1381; “Statehood Referendum,”debt-agreement-of-1861/. 661. Fredette, "West Virginia—'One of a Kind,'" p. 1381; "Statehood Referendum," in State of Convenience, at https://archive.wvculture.org/history/statehood/statehood10.html; "; “Proceedings of the Second Session of the Second Wheeling Convention," in State of Convenience, at https://archive.wvculture.org/history/statehood/ wheelingconvention20820.html; Richard Orr Curry, A House Divided, Appendix III, pp. 149-150.

    662 662. Debates and Proceedings of the First Constitutional Convention of West Virginia, 1861-1863, 3 vols. (Huntington, WV: Gentry Brothers, [1939]).

    663 663. First Constitutional Convention Proceedings, vol. 3, p. 449; Fredette, "West Virginia—'One of a Kind,’”'" p. 1381.

    664 “ 664. "Act of the Reorganized Government of Virginia Granting Permission for Creation of New State," in State of Convenience, at https://archive.wvculture.org/history/statehood/rgov051362.html; Fredette, "West Virginia—'One of a Kind,’”'" p. 1381.

    665 665. Initially elected from the Restored Government of Virginia, he would represent West Virginia in the Senate starting in 1863. See "Willey, Waitman Thomas" in Biographical Directory of the United States Congress, at https://bioguide.congress.gov/search/bio/W000484.

    666. 666. Congressional Globe, 37th37th Cong., 2nd2nd sess. (May 29, 1862), p. 2415.

    667 667. Congressional Globe, 37th37th Cong., 2nd2nd sess. (June 23, 1862), p. 2864.

    668 668. Senate Journal, 37th37th Cong., 2nd2nd sess. (July 14, 1862), p. 835; Congressional Globe, 37th37th Cong., 2nd2nd sess. (July 14, 1862), p. 3320.

    669 669. The Congressional Globe reports the vote as 96-55, while the House Journal reports the vote as 96-57. See Congressional Globe, 37th Cong., 2nd sess. (December 10, 1862), p. 59, and House Journal, 37th Cong., 2nd sess. (December 10, 1862), pp. 58-59.

    670 12 Stat. 633.

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    zero. The convention approves the amended constitution the next day, 52 to zero.671

    March 26, 1863: Eligible voters ratify the revised state constitution by a vote of 28,321 to 572.672

    April 20, 1863: President Lincoln issues a proclamation admitting West Virginia into the Union.673

    June 20, 1863: West Virginia is admitted into the Union as the 35th state, 60 days after the presidential proclamation.674

    Wisconsin

    September 3, 1783: The United States acquires the the land that will become Wisconsin in the Treaty of Paris.675

    January 21, 1836: Senator John M. Clayton of Delaware introduces 24 S. 92, a bill to create the Wisconsin Territory.676

    March 29, 1836: Senate passes 24 S. 92 without a recorded vote.677

    April 8, 1836: House passes an amended version of 24 S. 92 without a recorded vote.678

    April 11, 1836: Senate concurs in two of the House’s three amendments and sends 24 S. 92 back to the House without a recorded vote.679

    April 14, 1836: House insists on its remaining amendment, sending 24 S. 92 back to the Senate without a recorded vote.680

    671 “ 670.

    12 Stat. 633.

    671. "West Virginians Approve the Willey Amendment," in State of Convenience, at https://archive.wvculture.org/ history/statehood/statehood15.html; "; “Votes of the Delegates on Revised Constitution," in State of Convenience, at https://archive.wvculture.org/history/statehood/ccvote.html; First Constitutional Convention Proceedings, vol. 3, pp. 728 and 731.

    672 “ 672. "West Virginians Approve the Willey Amendment," in State of Convenience, at https://archive.wvculture.org/ history/statehood/statehood15.html; A House Divided, pp. 150-151.

    673 13 Stat. 731.

    674 13 Stat. 731.

    675 Jonathan Kasparek, “The State of Wisconsin,” 673.

    13 Stat. 731.

    674.

    13 Stat. 731.

    675. Jonathan Kasparek, "The State of Wisconsin," in Shearer, Uniting States, vol. 3, pp. 1325-1350.

    676 676. Senate Journal, 24th24th Cong., 1st1st sess. (January 21, 1836), p. 112; Congressional Globe, 24th24th Cong., 1st1st sess. (January 21, 1836), p. 127.

    677 677. Senate Journal, 24th24th Cong., 1st1st sess. (March 29, 1836), pp. 249-250; Congressional Globe, 24th24th Cong., 1st1st sess. (March 29, 1836), p. 301.

    678 678. House Journal, 24th24th Cong., 1st1st sess. (April 8, 1836), pp. 649-651; Congressional Globe, 24th24th Cong., 1st1st sess. (April 8, 1836), pp. 339-341.

    679 679. Senate Journal, 24th24th Cong., 1st1st sess. (April 11, 1836), p. 282; Congressional Globe, 24th24th Cong., 1st1st sess. (April 11, 1836), p. 343.

