Henry Johnson (Louisiana politician): Difference between revisions
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{{Short description|Governor of Louisiana (1783–1864)}} |
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{{other people|Henry Johnson}} |
{{other people|Henry Johnson}} |
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{{Infobox |
{{Infobox officeholder |
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|name= Henry Johnson |
|name = Henry S. Johnson |
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|image=H.S.Johnson.jpg |
|image = H.S.Johnson.jpg |
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|jr/sr=United States Senator |
|jr/sr = United States Senator |
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|state=[[Louisiana]] |
|state = [[Louisiana]] |
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|term_start = February 12, 1844 |
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|term_end = March 3, 1849 |
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|preceded=[[William C.C. Claiborne]]<br>[[Charles Magill Conrad|Charles M. Conrad]] |
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|predecessor = [[Alexander Porter]] |
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|successor = [[Pierre Soulé]] |
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|term_start1 = January 12, 1818 |
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|term_start2=September 25, 1834 |
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|term_end1 = May 27, 1824 |
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|predecessor1= [[William C.C. Claiborne]] |
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|district2 = {{ushr|LA|1|1st}} |
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|state2 = [[Louisiana]] |
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|term_start2 = December 1, 1834<ref>[https://books.google.com/books?id=yE09AQAAMAAJ&pg=RA2-PA1 ''The Congressional Globe'', December 8, 1834.]</ref> |
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|order3 = 5th |
|order3 = 5th |
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|office3 = Governor of Louisiana |
|office3 = Governor of Louisiana |
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|term_start3 = December 13, 1824 |
|term_start3 = December 13, 1824 |
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|term_end3 = December 15, 1828 |
|term_end3 = December 15, 1828 |
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|predecessor3 |
|predecessor3= [[Henry S. Thibodaux]] |
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|successor3 = [[Pierre Derbigny]] |
|successor3 = [[Pierre Derbigny]] |
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|birth_date = {{birth date|1783|9|14|mf=y}} |
|birth_date = {{birth date|1783|9|14|mf=y}} |
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|birth_place = [[Davidson County, Tennessee |
|birth_place = [[Virginia]]<!--also reported to be Davidson County, Tennessee (which wasn't yet designated at that time--> |
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|death_date = {{death date and age|1864|9|4|1783|9|14|mf=y}} |
|death_date = {{death date and age|1864|9|4|1783|9|14|mf=y}} |
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|death_place = [[Pointe Coupee Parish]], [[Louisiana]] |
|death_place = [[Pointe Coupee Parish]], [[Louisiana]] |
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|party = [[Democratic-Republican]], [[National Republican Party (United States)|National Republican]], [[Whig Party (United States)|Whig]] |
|party = [[Democratic-Republican]], [[National Republican Party (United States)|National Republican]], [[Whig Party (United States)|Whig]] |
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|spouse = Elizabeth Key |
|spouse = Elizabeth Rousby Key |
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|religion = [[Episcopal Church in the United States of America|Episcopalian]] |
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}} |
}} |
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'''Henry Johnson''' (September 14, 1783 – September 4, 1864) was an attorney and politician |
'''Henry S. Johnson''' (September 14, 1783 – September 4, 1864) was an American attorney and politician who served as the [[List of Governors of Louisiana|fifth Governor]] of [[Louisiana]] (1824–1828). He also served as a [[United States House of Representatives|United States representative]] and as a [[United States Senate|United States senator]]. He participated in the [[slave trade in the United States]]. |
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==Early life== |
==Early life== |
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Johnson was born in Virginia |
Johnson was born in Virginia.<ref name="cong">{{congbio|J000137}}</ref> His family is said to have resided in southern Virginia, where Johnson completed academic study and became a member of Virginia [[Bar (law)|bar]]. He was [[Episcopal Church in the United States of America|Episcopalian]]. |
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==Marriage and family== |
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⚫ | Several years after the United States made the [[Louisiana Purchase]] |
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==Political career== |
==Political career== |
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===1812 to 1828=== |
===1812 to 1828=== |
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In 1812, Johnson lost a bid to the U.S. Congress. |
