Henry Taylor Blow

Henry Taylor Blow
Member of the U.S. House of Representatives
from Missouri's 2nd district
In office
March 4, 1863 – March 3, 1867
Preceded by James S. Rollins
Succeeded by Carman A. Newcomb
Member of the Missouri Senate
In office
1854-1858
Personal details
Born (1817-07-15)July 15, 1817
Southampton County, Virginia, USA
Died September 11, 1875(1875-09-11) (aged 58)
Saratoga, New York, USA
Spouse(s) Minerva Grimsley Blow
Profession Politician, Businessman

Henry Taylor Blow (July 15, 1817 – September 11, 1875) was a two-term U.S. Representative from Missouri and an ambassador to both Venezuela and Brazil.

Early life

Henry was born in Southampton County, Virginia, to Captain Peter and Elizabeth (Taylor) Blow, owners of the famous enslaved man Dred Scott.[1] Blow was the eighth of ten children.[2] He moved with his parents to Huntsville, Alabama, where his father unsuccessfully tried farming.[1] In 1830 the family moved again to St. Louis, Missouri, where Peter Blow opened a boarding house, and hired out his slaves, including Dred Scott, who worked as a roustabout.[1] Henry's mother died in 1831, followed by his father the next year.[1]

Henry Blow graduated from Saint Louis University[3] and started apprenticing in a law office, but was forced by the deaths of his parents to become a clerk in his brother-in-law Charless' business, selling paint and oil.[4] Peter Blow had left his estate to his two unmarried daughters and Henry's younger brothers, Taylor and William. Henry was only fifteen when his father died, but that was old enough to be seen as a man able to survive on his own. Henry's married sister, Charlotte Taylor Blow, also did not receive an inheritance. She married Joseph Charless, Jr. in 1831. Charless' father had founded the first newspaper west of the Mississippi. The Charless family helped Henry after the death of his father and Henry began working as a clerk at their wholesale drug and paint company. When Joseph Charles Sr. retired in 1836, Henry was made a partner in the business. In 1838, the business was renamed Charless, Blow, and Company. Only a few years later, in 1844, the partnership was dissolved. Charless retained ownership of the drugstore and Blow kept the manufacturing firm, which was later known as Collier White Lead and Oil Company. The Collier Company was one of the largest factories in St. Louis.[2]

Charless, Blow, and Company was not the only business that Blow would lead. Henry and his brother, Peter, created the Granby Mining and Smelting Company. Henry also served as president of the Iron Mountain Railroad for a time and helped to establish a furnace for the iron industry in Carondelet.[2]

Henry married Minerva Grimsley (1821–1875), daughter of wealthy saddle manufacturer, Colonel Thornton and Susan (Stark) Grimsley,[1] by whom he had nine children. Henry and Minerva were married in 1840.[2] Henry encouraged his daughters to get an education, which was unusual for that time.[2] One of them, Susan Elizabeth Blow, became a noted nineteenth-century educator[5] who started the nation's first all-district kindergarten.[6] In 1849, after the family's house had burned down and a cholera epidemic was sweeping St. Louis, Blow moved his family to Carondelet, which was a separate city at that time. Colonel Thornton had given the family seventeen acres there. Blow built a Victorian mansion on the land that held a library with elaborate paneling and stained glass windows that were later installed at the Missouri History Museum.[2]

Political Life

Despite being raised in the south, Blow was an abolitionist. Henry's parents had owned a slave, Dred Scott, who was sold to Dr. Emerson, who took Scott to Illinois and Wisconsin, which were both free territories. When Scott returned to St. Louis, Henry and Taylor Blow encouraged Scott to sue for his freedom since he had lived in free states. Both men contributed money to finance the case, which made its way through the legal system, all the way to the Supreme Court. Scott later lost his bid for freedom. The court ruled that a slave is property and not a citizen. Dred Scott did eventually gain his freedom after Dr. Emerson's widow gave him to Taylor Blow, who freed Scott permanently.[2]

