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Romualdo Pacheco

Governor of California in 1875

Romualdo Pacheco

Summary

Governor of California in 1875

FieldValue
nameRomualdo Pacheco
imagePacheco, Hon. Romualdo of Cal. Panel 2 Edit 3.jpg
captionPortrait by Mathew Brady 1877–1880
order112th
office1Governor of California
lieutenant1William Irwin (Acting)
term_start1February 27, 1875
term_end1December 9, 1875
predecessor1Newton Booth
successor1William Irwin
office212th Lieutenant Governor of California
governor2Newton Booth
term_start2December 8, 1871
term_end2February 27, 1875
predecessor2William Holden
successor2William Irwin (Acting)
office37th Treasurer of California
governor3Leland Stanford
Frederick Low
term_start3October 10, 1863
term_end3December 7, 1867
predecessor3Delos R. Ashley
successor3Antonio F. Coronel
state4California
district4
term_start4March 4, 1879
term_end4March 4, 1883
predecessor4Peter D. Wigginton
successor4Pleasant B. Tully
term_start5March 4, 1877
term_end5February 7, 1878
predecessor5Peter D. Wigginton
successor5Peter D. Wigginton
state_senate6California
term_start6January 7, 1869
term_end6October 6, 1871
predecessor6Patrick W. Murphy
successor6James Van Ness
constituency63rd district
term_start7January 7, 1861
term_end7December 7, 1863
predecessor7John H. Watson
successor7Juan Y. Cot
constituency73rd district
term_start8January 4, 1858
term_end8January 2, 1860
predecessor8Pablo de la Guerra
successor8Pablo de la Guerra
constituency82nd district
{{Collapsed infobox section beginlastyesDiplomatic offices
titlestyleborder:1px dashed lightgrey;}}{{Infobox officeholderembed=yes
office9United States Minister to Nicaragua
president9Benjamin Harrison
term_start9May 21, 1891
term_end9October 13, 1891
predecessor9Lansing B. Mizner
successor9Richard C. Shannon
office10United States Minister to Costa Rica
president10Benjamin Harrison
term_start10May 7, 1891
term_end10October 31, 1891
predecessor10Lansing B. Mizner
successor10Richard C. Shannon
office11United States Minister to Honduras
president11Benjamin Harrison
Grover Cleveland
term_start11April 17, 1891
term_end11June 12, 1893
predecessor11Lansing B. Mizner
successor11Pierce M. B. Young
office12United States Minister to El Salvador
president12Benjamin Harrison
term_start12March 28, 1891
term_end12November 14, 1891
predecessor12Lansing B. Mizner
successor12Richard C. Shannon
office13United States Minister to Guatemala
president13Benjamin Harrison
term_start13February 28, 1891
term_end13June 12, 1893
predecessor13Lansing B. Mizner
successor13Pierce M. B. Young
birth_nameJosé Antonio Romualdo Pacheco
birth_date
birth_placeSanta Barbara, Alta California, Mexico
death_date
death_placeOakland, California, United States
partyDemocratic (before 1860)
National Union (1860–1868)
Republican (after 1868)
People's Independent (1875)
spouseMary McIntire Pacheco
children
relativesJosé Antonio Romualdo Pacheco (father)
María Ramona Carrillo de Pacheco (mother)
María Ygnacia López de Carrillo (grandmother)
Francisca Benicia Carrillo de Vallejo (aunt)
Mariano Guadalupe Vallejo (uncle)
Pablo de la Guerra (cousin)
signatureSignature of José Antonio Romualdo Pacheco, Jr.png
allegianceUnited States
branch
battlesAmerican Civil War
rank[[File:Union Army brigadier general rank insignia.svgborder35px]] Brigadier General

Frederick Low Grover Cleveland National Union (1860–1868) Republican (after 1868) People's Independent (1875) María Ramona Carrillo de Pacheco (mother) María Ygnacia López de Carrillo (grandmother) Francisca Benicia Carrillo de Vallejo (aunt) Mariano Guadalupe Vallejo (uncle) Pablo de la Guerra (cousin)

José Antonio Romualdo Pacheco (October 31, 1831January 23, 1899) was a Californio statesman and diplomat. He is best known as the only Hispanic person to serve as governor of California since the American Conquest of California, and as the first Latino to represent a state in the U.S. Congress. A Republican, Pacheco was elected and appointed to various state, federal, and diplomatic offices throughout his more than thirty-year career, including serving as a California State Treasurer, California State Senator, and three terms in the U.S. House of Representatives. He was thus the first governor of California to be born in the state limits, although he was born before the state came into existence. Governors prior to him were settlers.

