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Massachusetts's 17th congressional district

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Massachusetts's 17th congressional district
Obsolete district
Created1803
Eliminated1820
Years active1803–1821
Massachusetts's current districts, since 2013

Massachusetts's 17th congressional district is an obsolete district. During its short tenure of 1803–1821 it was located in the District of Maine, prior to Maine achieving statehood.

YouTube Encyclopedic

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  • War & Expansion: Crash Course US History #17
  • 19th Century Reforms: Crash Course US History #15
  • Surviving the Economic Downturn w/ Frank Ryan, CPA

Transcription

Episode 17: Expansion and War Hi, I'm John Green, this is Crash Course U.S. history and today we’re going to discuss how the United States came to acquire two of its largest states, Texas and…there is another one. Mr. Green! Mr. Green! I believe the answer you’re looking for is Alaska. Oh me from the past, as you can clearly tell from the globe, Alaskan statehood never happened. No I am referring of course to California. Stan, are we using your computer today? Oh. Stan! We’ve talked about westward expansion a few times here on CrashCourse, but it’s usually about, like, Kentucky or Ohio. This time we’re going really west, I mean, not like Hawaii west, but sea to shining sea west. intro So you might remember that journalist John O’Sullivan coined the phrase Manifest Destiny to describe America’s god given right to take over all the land between the Atlantic and Pacific Oceans, regardless of who happened to be living there Sorry Native Americans, Mexicans, French fur trappers, beavers, bison, prairie dogs, passenger pigeons. I’m not going to go so far as to give God credit for America’s internal imperialism, but I will say that our expansion had a lot to do with economics, especially when you consider Jefferson’s ideas about the empire of liberty. Stan, did I just say liberty? That means technically I also have to talk about slavery, but we’re gonna kick the slavery can down the road until later in the show. Just like American politicians did in the 19th century. By 1860 nearly 300,000 people had made the trip that has been immortalized by the classic educational video game “Oregon Trail,” which, by the way, is inaccurate in the sense that a family of 6, even a very hungry one, cannot eat a buffalo. But is extremely accurate in that a lot of people died of dysentery and cholera. Frickin disease. So, Oregon at the time was jointly controlled by the U.S. and Britain. Northern Mexico at the time included what are now Texas, Arizona, Utah, Nevada, New Mexico, and California. But New Mexico and California were the only two with, like, big settlements. About 30,000 Mexicans lived in New Mexico, and about 3,500 in California, and in both places they were outnumbered by Native Americans. Okay, let’s go to the Thought Bubble. When Mexico became independent, there were only about 2,000 Tejanos there, so to encourage economic development, Mexico’s government granted a huge tract of land to Moses Austin. Austin’s son Stephen made a tidy profit selling off smaller parcels of that land until there were 7,000 American Americans there. This made Mexico nervous so, backpedalling furiously, Mexico annulled the land contracts and banned further emigration into Texas. Even though slavery was already abolished in Mexico, up to now they had allowed Americans to bring slaves. Austin, joined by some Tejano elites, demanded greater autonomy and the right to use slave labor. Thinking the better of it, Mexican General Antonio Lopez de Santa Ana decided to assert control over the restive territory with an army, turning the elite’s demands for autonomy into a full-scale revolt for independence. On March 13, 1836, Santa Ana defeated the American defenders of the Alamo, killing 187 (or 188, sources differ) Americans including Davy Crockett. The Texas rebels would “remember the Alamo” and come back to defeat Santa Ana at the battle of San Jacinto. And Mexico was forced to recognize Texas’s independence. So Texas became the Lone Star Republic and quickly decided that it would be much better to be a less lonely star and join the United States. So, in 1837, Texas’ Congress called for union but all they heard back was, “not so fast, Texas.” Why? Because Texas wanted to be a slave state, and adding another slave state would disrupt the balance in the Senate, so Jackson and Van Buren did what good politicians always do: they ignored Texas. And then after Martin Van Buren wrote a letter denouncing any plan to annex Texas on the grounds that it would probably provoke a war, Democratic convention southerners threw their support behind slaveholding Andrew Jackson pal, James K. Polk. Polk just managed to get a presidential victory over perennial almost-president Henry Clay, and seeing the writing on the wall, Congress annexed Texas in March of 1845, days before Polk took office. Congress then forged an agreement with Britain to divide Oregon at the 49th parallel, which restored the slave state/free state balance in the Senate. Thanks, Thought Bubble. Hey, Stan, can I get the foreshadowing filter? I wonder if we’re going to be able to keep that slave state/free state balance...forever. The land-hungry James K. Polk had another goal as president: acquire California from Mexico. He tried to purchase it from Mexico, but they were like, “No,” which is Spanish for “No.” So Polk decided to do things the hard way – he sent troops under future president Zachary Taylor into this disputed border region. As expected, by which I mean intended, fighting broke out between American and Mexican forces. Polk, in calling for a declaration of war, claimed that the Mexicans had “shed blood upon American soil,” although the soil in question was arguably not American, unless you think of America as being, you know, all of this. A majority of Americans supported this war, although to be fair, a majority of Americans will support almost any war. I’m sorry, but it is true. At least at first. It was the first war fought by American troops primarily on foreign soil, as most of the fighting was done in Mexico. Among the dissenters was a Massachusetts Transcendentalist who is probably better known than the war itself. Henry David Thoreau was in fact thrown in jail for refusing to pay taxes in protest of the war and wrote “On Civil Disobedience” in his defence, which many American high-schoolers are assigned to read and expected not to understand, lest they take the message to heart and stop doing assignments like reading “On Civil Disobedience.” Another critic was concerned about the increase in executive power that Polk seemed to show, saying: “Allow the president to invade a neighboring country whenever he shall deem it necessary to repel an invasion and you allow him to make war at pleasure” That critic was none other than noted peacenik Abraham Lincoln, who would go on to do more to expand executive power than any president in the 19th century except maybe Andrew Jackson. Right so Santa Ana’s army was defeated in February 1847 but Mexico refused to give up. So Winfield Scott, who had the unfortunate nickname “old fuss and feathers,” captured Mexico City itself in September. A final peace treaty, the Treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo was signed in 1848, under which Mexico confirmed the annexation of Texas and further ceded California as well as several other places that would later become states but we couldn’t fit on the map. In return, the U.S. paid Mexico $15 million and agreed to a no backsies deal in re Texas thereby