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John Albion Andrew

American lawyer and politician (1861-66)


American lawyer and politician (1861-66)

FieldValue
nameJohn Albion Andrew
imageJohnAAndrew byJWBlack.jpg
image_size220
captionCarte de visite of Andrew, by James Wallace Black
order125th
office1Governor of Massachusetts
term_start1January 3, 1861
term_end1January 4, 1866
lieutenant1John Z. Goodrich
John Nesmith
Joel Hayden
predecessor1Nathaniel P. Banks
successor1Alexander H. Bullock
office2Member of the
Massachusetts House of Representatives
from the 6th Suffolk district
alongside2George P. Clapp
term_start2January 6, 1858
term_end2January 5, 1859
predecessor2Countywide district
successor2Thornton K. Lothrop
Martin Brimmer II
birth_date
birth_placeWindham, Massachusetts
(now Windham, Maine)
death_date
death_placeBoston, Massachusetts
spouseEliza Jane Hersey
childrenJohn F. Andrew
professionLawyer
partyWhig (1840–1848)
Free Soil (1848–1854)
Republican (1854–1867)
signatureJohn_A_Andrews_Signature.png

John Nesmith Joel Hayden Massachusetts House of Representatives from the 6th Suffolk district Martin Brimmer II (now Windham, Maine) Free Soil (1848–1854) Republican (1854–1867)

John Albion Andrew (May 31, 1818 – October 30, 1867) was an American lawyer and politician from Massachusetts. He was elected in 1860 as the 25th Governor of Massachusetts, serving between 1861 and 1866, and led the state's contributions to the Union cause during the American Civil War (1861–1865). He was a guiding force behind the creation of some of the first African-American units in the United States Army, including the 54th Massachusetts Infantry. He belonged to the Whig, Free Soil, and Republican parties during his career.

Educated at Bowdoin College, Andrew was a radical abolitionist of slavery from an early age, engaged in the legal defense of fugitive slaves against owners seeking their return. He provided legal support to John Brown after his 1859 raid on Harpers Ferry, Virginia, raising his profile and propelling him to the Massachusetts governor's chair. Andrew was a persistent voice criticizing President Abraham Lincoln's conduct of the war, and pressing him to end slavery. By the end of the war, his politics had moderated, and he came to support the Reconstruction policies of Lincoln's successor, Andrew Johnson.

In Massachusetts, Andrew opposed the Know Nothing movement of the 1850s and the state's strict alcohol prohibition laws, and oversaw the state takeover of the Hoosac Tunnel construction project. In 1865, he signed legislation establishing the Massachusetts State Police, the first statewide police force of its type in the nation. He died early of apoplexy at the age of 49.

Early life and career

Andrew was born in Windham (in modern-day Maine, then a part of Massachusetts) on May 31, 1818, the eldest of four children. His father, Jonathan Andrew, was descended from an early settler of Boxford, Massachusetts, and ran a small but prosperous merchant business in Windham. His mother, Nancy Green Pierce, was a teacher at Fryeburg Academy. Andrew's 5th great grandfather was an immigrant from England named George Andrew who settled in Boxford, Massachusetts, in 1637. His 4th great grandfather was born in Boxford, Massachusetts, in 1638, being his first American-born ancestor.

Andrew received his primary education first at home, and then at several area boarding schools. After his mother's death in 1832, he attended Gorham Academy in nearby Gorham. During his youth he exhibited talent for both memory and public speaking, memorizing church sermons and recounting them with the same oratorical style in which they were delivered. While a teenager, he was exposed to the early abolitionist writings of William Lloyd Garrison and others. He entered Bowdoin College in 1833.

After his graduation in 1837, Andrew moved to Boston to study law under Henry H. Fuller, with whom he became close friends.

War Governor of Massachusetts

When Andrew took office on January 2, 1861, on the eve of the American Civil War, the Albany Argus called him "a lawyer of a low type and a brutal fanatic" who "proposes to maintain the condemned [personal liberty] statutes of [Massachusetts], and to force upon the South by arms, an allegiance to the Constitution thus violated." In the early war years that followed, Andrew was a persistent radical voice, pressuring President Abraham Lincoln on the conduct of the war and the need to end slavery.

