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Historic Autographs Civil War John J Crittenden signed letter autograph PSA/DNA

Historic Autographs Civil War John J Crittenden signed letter autograph PSA/DNA
Historic Autographs Civil War John J Crittenden signed letter autograph PSA/DNA

Historic Autographs Civil War John J Crittenden signed letter autograph PSA/DNA

In stock - comes with Letter of Authenticity from Historic Autographs - authenticated by PSA/DNA! John Jordan Crittenden (September 10, 1787 July 26, 1863) was a politician from the U. He represented the state in both the U.

And twice served as United States Attorney General. In the administrations of William Henry Harrison. He was also the 17th. And served in the state legislature.

Although frequently mentioned as a potential candidate for the U. He never consented to run for the office.

During his early political career, Crittenden served in the Kentucky House of Representatives. And was chosen as speaker. With the advent of the Second Party System. He allied with the National Republican.

Party and was a fervent supporter of Henry Clay. Jackson supporters in the Senate refused to confirm Crittenden's nomination by John Quincy Adams. In 1828, but after his brief service as Kentucky Secretary of State.

The state legislature elected him to the second of his four non-consecutive stints in the U. Upon his election as president, William Henry Harrison.

Appointed Crittenden as Attorney General, but 5 months after Harrison's death, political differences prompted him to resign rather than continue his service under Harrison's successor, John Tyler. Win Kentucky's vote in the 1848 presidential election. Taylor was elected, but Crittenden refused a post in his cabinet, fearing he would be charged with making a corrupt bargain. , as Clay had been in 1825. Following Taylor's death in 1850, Crittenden resigned the governorship and accepted Millard Fillmore. S appointment as attorney general. As the Whig Party crumbled in the mid-1850s, Crittenden joined the Know Nothing. After the expiration of his term as attorney general, he was again elected to the U. Senate, where he urged compromise on the issue of slavery. To prevent the breakup of the United States. As bitter partisanship increased the threat of secession. Crittenden sought out moderates from all parties and formed the Constitutional Union Party. Though he refused the party's nomination for president in the 1860 election. In December 1860, he authored the Crittenden Compromise. A series of resolutions and constitutional amendments he hoped would avert the Civil War. Crittenden was elected to the House of Representatives in 1861 and continued to seek reconciliation between the states throughout his term. He declared his candidacy for re-election to the House in 1863, but died before the election took place. Old Court New Court controversy. Association with the National Republicans. Second term as attorney general. Service in the House of Representatives and death. John Jordan Crittenden was born September 10, 1787, near Versailles. He was the second child and first son of Revolutionary War. And his wife Judith Harris. John and Judith Crittenden had four sons and five daughters, all but one of whom survived infancy. On his father's side, he was of Welsh. Ancestry, while his mother's family was French Huguenot. His father had surveyed land in Kentucky with George Rogers Clark. And settled there just after the end of the American Revolution. Two of Crittenden's brothers, Thomas and Robert. Became lawyers, while the third, Henry, was a farmer. Crittenden began a college preparatory curriculum at Pisgah Academy in Woodford County. He was then sent to a boarding school. Among his classmates were Thomas Alexander Marshall. Crittenden became especially close friends with Blair, and later political differences did little to diminish their friendship.

After a year at boarding school, Crittenden moved to the Lexington, Kentucky. Home of Judge George M. He began his tertiary studies at Washington College now Washington and Lee University.

During his brief tenure there, he studied mathematics and belles-lettres. And became friends with Hugh Lawson White.

Crittenden was dissatisfied with the curriculum at Washington College and matriculated to the College of William and Mary. And became acquainted with John Tyler. Crittenden completed his studies in 1806, and was admitted to the bar. He began his practice in Woodford County, but as central Kentucky was well already supplied with able lawyers, he moved to Logan County, Kentucky.

On the then western frontier and opened his practice in Russellville. At age twenty-two, he was appointed by Governor Ninian Edwards. The following year, Edwards also made Crittenden his aide-de-camp. On May 27, 1811, Crittenden married Sarah O.

Lee at her home in Versailles. Lee was a cousin of future U.

And aunt of US Senator Wilkinson Call. They had seven children before Sarah's death in mid-September 1824.

Among their children were Confederate. Their daughter Sallie Lee "Maria" Crittenden was the mother of John C. During the late 19th century. Crittenden's career as an elected official began in the Kentucky House of Representatives.

Where he represented Logan County from 1811 to 1817. After the 1811 legislative session, he volunteered as an aide to General Samuel Hopkins.

In an expedition against the Indians. On the outbreak of the War of 1812. Appointed him as an aide-de-camp for the First Kentucky Militia. In 1813, he became an aide-de-camp to Governor Isaac Shelby. Serving at the Battle of the Thames.

Following the war, the governor issued him a special commendation for faithfulness in carrying out his orders. He then resumed his law practice in Russellville. In 1814, Governor Shelby appointed Crittenden to fill the U. Senate seat vacated by his former teacher, George M. Bibb; later, however, Shelby learned that Crittenden was only twenty-seven years old, three years shy of the constitutional age requirement for senators. He would retain the position from 1815 to 1817. As speaker, Crittenden presided over a particularly tumultuous time in the legislature. In October 1816, recently elected governor George Madison. He was succeeded by Lieutenant Governor. Slaughter immediately made two extremely unpopular appointments, and quickly fell out of favor with many Kentuckians. A group of legislators, led by John C. Breckinridge, pointed out that the Kentucky Constitution.

