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Henry Seymour (New York politician)

American politician (1780–1837)


Summary

American politician (1780–1837)

FieldValue
nameHenry Seymour
imageHenrySeymourUtica.jpg
occupation
birth_placeLitchfield, Connecticut
death_placeUtica, New York
birth_date
death_date
office12nd Mayor of Utica
term_start11833
term_end11834
predecessor1Joseph Kirkland
successor1Joseph Kirkland
office2Erie Canal Commissioner
term21819–1831
assembly3New York
constituency_AM3Onondaga
term31819-1820
state_senate4New York
district4Western
term4

Henry Seymour (May 30, 1780 – August 26, 1837) was an American merchant, banker and politician from New York.

Life

Born in Litchfield, Litchfield County, Connecticut, Seymour was the sixth child and fifth son of Major Moses Seymour (1742–1826), a politician who served as an officer in the American Revolution, and his wife Molly (Marsh) Seymour. His brother, Horatio became a successful businessman and banker, and went on to serve two terms in the United States Senate.

In 1801 Henry Seymour left Connecticut with $300 from his father. Settling in Onondaga County, New York, he used the money to establish a general store in Pompey Hill. Seymour prospered with the arrival of new immigrants from the New England region, and soon became a prominent member of the community. In January 1807 he married Mary Ledyard Forman (1785–1859), of Matawan, New Jersey, daughter of General Johnathan Forman and Mary (Ledyard) Forman. They had six children, two boys and four girls. Their son Horatio Seymour was twice Governor of New York and was the Democratic nominee for U.S. President in 1868, while their daughter Julia Catherine married U.S. Senator Roscoe Conkling.

Political career

Seymour began his political career in 1809 when he was selected as town clerk. He served in the War of 1812 as a quartermaster under the command of General Jacob Brown. In April 1815 he was elected to the New York State Senate, where he served until 1818. While in the Senate, he became an integral part of the Albany Regency organization then being created by Martin Van Buren, and was regarded as his most effective lieutenant. In 1818 he was selected by the legislature to a year-long term on the Council of Appointment, and afterward served for two terms in the New York State Assembly.

In March 1819 Seymour was elected by the Bucktails in the New York State Legislature to the Erie Canal Commission. He replaced Ephraim Hart, who had been a recess appointment made by Governor DeWitt Clinton after the resignation of Joseph Ellicott. Seymour's election was key to the Bucktails' capture of the canal commission, which was an integral part of the governor's power base. As a commissioner, Seymour addressed himself conscientiously to his job of ensuring the navigability of the canal, even moving his family in 1820 to Utica in Oneida County, New York in order to supervise the construction of the canal's middle section. He continued as a commissioner until 1831, after which he served as mayor of Utica in 1833 and as a member of a three-man commission tasked with arbitrating the boundary between New York and New Jersey.

Business career and death

Though mentioned as a possible candidate for governor, by the late 1820s Seymour focused his attention increasingly on his growing real estate and business interests. In 1835 he became the president of the Farmers' Loan and Trust Company and moved to New York City. Though his interests flourished during the boom years of the early 1830s, the New York fire of 1835 followed by the financial panic of 1837 brought an end to prosperous times and left Seymour in a state of acute depression. Returning to Utica in August 1837, he shot himself on August 26.

Family

Seymour had a number of successful family members in addition to his brother and children. State Engineer Horatio Seymour Jr. was his grandson, Congressman Origen S. Seymour was his nephew, and Congressman Edward Woodruff Seymour was his great-nephew.

References

References

  1. Stewart Mitchell, ''Horatio Seymour of New York'' (Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 1938), pgs. 5-7.
  2. Jabez Hammond, ''The History of Political Parties in the State of New-York'' (Albany NY: C. Van Benthuysen, 1842), vol. I, pgs. 401, 417, 495-497; John Niven, ''Martin Van Buren: The Romantic Age in American Politics'' (New York: Oxford University Press,1983), pg. 65.
  3. Niven, op cit, p. 74.
  4. Mitchell, op cit, pgs. 12-20.
  5. Hammond, ''The History of Political Parties in the State of New-York'' (Albany NY: C. Van Benthuysen, 1842), vol. II, pgs. 97-98; Mitchell, op cit, pgs. 17-23.
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