Blow joined the Republican Party in 1854 because of their views towards slavery.[2] Henry Taylor Blow was elected to the Missouri Senate that year and served from 1854 to 1858.[7] In 1860, Blow served as the Missouri delegate at the Chicago convention where they nominated Abraham Lincoln.[2]

Blow was appointed Minister to Venezuela in 1861 by President Abraham Lincoln, and served until the following year.[4] In this position Blow worked to improve trade between Venezuela and the Mississippi Valley. Blow did not retain this post for long. He returned to the United States to support the Union during the Civil War.[2] He was then elected to the United States House of Representatives[4] as an Unconditional Unionist. Blow was elected in 1862 and 1864 and served until 1867. Blow wanted to return to his businesses in St. Louis and declined to run for reelection in 1867.[2] Blow served on the Joint Committee on Reconstruction, which drafted the Fourteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution.

Blow returned to politics in 1869 when he was appointed ambassador to Brazil by President Ulysses S. Grant. In 1874, Blow was appointed to the board of commissioners assigned to reorganize the government of the District of Columbia. He resigned, "for personal considerations," only 6 months after taking office.[2][8]

Death and Legacy

Henry Taylor Blow died in 1875 at age 58 in Saratoga, New York.[9] Blow's death came just three months after Minerva's death. The two were married for thirty-five years.[2] Blow's funeral service lasted two hours and a special train was commissioned to take mourners from St. Louis to his home in Carondelet. The funeral procession was a mile long and spanned twenty-five miles to his final resting place.[2] He was interred in Bellefontaine Cemetery in St. Louis, Missouri,[9] and was survived by six of his children.

Blow helped establish many organizations in St. Louis including a Presbyterian church, the Philosophical Society, the St. Louis Philharmonic Society, the Twentieth Century Club, the Western Academy of Art, and a Carondelet public school.[2]

Blow Street, which passes through several south St. Louis city neighborhoods, is named for Blow.[10]

The H.T. Blow School in Washington, DC was named for him. It was later merged with Franklin Pierce Elementary School to create Blow-Pierce Elementary. More recently it was changed to a charter school called Friendship Blow Pierce Elementary School.

References

  1. 1 2 3 4 5 Charles Van Ravenswaay, St. Louis: An Informal History of the City and Its People, 1764-1865, (Missouri Historical Society Press, 1991), 406.
  2. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 Shepley, Carol Ferring (2008). Movers and Shakers, Scalawags and Suffragettes: Tales from Bellefontaine. St. Louis, Missouri: Missouri History Museum.
  3. John Thomas Scharf, History of Saint Louis City and County: From the Earliest Periods to the Present Day, Volume 1, (Louis H. Everts & Co., 1883), 608.
  4. 1 2 3 Walter Ehrlich, They Have No Rights, (Applewood Books, 2007), 10-11.
  5. Susan E. Blow, Kathleen G. Winterman, Encyclopedia of Educational Reform and Dissent, Vol. 1, (SAGE Publications Inc., 2010), 109.
  6. Carol Ferring Shepley, Movers and Shakers, Scalawags and Suffragettes: Tales from Bellefontaine Cemetery, (Missouri History Museum Press, 2008), 34.
  7. Charles Van Ravenswaay, St. Louis: An Informal History of the City and Its People, 1764-1865, 411.
  8. "The Resignation of Commissioner Blow" (PDF). The Evening Star. 5 January 1875. Retrieved 30 June 2017.
  9. 1 2 Carol Ferring Shepley, Movers and Shakers, Scalawags and Suffragettes: Tales from Bellefontaine Cemetery, 37.
  10. http://www.slpl.lib.mo.us/libsrc/b-street.htm
U.S. House of Representatives
Preceded by
James S. Rollins
Member of the U.S. House of Representatives
from Missouri's 2nd congressional district

March 4, 1863 – March 3, 1867
Succeeded by
Carman A. Newcomb
Diplomatic posts
Preceded by
Edward A. Turpin
United States Minister to Venezuela
June 8, 1861 – February 22, 1862
Succeeded by
Erastus D. Culver
Preceded by
James W. Webb
United States Minister to Brazil
August 28, 1869 – November 6, 1870
Succeeded by
James R. Partridge
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