Provided only that the lieutenant governor would serve as governor until a new gubernatorial election was held and a qualified successor was chosen. Slaughter, they claimed, was only the "acting governor". The group presented a bill to the House that called for new elections. The bill was defeated, but Crittenden supported it. Crittenden's support of a new election was both popular and politically expedient.

Senate term of Martin D. One of Slaughter's unpopular nominees, expired in 1817, the Kentucky General Assembly. Chose Crittenden to fill the vacancy. Though he was the youngest member of the body, he served as the second-ever chairman of the newly created Committee on the Judiciary.

He was also a member of the Committee on Naval Affairs. During his term, he introduced legislation to reimburse. Persons who were fined under the 1798 Sedition Act. He found state politics more interesting, however, and this fact, coupled with increased financial responsibilities incurred by the birth of his third and fourth children, prompted his decision to resign his seat on March 3, 1819.

After leaving Congress, Crittenden moved to Frankfort. The state capital, to attract more legal clients and be nearer the center of the state's political activity. Among his clients after moving to Frankfort were former Presidents. Future Vice-President Richard Mentor Johnson.

And future governors James T. During this period, he collaborated with Henry Clay. In defending Charles Wickliffe, son of Robert C. Wickliffe was charged with the murder of the editor of the Kentucky Gazette.

Crittenden argued that the slaying was self-defense. And Clay delivered a passionate closing argument. In January 1820, Crittenden and John Rowan were chosen to help resolve Kentucky's boundary dispute with Tennessee. The boundary was supposed to run along the line at 36 degrees, 30 minutes north latitude, but when Dr.

Surveyed it, he erroneously marked the line farther south. Crittenden and Rowan proposed either that the "Walker Line" remain the boundary from the Cumberland Mountains. And Tennessee would compensate for the error west of the Tennessee River, or that the boundary be reset at 36 degrees, 30 minutes throughout. Tennessee's commissioners rejected both proposals, asking instead that the Walker Line be accepted east of the Tennessee River and a more southerly line west of it, with reciprocal agreements between the states to honor existing land grants. Crittenden was inclined to accept the offer, but Rowan was not.

The Kentucky commissioners proposed that the matter be submitted to arbitration. In a report to the General Assembly, Crittenden recommended that Kentucky accept the Tennessee proposal. The legislators were swayed by Crittenden's report, and the articles of agreement were signed on February 2, 1820. Crittenden was elected to the board of trustees for Transylvania University. In 1823, possibly due to lobbying by Henry Clay.

A year later, the faculty of the university awarded him an honorary. Crittenden also served as a trustee and attorney for the Kentucky Seminary in Frankfort.

Crittenden used his influence in support of Clay in the 1824 presidential election. Until Clay was eliminated from contention. He then threw his support to Andrew Jackson.

Until he learned that John Quincy Adams. If elected, would likely make Clay Secretary of State. Critics termed Adams' alleged promise to Clay the corrupt bargain. , but it resulted in Adams' election.

Upon his appointment as Secretary of State, Clay was prepared to recommend Crittenden to replace him as chief counsel in Kentucky for the Second Bank of the United States. But the bank chose not to hire a replacement. Main article: Old Court New Court controversy. Crittenden was drawn back into public service by the Old Court New Court controversy.

When legislation aimed at providing relief to the state's debtors was struck down by the Kentucky Court of Appeals. Supporters of the legislation in the General Assembly passed a bill abolishing the Court and creating a new court, which they stocked with sympathetic justices. Opponents of the legislation held that the Assembly's action was unconstitutional, and for a time, both courts claimed authority as the court of last resort. Though he had served as president of the New Court-backed Bank of the Commonwealth since its formation in 1820, Crittenden publicly identified himself with the Old Court supporters in April 1825.

In the legislative election of 1825, friends called on Crittenden to seek election to the state House of Representatives. Many believed that he was the only Old Court supporter that commanded enough respect to win one of the two seats allotted to Franklin County. A bastion of the New Court.

When Crittenden consented to run, New Court supporters nominated the state's Attorney General. And Lewis Sanders, a prominent lawyer.

Crittenden and Sharp were elected to the two seats. In the early hours of the morning of November 7, 1825, the very morning the legislature was to convene, Sharp was assassinated. Charges were made that Old Court supporters had instigated the murder. Was apprehended, it became clear that the motivation for the killing was personal, not political. Beauchamp's wife had married him on the condition that he kill Sharp, who had refused to claim the child he had fathered with her previously. Despite this, Crittenden refused a request to represent Beauchamp in his murder trial because he wanted to avoid any implication in the matter. The court controversy dominated the legislative session.

Crittenden joined the Old Court majority in the House in passing a measure to abolish the New Court. The bill was killed in the Senate, however, by the tie-breaking vote of Lieutenant Governor Robert B.

Crittenden later served on a committee of six to resolve the conflict, but to no avail. He was unwilling to accept a solution whereby all the justices resigned from both courts, and the governor would appoint a reorganized court made up equally of Old Court and New Court supporters.