In 1812, Johnson lost a bid to the [[U.S. Congress]]. After his defeat, he [[Practice of law|practiced law]] in [[Donaldsonville, Louisiana]], located on the south bank of the Mississippi River in the south-central part of the state. He became a district judge of the [[Ascension Parish, Louisiana|Ascension Parish]] Court in 1811; and was selected as a delegate to the first State constitutional convention in 1812.<ref name="cong"/> |
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Upon the death of U.S. |
Upon the death of U.S. senator [[William C.C. Claiborne]] in 1818, Johnson was elected by the state legislature as a [[Democratic-Republican Party (United States)|Democratic-Republican]] to fill his vacancy. He served as chairman, Senate Committee on Indian Affairs, in the 17th Congress. In 1823, he was elected by the [[Louisiana State Legislature]] as an "Adams Republican," also known as the [[National Republican Party (United States)|National Republican Party]] candidate,<ref name="cong"/> to a full six-year U.S. Senate term. The Party asked him not to run for governor in 1824, as it wanted to retain control of that Senate seat. |
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Johnson did run for governor, being elected in 1824. He served a full term as [[ |
Johnson did run for governor, being elected in 1824. He served a full term as [[Governor of Louisiana|Louisiana Governor]] from 1824 until 1828.<ref name="cong"/> During his term, the legislature moved the [[Capital city|state seat of government]] to [[Donaldsonville]], a compromise location settled on between [[English American|Anglo-American]] leaders, who wanted the capital moved from [[New Orleans]] to a more northerly location, and [[Louisiana Creole people|French Creoles]], who wanted to retain the seat of government within an historically-French area to reflect the state's origins. Earlier in 1824, riots in New Orleans over this same issue had forced the resignation of Governor [[Thomas B. Robertson]]. |
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Johnson gained election as governor due to a bitter division among the Creoles at the time. He also enjoyed the goodwill of a visit to Louisiana by the Revolutionary War hero, the French aristocrat [[Marquis de Lafayette]]. That visit allayed the bitter Creole-Anglo split. Johnson inflamed the conflict again by taking the side of the "Anglos" in a dispute about cotton and sugar cultivation. |
Johnson gained election as governor due to a bitter division among the Creoles at the time. He also enjoyed the goodwill of a visit to Louisiana by the [[American Revolutionary War]] hero, the French [[aristocrat]] [[Marquis de Lafayette]]. That visit allayed the bitter Creole-Anglo split. Johnson inflamed the conflict again by taking the side of the "Anglos" in a dispute about cotton and sugar cane cultivation. |
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During Johnson's term, his administration founded two financial institutions that promoted prosperity: the Louisiana State Bank and the Consolidated Association of Planters of Louisiana. He improved commerce within Louisiana by forming the [[Internal improvements|Internal Improvement]] Board to maintain and build infrastructure |
During Johnson's term, his administration founded two financial institutions that promoted prosperity: the Louisiana State Bank and the Consolidated Association of Planters of Louisiana. He improved commerce within Louisiana by forming the [[Internal improvements|Internal Improvement]] Board to maintain and build infrastructure – such as roads and canals, to improve transportation and facilitate the movement of goods and produce to market. |
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===1829 to 1842=== |
===1829 to 1842=== |
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In |
In 1828, Johnson ran to gain election by the state legislature to his former [[U.S. Senate]] seat against [[Charles Dominique Joseph Bouligny]], a man of [[Louisiana Creole people|French and Spanish Creole]] descent, whose father had been a high-ranking official in [[Louisiana (New Spain)|Spanish Louisiana]] at the end of the 18th century. In that election year, Johnson backed [[Edward Douglass White, Sr.]], against [[Edward Livingston]] for the [[Louisiana's 1st congressional district]], [[John Quincy Adams]] for [[President of the U.S.|President]], and [[Pierre Derbigny]] for governor. Some of the men he supported were elected, but the legislature re-elected incumbent Bouligny to the Senate. Bouligny had first been elected after Johnson resigned to take the governorship in 1824.<ref name="cong"/> (Adams lost the Presidency to Andrew Jackson.) |
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In 1834 Johnson was elected as a [[Whig Party (United States)|Whig]] to the |
In 1834 Johnson was elected as a [[Whig Party (United States)|Whig]] to the [[U.S. House of Representatives]], to fill the vacancy after the resignation of [[Edward Douglass White, Sr.]] He was re-elected for two more terms, serving in total from 1834 to 1839.<ref name="cong"/> |