Early life

Engraving of Pacheco published 1858

José Antonio Romualdo Pacheco was a Californio, born in Santa Barbara, California, to a family with prominent connections. His father, José Antonio Romualdo Pacheco, had moved to Alta California from Guanajuato in 1825, and served as an aide to José María de Echeandía during his tenure as governor of Alta California. Pacheco's father was killed at the Battle of Cahuenga Pass in 1831, when the young Romualdo was just five weeks old. His father had shot José María Avila, who had attacked Alta California Governor Manuel Victoria with a lance, but died when Avila's lance struck him.

His mother, María Ramona Carrillo de Pacheco, was a sister-in-law of General Mariano Guadalupe Vallejo and a daughter of María Ygnacia López de Carrillo, the grantee of Rancho Cabeza de Santa Rosa. After the death of his father, Romualdo's mother married Captain John D. Wilson, a Scotsman, who sent Pacheco to Honolulu, Hawaii, for his education.

At age twelve, Pacheco began an apprenticeship aboard a trading vessel. The Mexican–American War broke out two years later, and he was briefly held by American forces during the Conquest of California while on one trip in July 1846, as he brought cargo to Yerba Buena (modern day San Francisco). The ship he was on was searched, and he made an oath of allegiance to the United States and was released.

Politics

U.S. House of Representatives

Pacheco's association with a prominent family in the state helped him to gain support as he entered politics in the 1850s. He was also well respected by Anglos coming into the area. Early in his political career in the 1850s, he was a Democrat. He became affiliated with the National Union Party in the 1860s, but was elected to most of his positions as a candidate for the Republican Party.

In 1853, at age 22, Pacheco successfully sought the position of Judge in San Luis Obispo County. Pacheco was elected to the State Senate in 1857, succeeded his cousin Pablo de la Guerra. At 27 years old, he was the youngest member of the legislature. He was re-elected two times, serving until 1863. During the American Civil War Pacheco was appointed the rank of brigadier general by Governor Leland Stanford and directed to disarm military companies in the Los Angeles area that were not loyal to the Union.

Pacheco served as State Treasurer from 1863 to 1867, then returned to the State Senate until he was elected Lieutenant Governor in 1871. He served as Lieutenant Governor of California under Newton Booth until Booth was elected to the United States Senate in 1873 and took office in 1875. Pacheco then served as Governor from February 27 to December 9, 1875, when Lieutenant Governor William Irwin, winner in the September elections that year, was inaugurated. Pacheco, having been denied the Republican nomination for Governor, instead ran for Lieutenant Governor on the People's Independent ticket alongside John Bidwell.

After his brief tenure as governor, Pacheco ran for a U.S. House seat in 1876, defeating incumbent Peter D. Wigginton by just one vote*.* California Secretary of State Thomas Beck refused to certify the election due to the revelation that two votes cast for Wigginton in Monterey County were not counted. Pacheco contested this and brought the case all the way to the Supreme Court of California, where it was found that the tally clerk had indeed removed two votes after California’s Board of Elections had adjourned. However, the court found that this was done to account for a clerical error in the vote totals, legitimizing Pacheco’s win in the election.

He was sworn into office on October 17th, 1877, in spite of the efforts made to block his taking of the oath of office on the basis of Wigginton’s contestation made by the Democrat-controlled Congress. The House Committee on Elections found on January 31st, 1878 that while the State Supreme Court’s ruling regarding the two votes removed for Wigginton in Monterey was valid, they argued that because of irregularities in ballots outside of Monterey County, dozens of votes for both candidates were invalid. State law gave precinct judges the authority to throw out ballots for having extraneous markings. They also claimed that many ballots were cast by voters who were not residents of the state or districts. The committee ruled that Wigginton won by a 4 vote margin. The full house concurred in a partisan vote of 136 to 125, thus removing Pacheco from his seat of February 7th, 1878.

Pacheco ran again in 1878, winning with 40% of the votes, which was more than either the Democrat Wallace Leach or the independent candidate James Ayers. His win was due in large part to his ability to appeal to “the Spanish Vote” by campaigning in both English and Spanish. He was reelected in 1880, winning with 46% of the vote, narrowly defeating Leach by 191 votes.