Shortly after taking office, Andrew began to ready the Massachusetts militia for duty, promoting younger and more vigorous leaders, and contracting for updated armaments, equipment, and supplies. He also wrote to the governors of Maine and New Hampshire, urging them to also step up preparations. Once hostilities broke out, he also took the lead to update the state's coastal defenses, which were in poor condition and largely obsolete. Taking this step without federal authorization or funding, he secured bank loans from major Boston banks to fund the effort in the interim. With the war already underway in late 1861, Andrew engaged in a highly public dispute with General Benjamin Franklin Butler, who sought to appoint officers of regiments he recruited. Andrew ended up winning in the disagreement, and (in a response viewed at the time as somewhat petulant) refused to appoint any of Butler's choices to those positions.

A historical election poster promoting Andrew for governor

Andrew was a regular voice, although somewhat muted in public statements, in the drive to declare an end to slavery. When Lincoln announced his preliminary Emancipation Proclamation in September 1862 (shortly after the Union victory in the Battle of Antietam), Andrew was supportive, but called it "a poor document but a mighty act", and complained that it was too limited in scope and late in becoming effective. Andrew was one of the leading state executives at the Loyal War Governors' Conference in Altoona, Pennsylvania, held in late September 1862, which ultimately backed the Emancipation Proclamation and the continued war effort.

Andrew was a leading force in promoting the enlistment of black men as uniformed soldiers in the Union Army, although the state legislature was at first reluctant to authorize it. Abolitionist Frederick Douglass had advocated this from the start of the war, and Andrew viewed it as a necessary equalizing step, and a means to fill the state's enlistment quotas with something other than factory workers. After lobbying the administration, Andrew was granted permission to raise a black regiment in January 1863. Due to Massachusetts's small black population, the 54th (and then also the 55th) Massachusetts were composed of blacks recruited not just from Massachusetts, but also Ohio, New York, Pennsylvania, and other states. Andrew wanted the regiments to be staffed by black officers, but this was rejected, and their officers were instead hand-picked by Andrew from strong abolitionist circles. He was also supportive of efforts by the recruits to receive equal pay; he offered them money from the state to do so, but they refused, holding out for equal pay from the federal government. He was somewhat less receptive to the relocation of freed slaves to Massachusetts, objecting to a plan to send 500 of them to Massachusetts from South Carolina in 1862.

By the end of the war, Andrew's politics had moderated. In late 1865, he expressed support for the Reconstruction policies of President Andrew Johnson, resulting in a split with his longtime political ally Charles Sumner. With the war at an end in 1865, he decided not to run for reelection. In his final speech to the state legislature in January 1866 he outlined his vision of how Reconstruction should proceed, significantly diverging from the Radical agenda by not making black suffrage a prerequisite for the readmission of rebel state legislators to Congress. He had in part acted on private efforts to aid in the reconstruction of the south in 1865, forming a land agency as a clearing house for Northerners seeking to invest in the southern properties.

Andrew was elected a 3rd Class Companion (honorary member) of the Pennsylvania Commandery of the Military Order of the Loyal Legion of the United States in recognition of his support of the Union during the Civil War.

Domestic Massachusetts issues

1930s postcard view of the [[Hoosac Tunnel

Andrew was elected with support from a large and primarily populist base. He was not part of Boston's relatively conservative aristocracy, whose support he needed to govern, especially in managing the war effort. Many of his military advisors and aides were drawn from Boston's elites, which caused some discontent among his populist supporters.