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In June 1838, while a congressman, Johnson was a party to the [[1838 Jesuit slave sale]], involving 272 slaves, nearly a third of which were not yet 10 years old. Some of the slaves were sent to Johnson's Chatham Plantation in [[Ascension Parish, LA|Ascension Parish]], while others ended up on West Oak Plantation (owned by [[Jesse Batey]]), in nearby [[Maringouin, LA|Maringouin]], [[Iberville Parish, LA|Iberville Parish]].<ref name="Rotham">{{Cite journal | last=Rothman | first=Adam | date=Fall 2017 | title=Georgetown University and the Business of Slavery | journal=Washington History | volume=29 | issue=2 | pages=18–22 | jstor=90015020}}</ref><ref>{{cite news| last = Swarns | first = Rachel | title = 272 Slaves Were Sold to Save Georgetown. What Does It Owe Their Descendants? | url = https://www.nytimes.com/2016/04/17/us/georgetown-university-search-for-slave-descendants.html | access-date = 19 June 2022 | work = New York Times | date = 17 April 2016}}</ref> Johnson renegotiated the terms of payment in 1844, needing more time to pay off his debt.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://slaveryarchive.georgetown.edu/items/show/63|title=Henry Johnson renegotiates the terms of sale, February 17, 1844 · Georgetown Slavery Archive|website=slaveryarchive.georgetown.edu|date=17 February 1844 |language=en-US|access-date=2018-02-02}}</ref> That same year, Johnson sold a share of Chatham and would eventually sell the remainder of his land and enslaved people to John R. Thompson in 1851.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://slaveryarchive.georgetown.edu/items/show/73|title=Henry Johnson slave sales · Georgetown Slavery Archive|website=slaveryarchive.georgetown.edu|language=en-US|access-date=2018-02-02}}</ref> |
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===1844 to 1850=== |
===1844 to 1850=== |
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In 1844, Johnson was |
In 1844, Johnson was [[United States Senate special election in Louisiana, 1844|elected]] to fill the vacant U.S. Senate position of [[Alexander Porter]], who never took the seat due to ill health and died in January 1844. Johnson served the remainder of the term until 1849. He served as Chairman of the Committee on Pensions. As senator he supported bills favoring the annexation of Texas, which had become an [[Republic of Texas|independent Republic]] after separating from Mexico. He also voted to repeal the tariff of 1846. |
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In 1848 Johnson lost a bid to remain in the Senate to [[Pierre Soulé]], a [[Jacksonian democracy|Jacksonian-Democrat]] of French Creole descent. In 1850, he suffered a final political defeat, losing a race for Representative |
In 1848 Johnson lost a bid to remain in the Senate to [[Pierre Soulé]], a [[Jacksonian democracy|Jacksonian-Democrat]] of French Creole descent. In 1850, he suffered a final political defeat, losing a race for U.S. Representative against [[Henry Adams Bullard]] (Whig). |
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Henry Johnson moved to [[New Roads, Louisiana|New Roads]] in [[Pointe Coupee Parish, Louisiana|Pointe Coupée Parish]] and continued the [[practice of law]].<ref name="cong"/> |
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== Personal life == |
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⚫ | After passing the bar, Johnson married Elizabeth Rousby Key<!--was styled here as "of Virginia" but the Key family resided in Maryland-->, a daughter of [[Philip Barton Key]] by Ann Plater, a daughter of [[George Plater]]; Elizabeth's father was an uncle of [[Francis Scott Key]] and Anne Arnold Phoebe Charlton Key, who married [[Roger B. Taney]]. The couple had a family together. |
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⚫ | Several years after the United States made the [[Louisiana Purchase]], the Johnsons moved to the [[Territory of Orleans]], in 1809. He was appointed as clerk of the Second Superior Court of the Territory. In 1811, he was appointed clerk of the newly formed [[St. Mary Parish, Louisiana|St. Mary Parish]] in the southwestern part of the state.<ref name="cong" /> |
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During the [[American Civil War|Civil War]], Gov. Johnson remained in Pointe Coupee Parish. The state was controlled by the Union after the fall of New Orleans. He died in September 1864, near the close of the war, and was buried on his plantation, which lies at the confluence of Bayou Grosse Tête and Bayou Maringouin. |
During the [[American Civil War|Civil War]], Gov. Johnson remained in Pointe Coupee Parish. The state was controlled by the Union after the fall of New Orleans. He died in September 1864, near the close of the war, and was buried on his plantation, which lies at the confluence of Bayou Grosse Tête and Bayou Maringouin. |
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Sidney Marchand in his ''Story of Ascension Parish'' said that Johnson had bequeathed the land in Donaldsonville on which was built the present-day Ascension Episcopal Church (at the corner of Attakapas/Nicholls and St. Patrick streets).{{citation needed|date=July 2014}} |
[[Sidney A. Marchand]] in his ''Story of Ascension Parish'' said that Johnson had bequeathed the land in Donaldsonville on which was built the present-day Ascension Episcopal Church (at the corner of Attakapas/Nicholls and St. Patrick streets).{{citation needed|date=July 2014}} |
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==References== |
==References== |
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==External links== |
==External links== |
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{{congbio|J000137}} |
{{congbio|J000137}} |
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*[http://www.sos. |
*[https://web.archive.org/web/20120729145443/http://www.sos.la.gov/tabid/363/Default.aspx State of Louisiana: Louisiana Secretary of State: Henry S. Johnson] (archived at [[Internet Archive]]) |
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*{{Cite web|url=https://slaveryarchive.georgetown.edu/collections/show/1 |title=Sale of Maryland Jesuit's enslaved community to Louisiana in 1838|publisher=The Georgetown Slavery Archive}} |
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{{s-ttl|title=[[Whig Party (United States)|Whig]] nominee for [[List of Governors of Louisiana|Governor of Louisiana]]|years=[[1842 Louisiana gubernatorial election|1842]]}} |
