Above is a copy of the Florida Ordinance of Secession signed on January 10,1861 by the Florida Secession Convention and a Key showing each known signature and where that person who signed was from. 

SECESSION FROM THE UNION


Wh
en the news of thBlack Republican victorin 1860 in the election of Lincoln tsucceed Buchanaaspresident of the United Statereached Flori­da an immediate wave of adverse reaction was felt throughout the statePub­lic meetingheld in thetownand settlements adopted resolutions calling forstate action on thcourse tbe followed toward separation from the union. On November 8 a public meeting at Fernandina went on record with the decla­ration that Lincoln's electiowas the first step in the dissolution of the union and similar meeting in Jefferson county favored secession if necessary to pro­tect southern rights. A St. Augustinmeeting of November 17 and one at Ocala Novembe26 added their resolutions to the General Assembly to provide for "Convention of Delegates" to consider "the expediency of dissolving our connection with theFederal Union. . . ." In general, the erstwhile Whigsjoined with the Democratin denouncing the selection of Lincoln, while the Democratic newspapers almost unanimously demanded state action agains"that party of fanatics, whhave deliberatelthreatened to force us into an admis­sion of the equalitysocially and politicallyof the slave…….”


Opp
osition to the project for immediate secession waspubliclexpressed ba few prominent Floridians. Richard Keith Call, staunch Whig and stronunion nationalist, wrote manletters to Middle Florida newspapers urging re­sistance against northernoppression barmed revolutiowithin the existing government rather than by secession from the union. Federal Judge WilliaMarvin of Key West opposedthe ideof secession and exercised influence in fostering union sentiment in the Keys. David Shelby Walker, an associate jus­ticof the state supreme court, was opposed to the idea and privately exercised his opinion on others, though hiopposition was not asviolent as that of Call.3 But the sentiment forsecession overwhelmed the small voices of the unionists, particularlwhen Governor Madison Perry, Governor-elect John Milton, and Congressman-elect R.BHilton were on record by the middle of November 1860 for immediate separation. With the national government in control of the Republican Party southernerbelieved that federal control of slavery in the territories wabut a minor goal of the abolitionists in that party who meant to finally destroy slavery in the southern states.


On November 26 the General Assembly convened in regular session at Tallahassee. Governor Perry devoted his entire message to the necessity for secession at once, as an indecisive wait for an aggressive act by the national government might well invite the disaster which the slaves of Santo Domingo inflicted upon the white inhabitants of that island. The governor asked the legislature to enact legislation for the election of delegates to a constituent as­sembly which, in turn, might take proper action toward protecting the rights of the people of Florida. Perry also recommended reorganization of the state militia and the appropriation of $100,000 as a military fund for the ensuing year. The legislature quickly acquiesced in the requests of the chief executive by passing a law calling for the election of delegates to a convention to be convened on January 3, 1861, and other laws for the reorganization of the militia, and for the appropriation of $100,000 for the munitions of war.

Above is a portrait of Governor Madison S. Perry of Florida who was Governor of Florida at the time of secession. Image courtesy of Wikimedia Commons.

Governor Perry issued a proclamation on November 30 providing for the election of delegates, on December 22, to the January convention. The governor then left for South Carolina to arrange for the purchase of guns and ammuni­tion and to meet with southern leaders who had assembled there to observe the secession convention in the Palmetto State. In the short campaign for the selection of delegates the predominant issue was whether secession should be immediate by Florida alone or delayed until Georgia, Alabama, and other south­ern states had taken action on the movement. Wilkinson Call, nephew of RKCall, and four others ran on a "People's ticket" in Leon county, pledged to submit the action of thconvention to a populavote. Young Call made number ofspeeches ibehalof populaapproval of the work of the forthcoming con­vention, but tno avail. The popular appeaof the secession movement was re­flected in thNovembemasthead of an East Florida newspaper: "The Seces­sion of thState of Florida,ThDissolutioof the UnionThe Formation of aSouthern Confederacy."


Th
e sentiments of the Florida congressional delegation in Washington ap­pear to have followed those of their constituentrather than to have led them in thematter oimmediate secession as opposed to a policyof watchful wait­ing. Senator Yulee, a radical in 1850, so hopeful for the prosperity of Fernan­dinand theFloridRailroad in 1860, wrote in Mathat "if themodern Repub­licans succeed in acquirinpossession of the Federal Government, it will be thdutof the Southern States to secede ... until new guaranties oftheirightcan be obtained; anin failure of thito seetheisafety ineUnioof sympathizing and homogeneouStates.Yulee, ndoubt, belonged tthelargminoritof southern leaderin 1860-1861 who believed thaseparation from the old union and formation of a new southern union could baccoplished peacefully. In October 1860 the Florida senator stated: "there is no peacin the land, nor anygeneral harmony between the states; wshouldarrangtogether now and at oncfor livinin peace or partinin peace." A month lateYuleehowever, in aletter to the General Assembltheabout tcon­vene, wrote ohis intention to "promptland joyously return home" to assist the state on secession.


