Congressmen 1788-1838
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H. Doc. 108-222
EIGHTEENTH CONGRESS MARCH 4, 1823, TO MARCH 3, 1825 FIRST SESSION—December 1, 1823, to May 27, 1824 SECOND SESSION—December 6, 1824, to March 3, 1825 VICE PRESIDENT OF THE UNITED STATES—DANIEL D. TOMPKINS, of New York PRESIDENT PRO TEMPORE OF THE SENATE—JOHN GAILLARD, 1 of South Carolina SECRETARY OF THE SENATE—CHARLES CUTTS, of New Hampshire SERGEANT AT ARMS OF THE SENATE—MOUNTJOY BAYLY, of Maryland SPEAKER OF THE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES—HENRY CLAY, 2 of Kentucky CLERK OF THE HOUSE—MATTHEW ST. CLAIR CLARKE, 3 of Pennsylvania SERGEANT AT ARMS OF THE HOUSE—THOMAS DUNN, of Maryland; JOHN O. DUNN, 4 of District of Columbia DOORKEEPER OF THE HOUSE—BENJAMIN BIRCH, of Maryland ALABAMA GEORGIA Waller Taylor, Vincennes SENATORS SENATORS REPRESENTATIVES William R. King, Cahaba John Elliott, Sunbury Jonathan Jennings, Charlestown William Kelly, Huntsville Nicholas Ware, 8 Richmond John Test, Brookville REPRESENTATIVES Thomas W. Cobb, 9 Greensboro William Prince, 14 Princeton John McKee, Tuscaloosa REPRESENTATIVES AT LARGE Gabriel Moore, Huntsville Jacob Call, 15 Princeton George W. Owen, Claiborne Joel Abbot, Washington George Cary, Appling CONNECTICUT Thomas W. Cobb, 10 Greensboro KENTUCKY 11 SENATORS Richard H. Wilde, Augusta SENATORS James Lanman, Norwich Alfred Cuthbert, Eatonton Elijah Boardman, 5 Litchfield John Forsyth, Augusta Richard M. Johnson, Great Crossings Henry W. Edwards, 6 New Haven Edward F. Tattnall, Savannah Isham Talbot, Frankfort REPRESENTATIVES AT LARGE Wiley Thompson, Elberton REPRESENTATIVES Noyes Barber, Groton Samuel A. Foote, Cheshire ILLINOIS Richard A. Buckner, Greensburg Ansel Sterling, Sharon SENATORS Henry Clay, Lexington Ebenezer Stoddard, Woodstock Jesse B. Thomas, Edwardsville Robert P. Henry, Hopkinsville Gideon Tomlinson, Fairfield Ninian Edwards, 12 Edwardsville Francis Johnson, Bowling Green Lemuel Whitman, Farmington John McLean, 13 Shawneetown John T. -
Washington City, 1800-1830 Cynthia Diane Earman Louisiana State University and Agricultural and Mechanical College
Louisiana State University LSU Digital Commons LSU Historical Dissertations and Theses Graduate School Fall 11-12-1992 Boardinghouses, Parties and the Creation of a Political Society: Washington City, 1800-1830 Cynthia Diane Earman Louisiana State University and Agricultural and Mechanical College Follow this and additional works at: https://digitalcommons.lsu.edu/gradschool_disstheses Part of the History Commons Recommended Citation Earman, Cynthia Diane, "Boardinghouses, Parties and the Creation of a Political Society: Washington City, 1800-1830" (1992). LSU Historical Dissertations and Theses. 8222. https://digitalcommons.lsu.edu/gradschool_disstheses/8222 This Thesis is brought to you for free and open access by the Graduate School at LSU Digital Commons. It has been accepted for inclusion in LSU Historical Dissertations and Theses by an authorized administrator of LSU Digital Commons. For more information, please contact [email protected]. BOARDINGHOUSES, PARTIES AND THE CREATION OF A POLITICAL SOCIETY: WASHINGTON CITY, 1800-1830 A Thesis Submitted to the Graduate Faculty of the Louisiana State University and Agricultural and Mechanical College in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Master of Arts in The Department of History by Cynthia Diane Earman A.B., Goucher College, 1989 December 1992 MANUSCRIPT THESES Unpublished theses submitted for the Master's and Doctor's Degrees and deposited in the Louisiana State University Libraries are available for inspection. Use of any thesis is limited by the rights of the author. Bibliographical references may be noted, but passages may not be copied unless the author has given permission. Credit must be given in subsequent written or published work. A library which borrows this thesis for use by its clientele is expected to make sure that the borrower is aware of the above restrictions. -