Ultimately, Old Court partisans gained control of both houses of the legislature, and the New Court was abolished permanently in December 1826. On November 15, 1826, Crittenden married Maria Knox Todd, a widow who was the daughter of Judge Harry Innes. Crittenden took Todd's three children as his own, and the couple had two more children: John and Eugene. Todd's daughter Catherine married her stepbrother. Crittenden's son Thomas; their son, John Jordan Crittenden III. Was killed at the Battle of the Little Bighorn. Maria Knox Todd Crittenden died on September 8, 1851 of an unknown illness. Crittenden's Supreme Court nomination. As a result of the Old Court New Court controversy, Kentucky's politicians became divided between the Democrats. Crittenden's alliance with Henry Clay and his own personal political views put him squarely in the National Republican Party. In 1828, Adams nominated him to replace Kentuckian Robert Trimble. As an associate justice of the Supreme Court. But Jackson supporters in the Senate refused to confirm him.

When Jackson defeated Adams in the 1828 presidential election. He removed Crittenden from his post as district attorney because of his association with Clay and his opposition to Jackson's financial policies. Crittenden supporters sought to make him the National Republican nominee for governor in the election of 1828.

Though his nomination was all but certain, Crittenden declined the opportunity, fearing that his association with Clay, who was losing popularity in the state, would cost his party the election. Instead, he threw his support behind Thomas Metcalfe. Who went on to carry a very close election over Democrat William T. Crittenden instead sought another term in the Kentucky House, but was again denied the seat. In 1829, Crittenden was elected to the Kentucky House via a special election.

He served as Speaker of the House for his entire term. In 1830, he was the Whig nominee to replace John Rowan in the Senate.

Secretly, the party wished to nominate Henry Clay, giving him a springboard from which to launch another presidential campaign, but it was unknown whether he would be able to secure enough votes for confirmation; it was decided that Crittenden would be the nominee, and if the voting favored the Whigs by a large enough margin, Crittenden would withdraw and allow them to confirm Clay instead. The Democrats countered successively with Richard Mentor Johnson. None of them polled more than sixty-four of the sixty-nine votes needed for confirmation. Crittenden garnered sixty-eight votes on fourteen different ballots, but he refused to vote for himself because he wanted Clay to be the nominee.

Some of Crittenden's supporters, however, refused to vote for Clay, and the seat was left vacant. The following year, a clear majority of the House of Representatives were pledged to Crittenden for the open Senate seat. However, Clay allies pressured Crittenden to step aside and allow Clay to be the Whig nominee. Crittenden obliged, and Clay was elected by a margin of nine votes over Richard M. Crittenden went on to manage both the unsuccessful gubernatorial campaign of Richard Aylett Buckner.

And the campaign to help Clay win Kentucky in the 1832 presidential election. After Clay's defeat in 1832, he offered to resign his Senate seat and allow Crittenden to succeed him, but Crittenden refused the offer.

Later that year, Crittenden retired from the General Assembly. Crittenden was active in organizing the Whig Party from the remnants of the defunct National Republican Party in 1834. On July 4, 1834, he called to order the party's first organizational meeting in the state at Cove Spring, Kentucky. He was chosen as chair of the committee on resolutions and in a speech on July 5, bitterly condemned President Jackson. Later in 1834, Kentucky governor James T.

Appointed Crittenden Secretary of State. In the August elections, Whigs won a majority in both houses of the General Assembly. When the Assembly convened, they elected Crittenden to the U.

Senate over Democrat James Guthrie. By a vote of 9440.

Immediately upon taking his seat in the Senate, Crittenden was named to the Committee on Public Lands. And the Committee on the Judiciary. Probably due to Clay's influence.

Early in his term, Crittenden vociferously opposed Senator Thomas H. S proposal to spend the federal budget surplus on public land graduation and military fortifications along the eastern seaboard. He also blasted the Jackson administration for issuing the Specie Circular. He pointed out that the principles of the circular had been presented in a resolution on the Senate floor, but had been tabled. Crittenden maintained that the tabling of the resolution was a condemnation by the Senate, yet the administration issued the circular only months later, overstepping, as Crittenden saw it, the bounds of the executive branch's authority. To prevent it from becoming law. During his term, Crittenden remained an outspoken critic of Jackson and his successor, Martin Van Buren. He supported Henry Clay's plan for distributing proceeds from the sale of public lands among the states, and also joined Clay in opposing the administration-backed Second Seminole War.

One of the few administration proposals he supported was the recognition of the new Republic of Texas. During this period of Crittenden's service in the Senate, the issue of slavery.

Crittenden was regarded as a moderate on the issue, seeking to keep it out of politics altogether. In 1836, he resisted petitions by the Quakers.

To abolish slavery in Washington, D. But he also opposed radical pro-slavery measures such as John C. In contrast to his usually conciliatory nature, Crittenden was drawn into a disagreement between congressmen Jonathan Cilley. That ended in a duel. On the floor of the House, Cilley had attacked the integrity of Whig newspaper editor James Watson Webb. Webb demanded a retraction of Cilley's comments through his friend, Congressman Graves. When Cilley refused to receive the communication from Graves, Graves charged that Cilley was questioning Webb's honor and challenged him to a duel.

Graves, accompanied by Kentucky Congressman Richard Menefee. And Virginia Congressman Richard Wise. Asked Crittenden to serve as a second for Graves in the duel; Crittenden initially protested, but finally agreed. The House proposed the expulsion of Graves and the censure.

Of the other participants (excluding Crittenden, who was a senator and not subject to House censure). The resolutions of expulsion and censure were eventually tabled, but Crittenden personally felt the sting of what he considered an indirect censure and later regretted his actions.

