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John W. Stevenson

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From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
American politician, Kentucky (1812–1886)
For the American African Methodist Episcopal church minister, seeJohn W. Stevenson (minister). For other people, seeJohn Stevenson (disambiguation).

John Stevenson
President of the American Bar Association
In office
1884–1885
Preceded byCortlandt Parker
Succeeded byWilliam Allen Butler
Chairman of the Senate Democratic Caucus
In office
December 1873 – March 4, 1877
Preceded byPosition established
Succeeded byWilliam A. Wallace
United States Senator
fromKentucky
In office
March 4, 1871 – March 4, 1877
Preceded byThomas C. McCreery
Succeeded byJames B. Beck
25thGovernor of Kentucky
In office
September 8, 1867 – February 13, 1871
Preceded byJohn L. Helm
Succeeded byPreston Leslie
19thLieutenant Governor of Kentucky
In office
September 3, 1867 – September 8, 1867
GovernorJohn L. Helm
Preceded byRichard Jacob
Succeeded byJohn G. Carlisle
Member of theU.S. House of Representatives
fromKentucky's10th district
In office
March 4, 1857 – March 4, 1861
Preceded bySamuel F. Swope
Succeeded byJohn W. Menzies
Personal details
Born(1812-05-04)May 4, 1812
DiedAugust 10, 1886(1886-08-10) (aged 74)
Resting placeSpring Grove Cemetery
PartyDemocratic
SpouseSibella Winston
RelativesCarter Braxton (Great-grandfather)
Andrew Stevenson (Father)
Willoughby Newton (Cousin)
EducationHampden-Sydney College
University of Virginia, Charlottesville (BA)
SignatureJ. W. Stevenson

John White Stevenson (May 4, 1812 – August 10, 1886) was an American politician and attorney who was the 25thgovernor of Kentucky and represented the state in both houses of theU.S. Congress. The son of formerSpeaker of the House and U.S. diplomatAndrew Stevenson, John Stevenson graduated from theUniversity of Virginia in 1832 and studied law under his cousin, futureCongressmanWilloughby Newton. After briefly practicing law inMississippi, he relocated toCovington, Kentucky, and was electedcounty attorney. After serving in theKentucky legislature, he was chosen as a delegate to the state's third constitutional convention in 1849 and was one of three commissioners charged with revising its code of laws, a task finished in 1854. ADemocrat, he was elected to two consecutive terms in the U.S. House of Representatives where he supported several proposed compromises to avert theCivil War and blamed theRadical Republicans for their failure.

After losing his reelection bid in 1861, Stevenson, a knownConfederate sympathizer, stayed out of public life during the war and was consequently able to avoid being imprisoned, as many other Confederate sympathizers were. In 1867, just five days afterJohn L. Helm and Stevenson were elected governor andlieutenant governor, respectively, Helm died and Stevenson became acting governor. Stevenson subsequently wona special election in 1868 to finish Helm's term. As governor, he opposed federal intervention in what he considered state matters but insisted that blacks' newly granted rights be observed and used the state militia to quell post-war violence in the state. Although a fiscal conservative, he advocated a new tax to benefit education and created the state bureau of education.

In 1871, Stevenson defeated incumbentThomas C. McCreery for his seat in theU.S. Senate after criticizing McCreery for allegedly supporting the appointment ofStephen G. Burbridge, who was hated by most Kentuckians, to a federal position. In the Senate, he opposedinternal improvements and defended aconstructionist view of theconstitution, resisting efforts to expand the powers expressly granted in that document. Beginning in late 1873, Stevenson functioned as the first chairman (later calledfloor leader) of theSenate Democratic caucus. He did not seek reelection in 1877, returning to his law practice and accepting future Kentucky GovernorWilliam Goebel as a law partner. He chaired the1880 Democratic National Convention and was elected president of theAmerican Bar Association in 1884. He died in Covington on August 10, 1886, and was buried inSpring Grove Cemetery atCincinnati, Ohio.