Sen
ator Mallory had remained somewhat aloof in the:turmoil of the decadof the fifties over issues of theNorth and South. On several occasionthe senior senator spoke on thflooof the senate and always insupport of the south­ern rightissue, but never with the earlier radical enthusiasm of Yulee. In 1858Mallory stated that Republican control which infringedsouthern rights would induce every effort on his part tinduce secession of thaffectestates. Hlaterwrothhad "believed in secession as a right resulting from state sover­eignty,but thahe regardedsecessio"as only another name for revolution."


Repr
esentativGeorge S. Hawkins, howeverbecama "fire-eating radicaand plumped for immediate secession." Hawkinrefused to serve on a joint com­mittee created to compromise differences between the sections and proudlstated that thcall for a state convention in Florida was ample proof that a sovereign statcould well settlsuch important questions at home. Hawkins, unlike Yuleand Mallory, signed the address of thirty southern congressmenwhich advised theielectors to secede and establisasouthern nation, for the triumph of thRepublican partforebode the future strangulation of southern rights with denial of equalitunder thfederal constitution and the lawof congress.


In 
thshort campaign for thelection of convention delegates the opposi­tion to secession wanegligibleIf there was an issue, the public discussion re­volved around the proposition of immediate secession. The Perry administra­tion, press, and pulpit urged rapid actionWhen the South Carolina convention voted for secession on December 20 many Floridians were convinced that the gauntlet had been laid down. Alabama, Mississippi, and Georgia had also called conventions and Louisiana and Virginia had called special sessions of their legislatures. As a result of the special election the delegates were divided, with a third of convention membership in the moderate group and several delegates who wavered between cooperation and immediate secession.

Above is a picture of the Florida Capitol Building around the time fo the start of the War Between the States. This was where the Florida Secession Convention met and the Florida Legislature passed the Florida Ordinance of Secession. Image courtesy of Wikimedia Commons.

The convention met to organize on January 3, 1861.Tallahassee was flooded with visitors from over the state, as well as commissioners E. CBul­lock of Alabama and LW. Spratt of South Carolina. Edmund Ruffin, a rabid fire-eater from Virginia, attended as an unofficial observer and kept a day-to-day account of the proceedings in a diary.


Sixty of the sixty-nine delegates who were members of the convention were present on the first day when a temporary organization was made. There was no meeting on January fourth in deference to President Buchanan's request that the day be observed in fasting and humiliation "on account [wrote Ruffin] of the political dangers and
 disasters now impending to be produced not by northern abolitionists, but by the spirit of resistance and disunion of the southern states. The very appointment of the day and service is a rebuke and censure of the seceding states."


The convention delegates and state officials used the day of fast and humili­ation to confer on the action necessary to seize the various federal military in­stallations in the state. "The arsenal at Chattahoochee and Fort Marion at St. Au­gustine were seized by state troops even before passage of the secession ordinance. The Federals were in sufficient force at Pensacola to offer resistance, and the political situation made unwise what military considerations would have dic­tated." The strength of the union forces and union sentiment at Key West made the union hold on that town secure throughout the entire war.


And at Washington Senators Yulee and Mallory wrote the War Depart­ment for information on the strength of the federal fortifications and garrisons in Florida, but such intelligence was denied them on the basis of classified mat­ter of interest to the armed forces. On January 5, Yulee wrote Joseph Finegan, a business associate and a delegate to the convention: "The immediately impor­tant thing to be done is the occupation of the forts and arsenals in Florida. The Naval Station and forts at Pensacola are first in consequence." Yulee urged Finegan, later a Confederate general, to seek the aid of Georgia troops in the seizure of the forts and also the arsenal at Chattahoochee. Further, Yulee urged the establishment of a confederation of southern states and the formation of a southern army for the defense of the South.


When the secession convention resumed its work on January 5, Judge John C
McGehee of Madison County received forty-seven of the fifty-seven votes cast for president and took the chairMcGehee, an ardent southern rights spokes­man, delivered a stirring address in which the threats to slavery arguments of the southern states were reiterated once again. Slavery he found to be the ele­ment of all value, a value whose destruction obliterated property. But the peculiar institution meant value to only 5,000 slave holders. The non-slaveholdersfeared abolition of slaveras thend of the control of the Negro; theyfeared the con­sequenceof thsocial equalitof abolitionand likened such an eventuality to thehorrors of thSantDomingo and other insular slave insurrections.


After McGehee
's speech the convention was organized with nine standing committees and several lesser officials. The convention began the business for which it had been called when McQueen McIntosh of Apalachicolawho had re­signefederal judgeship on the Republican victorin Novemberintroduced aresolution upholding thright of secession and the necessitof Florida's exer­cisinthe right in view of the national political crisisTwo days later, after seve­ral amendmenthad been debated and defeated, the resolution was adopted and the chair appointed a committee to prepare an ordinance of secession. The seces­sion ordinance reached the convention floor on January 9. Jackson Morton and George TWard,former Whigs, led a fight of the more conservative members to delay action until Georgiand Alabamhad seceded, and further, to require popular referendumof thelectors of the state on the measureBoth proposals werdefeated: the delay, 39-30 and the referendum, 41-26. "When it was shown that immediate action could not be blocked, most of the cooperationists declared that thewould vote for the ordinance because they felt keenly the political necessitfor unanimity. On January 10 the ordinance was passed by a vote of 62 to 7."