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{{s-aft|after=[[Guillaume Louis DeBuys]]}} |
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{{U.S. Senator box |
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|before=[[William C.C. Claiborne]] |
|before=[[William C.C. Claiborne]] |
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|after=[[Charles Dominique Joseph Bouligny|Dominique Bouligny]] |
|after=[[Charles Dominique Joseph Bouligny|Dominique Bouligny]] |
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|alongside=[[Eligius Fromentin]], [[James Brown ( |
|alongside=[[Eligius Fromentin]], [[James Brown (Louisiana)|James Brown]], [[Josiah S. Johnston]] |
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|years=January 12, 1818 – May 27, 1824}} |
|years=January 12, 1818 – May 27, 1824}} |
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{{U.S. Senator box |
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|state=Louisiana |
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|before=[[ |
|before=[[Alexander Porter]] |
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|after=[[Pierre Soulé]] |
|after=[[Pierre Soulé]] |
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|alongside=[[Alexander Barrow]], [[Pierre Soulé]], [[Solomon W. Downs]] |
|alongside=[[Alexander Barrow]], [[Pierre Soulé]], [[Solomon W. Downs]] |
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|years=February 12, 1844 |
|years=February 12, 1844 – March 3, 1849}} |
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{{succession box |title=[[List of Governors of Louisiana|Governor of Louisiana]] | before=[[Henry S. Thibodaux]]| after=[[Pierre Derbigny]] | years=1824–1828}} |
{{succession box |title=[[List of Governors of Louisiana|Governor of Louisiana]] | before=[[Henry S. Thibodaux]]| after=[[Pierre Derbigny]] | years=1824–1828}} |
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{{US House succession box | state=Louisiana | district=1 | district_ord=1st | before=[[Edward Douglass White Sr.]] | after=[[Edward Douglass White Sr.]] | years=December 1, 1834 – March 3, 1839}} |
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|title= |
|title=Most senior living U.S. senator <BR> (Sitting or former) |
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|before= [[John J. Crittenden]] |
|before= [[John J. Crittenden]] |
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|after= [[Walter Lowrie (politician)|Walter Lowrie]] |
|after= [[Walter Lowrie (politician)|Walter Lowrie]] |
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{{Authority control |
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{{Persondata <!-- Metadata: see [[Wikipedia:Persondata]]. --> |
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| NAME =Johnson, Henry |
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| ALTERNATIVE NAMES = |
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| SHORT DESCRIPTION = American politician |
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| DATE OF BIRTH =September 14, 1783 |
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| PLACE OF BIRTH =[[Davidson County, Tennessee]] |
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| DATE OF DEATH =September 4, 1864 |
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| PLACE OF DEATH =[[Pointe Coupee Parish]], [[Louisiana]] |
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}} |
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{{DEFAULTSORT:Johnson, Henry}} |
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[[Category:Key family of Maryland]] |
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[[Category:Louisiana Democratic-Republicans]] |
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[[Category:National Republican Party members of the United States House of Representatives]] |
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[[Category:National Republican Party state governors of the United States]] |
[[Category:National Republican Party state governors of the United States]] |
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[[Category:People from Donaldsonville, Louisiana]] |
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[[Category:People from New Roads, Louisiana]] |
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Latest revision as of 02:58, 11 December 2024
Henry S. Johnson | |
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United States Senator from Louisiana | |
In office February 12, 1844 – March 3, 1849 | |
Preceded by | Alexander Porter |
Succeeded by | Pierre Soulé |
In office January 12, 1818 – May 27, 1824 | |
Preceded by | William C.C. Claiborne |
Succeeded by | Dominique Bouligny |
Member of the U.S. House of Representatives from Louisiana's 1st district | |
In office December 1, 1834[1] – March 3, 1839 | |
Preceded by | Edward Douglass White, Sr. |
Succeeded by | Edward Douglass White, Sr. |
5th Governor of Louisiana | |
In office December 13, 1824 – December 15, 1828 | |
Preceded by | Henry S. Thibodaux |
Succeeded by | Pierre Derbigny |
Personal details | |
Born | Virginia | September 14, 1783
Died | September 4, 1864 Pointe Coupee Parish, Louisiana | (aged 80)
Political party | Democratic-Republican, National Republican, Whig |
Spouse | Elizabeth Rousby Key |
Henry S. Johnson (September 14, 1783 – September 4, 1864) was an American attorney and politician who served as the fifth Governor of Louisiana (1824–1828). He also served as a United States representative and as a United States senator. He participated in the slave trade in the United States.
