Resolution on Pensions for Wounded Veterans, 3 December 1784
Resolution on Pensions for Wounded Veterans
[3 December 1784]
Resolved, that it is the opinion of this committee, That the Executive ought to be authorised to put on the pension list all officers and soldiers, who have been wounded in the service of their country, and whom they may think entitled to the same, upon application being made to them therefor.1
Printed copy (
, Oct. 1784, p. 53). No Ms of the resolution has been found.1. As chairman of the Committee for Courts of Justice, JM reported that the petition of Joseph Anderson, “praying to be put on the list of pensioners,” had been considered. Instead of routinely passing on the merits of Anderson’s petition, the committee recommended that this time-consuming problem should be shifted away from the legislature to the discretion of the governor and Council of State. The resolution was approved and the way cleared for the amendments incorporated in the Bill Enabling the Executive to Pension Disabled Veterans, 16 Nov. 1784. Joseph Anderson (1736– ca. 1823) had enlisted in 1779 in the 11th Virginia Regiment and subsequently “received a dangerous hurt which rendered him incapable of duty.” In 1821 Anderson applied for a pension, declaring his main assets were “one Negro man aged near 70, [and] 200 acres of poor land entirely unproductive” (Virginia Revolutionary Pension Applications, John Frederick Dorman, comp. [15 vols.; Washington, 1958——], II, 32).