    680 680. House Journal, 24th24th Cong., 1st1st sess. (April 14, 1836), pp. 700-701; Congressional Globe, 24th24th Cong., 1st1st sess. (April 14, 1836), p. 359.

    Wisconsin: 30th State

    Wisconsin Territory created July 3, 1836 (5 Stat. 10) Enabling law enacted August 6, 1846 (9 Stat. 56) Wisconsin admitted May 29, 1848 (9 Stat. 233)

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    April 18, 1836: Senate accepts the House version of 24 S. 92 without a recorded vote.681

    April 20, 1836: President Andrew Jackson signs 24 S. 92, creating the Wisconsin Territory as of July 3, 1836.682

    January 13, 1846: Delegate Morgan L. Martin of Wisconsin introduces 29 H.R. 105, a bill that would enable Wisconsin residents to write a constitution and form a government ahead of statehood.683

    June 9, 1846: House amends and passes 29 H.R. 105 without a recorded vote.684

    June 10, 1846: House votes to reconsider its vote to pass 29 H.R. 105, then amends and passes it without a recorded vote.685

    August 5, 1846: Senate passes 29 H.R. 105 without a recorded vote.686

    August 6, 1846: President James K. Polk signs 29 H.R. 105, enabling Wisconsin residents to write a constitution and form a state government.687

    October 5, 1846: Delegates gather in Madison to write a state constitution.688

    December 16, 1846: The Madison convention adjourns after completing work on a state constitution.689

    April 6, 1847: Wisconsin voters reject ratification of the state constitution, 20,233 to 14,119.690

    December 15, 1847: Delegates gather in Madison for a second constitutional convention.691

    February 1, 1848: Delegates at the second Madison convention approve a new state constitution by a vote of 60 to 1.692

    March 13, 1848: Wisconsin voters ratify the new state constitution, 16,759 to 6,384.693

    681 Senate Journal, 24th Cong., 1st 681. Senate Journal, 24th Cong., 1st sess. (April 18, 1836), p. 294; Congressional Globe, 24th24th Cong., 1st1st sess. (April 18, 1836), p. 370.

    682 5 Stat. 10.

    683 House Journal, 29th Cong., 1st 682.

    5 Stat. 10.

    683. House Journal, 29th Cong., 1st sess. (January 13, 1846), p. 253; Congressional Globe, 29th29th Cong., 1st1st sess. (January 13, 1846), p. 196.

    684 684. House Journal, 29th29th Cong., 1st1st sess. (June 9, 1846), pp. 931-932; Congressional Globe, 29th29th Cong., 1st1st sess. (June 9, 1846), pp. 949-950.

    685 The House’ 685. The House's initial vote on reconsideration was recorded in the House Journal as 127-45 and in the Congressional Globe as 125-45. See House Journal, 29th Cong., 1st sess. (June 10, 1846), pp. 936-938, and Congressional Globe, 29th Cong., 1st sess. (June 10, 1846), pp. 952-953.

    686 686. Senate Journal, 29th29th Cong., 1st1st sess. (August 5, 1846), p. 482; Congressional Globe, 29th29th Cong., 1st1st sess. (August 5, 1846), p. 1194.

    687 9 Stat. 56.

    688 687.

    9 Stat. 56.

    688. Journal of the Convention to Form a Constitution for the State of Wisconsin: Begun and Held at Madison, on the Fifth Day of October, One Thousand Eight Hundred and Forty-Six (Madison, WI: Beriah Brown, 1847), p. 3.

    689 689. Journal of the Convention to Form a Constitution for the State of Wisconsin (1847), p. 477.

    690 690. Jack Stark, The Wisconsin State Constitution: A Reference Guide (Westport, CT: Greenwood Press, 1997), p. 4.

    691 691. Journal of the Convention to Form a Constitution for the State of Wisconsin, With a Sketch of the Debates, Begun and Held at Madison, on the Fifteenth Day of December, Eighteen Hundred and Forty-Seven (Madison, WI: Tenney, Smith & Holt, 1848), p. 3.

    692 692. Journal of the Convention to Form a Constitution for the State of Wisconsin (1848), p. 599.

    693 Stark, Wisconsin State Constitution, p. 8.

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    April 13, 1848: Representative Caleb B. Smith of Indiana reports 30 H.R. 397, a bill to admit Wisconsin as a state, from the House Committee on Territories.694

    May 11, 1848: House amends 30 H.R. 397 and passes it without a recorded vote.695

    May 19, 1848: Senate passes 30 H.R. 397 without a recorded vote.696

    May 29, 1848: President Polk signs 30 H.R. 397, admitting Wisconsin into the Union as the 30th state.697

    Wyoming

    February 2, 1848: The United States, in the Treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo, acquires from Mexico part of the land that will become Wyoming , adding to territory acquired earlier in the Louisiana Purchase of 1803, the annexation of Texas in 1845, and the Oregon Treaty of 1846.698

    February 13, 1868: Senator Richard Yates of Illinois introduces 40 S. 357, a bill to create the Wyoming Territory.699

    June 3, 1868: Senate amends 40 S. 357 and passes it without a recorded vote.700

    July 22, 1868: House passes 40 S. 357 by a 106-50 vote.701

    July 25, 1868: President Andrew Johnson signs 40 S. 357, creating the Wyoming Territory.702

    June 3, 1889: Territorial Governor Francis E. Warren sets a July election for delegates to a constitutional convention that will meet in Cheyenne.703

    September 2, 1889: Delegates gather in Cheyenne to write a state constitution.704

    694 House Journal, 30th Cong., 1st 693.

    Stark, Wisconsin State Constitution, p. 8.