Early life
[edit]Johnson was born in Virginia.[2] His family is said to have resided in southern Virginia, where Johnson completed academic study and became a member of Virginia bar. He was Episcopalian.
Political career
[edit]1812 to 1828
[edit]In 1812, Johnson lost a bid to the U.S. Congress. After his defeat, he practiced law in Donaldsonville, Louisiana, located on the south bank of the Mississippi River in the south-central part of the state. He became a district judge of the Ascension Parish Court in 1811; and was selected as a delegate to the first State constitutional convention in 1812.[2]
Upon the death of U.S. senator William C.C. Claiborne in 1818, Johnson was elected by the state legislature as a Democratic-Republican to fill his vacancy. He served as chairman, Senate Committee on Indian Affairs, in the 17th Congress. In 1823, he was elected by the Louisiana State Legislature as an "Adams Republican," also known as the National Republican Party candidate,[2] to a full six-year U.S. Senate term. The Party asked him not to run for governor in 1824, as it wanted to retain control of that Senate seat.
Johnson did run for governor, being elected in 1824. He served a full term as Louisiana Governor from 1824 until 1828.[2] During his term, the legislature moved the state seat of government to Donaldsonville, a compromise location settled on between Anglo-American leaders, who wanted the capital moved from New Orleans to a more northerly location, and French Creoles, who wanted to retain the seat of government within an historically-French area to reflect the state's origins. Earlier in 1824, riots in New Orleans over this same issue had forced the resignation of Governor Thomas B. Robertson.
Johnson gained election as governor due to a bitter division among the Creoles at the time. He also enjoyed the goodwill of a visit to Louisiana by the American Revolutionary War hero, the French aristocrat Marquis de Lafayette. That visit allayed the bitter Creole-Anglo split. Johnson inflamed the conflict again by taking the side of the "Anglos" in a dispute about cotton and sugar cane cultivation.
During Johnson's term, his administration founded two financial institutions that promoted prosperity: the Louisiana State Bank and the Consolidated Association of Planters of Louisiana. He improved commerce within Louisiana by forming the Internal Improvement Board to maintain and build infrastructure – such as roads and canals, to improve transportation and facilitate the movement of goods and produce to market.
1829 to 1842
[edit]In 1828, Johnson ran to gain election by the state legislature to his former U.S. Senate seat against Charles Dominique Joseph Bouligny, a man of French and Spanish Creole descent, whose father had been a high-ranking official in Spanish Louisiana at the end of the 18th century. In that election year, Johnson backed Edward Douglass White, Sr., against Edward Livingston for the Louisiana's 1st congressional district, John Quincy Adams for President, and Pierre Derbigny for governor. Some of the men he supported were elected, but the legislature re-elected incumbent Bouligny to the Senate. Bouligny had first been elected after Johnson resigned to take the governorship in 1824.[2] (Adams lost the Presidency to Andrew Jackson.)