Construction of the Hoosac Tunnel was a significant issue within the state during Andrew's tenure. The state had loaned its builder, the Troy and Greenfield Railroad, $2 million in the 1850s to support the construction. In 1861, both outgoing Governor Banks, and Andrew, after he took office, refused to sign a bill authorizing additional funding to the financially troubled project. Andrew lacked confidence in Herman Haupt, the tunnel's chief engineer, and withdrew the state engineer overseeing the project. These actions cost Andrew votes in the 1861 election in the towns on the railroad route, but not enough to cost him the election. The state took over the tunnel project in 1862, and it was finally completed at great expense in 1875.

Andrew also had to contend with ongoing political activities of the nativist Know Nothings, some of whom were now in the Republican fold. The state had in 1859 enacted a constitutional amendment requiring newly naturalized citizens to wait two years before they could vote. This amendment was repealed in 1862–1863 (by a process requiring votes of consecutive legislatures and a referendum). Andrew also deliberately snubbed the sentiments of the anti-Catholic Know Nothings by signing the charter for the College of the Holy Cross, a Catholic college in Worcester, and subsequently attending its first commencement exercises. In support of the war effort, he rescinded a ban, enacted by the Know Nothing Governor Henry J. Gardner, against the formation of militia companies composed of immigrants. This made possible the formation of state units populated mainly by German and Irish immigrants. On July 14, 1863, in response to a draft riot that broke out among Irish Catholics in the North End of Boston, Andrew ordered six companies and additional regular troops to protect Union armories in the neighborhood from attempts by the rioters to raid them.

Reform elements within the Republican establishment pressed Andrew for enforcement of the state's alcohol prohibition law, which had been passed in 1855, and which had been poorly enforced, particularly in Boston. In response, legislation was enacted in 1865 and signed by Andrew creating a statewide constabulary, now the Massachusetts State Police; it was the first police force of its kind in the nation. Andrew was not a supporter of prohibition, and did little to enforce the law; his fondness of alcohol was well known.

Post-war career

Andrew resumed the practice of law after leaving office, although he intended to remain active in politics. He sought the chairmanship of the state Republican Party, competing against Radicals. When President Johnson engaged in political attacks against Charles Sumner in 1866, charging him with treason, Andrew decided to withdraw from the contest.

Among Andrew's clients in 1867 were a group of businessmen who sought a loosening of the state's strict alcohol prohibition law. Even though Andrew had laxly enforced the law while governor, his successor Alexander Bullock was a strict prohibitionist, and his enforcement of the law was the strictest the state had yet seen. Andrew represented the businessmen in extensive hearings (lasting six weeks) before a legislative committee considering the issue. His promotion of the cause was seized on by Democrats in the 1867 gubernatorial campaign, in which Andrew's chief of staff John Quincy Adams II was running as a Democrat against Bullock.

Governor Andrew died on October 30, 1867, of apoplexy after having tea at his home in Boston. His grave is marked by a full-size statue, mounted on a pedestal.

Honors and memorials

  • Andrew Square in South Boston is named in his honor.
  • John A. Andrew St., in the Jamaica Plain section of Boston, is named in his honor, and his name is one of four on the Soldier's Memorial in the same community (along with Lincoln, Admiral David Farragut, and General George Henry Thomas).
  • John Andrew Hospital at Tuskegee University in Tuskegee, Alabama, is named for him.
  • The City of Boston placed a plaque at the site of his home on Charles Street in 1924.https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:John_Albion_Andrew_plaque_-_Boston,MA-_DSC02649.JPG
  • In 2007, governor Deval Patrick hung Andrew's portrait over the fireplace in his office, calling him an inspiration.
  • John A. Andrew School in Windham, Maine is named for him.

References

Bibliography

  • Engle, Stephen D. (2023). "'I Stood before His Silent Grave': John Albion Andrew, the Soul of a Champion", in Final Resting Places: Reflections on the Meaning of Civil War Graves, edited by Brian Matthew Jordan and Jonathan W. White. Athens, Georgia: The University of Georgia Press.
  • (Volume 1, Volume 2)
  • Stowe, Harriet Beecher. "Gov. John A. Andrew", in Men of Our Times; Or Leading Patriots of the Day (1868), and in The Lives and Deeds of Our Self-Made Men (1872).