Early life and family

[edit]

John White Stevenson was born May 4, 1812, inRichmond, Virginia.[1] He was the only child ofAndrew and Mary Page (White) Stevenson.[2] His mother—the granddaughter ofCarter Braxton, a signer of theDeclaration of Independence—died during childbirth.[3] Stevenson was sent to live with his maternal grandparents, John and Judith White, until he was eleven; by then, his father had remarried.[4] His father, a prominentVirginia lawyer, rose to political prominence during Stevenson's childhood.[5] He was elected toCongress, eventually serving asSpeaker of the House and was later appointed Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary to the Court of St. James's (now called theUnited States Ambassador to the United Kingdom) byPresidentMartin Van Buren, where he engendered much controversy by his pro-slavery practices.[5] Because of his father's position, young Stevenson had met bothThomas Jefferson andJames Madison.[2]

Stevenson was educated by private tutors in Virginia and Washington, D.C., where he frequently lived while his father was in Congress.[2] In 1828, at the age of 14, he matriculated from the Hampden–Sydney Academy (nowHampden–Sydney College).[4][6] Two years later, he transferred toUniversity of Virginia, where he graduated in 1832.[4][7] After graduation, heread law with his cousin,Willoughby Newton, who would later serve in the U.S. Congress.[6] In 1839, Stevenson wasadmitted to the bar in Virginia.[4]

Following Madison's advice, Stevenson decided to settle in the west.[2] He traveled on horseback through the western frontier until he reached theMississippi River, settling atVicksburg, Mississippi.[8] Vicksburg was a small settlement at the time and did not provide enough work to satisfy him, and, in 1840, he decided to travel toCovington, Kentucky, settling there permanently in 1841.[8][7] In Covington, he formed a law partnership with Jefferson Phelps, a respected lawyer in the area; the partnership lasted until Phelps' death in 1843.[9]

A devoutEpiscopalian, Stevenson frequently attended the conventions of that denomination.[2] He was elected as avestryman of theTrinity Episcopal Church in Covington on November 24, 1842.[10] In 1843, he married Sibella Wilson ofNewport, Kentucky.[5] They had five children: Sally C. (Stevenson) Colston, Mary W. (Stevenson) Colston, Judith W. (Stevenson) Winslow, Samuel W. Stevenson, and John W. Stevenson.[5][note 1]

Political career

[edit]

Soon after arriving in Covington, Stevenson was electedcounty attorney forKenton County.[7] He was chosen as a delegate to the1844 Democratic National Convention and was elected to represent Kenton County in theKentucky House of Representatives the following year.[11] He was reelected in 1846 and 1848. In 1849, he was chosen as a delegate to the state constitutional convention that produced Kentucky's third state constitution.[1][2] In 1850, he, Madison C. Johnson, andJames Harlan were appointed as commissioners to revise Kentucky's civic and criminal code.[6] Their work,Code of Practise in Civil and Criminal Cases was published in 1854.[6] He was again one of Kentucky's delegates to theDemocratic National Conventions in1848,1852, and1856, serving as apresidential elector in 1852 and 1856.[2][7]

U.S. Representative

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In 1857, Stevenson was elected to the first of two consecutive terms in the U.S. House of Representatives.[7] For the duration of his tenure in that body, he served on theCommittee on Elections.[12] He favored admittingKansas to the Union under theLecompton Constitution.[5]

A man with gray hair wearing a black suit and white shirt, sitting with his hands folded
John J. Crittenden proposed a compromise advocated by Stevenson.

Like many Kentuckians, Stevenson was sympathetic to the southern states' position in the lead-up to theCivil War, but he opposed secession as a means of dealing with sectional tensions.[2] In the1860 presidential election, he supported his close friend,John C. Breckinridge.[5] Desiring to avert the Civil War, he advocated acceptance of the several proposed compromises, including theCrittenden Compromise, authored by fellow KentuckianJohn J. Crittenden.[2] He blamed theRadical Republicans' rigid adherence to their demands for the failure of all such proposed compromises, and on January 30, 1861, denounced them in a speech that theDictionary of American Biography called the most notable of his career in the House.[2]

Stevenson was defeated for reelection in 1861.[2] For the duration of the war, which lasted until April 1865, he stayed out of public life in order to avoid being arrested as many otherConfederate sympathizers were.[2] After the war, he was a delegate to theNational Union Party's convention inPhiladelphia, Pennsylvania, in 1865.[5] He was a supporter of theReconstruction policies of PresidentAndrew Johnson.[2]

Governor of Kentucky

[edit]
A bald man wearing a white shirt and black jacket, holding glasses in his left hand
John L. Helm's death elevated Stevenson to governor.