Before adjourning on the tenth the convention, by resolution
appointed the judges of the state supreme court to direct the enrolling of the ordinance. The judges, in turn, directed that the ordinance be enrolled on parchment and re­quested Miss Elizabeth M. Eppesa lineal descendant of "the immortal author of the first Declaration of American Independence," to bind the document with blue ribbon. On the following day, sixty-four members of the convention pro­ceeded to the east portico of the capitol where the ceremony of signing the ordinance of secession was completed. The ceremony took place before gover­nor-elect Milton, the members of the legislature, Supreme Court, governor's cabi­net, and many citizens. After the last member had signed, the state seal was affixed and McGehee announced that Florida was a free, sovereign, and inde­pendent state and that all connections with the United States were at an end.

Above is a picture of Brown's Inn in Tallahassee, Florida around 1860. This hotel was popular with state politicians and may have lodged some of the convention members who attended the Secession Convention of January 1861. This hotel did play a historic role as the site of several parties that celebrated the secession of Florida on January 10, 1861. Image courtesy of Wikimedia Commons.

Secession was the occasion for spontaneous celebrations in Tallahassee and other towns in the state. Parades, gun salutes, numerous toasts and speeches were in evidence as the jubilation over secession spread. "Little did the people of Flo­rida realize that they had embarked on a course which was to lead to the des­truction of the social and economic institutions and of the way of life which they were determined to preserve?"


The news of secession in Florida reached Washington by telegraph and Yu­lee and Mallory refrained from participation in the proceedings of the Senate, but did not make a formal withdrawal until January 21
In his farewell speech Yulee reminded the Senate that one of the conditions of the cession of Florida from Spain to the United States was that the residents of the territory should be admitted into the union on terms of equality with the citizens of that nation. Thus, in seceding, Florida was but exercising the equality gained on entrance into the union in 1845. Mallory was more eloquent when he said: "From the Union, governed by the Constitution as our fathers made it, there breathes not a secessionist upon her soil, but a deep sense of injustice, inequality and insecuri­ty ... is brought home to the reason and patriotism of her people; and to secure and maintain these rights which the Constitution no longer accords them, they have placed the State of Florida out of the Confederacy." Mallory concluded with the statement: "We seek not to war upon, or to conquer you; and we know that you cannot conquer us."


Before the convention adjourned Governor Perry was authorized to appoint four counselors of state and Perry selected McGehee, Jackson Morton, John Beard, and Joseph Finegan
As the convention could not agree on delegates to the convention of the seceded states to be held at Montgomery, Perry appointed Jackson Morton, Patton Anderson, and James BOwensThe congressional dele­gation of Mallory, Yulee, and Hawkins was made a commission to negotiate with federal officials for the transfer of the United States military and naval installa­tions to the "nation of Florida." 

On February 4 the delegates from the seceding states met at Montgomery, Alabama, and later agreed upon a "Provisional Government" for the Confede­rate States of America, with a constitution, which was reported to the statesJefferson Davis was chosen president, and Alexander HStevens, vice president, the two being inaugurated on February 18. The Florida convention reassembled on January 26 anbordinanceunanimously adopted the Confederate constitu­tion on the twenty-eighththus, Floridbecame a member of the "Provisional Government." On March 11, 1861 theConfederate Congress adopted a constitu­tion and reported it tthe Florida convention. On theeighteenth of April the conventiomet agaiat Tallahassee and in four days haagain ratified theConfederate constitution unanimously"At thismeeting, thconvention divided the state into twocongressional districts, and transacted businessrelating to pub­lic lands, fortifications, railroads, and educationSuch amendmentto the [state]constitution as thchange in political relationmadenecessary wermadethe amended constitution to bereferred tthpeople."
 

Apri186brought the seceding stateface tface with the beginning of armed hostilities. Thfirsgunat Charleston in thfight over Fort Sumter had been fireon the twelfthThree days later Lincoln called fo75,000 militiamen tquiet thdisturbances in the southern states; the "brothers' war" had begun. InFlorida, the administration of Perry carrieon until October, while the three Floridmembers of the Provisional Congresof the Confederacy served until February 171862In addition to the three representatives chosen by the 1861 Convention George T. Ward and John P. Sanderson served in the Provisional Congress on the resignations of Patton Anderson and WardJameBOwens and Jackson Morton served out one-year terms. With the organization of the First Congress, AugustuE. Maxwell and James M. Baker serveas senators through thfour sessionof the First Congress and the twsessions of the Second Con­gress, all of which were held at RichmondRobert BHiltoserved as a Rep­resentative in both Congresses while James B. Dawkins and John M. Martin divided thterm of thesecond representative in the First Congress and SSt.George Rogers waHilton's colleaguin the Second Congress"PoliticallJack­son Morton and George T. Ward had beeat first Whigs and later Constitution­aUnionists. Owens, Sanderson and Martin were Democrats. Anderson, Mor­ton, Ward and Martin, each served in the Confederate armafter their terms in Congress.Both Maxwell and Baker, the twsenators, were Democrats.