In 1834 Johnson was elected as a Whig to the U.S. House of Representatives, to fill the vacancy after the resignation of Edward Douglass White, Sr. He was re-elected for two more terms, serving in total from 1834 to 1839.[2]
In June 1838, while a congressman, Johnson was a party to the 1838 Jesuit slave sale, involving 272 slaves, nearly a third of which were not yet 10 years old. Some of the slaves were sent to Johnson's Chatham Plantation in Ascension Parish, while others ended up on West Oak Plantation (owned by Jesse Batey), in nearby Maringouin, Iberville Parish.[3][4] Johnson renegotiated the terms of payment in 1844, needing more time to pay off his debt.[5] That same year, Johnson sold a share of Chatham and would eventually sell the remainder of his land and enslaved people to John R. Thompson in 1851.[6]
Henry Johnson unsuccessfully ran for governor in 1842 as the Whig nominee. He was defeated by Democratic nominee U. S. Senator Alexandre Mouton.
1844 to 1850
[edit]In 1844, Johnson was elected to fill the vacant U.S. Senate position of Alexander Porter, who never took the seat due to ill health and died in January 1844. Johnson served the remainder of the term until 1849. He served as Chairman of the Committee on Pensions. As senator he supported bills favoring the annexation of Texas, which had become an independent Republic after separating from Mexico. He also voted to repeal the tariff of 1846.
In 1848 Johnson lost a bid to remain in the Senate to Pierre Soulé, a Jacksonian-Democrat of French Creole descent. In 1850, he suffered a final political defeat, losing a race for U.S. Representative against Henry Adams Bullard (Whig).
Henry Johnson moved to New Roads in Pointe Coupée Parish and continued the practice of law.[2]
Personal life
[edit]After passing the bar, Johnson married Elizabeth Rousby Key, a daughter of Philip Barton Key by Ann Plater, a daughter of George Plater; Elizabeth's father was an uncle of Francis Scott Key and Anne Arnold Phoebe Charlton Key, who married Roger B. Taney. The couple had a family together.
Several years after the United States made the Louisiana Purchase, the Johnsons moved to the Territory of Orleans, in 1809. He was appointed as clerk of the Second Superior Court of the Territory. In 1811, he was appointed clerk of the newly formed St. Mary Parish in the southwestern part of the state.[2]
Death
[edit]During the Civil War, Gov. Johnson remained in Pointe Coupee Parish. The state was controlled by the Union after the fall of New Orleans. He died in September 1864, near the close of the war, and was buried on his plantation, which lies at the confluence of Bayou Grosse Tête and Bayou Maringouin.
Sidney A. Marchand in his Story of Ascension Parish said that Johnson had bequeathed the land in Donaldsonville on which was built the present-day Ascension Episcopal Church (at the corner of Attakapas/Nicholls and St. Patrick streets).[citation needed]
References
[edit]- ^ The Congressional Globe, December 8, 1834.
- ^ a b c d e f g h
- United States Congress. "Henry Johnson (id: J000137)". Biographical Directory of the United States Congress.
- ^ Rothman, Adam (Fall 2017). "Georgetown University and the Business of Slavery". Washington History. 29 (2): 18–22. JSTOR 90015020.
- ^ Swarns, Rachel (17 April 2016). "272 Slaves Were Sold to Save Georgetown. What Does It Owe Their Descendants?". New York Times. Retrieved 19 June 2022.
- ^ "Henry Johnson renegotiates the terms of sale, February 17, 1844 · Georgetown Slavery Archive". slaveryarchive.georgetown.edu. 17 February 1844. Retrieved 2018-02-02.
- ^ "Henry Johnson slave sales · Georgetown Slavery Archive". slaveryarchive.georgetown.edu. Retrieved 2018-02-02.
External links
[edit]- United States Congress. "Henry Johnson (id: J000137)". Biographical Directory of the United States Congress.
- State of Louisiana: Louisiana Secretary of State: Henry S. Johnson (archived at Internet Archive)
- "Sale of Maryland Jesuit's enslaved community to Louisiana in 1838". The Georgetown Slavery Archive.
- 1783 births
- 1864 deaths
- Democratic-Republican Party United States senators
- Governors of Louisiana
- Key family of Maryland
- Louisiana Democratic-Republicans
- Louisiana National Republicans
- 19th-century American planters
- National Republican Party members of the United States House of Representatives
- National Republican Party state governors of the United States
- People from Donaldsonville, Louisiana
- People from New Roads, Louisiana
- United States senators from Louisiana
- Whig Party members of the United States House of Representatives from Louisiana
- Whig Party United States senators
- United States senators who owned slaves
- Members of the United States House of Representatives who owned slaves
- 19th-century United States senators
- 19th-century members of the United States House of Representatives