H. Doc. 108-222
NINETEENTH CONGRESS MARCH 4, 1825, TO MARCH 3, 1827 FIRST SESSION—December 5, 1825, to May 22, 1826 SECOND SESSION—December 4, 1826, to March 3, 1827 SPECIAL SESSION OF THE SENATE—March 4, 1825, to March 9, 1825 VICE PRESIDENT OF THE UNITED STATES—JOHN C. CALHOUN, of South Carolina PRESIDENT PRO TEMPORE OF THE SENATE—JOHN GAILLARD, 1 of South Carolina; NATHANIEL MACON, 2 of North Carolina SECRETARY OF THE SENATE—CHARLES CUTTS, of New Hampshire; WALTER LOWRIE, 3 of Pennsylvania SERGEANT AT ARMS OF THE SENATE—MOUNTJOY BAYLY, of Maryland SPEAKER OF THE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES—JOHN W. TAYLOR, 4 of New York CLERK OF THE HOUSE—MATTHEW ST. CLAIR CLARKE, 5 of Pennsylvania SERGEANT AT ARMS OF THE HOUSE—JOHN O. DUNN, of District of Columbia DOORKEEPER OF THE HOUSE—BENJAMIN BIRCH, of Maryland ALABAMA DELAWARE Elias K. Kane, Kaskaskia SENATORS REPRESENTATIVE AT LARGE SENATORS Nicholas Van Dyke, 10 New Castle Daniel P. Cook, Edwardsville William R. King, Cahaba 11 6 Daniel Rodney, Wilmington Henry H. Chambers, Madison Henry M. Ridgely, 12 Dover INDIANA Israel Pickens, 7 Cahaba Thomas Clayton, Dover 8 SENATORS John McKinley, Huntsville REPRESENTATIVE AT LARGE James Noble, Brookville REPRESENTATIVES Louis McLane, 13 Wilmington William Hendricks, Madison John McKee, Tuscaloosa REPRESENTATIVES Gabriel Moore, Huntsville GEORGIA George W. Owen, Claiborne SENATORS Ratliff Boon, Boonville Thomas W. Cobb, Greensboro Jonathan Jennings, Charlestown CONNECTICUT John Macpherson Berrien, Savannah John Test, Brookville REPRESENTATIVES AT LARGE SENATORS George Cary, Appling KENTUCKY Henry W. Edwards, New Haven Alfred Cuthbert, Eatonton SENATORS Calvin Willey, 9 Tolland John Forsyth, Augusta Richard M. -
[Pennsylvania County Histories]
P 3 PC?. 11 V 36. Digitized by the Internet Archive in 2018 with funding from This project is made possible by a grant from the Institute of Museum and Library Services as administered by the Pennsylvania Department of Education through the Office of Commonwealth Libraries https://archive.org/details/pennsylvaniacoun36unse MARK TWAIK’S SCRdP BOOK. PATENT 281,657. TRADE MARKS: UNITED STATES. GREAT BRITAIN. Registered No. 5,896. Registered No. 15,979. DIRECTIONS. Use but little moisture, and only on the gummed lines. Press the scrap on without wetting it. DANIEL SLOTE & COMPANY, NEW YORK. IS iisriDiEix:, ' uv w w XYZ arr These donations were accepted with tffife thanks of the society. An election for officers of the society (for the ensuing year resulted in the 'Selection of A. Lewis Smith, as pres¬ ident; Dr. Joseph Vance, First Vice President; A. 'G. C. Smith, Second vice President; H. G. AShmead, Recording Secretary; Horace L Clheyney, corres¬ ponding Secetary; Edward H. 'Hall, Date roL Z7.. j Treasurer, and the f ollowing board of ('directors: Mrs. J. Nowlin Trainer, (Morgan Bunting, Edward A- Price, I ^ ^ t ft A A,*-* f ■« Henry L. Broomall and Hon. John B. Hinksom At the conclusion of the regular bus¬ L iness of tbe meeting, the president in¬ troduced Hon. John B. Hinkson, wlho read an admirably prepared and valua¬ ble papier on “iSamuel Edwards and the A Brief But Comprehensive Court House.” At the conclusion of Sketch of His Life. Mr. Hinkson’s address, Thomas H. tSpeakman, Esq., related some interest¬ ing personal reminiscences of Samuel Edwards, as well as (his own personal READ BY HON- JOHN B. -