Ex-Confederates dominated the Kentucky Democratic convention that met inFrankfort on February 22, 1867.[13]John L. Helm, father of the late Confederate generalBenjamin Hardin Helm, was nominated for governor and Stevenson was nominated forlieutenant governor.[13] The entire Democratic slate of candidates was elected, including Stevenson, who received 88,222 votes to R. Tarvin Baker's 32,505 and H. Taylor's 11,473.[1] The only non-Confederate sympathizer to win election that year wasGeorge Madison Adams, congressman for the state's8th district who, although a Democrat, was a former federal soldier.[14] Helm took the oath of office on his sick bed at his home inElizabethtown, Kentucky, on September 3, 1867.[14] He died five days later, and Stevenson was sworn in as governor on September 13.[9] Among his first acts as governor were the appointments ofFrank Lane Wolford, a formerUnion soldier, asadjutant general and Fayette Hewitt, a formerConfederate soldier, as statequartermaster general.[15]

Because Helm died so soon after taking office, a special election for the remainder of his term was set for August 1868.[1] Democrats held a convention in Frankfort on February 22, 1868, and nominated Stevenson to finish out Helm's term.[16] R. Tarvin Baker, formerly Stevenson's opponent in the election for lieutenant governor, was the choice of theRepublicans.[1] The Republicans faced many disadvantages, including the national party's persecution of President Johnson and a lack of local organization in many Kentucky counties.[16] Despite Stevenson's shortcomings as a public speaker, he was elected in a landslide—115,560 to 26,605.[16] At the time, it was the largest majority obtained by any candidate in a Kentucky election.[16]

Civil rights

[edit]

Post-war Kentucky Democrats had split into two factions—the more conservativeBourbon Democrats and the more progressive New Departure Democrats.[17] Stevenson governed moderately, giving concessions to both sides.[17] He urged the immediate restoration of all rights to ex-Confederates and denounced Congress for failing to seat a portion of the Kentucky delegation because they had sided with the Confederacy.[18] A champion of states' rights, he resisted federal measures he saw as violating the sovereignty of the states and vehemently denounced the proposedFifteenth Amendment.[18][19] Following Stevenson's lead, the General Assembly refused to pass either theFourteenth or Fifteenth Amendment, but after their passage by a constitutional majority of the states Stevenson generally insisted that blacks' newly granted rights not be infringed upon.[18][20] He was silent, however, when state legislators and officials from various cities used lengthy residency restrictions and redrawn district and municipal boundaries to exclude black voters from specific elections.[21] His 1867 plea for legislators to call a constitutional convention to revise the state's pro-slavery constitution to better conform to post-war reality was completely ignored.[22]

Stevenson opposed almost every effort to expand blacks' rights beyond the minimums assured by federal amendments and legislation.[21] TheCivil Rights Act of 1866 guaranteed that blacks could testify against whites in federal courts, but he opposed New Departure Democrats when they insisted that Kentucky amend its laws to also allow black testimony against whites in state courts, and the measure failed in the 1867 legislative session.[21] Later that year, theKentucky Court of Appeals declared the Civil Rights Act unconstitutional, but a federal court soon overturned that decision.[21] Stevenson backed Bourbon Democrats' appeal of that decision to theSupreme Court of the United States.[21] By 1871, however, he had changed his mind and supported blacks' right to testify.[21] Despite Stevenson's support, the measure failed in the General Assembly again in 1871, but it passed the following year, after Stevenson had left office.[21]

In the 1870 election, the first state in which blacks were allowed to vote, Stevenson warned that violence against them would not be tolerated.[18] Although he relied on local authorities to suppress any incidents, he offered rewards for the apprehension of perpetrators of election-related violence.[18] Stevenson also recommended that the carrying of concealed weapons be outlawed.[23] The General Assembly passed the requested legislation on March 22, 1871.[23] The law imposed small fines for the first offense, but the amount rapidly increased for subsequent infractions in order to deter repeat offenders.[23]

State matters

[edit]

In Stevenson's first message to the legislature, he called on legislators to finally decide whether the state capital would remain atFrankfort or be moved toLexington orLouisville, as some had wanted.[24] His address made it clear that he favored keeping the capital at Frankfort, but he noted that additional space was needed at the presentcapitol building because the existing building could not continue to house enough room both thestate treasurer and auditor.[24] He laid out a vision for an addition to the capitol that would make it more spacious and more grandiose.[24] To pay for the expansion, the fiscally conservative Stevenson pressed the federal government to pay claims due Kentucky from Civil War expenses.[25] By the end of his term, the state had collected over $1.5 million in claims.[15] The legislature, however, disregarded his plan for expanding the capitol, instead opting to construct a separate executive office building next to the capitol.[24]

Stevenson also advocated careful study of the state's finances to deal with increasing expenditures.[1] He insisted that the state stop covering its short-term indebtedness usingbonds.[25] However, Stevenson was willing to tax to benefit segregation in schools, and helped create the state bureau of education in 1870. Because most blacks possessed little property of significant value, the new tax yielded little revenue to support their educational institutions.[18] State legislators rejected his 1870 proposal to create a state bureau of immigration and statistics to spur interest in and migration to the state.[25] He did persuade the legislators to make some improvements in the state's penal and eleemosynary institutions, including establishing a House of Reform for juvenile offenders.[1][17]

