Robert Lucas (governor)
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Robert Lucas | |
12th Governor of Ohio
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In office December 7, 1832 – December 12, 1836 |
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Preceded by | Duncan McArthur |
Succeeded by | Joseph Vance |
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Born | April 1, 1781 Shepherdstown, then part of Virginia |
Died | February 7, 1853 Iowa City, Iowa |
Political party | Democratic |
Spouse | Elizabeth Brown (1810), Friendly Ashley Sumner (1816) |
Children | George W., Napoleon B., Minerva, Sumner, Abigail M., Robert, Susannah |
Residence | Piketon, Ohio; Iowa City, Iowa |
Profession | Surveyor, military officer, farmer |
Religion | Quaker, Methodist |
Robert Lucas (April 1, 1781 – February 7, 1853) was the 12th governor of the U.S. state of Ohio, serving from 1832 to 1836. He served as the first Governor of Iowa Territory from 1838 to 1841.
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[edit] Early Life
Lucas was born in 1781 in Shepherdstown, a small community along the Potomac River in Virginia (now located in far eastern West Virginia), son of William Lucas and Susannah Barnes. Lucas came from a Quaker family whose roots stretched back to 1679 in Pennsylvania, and had recently moved to Virginia. His father, a Revolutionary War veteran, owned slaves and large amounts of land. According to family legend, Robert's uncle, Joseph Barnes, built a steam-powered boat long before Fulton's invention. Robert received some early schooling in mathematics and surveying, skills which would prove invaluable to his future work[1]. At about the age of 19 he moved to the Scioto Valley of the Northwest Territory, later Ohio [2]. He was preceded by other family members, including two older brothers and a cousin. One brother would later become a general, while his other brother and his cousin would become Ohio legislators. The family bought large parcels of land; eventually the nearby town of Lucas was named for them. For his skill in recruiting troops for the Army during the increasing hostilities between England, France, and the U.S., Robert Lucas was made Captain in 1807. He was elected to the Ohio legislature for the first time in 1808. He became married to Elizabeth Brown, his landlord's daughter, in 1810, and they had a daughter, Minerva, in 1811. Through complex political maneuvering, Lucas was made a Brigadier General in 1810 or 1811[3].
[edit] War of 1812 and Rise to Power
Lucas served in the War of 1812 and was famous for his resourcefulness and calm in an increasingly chaotic campaign. As one of his contemporaries stated, "As a spy he was productive and brave—as a soldier he had no superior" [4]. Lucas rose to national prominence during the court-martial trial of General William Hull. Hull was accused of incompetence in the loss of Detroit and the Michigan Territory to the British in June 1812, and the journals Lucas kept during the campaign were used as evidence to convict Hull[5]. Lucas' political career blossomed. In 1818 he was named Speaker of the Ohio Senate. In 1822, he lost the State Senate election to his former brother-in-law and political rival, William Kendall. Shortly after, around 1824, Lucas built a large brick house two miles east of Piketon, named Friendly Grove, which became an epicenter of local political activity, and still stands today[6]. Lucas regained his State Senate seat in 1824, and actively campaigned for Andrew Jackson. Lucas again lost his senate seat in 1828 to Kendall, but Lucas had the pleasure of being part of the electoral congress that elected Jackson President that year. Lucas won his senate seat back in 1829, in a special election after Kendall resigned; again, he was elected Senate speaker. In 1831, Lucas ran for the state assembly and lost, but he quickly rebounded[7].
[edit] Ohio Governor, 1832-1836
As an ardent Democrat, perhaps the highlight of his career was to serve as the chairman and president of the 1832 Democratic National Convention, the Democratic Party's first national convention. Lucas was also nominated the Democratic candidate for governor in 1832, and won after a vitriolic campaign. Lucas County, Ohio, was established and named for the governor during his second term, in defiance of the Michigan Territory, which also claimed the land around the mouth of the Maumee River — thus provoking the almost-bloodless Toledo War[8].