In the 1840 presidential election. Crittenden again encouraged Kentucky Whigs to support the nomination of Henry Clay. After Clay lost the nomination, Crittenden supported eventual victor William Henry Harrison. Crittenden was re-elected to the Senate in 1840 even though he was widely expected to be named to a position in Harrison's presidential cabinet. He was apparently given his choice of cabinet positions, and chose that of Attorney General.

He resigned his Senate seat to take this post. As attorney general, Crittenden issued only one notable opinion. The plaintiff in the case was an individual whose property had been damaged during Andrew Jackson's invasion of what would become the Florida Territory. The case was still being adjudicated in 1841. Court found in favor of the plaintiff and ordered the federal government to compensate him for the damages and to pay him interest on his claim from the time the damages were incurred. Asked Crittenden whether the court had the authority to award interest and whether or not it should be paid. Crittenden opined that it did not, and Ewing did not pay the interest.

Crittenden's opinion was used as a precedent. In similar cases by future attorneys general.

Only a week after being appointed by Harrison, Crittenden was dispatched to New York. To mediate tensions with Great Britain. Over the sinking of the steamboat Caroline. By a group of Canadian. He spoke with New York Governor. And secured his promise to pardon Alexander McLeod. Who had seized and burned the Caroline , if he were convicted of a crime in New York. Shortly after the Caroline affair, President Harrison died and Vice-President John Tyler ascended to the presidency.

Tyler resisted Clay's attempts to set the Whig agenda, and vetoed two bank bills against Crittenden's advice. Crittenden and the other Whigs in Tyler's cabinet.

Resigned in protest of Tyler's deviation from the traditional Whig agenda. Crittenden's resignation was effective September 11, 1841. Crittenden was appointed to the United States Senate in 1842, filling the vacancy caused by Clay's resignation. In January 1843, he was elected to a full term over Richard Mentor Johnson. The Whigs' feud with President Tyler continued unabated, and some even talked of impeaching.

Him, but Crittenden condemned that course of action. Congresses, he served on the Committee on Military Affairs.

He was an advocate of moderate protective tariffs and federal internal improvements. He opposed giving states the option to forgo apportionment. Which would have allowed them to elect their congressmen at-large.

Clay was widely considered the favorite not only for the Whig nomination, but to win the general election. None of the traditional campaign issuesTyler's "executive usurpation", Clay's "corrupt bargain" with John Quincy Adams, or the protective tariffseemed to excite the electorate. However, the issue of the annexation of Texas.

Clay made a tour of the South. Just before the Whig nominating convention and concluded that the sentiment in favor of annexation in that part of the country was not as strong as had been assumed in Washington, D. Acting on this belief, and against Crittenden's advice, Clay sent a letter opposing annexation to Crittenden, asking him to have it published in the National Intelligencer. Clay believed the Democrats would again nominate Martin Van Buren, who was ardently opposed to annexation, and this would keep annexation from becoming an issue in the campaign. Clay was nominated by acclamation.

At the Whig convention in Baltimore. At the Democratic nominating convention a month later, however, Van Buren was unable to secure his party's nomination, and the Democrats instead nominated James K.

Clay tried to moderate his views on annexation, but his changes of position drew opposition from supporters of both sides of the issue as he attempted to find a middle ground. Polk went on to win the election in a close race. This was the last time Clay would be nominated for president, and many Whigs believed that, following Clay's defeat, Crittenden was the new leader of their party. In 1845, the Senate took up the question of ending the joint occupancy of the Oregon Territory. Supported an immediate termination of the joint occupation agreement and maintained that a war with the British over the matter was inevitable.

Crittenden disagreed, and insisted that Britain be given two years notice before the joint occupation of the territory was ended in order to allow time for a diplomatic resolution. Ultimately, Crittenden's position prevailed, and a compromise with Britain was effected, setting the dividing line between the two nations' claims at the 49th parallel north. In 1846, the United States entered the MexicanAmerican War. In an attempt to gain control of Texas.

Crittenden did not support the war, and after war was declared, he insisted that commissioners accompany the U. Armies and attempt to broker peace at every opportunity. Throughout the war, he corresponded regularly with Generals Zachary Taylor.

Crittenden's sons, George and Thomas, both served in the war; Thomas Crittenden served on Scott's staff. President Polk consulted Crittenden regarding the terms of peace that should be accepted to end the war. Crittenden insisted that the terms of peace should not include the acquisition of territory to which the United States did not have a "just claim", but the Treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo.

Submitted to Congress in 1848 called for Mexico to give up not only its claims to Texas, but also to New Mexico, California, and all the territory in between. A few Whigs joined the Democratic majority in Congress to ratify the treaty and defeat the Wilmot Proviso. Which would have banned slavery in the newly acquired territory. Friends encouraged Crittenden to run for president in the 1848 election.

Newspaper declared its support for him as early as 1846. A Democratic senator from Rhode Island. Opined that Crittenden could win support from a sizable number of Democrats in addition to the support of his own party.

Desired to have the Kentucky General Assembly nominate Crittenden for president in 1847. None of these overtures swayed Crittenden. "For Heaven's sake don't talk to me about the Presidency, " he said, rebuffing one early offer. Clay hoped Crittenden would again support him, but Crittenden concluded that Clay was no longer a viable candidate and threw his support behind Kentuckian Zachary Taylor. This decision caused a rift between the two friends, and they were not reconciled until years later when Clay lay on his deathbed.