References

  1. Reno, p. 377
  2. The Life of John A. Andrew: Governor of Massachusetts, 1861-1865, Volume 1, by Henry Greenleaf Pearson pg. 1
  3. Pearson, pp. 1:7–9
  4. Pearson, pp. 1:10–12
  5. Pearson, p. 1:13
  6. Donald, pp. 144–149
  7. Pearson, pp. 1:43–45
  8. Trent, pp. 158–159
  9. Pearson, p. 1:47
  10. Earle, pp. 168–175
  11. Pearson, pp. 1:50–54
  12. ''Bay State Monthly''
  13. Cumbler, p. 71
  14. "[[Battle Hymn of the Republic]]" author [[Julia Ward Howe]] "and her husband, Dr. Samuel Gridley Howe, were the Andrews' closest friends, involved in promoting abolition, women's rights, and prison reform in the 1840s and 1850s". Engle, Stephen D., "I Stood Before His Silent Grave", p. 210.
  15. Trent, p. 184
  16. Mohr, p. 3
  17. Pearson, pp. 1:54–57
  18. State Street Trust Company, p. 43
  19. Pearson, p. 1:57
  20. Earle, p. 182
  21. Clarke, Wm. Horatio. (1903). "Mid-Century Memories of Dedham". [[Dedham Historical Society]].
  22. Pearson, pp. 1:61–63
  23. Pearson, pp. 1:64–65
  24. Pearson, pp. 1:65–67
  25. Pearson, pp. 1:68–69
  26. Pearson, pp. 1:73–92
  27. Pearson, pp. 1:92–93
  28. Pearson, p. 1:95
  29. Pearson, pp. 1:73–96
  30. Pearson, p. 1:100
  31. Pearson, pp. 1:105–110
  32. Pearson, pp. 1:111–113
  33. Pearson, pp. 1:119–120
  34. Pearson, pp. 1:123–128
  35. ''Brooklyn Daily Eagle'', January 10, 1861, p. 2
  36. McKitrick, p. 222
  37. O'Connor, p. 48
  38. Pearson, p. 1:143
  39. O'Connor, pp. 64–65
  40. O'Connor, pp. 88–89
  41. O'Connor pp. 115–117
  42. Pearson, pp. 2:48–56
  43. O'Connor, pp. 52–53
  44. Duncan, pp. 48, 51
  45. Weigley, pp. 186–188
  46. Weigley, pp. 188–189
  47. Campbell, p. 194
  48. The party split was such that Andrew was considered as a potential candidate for Sumner's Senate seat, but he rejected the possibility.McKitrick, p. 229
  49. Baum, p. 104
  50. Baum, p. 105
  51. McKitrick, p. 226
  52. "Prominent Companions of the Military Order of the Loyal Legion of the United States". Sons of Union Veterans of the Civil War.
  53. Miller, pp. 12–13
  54. Weber, pp. 139–140
  55. Baum, pp. 65–68
  56. Baum, pp. 44, 48
  57. Baum, p. 57
  58. Miller, pp. 21–22
  59. Tager, Jack. (2001). "Boston Riots: Three Centuries of Social Violence". [[University Press of New England.
  60. Mohr, pp. 5–8
  61. Pearson, p. 2:294
  62. Baum, p. 107
  63. Baum, p. 127
  64. Pearson, pp. 2:306–307
  65. Pearson, pp. 2:309–310
  66. Baum, pp. 127, 131
  67. "John A. Andrew". Hingham Public Library.
  68. Sammarco, page number unknown
  69. (April 14, 2005). "John A. Andrew". Jamaica Plain Historical Society.
  70. (May 14, 2004). "Civil War Memorial and Streets". Jamaica Plain Historical Society.
  71. Watson, p. 68
  72. (February 5, 2007). "A Place of Prominence for Bowdoin Alum". Bowdoin College.
  73. Lunt, Walter. "John A. Andrew School: Can an appreciation of the past add clarity to the future?". The Windham Eagle.
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