Most of you know that I really enjoy reading, which is good because for this Alaska research I have been doing a looooot of that. I was asked to do a bulleted biography of William H. Seward who was the Secetary of State at that time. He turns out to be a very interesting man. He spoke out against slavery and used his house as a part of the underground railroad. These are big things especially considering the time. This all took place in the 1800's.
I've attached my research to this blog.
HI JIM AND JAAAAAYYYYYY :) I'll email you soon
William H. Seward
Birth and Academia
- Born in 1801 in Florida, Orange County, New York
- Was the fourth of six children born to Samuel S. and Mary J. Seward.
- His father was a physician and later a judge
- In 1819, teaching in Georgia, the indignity of slavery first made an impression on him and later influenced him to become one of the most outspoken anti-slavery politicians of the time. **
- Attended Union College in Schenectady, New York, graduating in 1820
Early Career and Marriage
- Seward trained in law offices in Goshen and New York City
- Passed the New York State Bar in 1821.
- That same year, he met Frances Miller of Auburn
- Seward moved to Auburn, New York, in 1823 and entered into a law partnership with Frances' father, Judge Elijah Miller.
- 1824, Seward asked the Judge for permission to marry. Judge Miller allowed the match on the condition that William and Frances share the Miller home on South Street with him.
- William H. Seward and Frances Miller had five children - Augustus, Frederick, Cornelia, William and Frances "Fanny".
- At the age of 29, William Seward was elected as an Anti-Mason to the New York State Senate.
- In 1838 he won election as the first Whig Party governor of New York and was reelected again in 1840.
- During his gubernatorial terms, he extended the canal system through the state, promoted the building of the Croton Aqueduct, established libraries in the public school system and abolished imprisonment for debt.
- He also was a supporter of prison and education reforms, and the emerging antislavery movement
- Seward returned to Auburn in 1846, used the insanity defense to defend William Freeman (a mentally-ill African-American who had murdered a white farmer and his family.)**
- Seward lost the case but won a retrial. Freeman died in prison before the second trial could begin.
Career in Senate
- New York State Legislature voted Seward into the United States Senate in 1848. During his twelve years as a United States Senator, Seward helped to organize the new Republican Party
- He also worked to bring California into the Union as a free, not slave-holding state.
- He was also a member of the Foreign Relations Committee.
- William H. and Frances Seward used their home in the 1850s to shelter fugitive slaves as part of the Underground Railroad. **
- Seward was also instrumental in helping Harriet Tubman settle in Auburn and secure property on South Street which was to be her home for over fifty years.
- Seward never attained, the highest office in the land.
- A front-runner at the 1860 Republican presidential nominating convention, the party ultimately supported Abraham Lincoln.
- Seward accepted Lincoln's request to serve as Secretary of State, and he signed and helped to write the Emancipation Proclamation,
- This became law on January 1st, 1863.
Secretary Seward by Mathew Brady, 1861
- Secretary Seward was stabbed in his Washington home on April 14, 1865, the same night President Lincoln was shot in the Ford Theater.
- The attacker, Lewis Powell, a co-conspirator with Booth, injured five people.
- Seward recovered from his injuries and continued to serve as Secretary of State for President Andrew Johnson.
- During this administration, the United States purchased the Alaska Territory from Russia for $7,200,000.00.
- Derided by critics as "Seward's Folly," this purchase became one of Seward's greatest legacies.
Retirement
- In 1869, William Seward retired from the State Department
- He spent most of the remainder of his life traveling.
- He visited Alaska in June 1869 and later enjoyed a fourteen-month trip around the world.
- When Seward returned from his world tour, he began writing a book about his travels.
- Seward died in his home in Auburn on October 10, 1872 following a short illness.
- His last words to his family were to "Love one another."
Friday, July 4, 2008
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i like you!!!
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