Was Crittenden's opponent in the 1848 gubernatorial election. The Whig Party was also divided in Kentucky, not only between Clay and Taylor, but between gubernatorial candidates. Graves, out of politics since his fatal shooting of Representative Cilley, had the backing of sitting Whig governor William Owsley. Had secured support from former Whig governor Robert P. Letcher wrote to Crittenden that a Whig split and Democratic victory in the gubernatorial election would have an injurious effect on Whig hopes of carrying Kentucky in the 1848 presidential election; another former Whig governor, Thomas Metcalfe, concurred.

At the Whig nominating convention, both Graves and Dixon withdrew their names and a delegate from Logan County put forward Crittenden's name without his consent. The nomination easily carried before Crittenden's friends could block it. The governorship was less prestigious and paid less than Crittenden's position in the Senate. He would also have to abandon his growing legal practice before the Supreme Court. And would lose input on national issues of importance to him such as the territorial questions that grew out of the Mexican War. Nevertheless, he believed that his candidacy would unite the Whigs and help Taylor win Kentucky's electoral votes in the general election. He accepted the nomination a week after it was made. Chief Justice of the Kentucky Court of Appeals. Was the leading candidate for the Democratic gubernatorial nomination, but after the Whig nomination of Crittenden, Hise withdrew from consideration. The Democratic state convention then nominated Congressman Linn Boyd. But Boyd also declined the nomination. The Democrats were finally able to nominate Henderson. As Crittenden canvassed the state, his opponents charged him with disloyalty to Clay because he refused to support him in the 1848 election. Crittenden maintained that he supported Clay for the presidency over anyone else, but he had believed that Clay did not intend to seek the Whig nomination in 1848. After Clay announced his candidacy, Crittenden said, he remained neutral in the Whigs' choice. In the gubernatorial election, Crittenden defeated Powell by a vote of 65,860 to 57,397. He resigned his Senate seat to assume the governorship. With his own campaign at a close, Crittenden resumed direction of Taylor's presidential campaign, dispatching accomplished Whig speakers to all parts of the country.

After Taylor was elected, he offered Crittenden the post of Secretary of State. Appeals came in from both Whig and Democratic leaders across the country urging him to serve in the cabinet; Taylor was inexperienced, and many felt that without Crittenden to guide him, his administration would fail.

Taylor personally visited Crittenden in Frankfort on February 15, 1849, in hopes of persuading him to accept the appointment. Crittenden refused Taylor's overtures, and Taylor similarly rejected Crittenden's appeals to appoint his friend, Robert P. Crittenden's input is believed to have contributed significantly to the appointments of John M.

As Secretary of State and Orlando Brown. As Commissioner of Indian Affairs. Crittenden's reasons for refusing Taylor's appointment were many. Partially, he declined out of respect for Clay's feelings and partially he felt it would be viewed in the same way as Clay and Adams' "corrupt bargain" in 1825. Resigning the governorship also would have amounted to admitting to the Democrats' charges that he only sought the office to help Taylor win the presidency. Finally, he had not been able to fully heal the breach in the Whig Party, and he wanted to remedy that situation. During Crittenden's term, he gave strong support to superintendent.

Of public education, Robert Jefferson Breckinridge. Who would come to be known as the Father of public school system in Kentucky. In response to Crittenden's call for financial support for the improvement of public education, the General Assembly passed a common school law on February 26, 1849. This law established guidelines for several public officials regarding their administration of the common schools. The Assembly also reserved tolls.

To fund the state's schools. Crittenden ordered the refurbishing of the state penitentiary, which had been damaged by a fire, and called for an extensive state geological survey. He also advised the creation of a sinking fund. To retire the state's debt.

The state adopted a new constitution during Crittenden's term, though Crittenden was not a delegate to the constitutional convention. And apparently had little influence on the drafting of the document. Most Whigs opposed the calling of a constitutional convention because it would necessarily involve reapportionment of the state's legislative districts and threaten Whig dominance in the General Assembly; nevertheless, Crittenden belatedly supported the call for a convention during his 1848 gubernatorial campaign. With the question of slavery becoming even more critical following the territorial acquisitions of the MexicanAmerican War, John C. Calhoun delivered an inflammatory address in December 1848 urging leaders of the southern states to resist "Northern aggression", even if it meant secession from the Union.

Crittenden strongly denounced secession in his annual messages to the legislature in 1848 and 1849. In response, the state senate passed a resolution calling on Kentucky's citizens to cherish the Union and resist any efforts to secede.

President Millard Fillmore appointed Crittenden to his second term as U. Ascended to the presidency upon Taylor's death and offered Crittenden the post of Attorney General.

Believing the rift in the Whig Party was now much improved, he accepted the offer and resigned the governorship in 1850. Fillmore, an opponent of slavery, requested an opinion from Crittenden on the constitutionality of the fugitive slave law. One of the bills involved in the Compromise of 1850.

Specifically, he asked if the law suspended the writ of habeas corpus. Crittenden said that it did not, opining that it discharged a duty placed on Congress by the Constitution to return runaway slaves. Crittenden's opinion was probably motivated by a desire to see the Compromise pass and avert further sectional tension.