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SEVENTEENTH CONGRESS MARCH 4, 1821, TO MARCH 3, 1823 FIRST SESSION—December 3, 1821, to May 8, 1822 SECOND SESSION—December 2, 1822, to March 3, 1823 VICE PRESIDENT OF THE UNITED STATES—DANIEL D. TOMPKINS, of New York PRESIDENT PRO TEMPORE OF THE SENATE—JOHN GAILLARD, 1 of South Carolina SECRETARY OF THE SENATE—CHARLES CUTTS, of New Hampshire SERGEANT AT ARMS OF THE SENATE—MOUNTJOY BAYLY, of Maryland SPEAKER OF THE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES—PHILIP P. BARBOUR, 2 of Virginia CLERK OF THE HOUSE—THOMAS DOUGHERTY, 3 of Kentucky; MATTHEW ST. CLAIR CLARKE, 4 of Pennsylvania SERGEANT AT ARMS OF THE HOUSE—THOMAS DUNN, of Maryland DOORKEEPER OF THE HOUSE—BENJAMIN BIRCH, of Maryland ALABAMA Caesar A. Rodney, 8 Wilmington Waller Taylor, Vincennes 9 SENATORS Daniel Rodney, Lewes REPRESENTATIVE AT LARGE John W. Walker, 5 Huntsville William Hendricks, 12 Madison William Kelly, 6 Huntsville GEORGIA Jonathan Jennings, 13 Charlestown Willaim R. King, Cahaba SENATORS REPRESENTATIVE AT LARGE John Elliott, Sunbury KENTUCKY 10 Gabriel Moore, Huntsville Freeman Walker, Augusta SENATORS Nicholas Ware, 11 Richmond Richard M. Johnson, Great Crossings CONNECTICUT REPRESENTATIVES AT LARGE Isham Talbot, Frankfort SENATORS Joel Abbot, Washington REPRESENTATIVES James Lanman, Norwich Alfred Cuthbert, Eatonton Wingfield Bullock, 14 Shelbyville Elijah Boardman, Litchfield George R. Gilmer, Lexington James D. Breckinridge, 15 Louisville REPRESENTATIVES AT LARGE Robert R. Reid, Augusta Benjamin Hardin, Bardstown Noyes Barber, Groton Edward F. Tattnall, Savannah Francis Johnson, Bowling Green Daniel Burrows, Hebron Wiley Thompson, Elberton Henry W. Edwards, New Haven John T. Johnson, Georgetown Gideon Tomlinson, Fairfield ILLINOIS Thomas Metcalfe, Carlisle Thomas Montgomery, Stanford John Russ, Hartford SENATORS Ansel Sterling, Sharon Anthony New, Elkton Jesse B. -
Ocm08458220-1820.Pdf (13.93Mb)
fii:ii'T?:?''ii?r-i -^; 317.3M31 M41 63AIHOI#V vv..», Digitized by tine Internet Arcliive in 2009 witli funding from University of IVIassacliusetts, Boston http://www.arcliive.org/details/pocl<etalmanacl<fo1820amer rt'ip^VyrttrVpT .yg^M^g^ THE MASSACHUSETTS AND United States Calendar; For the Year of our LORD 182 0. 4 and j Forty-fourth of American Independence. CONTAINING I 1 Civil, Judicial, Ecck/ia/iica/, and Military Lifts in X MASSACHUSETTS; ) Associations, and Corporate Institutions, \ for Literary^ agricultural^ and charitable Purpofes. A Lijl ^ Post-Towns in MaJ'ackufctts, with the Names of the Post-Masters. ALSO, Catalogues of the Officers of the GENERAL GOVERNMENT, With its feveral Departments and ERabliihments j i Times of the Sittings of the feveral Courtsj Governors in each State; And a Variety of other intcreftlng Articles. BOSTON : PUBLISHED BY JAMES LORING, AND WEST, RICHARDSON 8c LORD. Sold, wholefale and retail, at their Book -Stores, Covnliill. ^^^S5^3?S9©^fe6^^^5p5©(£^^©g^^^^6^»i^^f^^ " ECLIPSES FOR 1820. There wiU be four Eclipses this j'ear, two of the *Sun, and two of the Moon, as follows, viz. I. The first will be of the Sun, March Uth day, 8h. STm. in the morninv?;, invisii>ie to ns, but visible and central in the STUthcrn Ocean,, in Long. oQo 12' East of Boston, and Lat. 6 50 32' South. ' IT. The ^^econti will be of t!ie Moon, March 29tlv, 2h. 2ni.in the evening, consequently invisible at Boston. III. The third will be of the Hun, S'f^ptember 7th» invisible at Boston. -