Mob violence, much of it perpetrated by vigilantes calling themselves "Regulators" who felt that local authorities had failed in their duties to protect the people, was an ongoing problem during Stevenson's administration.[26] In September 1867, Stevenson urged all Kentuckians to defer to local authorities and ordered that all vigilante groups be disbanded.[26] On October 1, however, a group calling themselves "Rousey's band" began perpetrating anti-Regulator violence inMarion County.[26] He dispatched Adjutant General Wolford to Marion County, authorizing him to use the state militia to quell the violence if necessary.[26] Wolford called out threecompanies of militia who suppressed "Rousey's band" and sent another to put down a similar movement inBoyle County.[26] Later in October, Stevenson dispatched the state militia toMercer County, and militiamen were dispatched to Boyle,Garrard, andLincoln counties in 1869.[23] The governor declared that he would never hesitate to send troops "whenever it becomes necessary for the arrest and bringing to justice of all those who combine together, no matter under what pretense, to trample the law under their feet by acts of personal violence."[23]

U.S. Senator

[edit]
A man with dark hair, bald on top, wearing a black suit and tie with a white shirt, seated
Thomas C. McCreery
A man with wavy, receding hair, wearing a black suit with a white shirt, seated
Thomas Laurens Jones

Beginning in late 1869, Stevenson attacked Kentucky SenatorThomas C. McCreery and RepresentativeThomas Laurens Jones for allegedly supporting PresidentUlysses S. Grant's nomination of former Union GeneralStephen G. Burbridge to a federal position in the revenue service.[25][27] Although born in northern Kentucky, Burbridge had commanded colored troops during the Civil War, and had also been specifically ordered to suppress Confederate guerillas in his home state. Kentucky's General Assembly had sought to bring him to trial forwar crimes in 1863 and 1864.[28] HistorianE. Merton Coulter wrote of Burbridge: "[The people of Kentucky] relentlessly pursued him, the most bitterly hated of all Kentuckians, and so untiring were their efforts, that it finally came to the point where he had not a friend left in the state who would raise his voice to defend him."[29] Stevenson's attacks on McCreery and Jones were likely designed to discredit them both in advance of the expiration of McCreery's Senate term in 1870.[25] McCreery vigorously denied Stevenson's charges and eventually challenged him to a duel.[27] Stevenson declined the challenge, citing his Christian beliefs.[27] The General Assembly met to choose McCreery's successor in December 1869 and, on the fifth ballot, chose Stevenson over McCreery for the six-year Senate term.[27] Stevenson resigned the governorship on February 13, 1871, in advance of the March congressional session.[1]

In the Senate, Stevenson was a conservative stalwart, steadfastly opposing spending oninternal improvements and maintaining a strict constructionist view of theconstitution.[2][25] He urged his fellow senators to oppose theCivil Rights Act of 1871, claiming that its provision that the president could suspend the right ofhabeas corpus in cases where he believed violence was imminent amounted to giving the chief executive the powers of a dictator.[30] He also opposed the appropriation of federal money to fund theCentennial Exposition inPhiladelphia, Pennsylvania, because he did not believe Congress was given the authority to make such an allocation under the Constitution.[31]

At the1872 Democratic National Convention, Stevenson received the votes ofDelaware's six delegates for the Democraticvice-presidential nomination, althoughBenjamin Gratz Brown was ultimately nominated.[32] In February 1873, Vice-PresidentSchuyler Colfax named Stevenson as one of five members of theMorrill Commission to investigateNew Hampshire SenatorJames W. Patterson's involvement in theCrédit Mobilier of America scandal.[33] Stevenson and fellow SenatorJohn P. Stockton ofNew Jersey both asked to be removed from the commission, but the Senate refused to grant their request.[33] On February 27, 1873, the commission recommended Patterson's expulsion from the Senate, but the chamber adjourned on March 4 without acting on the recommendation.[33] Patterson's term ended with the end of the session, and he was not re-elected, rendering moot further consideration of the matter.[33]

From December 1873 until the expiration of his term in 1877, Stevenson was generally recognized as the chairman (later known as thefloor leader) of the minorityDemocratic caucus in the Senate;[34] he was the first person to have acted in the capacity.[34] During theForty-fourth Congress, he chaired theCommittee on Revolutionary Claims.[7] He did not seek reelection at the end of his term.[7] In the disputed1876 presidential election, he was one of the visiting statesmen who went toNew Orleans, Louisiana, and concluded that the election had been fairly conducted in that state.[2]

Later life and death

[edit]