Fillmore, his misgivings assuaged, signed the bill, keeping the Compromise intact. Questions regarding claims in Florida, some already considered by Crittenden during his first term as attorney general, continued during his second term. Specifically, some of the claimants objected to a legal provision, passed by Congress years after the AdamsOnís Treaty.

That allowed the Secretary of the Treasury to refuse to pay claims awarded by Florida courts that he found not to be "just and equitable". The claimants contended that this allowed an executive officer to overrule a judicial decision in violation of the doctrine of separation of powers.

Crittenden held that the secretary's ruling was just as much a judicial action as that of the Florida judges. Further, he reiterated his 1841 decision that no interest could be paid on claims arising from damages resulting from Jackson's invasion. Despite this opinion, a Florida judge awarded interest to one of the claimants, and the government appealed the case to the Supreme Court, with Crittenden serving as the government's counsel. The Court upheld Crittenden's entire opinion in its ruling.

Crittenden was awarded an honorary. Later that year, he acted as Secretary of State.

During the illness of Daniel Webster. In this capacity, he wrote a vigorous warning to both Britain and France about interfering in the question of Cuban. He also encouraged adherence to the United States' traditional policy of non-interference in Europe during the celebrated visit of Hungarian. To the United States in 1851. In November 1851, the General Assembly convened to elect a successor to Senator Joseph R.

Underwood, whose term would expire in 1853, desired re-election, and Whigs Charles S. Had also announced their respective candidacies. Crittenden, whose term as attorney general also expired in 1853, had publicly announced that he wished to return to the Senate after his service in President Fillmore's cabinet, and upon learning this, Underwood and Morehead both withdrew from the race. Robertson was not expected to seriously challenge Crittenden, but following the withdrawals of the other candidates, Archibald Dixon entered the race. Historically an ally of Crittenden, Dixon's entrance into the race after Crittenden's announcement showed that he had switched his allegiance from Crittenden to Clay.

Democrats, desirous to defeat Crittenden and embarrass the Whigs, pledged to vote against him at all costs, even if it meant electing Dixon. Crittenden's friends, therefore, held back his name from nomination to spare him almost certain defeat. Balloting deadlocked for several days, with Clay supporters throwing their support to Dixon, Robertson, and Lieutenant Governor John B.

Another compromise was proposed whereby Clay, his health failing, would resign his Senate seat, creating two Senate vacancies and allowing both Dixon and Crittenden to be elected, but Clay refused to cooperate. Finally, on the night of December 11, 1851, the Whigs met in caucus and agreed to withdraw both Dixon and Crittenden and elect Thompson.

A week after the election, Clay resigned, but Crittenden now declined the appointment to fill his unexpired term. Instead, the legislature elected Dixon to the remainder of Clay's term, set to expire in March 1855. Three weeks before Clay's death in 1852, he sent for Crittenden, and the two were reconciled; Critteden delivered a eulogy for Clay in September 1852, publicly dispelling the feud. After Clay's death, Crittenden became the most prominent Whig leader in Kentucky.

He encouraged the party to support the nomination of Millard Fillmore for the presidency in 1852, but the nomination ultimately went to Winfield Scott. Crittenden was proposed as the nominee for vice-president, but he declined. Carried the state by 2,700 votes in the general election. And Democrats also captured the governorship that year; both were harbingers of the demise of the Whig Party in Kentucky. Elizabeth Moss, Crittenden's third wife.

On February 27, 1853, the twice-widower Crittenden married his third wife, Elizabeth Moss. Moss was twice-widowed, most recently to General William Henry Ashley. Moss was Crittenden's wife until his death. Crittenden served as attorney general until the expiration of Fillmore's term in 1853.

In 1853, the legislature was to elect a successor to Senator Dixon. Now satisfied that the feud between Clay and Crittenden had ended, Dixon did not seek re-election, leaving Crittenden with no Whig opposition. On a joint vote of the two houses of the General Assembly, Crittenden was elected 7859 over governor Lazarus Powell. In the period between his election and his taking office, Crittenden was the lead defense counsel in the murder. Ward, the son of one of Crittenden's lifelong friends.

Ward's younger brother had been disciplined by the principal at Louisville Male High School. The preceding November, and the elder Ward went to argue with the principal on behalf of his brother. In the ensuing encounter, Ward shot and killed the principal with a pistol. Public sentiment was heavily against Ward, and the trial was moved.

During the week-long trial, which began in April 1854, Crittenden emphasized inconsistencies in the accounts of eyewitnesses and called prominent character witnesses such as Louisville mayor. And Courier-Journal editor George D. He presented a case that Ward had acted in self-defense. Because the prosecution sought the death penalty.

Crittenden asserted that if the jury rendered an erroneous conviction, they would have no peace of mind knowing they had sentenced an innocent man to hang. There was a tremendous public outcry when Ward was found not guilty. Newspapers across the nation condemned the verdict and Crittenden for his role in securing it. Only Prentice, in the Courier-Journal , defended Crittenden and the Ward family. Several public meetings passed resolutions calling for Crittenden's resignation from the Senate.

After one such meeting, a mob gathered and Crittenden, Prentice, the Wards, and the twelve jurors were burned in effigy. When he assumed his Senate seat in 1855, Crittenden was sixty-nine years old, the eldest member of that body. The Whig Party had practically dissolved by this time, and he joined many of his fellow Kentuckians in associating with the Know Nothing Party.