Congressmen 1788-1838
19th Congress U. S. Congressional Election 1825-1827 12 October 1824 Name Party Vote Name Party Vote Name Party Vote 1st District: 9th District (3 elected): 17th District: John Wurts Federalist 1,221 Samuel McKean Dem-Rep 10,637 George Plumer Dem-Rep 2,786 Joel B. Sutherland Dem-Rep 1,124 George Kremer Dem-Rep 10,538 Jonathan H. Wise Federalist 1,991 2nd District: Espy Van Horne Dem-Rep 7,264 18th District: Joseph Hemphill Federalist 2,196 William C. Ellis Ind Rep 5,684 Patrick Farrelly Dem-Rep 4,137 Resigned after 18 May 1826. 10th District: Died 12 January 1826. William J. Duane Dem-Rep 1,620 James S. Mitchell Dem-Rep 4,260 Samuel Williamson Dem-Rep 1,005 3rd District: 11th District (2 elected): Daniel H. Miller Dem-Rep 2,131 James Wilson Dem-Rep 5,929 Special Elections Stephen Duncan Federalist 1,163 John Findlay Dem-Rep 5,693 Jacob Shearer Dem-Rep 538 Scattering 688 11 October 1825 4th District (3 elected): 12th District: 16th District: James Buchanan Federalist 6,968 John Mitchell Dem-Rep 2,731 Robert Orr Dem-Rep 5,157 Samuel Edwards Federalist 6,802 John Brown Dem-Rep 2,644 Abner Leacock Independent 3,944 Charles Miner Federalist 6,756 Robert Allison Old School 1,982 Isaac D. Barnard Dem-Rep 6,129 14 March 1826 William Anderson Dem-Rep 6,098 13th District: 18th District: Samuel Houston Dem-Rep 6,028 Alexander Thomson Dem-Rep 2,723 Thomas H. Sill Adams 1,812 5th District: Resigned after 18 May 1826. -
Of the United States Congress 1774-1989 Bicentennial Edition
ONE HUNDREDTH CONGRESS, SECOND SESSION SENATE DOCUMENT NO. 100-34 BIOGRAPHICAL DIRECTORY OF THE UNITED STATES CONGRESS 1774-1989 BICENTENNIAL EDITION THE CONTINENTAL CONGRESS SEPTEMBER 5, 1774, TO OCTOBER 21, 1788 and THE CONGRESS OF THE UNITED STATES FROM THE FIRST THROUGH THE ONE HUNDREDTH CONGRESSES MARCH 4, 1789, TO JANUARY 3, 1989, INCLUSIVE CLOSING DATE OF COMPILATION, JUNE 30, 1988 UNITED STATES GOVERNMENT PRINTING OFFICE 1989 THIS PUBUCATION MAY BE PURCHASED FROM THE SUPERINTENDENT OF DOCUMENTS, U.S. GOVERNMENT PRINTING OFFICE WASHINGTON, D.C. 20402. STOCK NUMBER 052-071-00699-1 Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data United States. Congress. Biographical directory of the United States Congress, 1774-1989, the Continental Congress, September 5, 1774, to October 21, 1788, and the Congress of the United States, from the First through the One Hun- dredth Congresses, March 4, 1789, to January 3, 1989, inclusive. (Document I 100th Congress, 2nd session, Senate; no. 100-34) "Edited under the direction of the Joint Committee on Printing. editors in chief, Kathryn Allamong Jacob, Bruce A. Ragsdale"p. 1. UnitedStates.Continental CongressBiographyDictionaries. 2. United States. CongressBiographyDictionaries.I. Jacob, Kathryn Allamong. II. Ragsdale, Bruce A.III. United States. Congress. Joint Committee on Printing. N. Title.V. Series: Senate document (United States. Congress. Senate); no. 100-34. JK1O1O.U51989 093.3'12'0922 [B] 88-600335 The paper used in this publication meets the minimumrequirements of the Joint Committee on Printing's Standard for UncoatedPermanent Printing Paper (JCP A270) and ANSI Standard Z39.48-1984. SENATE CONCURRENT RESOLUTION No. 85 NINETY-NINTH CONGRESS SUBMITTED BY MR. -
People and Sites Relating to the Underground Railroad