After his service in the Senate, Stevenson returned to his law practice in Covington.[2] In addition, he accepted a position teaching criminal law and contracts at theUniversity of Cincinnati College of Law.[2] He remained interested in politics and was chosen chairman of the 1879 Democratic state convention in Louisville and president of the1880 Democratic National Convention inCincinnati, Ohio.[1][2][35]

In 1883, theAmerican Bar Association began exploring the concept ofdual federalism.[36] Because of his personal acquaintance with James Madison, whom he characterized as a proponent of dual federalism, Stevenson delivered an address on the subject at the Association's annual meeting.[37][36] Stevenson maintained that Madison believed strongly in the rights of the sovereign states and regarded a Supreme Court appeal as "a remedy for trespass on the reserved rights of the states by unconstitutional acts of Congress."[36] Stevenson was elected its president that year's and his address published.[38][1][2] Association member Richard Vaux characterized Stevenson's presidential report reviewing state and federal legislation in 1885 as "most interesting and valuable to the profession".[37]

Among the men who studied law under Stevenson in his later years were futureU.S. Treasury SecretaryJohn G. Carlisle and future Kentucky GovernorWilliam Goebel.[6] Goebel eventually became Stevenson's law partner and the executor of his will.[39]

In early August 1886, Stevenson traveled toSewanee, Tennessee, to attend the commencement ceremonies ofSewanee University.[40] While there, he fell ill and was rushed back to his home in Covington, where he died on August 10, 1886.[40] He was buried inSpring Grove Cemetery in Cincinnati.[2]

Notes

[edit]
  1. ^Morton gives both Mary and John Stevenson's middle initials as "D." instead of "W." She also omits Samuel W. Stevenson from the list of children, including instead Andrew Stevenson of Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. She later writes that Stevenson was survived by six children, despite having previously listed only five names. Vaux (p. 14) lists sons Andrew and John, although he states that Andrew lives in Montana. Vaux also mentions three unnamed daughters.

References

[edit]
  1. ^abcdefghijHarrison 1992, p. 854.
  2. ^abcdefghijklmnopqrstJohn White Stevenson 1936.
  3. ^Vaux 1886, p. 5.
  4. ^abcdVaux 1886, p. 6.
  5. ^abcdefgOwen 2004, p. 98.
  6. ^abcdePowell 1976, p. 58.
  7. ^abcdefgStevenson, John White.
  8. ^abVaux 1886, p. 7.
  9. ^abMorton 1907, p. 13.
  10. ^Church History.
  11. ^Vaux 1886, p. 8.
  12. ^Allen 1872, p. 110.
  13. ^abTapp 1977, p. 19.
  14. ^abKinkead 1896, p. 207.
  15. ^abJohnson 1912, p. 397.
  16. ^abcdTapp 1977, p. 25.
  17. ^abcHarrison 1997, p. 243.
  18. ^abcdefOwen 2004, p. 99.
  19. ^Tapp 1977, p. 26.
  20. ^Johnson 1912, p. 398.
  21. ^abcdefgHarrison 1997, p. 244.
  22. ^Tapp 1977, p. 258.
  23. ^abcdeKentucky's Black Heritage 1971, p. 58.
  24. ^abcdClark 2002, p. 50.
  25. ^abcdefOwen 2004, p. 100.
  26. ^abcdeTapp 1977, p. 380.
  27. ^abcdTapp 1977, p. 27.
  28. ^Tapp 1977, p. 22.
  29. ^Tapp 1977, p. 24.
  30. ^Coker 2002, p. 201.
  31. ^Vaux 1886, p. 9.
  32. ^Official Proceedings of the National Democratic Convention 1972.
  33. ^abcdHinds and Cannon, p. 837
  34. ^abGamm 2005, p. 32.
  35. ^Tapp 1977, p. 162.
  36. ^abcTwiss 1962, p. 168.
  37. ^abVaux 1886, p. 11.
  38. ^Vaux 1886, p. 12.
  39. ^Morton 1907, p. 14.
  40. ^abVaux 1886, p. 14.

Bibliography

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External links

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U.S. House of Representatives
Preceded by Member of theU.S. House of Representatives
fromKentucky's 10th congressional district

1857–1861
Succeeded by
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Preceded byLieutenant Governor of Kentucky
1867
Succeeded by
Preceded byGovernor of Kentucky
1867–1871
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Preceded byDemocratic nominee forGovernor of Kentucky
1868
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New office Chair of theSenate Democratic Caucus
1873–1877
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1871–1877
Served alongside:Garrett Davis,Willis Machen,Thomas C. McCreery
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Preceded by Chair of the Senate Revolutionary Claims Committee
1875–1877
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