Although he did not agree with all of the party's principles, he would not associate with the Democrats, the party he had spent much of his career denouncing, nor would he associate with the new Republican Party. Because of their stance against slavery. Despite his misgivings about some of the party platform, he campaigned on behalf of Millard Fillmore, the party's candidate in the 1856 presidential election. In the early part of his term, Crittenden was concerned with quelling the violence in Kansas Territory. An opponent of the KansasNebraska Act.

Of 1854, Crittenden also opposed repealing the Missouri Compromise. Unless the North agreed to substitute popular sovereignty. For the exclusion of slavery north of the 36°30' line. In early 1856, he proposed sending General Winfield Scott to the Kansas Territory.

To ensure that fair elections were held there, but the proposal was blocked by the Pierce administration. He did not agree with all of the act proposed by Robert Toombs. To allow for a constitutional convention in Kansas Territory, but he supported it as a step to bring peace there. He regarded the ratifications of both the Topeka Constitution.

As invalid, and made one of the most highly regarded speeches of his career in opposition to the latter. His substitute bill that would have resubmitted the Lecompton Constitution to Kansas for another ratification vote was supported by Republicans, but it was ultimately defeated. So great was Crittenden's influence after his actions on the Kansas question that Abraham Lincoln. Felt that Crittenden's endorsement of Stephen Douglas. Crittenden's son Thomas (above) fought for the Union, but another son George (below), fought for the Confederacy.

From 1858 to 1860, Crittenden sought out moderates from all sections of the country to effect compromise on the territorial and slavery issues, thus averting war. In 1860, he was named chair of the National Union Executive Committee, a group of congressmen and journalists who feared that sectional differences would destroy the Union. His efforts helped form the Constitutional Union Party. Chosen as the keynote speaker. At the party's national convention on May 9, 1860, many urged him to become their nominee for president. At age seventy-three, however, Crittenden was already contemplating retirement and instead orchestrated the nomination of John Bell. Whom he actively supported in the 1860 presidential race. Even after the election of Abraham Lincoln as president in 1860, Crittenden rejected the idea that secession was inevitable and continued to work for the preservation of the Union. He believed that the current sectional crisis couldlike all past disagreements in U. However, he believed that this compromise must not be a simple legislative action, which could be altered or even repealed by a successive Congress, but amendments to the U. Which would be much more difficult to change. To that end, he proposed the Crittenden Compromise.

A package of six constitutional amendments and four congressional resolutionsin December 1860. Among the resolutions were a condemnation of Northern personal liberty laws. And an assertion of the constitutionality of the fugitive slave law.

The amendments would have restored the Missouri Compromise. Line and extended it to California. As a line of demarcation between slave and free territories.

Crittenden's other amendments would have further guaranteed that slavery would remain legal indefinitely in Washington, D. So long as it was legal in either Maryland. And that slaveholders would be reimbursed for runaway slaves.

Also, the amendments denied Congress any power to interfere with the interstate slave trade or with slavery in the existing Southern states and made the fugitive slave law. The compromise proposal was referred to a special committee proposed by Crittenden's fellow Kentucky senator, Lazarus Powell. Though it was believed that Republicans in general, including their representatives on the committee, were disposed to accept Crittenden's compromise or one substantially similar to it, President-elect Lincoln had already instructed his trusted allies in the legislature to resist any plan to extend slavery into the territories. Consequently, when the committee held its first meeting, the Republican members blocked Crittenden's plan and six others from coming to the floor for a vote.

Despite their opposition, however, the Republicans presented no alternative plan. After the rejection of Crittenden's plan in committee, Florida, Mississippi. S lead and passed ordinances of secession.

On January 3, 1861, Crittenden tried to salvage his plan by recommending to the full Senate that it be submitted to the people in referendum. It was widely believed that a referendum would recommend adoption of Crittenden's plan, and Republicans in Congress used a variety of procedures to prevent a vote on allowing it.

On January 16, with procedural delays exhausted, New Hampshire. Moved to substitute for Crittenden's plan a resolution stating that constitutional amendments were unnecessary to preserve the Union, and that enforcement of the Constitution and the present laws would eliminate the need for special sectional guarantees. With the senators from southern states (both those that had seceded and those that had not) refusing to vote, Republicans were left with a majority in the chamber and passed Clark's substitute resolution, effectively killing Crittenden's proposal. Crittenden remained in Washington for a few weeks after Congress adjourned. Having learned that John Archibald Campbell. An Alabaman serving on the Supreme Court, had decided to resign in light of his state's secession, President Lincoln proposed to appoint Crittenden to the vacant seat. Lincoln's cabinet approved, and the nomination papers were drafted, but Campbell belatedly reconsidered his resignation, and by the time he definitely determined to resign, Lincoln had changed his mind regarding Crittenden's nomination. On May 10, 1861, a conference was held to decide Kentucky's course in the war.

Crittenden joined Archibald Dixon and S. As Unionist representatives at the conference; the Southern Rights position was represented by John C.

The conference failed to produce a united course of action, but adopted the policy of armed neutrality. Unionists in the legislature, however, feared that the state militia and its commander Simon Bolivar Buckner. To counter any threat that the militia would seize control of the state for the South, the General Assembly organized the Home Guard, a separate militia controlled by a five-man, pro-Union commission. Crittenden enlisted in the Home Guard as a private. And was part of a group styled the "Union Defense Committee" that secured weapons for the Home Guard from the federal government.

In April, the General Assembly called a border states. Convention to be held in Frankfort in May.