People and Sites Relating to the 1 Underground Railroad, Abolitionism, and African American Life, 1820-1880 Niagara Falls and Niagara County Town/ SURNAME/ FIRST Color/ Village/ Subject NAME Status SIGNIFICANCE City LOCATION SOURCE COMMENTS Genealogy Alvord Daniel A Head of Town of Cambria, Niagara Co., NY Anti-Slavery Cambria http://ublib.buffalo.edu/archives/e Formed 1837 Society xhibits/old/urr/ASS-WNY.html Belding/ Oscar Recipient of land from Gerrit Smith in Franklin Co., NY Cambria W. H. Childs to Gerrit Smith/ Listed "single" Belden Dea. Joseph Trevor 12 Feb & 17 Apr 1850. Smith Family Papers, Syracuse University Brown Charles & FS Unsuccessful attempt by "slave catchers" from Kentucky to Cambria Chris Densmore Notes: SLAVE Anti-Slavery Bugle (Salem, Ohio), August 12, 1854, 3,c4: SLAVE-HUNTERS IN THE EMPIRE STATE-- The Martha capture fugitive slave Charles Brown at Warren's Corners RESCUE CASES IN NIAGARA following letters is from the Lockport (N.Y.) Journal: Warren's Corners, Niagara Co., June 20, 1854: Southern (June 20)1854. Charles & Martha were both RE owners. COUNTY NEW YORK bloodhounds and slave catchers are abroad! Our remarkably quiet neighborhood has this day been thrown into great Charles worked as a cabinet maker. Both Martha, Charles excitement from the appearance and suspicious deportment of some strangers. Charles Brown, a colored man, who has & family disappear from Lockport after the 1860 census. resided in our midst more than two years, and who has won the respect of all who made his acquaintance, was, at an They house Jos. Hemsley (see entry)& family, freedom early hour this morning, rather surprised by the appearance of his master's nephew from Kentucky. -
The Relationship Between Jefferson and Burr: 1791-1807
379 Ale / AN UNEASY ALLIANCE: THE RELATIONSHIP BETWEEN JEFFERSON AND BURR: 1791-1807 THESIS Presented to the Graduate Council of the North Texas State University in Partial Fulfillment of the Requirements For the Degree of MASTER OF SCIENCE By Dorcas K. Helms, B.S. Denton, Texas August, 1979 Helms, Dorcas K., The Uneasy Alliance: The Relationship Between Jefferson and Burr: 1791-1807. Master of Science (History), August, 1979, 152 pp., 1 table, map, bibliography, 126 titles. Papers, memoirs, diaries, letters and autobiographies from 1791-1807 are studied to determine the relationship between Jefferson and Burr. A limited examination of congressional records for the same period was made. Mono- graphs and biographies of Jefferson, Burr and their contemporaries were studied. This study shows that the relationship between Jefferson and Burr was one of political expediency and that Jefferson's antipathy toward Burr began in 1791 and not as a result of the House presidential election of 1801. The thesis con- cludes that Jefferson used Burr's political influence in New England to achieve Democratic -Republican control of the federal government and then used the alleged conspiracy between Burr and the Federalists during the House election of 1801 as an excuse to begin Burr's political destruction. TABLE OF CONTENTS Chapter I. THE EARLY YEARS: 1791-1796...... 21...0. II. THE TENUOUS YEARS: 1797-1800.............. .8.1..0...44 III. POLITICAL ALIENATION: 1801-1802.. .. ...... .a..'74.0... VI. WESTERN EXPEDITIONS: 1803-1805............. V. TREASON TRIALS AND THE BATTLE FOR ...98 EXECUTIVE OR JUDICIAL SUPREMACY ..... ..131... VL- EPILOGUE.-.......-..-.-.-.-.-. .. .... .... TABLE . 50 MAP*. .. e..o.0.........0......9...6...6.6.9.....101 BIBLIOGRAPHY..................a...........a...