4th - Brown County -- Samuel A. Kingman.
5th - Nemaha County -- Thomas S. Wright.
6th - Marshall and Washington counties -- J. A. Middleton.
7th - Jefferson County -- C. B. McClelland.
8th - Jackson County -- Ephraim Moore.
9th - Riley County -- S. D. Houston.
10th - Pottawatomie County -- Luther R. Palmer.
11th - Johnson County -- J. T. Barton, John T. Burns.
12th - Douglas County -- James Blood, N. C.
Blood, William Hutchinson, Edwin Stokes,Solon O. Thacher, P. H. Townsend, L. R. Williams.
13th - Shawnee County -- J. P. Greer, H. D. Preston, John
Ritchie.
14th - Wabaunsee, Davis, Dickinson and Clay counties
-- Edmund G.
Ross.
15th - Lykins County -- W. P. Dutton, Benjamin F. Simpson.
16th - Franklin County -- James Hanway.
17th - Osage, Breckenridge, Morris and Chase counties
-- William
McCullough, James M. Winchell.
18th - Linn County -- James M. Arthur, Josiah Lamb.
19th - Anderson County --
James G. Blunt.
20th - Coffey and Woodson counties -- Allen Crocker, Samuel E.
Hoffman.
21st - Madison, Hunter, Butler, Greenwood, Godfrey and Wilson
counties -- George H. Lillie.
22nd - Bourbon, McGee and Dorn counties -- J. C. Burnett, William
R. Griffith.
23d - Allen County -- James A. Signor.
A glance at the above list will show that the leaders of both
the
Free-State and pro-slavery parties of former days were absent.
James H. Lane, Charles Robinson,
Samuel N. Wood, Speer,
Charles H. Branscomb, and others who gave such loyal support to the
Topeka
Constitution, were missing; and on the other hand not a single prominent
pro-slavery man was among the 17 Democratic delegates. Of the 52 delegates
composing the convention, three-fourths of them were under the age of 40 years.
It was a young men's convention. Practically all occupations were represented.
There were 18 lawyers, 16 farmers, 8 merchants, 3 manufacturers, 3 physicians, 1
surveyor, 1 printer, 1 mechanic, and 1 land agent.
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