Slates of delegates were nominated by both the Unionists and Southern Rightists, but war broke out before the election of delegates; the Southern Rights delegates withdrew from the election, and the Unionist slate, including Crittenden, was chosen by default. On May 27, 1861, Crittenden was chosen chair of the convention and called it to order.

With war having largely precluded any good the meeting could have accomplished, only nine of Kentucky's twelve delegates were present, along with four from Missouri. (out of seven elected), and one from Tennessee (and his election was questionable); Virginia, Maryland, and Delaware. Ultimately, the convention accomplished little beyond calling on the southern states to reconsider their secession and on the northern states to moderate their demands.

Against his father's wishes, Crittenden's son George. Resigned his position as a lieutenant colonel. To join the Confederate States Army. (in which he was promoted brigadier then major general), only to effectively lose his career in the early Confederate defeat at Mill Springs, Kentucky. George's brother, Thomas Leonidas Crittenden. Had been a member of Buckner's State Guard, but joined the Union Army. In September 1861 and was advanced to the rank of brigadier general. Serving under Don Carlos Buell. Another son, Eugene, also served in the Union Army and attained the rank of colonel. One of John Crittenden's grandsons, John Crittenden Coleman, enlisted with the Confederate Army. While another grandson, John Crittenden Watson. And participated in David Farragut. S capture of New Orleans. Crittenden in his elder years.

President Lincoln called a special session of Congress to convene July 4, 1861, and Kentucky held special elections in June to select congressmen for the special session. Crittenden had expressed his desire to retire from public service and initially refused pleas to become a candidate, but he finally consented to run in late May. He was elected over secessionist candidate William E. In all, nine of Kentucky's ten congressional districts selected Unionist candidates in the special election.

Upon taking his seat, he was assigned to the Committee on Foreign Affairs. On July 10, 1861, he accompanied Simon B. Buckner on a visit to President Lincoln to secure a renewed commitment from Lincoln to respect Kentucky's neutrality; Lincoln agreed only to issue a declaration that he had no present designs on Kentucky but would not commit to restrict his future actions. In order to calm the fears of border state citizens concerned about the Union's objectives in the war, he introduced the CrittendenJohnson Resolution. Which blamed the secessionist states for the war and stated that the object of the war was not the subjugation of those states, but the defense of the Constitution and the preservation of the Union.

When those ends were achieved, the resolution stated, the war should cease. Asked that the question be divided. Burnett was one of only two votes against the portion of the resolution blaming the Southern states for the war; the only dissent on the remaining portion came from Wisconsin.

In the Senate, the resolution passed 305, with Kentucky senators Breckinridge and Powell voting in the minority. In December 1861 the House refused, by a vote of 7665, to reaffirm the resolution. Invaded Kentucky, capturing both Frankfort and Lexington.

He took up temporary residence at Louisville's Galt House. Hotel and was still residing there when Union General William "Bull" Nelson. Was killed by a fellow soldier there in 1862.

Drove the Confederates from the state on October 8, 1862. Returning for the regular congressional session, he became the conduit through which many reports of unconstitutional military arrests in Kentucky were channeled. He spoke against the admission of West Virginia. To the Union on the grounds that Virginia had not consented to the creation of the state from its territory.

He also opposed the Emancipation Proclamation. And the use of slaves as soldiers in the war.

Crittenden's health was failing, and he frequently complained of shortness of breath. He had determined to retire from Congress, but once again, friends persuaded him to stand for re-election. Shortly after his nomination, Crittenden and his wife were en route to an alum. To seek treatment to alleviate the symptoms of his failing health when he collapsed in Louisville.

He was interred at the State Cemetery in Frankfort. Among his other notable kinsmen were nephews Thomas Theodore Crittenden. Congressman from Missouri, and Thomas Turpin Crittenden. A general in the Union Army. And the town of Crittenden. Available sources leave some uncertainty and ambiguity regarding the exact timeline of Crittenden's education. All seem to agree on his graduation from William and Mary in 1806 and admission to the bar in 1807. Sources disagree on matriculation and graduation dates, as well as Crittenden's age and the duration of his studies at the other institutions. Taylor, A Leaf Upon a Torrent. Biographical Directory of the United States Congress.

"Kentucky Governor John Jordan Crittenden". "John Jordan Crittenden" in American Law Encyclopedia.

A History of Kentucky: Embracing Gleanings, Reminiscences, Antiquities, Natural Curiosities, Statistics, and Biographical Sketches of Pioneers, Soldiers, Jurists, Lawyers, Statesmen, Divines, Mechanics, Farmers, Merchants, and Other Leading Men, of All Occupations and Pursuits. From Conciliation to Conquest: The Sack of Athens and the Court-Martial of Colonel John B. The Life of John J.

Crittenden: With Selections from His Correspondence and Speeches. New York City, New York. Encyclopedia of the American Constitution. The University Press of Kentucky. Hatter, Russell; Gene Burch (2003). A Walking Tour of Historic Frankfort. Historical Dictionary of the Civil War: A-L. Crittenden: The Struggle for the Union. Lawyers and Lawmakers of Kentucky. Filson Club Historical Quarterly 18 (1): 328.

"A Leaf Upon a Torrent: John Jordan Crittenden's 1828 Nomination to the Supreme Court as a Study in Political Determinism". In the Shadow of the Patriarch: The John J. Crittenden Family in War and Peace.

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