freeing Mexico from the shackles of Amarillo. I’m sorry Amarillians. No I’m not. I am. I am. I’m not. I am. This is great, Stan. The people of Amarillo hate me, also the people of New Jersey, Alaska is in the green-parts-of-not-America, We don’t even have Arizona and New Mexico on the chalkboard. Pretty soon I will have alienated everyone. Anyway, thanks to the land from Mexico, our dream of expanding from the Atlantic to the Pacific was finally complete. And as always happens when dreams come true, trouble started. After the treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo, between 75,000 and 100,000 Spanish-speaking Mexicans and 150,000 Native Americans were under the jurisdiction of the United States. Despite the fact that the treaty granted Spanish descended Mexican “male citizens” legal and property rights, the Mexicans were still seen as inferior to Anglo-Saxons whose manifest destiny it was, of course, to overspread the continent. And the fact that these Mexicans were Catholic didn’t help either, especially because in the eastern part of the United States, there was a rising tide of anti-Catholic, anti-immigrant sentiment known as nativism. And there was a new political party, The American Party, dedicated entirely to such sentiment. They were referred to as the “Know-nothings” because when you asked them about their politics they would answer that they didn’t know anything. And indeed, they didn’t. This was not an expert branding strategy, although they did manage to win an unexpected number of local offices in a state heralded for its ignorance … Massachusetts. You thought I was going to say New Jersey, but I’m trying to make nice with the New Jersey people because they take it pretty personally. Meanwhile, in California, there weren’t enough white, English speaking American residents to apply for statehood until gold was discovered in 1848, leading of course to San Francisco’s NFL team, the San Francisco 48ers. By 1852, the non-Indian population in California had risen from 15,000 to 200,000 and it was 360,000 on the eve of the Civil War. Now not all of those migrants – mainly young men seeking their fortunes – were white. Nearly 25,000 Chinese people migrated to California, most as contract workers working for mining and railroad companies. And there were women, too, who ran restaurants, and worked as cooks, and laundresses, and prostitutes, but the ratio of men to women in California in 1860 was 3 to 1. Aw shmerg. It’s time for the Mystery Document? The rules here are simple. I read the Mystery Document and I’m either shocked by electricity or by the fact that I got it right. “We would beg to remind you that when your nation was a wilderness, and the nation from which you sprung barbarous, we exercised most of the arts and virtues of civilized life; that we are possessed of a language and a literature, and that men skilled in science and the arts are numerous among us; that the productions of our manufactories, our sail, and workshops, form no small share of commerce of the world; and that for centuries, colleges, schools, charitable institutions, asylums, and hospitals have been as common as in your own land. (…) And we beg to remark, that so far as the history of our race in California goes, it stamps with the test of truth that we are not the degraded race you would make us.” So it’s someone who said that “we” had a great civilization when “you” were a wilderness, plus they called us “barbarous,” so it’s either ancient Rome or China. I’m gonna lean toward China. That only gets me halfway there. Now I have to think of the name of the person. And I don’t know any famous people from mid-19th century China who lived in the U.S. ...People say I can’t sing. Norman Asing? Who the hell is Normal Asing? AHHHH. So these days California is known for its groovy, laid back, “oh your back hurts? here’s some pot” attitude, but that was not the case in the 19th century. The California constitution of 1850 limited civil participation to whites – no Asians, no Black people or Native Americans could vote or testify in court. Indians were kicked off their land if it had any mineral value, and thousands of their orphaned children were sold as slaves. And all of this led to the Indian population of California dropping from 150,000 to about 30,000 between 1848 and 1860. So it wasn’t at all clear whether California was the kind of place to be admitted to the U.S. as a free state or as a slave state. The Missouri Compromise was of no help here because half of California is below the 36 30 line, and half is above it. A new “Free Soil” party formed in 1848 calling for the limiting of slavery’s expansion in the west so that it could be open for white people to live and work. I just want to be clear that most of the people who were for limiting slavery were not, like, un-racist. So, they nominated the admirably-whiskered Martin Van Buren for the presidency, and Van Buren and Democratic nominee Lewis Cass then split the northern vote, allowing the aforementioned Zachary Taylor, to win. So in 1850, when California finally did ask to be admitted into the Union, it was as a free state. Southerners freaked out because they saw it as the beginning of the end of slavery, but then, to the rescue came Henry Clay, for his last hurrah. He said, “We can kick this problem down the road once more” and brokered a four-part plan that became known rather anticlimactically as the Compromise of 1850. Historians, can you name nothing?! The four points were: 1. California would be admitted as a free state 2. The slave trade, but not slavery, would be outlawed in Washington D.C. 3. A new, super harsh fugitive slave law would be enacted, and 4. Popular sovereignty The idea was that in the remaining territories taken from Mexico, the local white inhabitants could decide for themselves whether the state would be slave or free when it applied to be part of the U.S. Ah, the Compromise of 1850. A great reminder that nothing protects the rights of minorities like the tyranny of the majority. There was a huge debate over the bill in which noted asshat John C. Calhoun was so sick that he had to have his pro-slavery, anti-compromise remarks read by a colleague. On the other side, New York’s Senator William Seward, an abolitionist, also argued against compromise, based on slavery’s being, you know, wrong. But, eventually the compromise did pass, thus averting a greater crisis for ten whole years. Ralph Waldo Emerson predicted that if the United States acquired part of Mexico, it would be like swallowing arsenic. And indeed, arsenic can be a slow-acting poison. Now I don’t think Ralph Waldo Emerson was a good enough writer to have thought that far ahead, but he was right. Some people say that manifest destiny made the Civil War inevitable. But, as we’ll see next week, what really made the Civil War inevitable was slavery. But, we see in the story of manifest destiny the underlying problem, the United States didn’t govern according to its own ideals. It didn’t extend liberties to Native Americans or Mexican Americans or immigrant populations or slaves. Thanks for watching. And we’ll see you next week when things will get much worse. Crash Course is produced and directed by Stan Muller. Our script supervisor is Meredith Danko. The show is written by my high school history teacher Raoul Meyer and myself. Our associate producer is Danica Johnson. And our graphics team is Thought Café. If you’d like to contribute to the libertage, you can suggest captions. You can also ask questions in comments where they will be answered by our team of historians. Thank you for watching Crash Course and as we say in my hometown, don’t forget to be awesome.

