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Prof. Spurs Mississippi to Ratify Slavery Amendment

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University of Mississippi Medical Center Professor Ranjan Batra (right) and colleague Ken Dale Sullivan hold up the document finalizing the ratification by the state of Mississippi of the 13th Amendment.
  • United States

    It’s not often that by deciding to go see a movie you can change history.

    Ranjan Batra, associate professor of neurobiology and anatomical sciences at the University of Mississippi Medical Center in Jackson, Miss., last November attended a showing of “Lincoln,” the film that depicts the political fighting that led to passage of the 13th Amendment abolishing slavery and features an Academy Award-winning performance by Daniel Day Lewis in the title role.

    The Kolkata-born Batra told India-West last week that “toward the end of ‘Lincoln,’ Daniel Day-Lewis talks about the ratification process for the 13th Amendment that is yet to come, and that the amendment would require ratification by several of the Southern states in order to become law.” 

    “I am a scientist, and naturally curious. Living as I do in Mississippi, I wondered how the ratification process had fared in the South, and particularly in Mississippi.”

    What Batra found out, by visiting Web site usconstitution.net, was that after Congress voted for the 13th Amendment in January 1865, the measure went to the states for ratification.

    On Dec. 6, 1865, the amendment received the three-fourths’ vote of 36 states needed when Georgia became the 27th state to ratify it. States that failed to ratify the amendment included Delaware, Kentucky, New Jersey and Mississippi.

    Over the next 129 years, states that initially rejected the amendment ratified it: New Jersey in 1866, Delaware in 1901 and Kentucky in 1976.

    According to ClarionLedger.com, there was an asterisk beside the state of Mississippi. A note read: “Mississippi ratified the amendment in 1995, but because the state never officially notified the U.S. Archivist, the ratification is not official.”

    Was Batra “shocked” to find out that Mississippi had not officially ratified the 13th Amendment?

    “Shocked is an overstatement,” the Indian American professor told India-West in an e-mail. “It takes a lot to shock me. More along the lines of embarrassed.”

    He decided to see if he could do something about it. Batra spoke to Ken Dale Sullivan, an anatomical material specialist at the University of Mississippi Medical Center’s body donation program.

    When Batra informed Sullivan that Mississippi had never ratified the amendment, the latter recalled the 1995 ratification of the amendment by state legislators and decided to pursue the matter further.

    Sullivan contacted the National Archives’ Office of the Federal Register, where he confirmed the basic facts about the state’s failure to ratify the amendment. He was told what steps needed to be taken to complete ratification.

    After going to a movie theater and seeing “Lincoln” and observing the audience cheering at the film’s conclusion, the Mississippi-born Sullivan decided he would do everything in his power to ensure that Mississippi would ratify the amendment, he told the Clarion-Ledger.

    Sullivan found a copy of the 1995 Senate resolution, which had been approved unanimously in 1995 in both the state Senate and House. Some legislators hadn’t voted, but there was not a single “nay” vote.

    The last paragraph of the resolution called upon the secretary of state to send a copy to the Office of the Federal Register. Why the copy was never sent remains unknown, the Clarion-Ledger said.

    Sullivan contacted the office of Mississippi Secretary of State Delbert Hosemann, who filed the necessary paperwork to make it official.

    Hosemann Jan. 30 sent the Office of the Federal Register a copy of the 1995 Senate resolution, which had been adopted by the legislatures.

    Charles A. Barth, director of the Federal Register, Feb. 7 wrote back that he had received it: “With this action, the State of Mississippi has ratified the 13th Amendment to the Constitution of the United States."

    Batra said that he couldn’t have accomplished it by himself.

    “I realized right away that it would be difficult for me to do alone and that I would have to locate someone who had good contacts with and knowledge about the Mississippi political establishment,” 

    “I was lucky on the first shot,” he added. “Ken Sullivan had run for office three times, and knew a lot about what to do and where to find documents. You must understand that Ken did nearly all the work.”

    “The other person who deserves mention is Stephen JJ Mount, who ran usconstitution.net,” explained Batra, “where Ken and I learned that Mississippi’s ratification of the 13th amendment was not yet official. Sadly, as I have now discovered, Mount died a year and a half before I saw his Web site.”

    Batra, who became a U.S. citizen in 2008 and whose current research focuses on how the frequency of a sound in analyzed by the brain, said he is not “a history buff,” but is “interested in how history shapes modern politics, and there is a lot of that in Mississippi.”

    The asterisk has now been removed from the state of Mississippi.

    “I am pleased and honored that I was able to play a small part in seeing that Mississippi’s ratification of the 13th Amendment was made official, Batra told India-West.

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