[edit] Iowa Territorial Governor, 1838-1841
During his tenure running Iowa, he again showed his tendency towards conflict with other states, starting the Honey War with Missouri. Technically, Lucas was not the first acting governor of the Iowa territory. William B. Conway, appointed territorial secretary by Martin Van Buren, arrived in Iowa six weeks before Lucas and thus assumed the duties of acting governor. Friction developed between Lucas and Conway over some of the decisions Conway made in Lucas' absence, and led to an acerbic relationship. Lucas was often at odds with the territorial legislature, his liberal use of absolute veto power and his condescending rebukes of legislators often made him the target of acrimonious exchanges. Conway complained to Van Buren that Lucas committed "vexatious, ungraceful, petulant, ill-natured and dogmatic interferences" with the legislature [9]. Van Buren and the U. S. Congress responded by limiting the territorial governor’s veto power and his ability to make appointments. Lucas served for only a few years as territorial governor, from 1838-1841, and spent those years mostly in Burlington, Iowa and Muscatine, Iowa (then called Bloomington), as there were only provisional accommodations in Iowa City for the territorial legislature. His retirement house in Iowa City, Plum Grove, is maintained by the state as a monument to Lucas.
[edit] References
- ^ Parish 1907
- ^ Petersen 1952a:314-315
- ^ Parish 1907
- ^ Verchères de Boucherville 1940:314
- ^ Gilpin 1958; Parish 1907; Petersen 1952:241; Verchères de Boucherville 1940
- ^ Parish 1907
- ^ Lucas' political rise is documented in a numer of sources, including Peterson, Parish and Ryan
- ^ Ryan 1912:440-447
- ^ Petersen 1952a:317-318
[edit] Bibliography
- Gilpin, Alec R. (1958) The War of 1812 in the Old Northwest. Michigan State University Press, Lansing, Michigan.
- Parish, John C. (1948) Iowa in the Days of Lucas. Palimpsest 29:13-18.
- Petersen, William J. (1948) Robert Lucas. Palimpsest 29:1-12.
- Petersen, William J. (1952) The Story of Iowa: The Progress of an American State. Lewis Historical Publishing, New York.
- Ryan, Daniel J. (1912) History of Ohio: The Rise and Progress of an American State. Vol. 3, Century History Co., New York.
- Shambaugh, Benjamin F. (editor) 1906 Executive Journal of Iowa 1838-1841: Governor Robert Lucas. State Historical Society of Iowa, Iowa City.
- Swisher, Jacob A. (1948) Plum Grove. Palimpsest 29:19-32.
- Verchères de Boucherville, Thomas (1940)War on the Detroit: The Chronicles of Thomas Verchères de Boucherville and the Capitulation by an Ohio Volunteer. Edited by Milo M. Quaife. Lakeside Press, Chicago.
- Wright, Luella M. (1944) Robert Lucas in Verse. Palimpsest 25:234-248.
Political offices | ||
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Preceded by Abraham Shepherd |
Speaker of the Ohio Senate 1818-12-07 – 1819-12-05 |
Succeeded by Allen Trimble |
Preceded by Duncan McArthur |
Governor of Ohio 1832-12-07 – 1836-12-12 |
Succeeded by Joseph Vance |
New title New office
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Governor of Iowa Territory 1838–1841 |
Succeeded by John Chambers |
Ohio House of Representatives | ||
New district | Representative from Scioto County 1808–1809 |
Succeeded by Daniel McKinney |
Ohio Senate | ||
Preceded by Lewis Summers |
Senator from Gallia and Scioto Counties 1814–1816 |
District eliminated |
New district | Senator from Gallia, Scioto, Pike, and Jackson Counties 1816–1818 |
Succeeded by Himself as Senator from Gallia, Lawrence, Scioto, Pike, and Jackson Counties |
Preceded by Himself as Senator from Gallia, Scioto, Pike, and Jackson Counties |
Senator from Gallia, Lawrence, Scioto, Pike, and Jackson Counties 1818–1820 |
District eliminated |
New district | Senator from Pike, Scioto, and Lawrence Counties 1820–1822 |
Succeeded by William Kendall |
Preceded by William Kendall |
Senator from Pike, Scioto, and Lawrence Counties 1824–1828 |
District eliminated |
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