    694. House Journal, 30th Cong., 1st sess. (April 13, 1848), p. 677; Congressional Globe, 30th30th Cong., 1st1st sess. (April 13, 1848), p. 623.

    695 695. House Journal, 30th30th Cong., 1st1st sess. (May 11, 1848), pp. 787-789; Congressional Globe, 30th30th Cong., 1st1st sess. (May 11, 1848), pp. 754-755.

    696 696. Senate Journal, 30th30th Cong., 1st1st sess. (May 19, 1848), p. 351; Congressional Globe, 30th30th Cong., 1st1st sess. (May 19, 1848), p. 785.

    697 9 Stat. 233.

    698 Phil Roberts, “The State of Wyoming,” 697.

    9 Stat. 233.

    698. Phil Roberts, "The State of Wyoming," in Shearer, Uniting States, vol. 3, pp. 1351-1378.

    699 699. Senate Journal, 40th40th Cong., 2nd2nd sess. (February 13, 1868), p. 185; Congressional Globe, 40th40th Cong., 2nd2nd sess. (February 13, 1868), p. 1143.

    700 700. Senate Journal, 40th40th Cong., 2nd2nd sess. (June 3, 1868), p. 450; Congressional Globe, 40th40th Cong., 2nd2nd sess. (June 3, 1868), p. 2802.

    701 701. House Journal, 40th40th Cong., 2nd2nd sess. (July 22, 1868), pp. 1150-1151; Congressional Globe, 40th40th Cong., 2nd2nd sess. (July 22, 1868), p. 4345.

    702 15 Stat. 178.

    703 “ 702.

    15 Stat. 178.

    703. "Proclamation by the Governor," in Report of the Governor of Wyoming to the Secretary of the Interior, 1889, by Francis E. Warren (Washington: GPO, 1889), pp. 123-124.

    704 704. Journal and Debates of the Constitutional Convention of the State of Wyoming (Cheyenne, WY: The Daily Sun, Book and Job Printing, 1893), p. 3.

    Wyoming: 44th State

    Wyoming Territory created July 25, 1868 (15 Stat. 178) Wyoming admitted July 10, 1890 (26 Stat. 222)

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    September 30, 1889: Delegates at the Cheyenne convention vote 37-0 to adopt a state constitution for Wyoming.705

    November 5, 1889: Wyoming voters ratify the new state constitution, 6,272 to 1,923.706

    December 18, 1889: Delegate Joseph M. Carey of Wyoming introduces 51 H.R. 982, a bill to admit Wyoming as a state.707

    March 26, 1890: House amends and passes 51 H.R. 982 by a 139-127 vote.708

    June 27, 1890: Senate amends and passes 51 H.R. 982 by a 29-18 vote.709

    July 8, 1890: House passes the Senate-amended version of 51 H.R. 982 without a recorded vote.710

    July 10, 1890: President Benjamin Harrison signs 51 H.R. 982, admitting Wyoming into the Union as the 44th state.711

    Author Information

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    Carol Wilson

    Senior Research Librarian

    Kathleen E. Marchsteiner Senior Research Librarian

    705 Journal and Debates of the Constitutional Convention of the State of Wyoming, p. 863.

    706 705.

    Journal and Debates of the Constitutional Convention of the State of Wyoming, p. 863.

    706. Warren, Report of the Governor of Wyoming to the Secretary of the Interior, 1890 (Washington: GPO, 1890), p. 14.

    707 707. House Journal, 51st51st Cong., 1st1st sess. (December 18, 1889), p. 41; Congressional Record, vol. 21, part 1 (December 18, 1889), pp. 261-262.

    708 708. House Journal, 51st51st Cong., 1st1st sess. (March 26, 1890), pp. 391-392; Congressional Record, vol. 21, part 3 (March 26, 1890), pp. 2711-2712.

    709 709. Senate Journal, 51st51st Cong., 1st1st sess. (June 27, 1890), p. 400; Congressional Record, vol. 21, part 7 (June 27, 1890), p. 6589.

    710 710. House Journal, 51st51st Cong., 1st1st sess. (July 8, 1890), p. 833; Congressional Record, vol. 21, part 7 (July 8, 1890), p. 7034.

    711 26 Stat. 222.

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    711.

    26 Stat. 222.