List of members representing the district

Representative Party Years Cong
ress
Electoral history District location
District created March 4, 1803
Phineas Bruce
(Machias)
Federalist March 4, 1803 –
?
8th Elected in 1802, but prevented by illness from qualifying. 1803 – 1813
"Kennebec district," District of Maine
Vacant ? –
March 3, 1805

John Chandler
(Monmouth)
Democratic-
Republican
March 4, 1805 –
March 3, 1809
9th
10th
Elected in 1804.
Re-elected in 1806.
Retired.
Barzillai Gannett
(Gradiner)
Democratic-
Republican
March 4, 1809 –
1812
11th
12th
Elected in 1808.
Re-elected in 1810.
Resigned.
Vacant 1812 –
April 6, 1812
12th
Francis Carr
(Orrington)
Democratic-
Republican
April 6, 1812 –
March 3, 1813
Elected to finish Gannett's term.
Lost re-election.
Abiel Wood
(Wiscasset)
Democratic-
Republican
March 4, 1813 –
March 3, 1815
13th Elected in 1812.
Redistricted to the 16th district and lost re-election.
1813 – 1821
"4th Eastern district," District of Maine
James Carr
(Bangor)
Federalist March 4, 1815 –
March 3, 1817
14th Elected in 1815 on the second ballot.
Retired.
John Wilson
(Belfast)
Federalist March 4, 1817 –
March 3, 1819
15th Elected in 1816.
Lost re-election.
Martin Kinsley
(Hampden)
Democratic-
Republican
March 4, 1819 –
March 3, 1821
16th Elected in 1819 on the third ballot.
Redistricted to Maine's 4th district and lost re-election.
District moved to Maine March 3, 1821

References

  • Martis, Kenneth C. (1989). The Historical Atlas of Political Parties in the United States Congress. New York: Macmillan Publishing Company.
  • Martis, Kenneth C. (1982). The Historical Atlas of United States Congressional Districts. New York: Macmillan Publishing Company.
  • Congressional Biographical Directory of the United States 1774–present
  • "Our Campaigns - United States - Massachusetts - MA - District 17". www.ourcampaigns.com. Retrieved December 31, 2020.


This page was last edited on 8 January 2024, at 01:38
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