During his first term, he was a member of three standing committees: Public Lands, Private Land Claims, and Public Expenditures. Romualdo preferred working in these smaller committees to speaking in front of the entire house. He focused his legislative efforts on improving the harbors and railroads in his district. Because the House of Representatives was controlled by Democrats at the time, he failed to get his legislation through Congress.

Because of his experience in the field, when the GOP took control of the House, they named Pacheco Chairman of the Committee on Private Land Claims.

In 1882, he broke from his silence on national issues when he argued in favor of The Chinese Exclusion Act, citing concerns that Chinese immigrants who worked in mines and on railroads in California were stealing the jobs of White Americans and degrading the morality of Chinese cities. The bill was passed as Pacheco joined the 60 Republicans as well as all the Californian representatives in voting in the affirmative.

Diplomacy and death

Pacheco in the 1890s

After leaving Congress, Pacheco lived on a cattle ranch in the northern Mexican state of Coahuila for five years until he was appointed as U.S. Minister to various countries in Central America in 1890.

He returned to California in 1893, and he died in Oakland, at the home of his brother-in-law, in 1899. He is buried in Mountain View Cemetery.

Personal life

On October 31, 1863, he married Mary McIntire, a 22-year-old playwright. They had two children, Maybella Ramona and Romualdo

Legacy

Pacheco not only was the first Hispanic governor of California, but (as of 2024) the only one in California's history as a state. He is also remembered for being the first Latino to represent a state in the U.S. House of Representatives. Latinos had served as non-voting delegates of territories before, but Pacheco was the first Latino member of Congress with full voting rights.

He was the last Hispanic Republican elected to represent California in the U.S. Congress until Mike Garcia was elected to represent the 25th district in a special election in May 2020, although Frank Coombs, whose mother was Mexican, was a Republican U.S. representative from California from 1901 to 1903, and Mexican-American U.S. Representative Matthew G. Martínez switched from the Democratic Party to the Republican Party on July 27, 2000 and served in Congress as a Republican until his term concluded on January 3, 2001.

Romualdo Pacheco was the last Latino governor in the United States until Bill Richardson, who served as governor of New Mexico from 2002 to 2011.

References

Sources

  • {{cite book
  • Ronald Genini & Richard Hitchman, Romualdo Pacheco: A Californio in Two Eras, The Book Club of California:1985. LC Control#86101529

References

  1. (2012). "Romualdo Pacheco 1875 - 1875". Governors of California.
  2. . ["Romualdo Pacheco"](https://www.joincalifornia.com/candidate/7093).
  3. Easton, Callum. (2023-07-03). "Chasing the Bounty: The voyages of the 'Pandora' and 'Matavy' Chasing the Bounty: The voyages of the 'Pandora' and 'Matavy' , by D. A. Maxton (ed.), McFarland & Company, Inc., Jefferson NC, 2020, $39.95, 190 pages, illustrations, ISBN 9781477779389". The Mariner's Mirror.
  4. Shippee, L. B.. (1944-01-01). "Papers Relating to the Foreign Relations of the United States, 1919: The Paris Peace Conference. Volumes I and II. (Washington: Government Printing Office. 1942. Pp. lxiii, 575; lxxxii, 812. $1.25, $1.50.)". The American Historical Review.
  5. "The Repeal of the Rhodesian Chrome Amendment. Hearings before the Subcommittee on Africa and the Subcommittee on International Organizations and Movements of the Committee on Foreign Affairs, House of Representatives. 93rd Cong., 1st sess., October 5, 1973 and October 17, 1973".
  6. (2003-12-31). "Cases Cited". Lynne Rienner Publishers.
  7. (2008-08-05). "New York Times Education Poll, February 1983".
  8. Canon, David T.. (September 1991). "Leading Congress: New Styles, New Strategies. Edited by John J. Kornacki. Washington: Dirksen Congressional Center and Congressional Quarterly Press, 1990. 185p. $35.00.". American Political Science Review.
  9. (1993-02-14). "Census of Population and Housing, 1990 [United States]: Modified Age/Race, Sex, and Hispanic Origin (MARS) State and County File".
  10. "New House Bill Cuts Critical Climate Research. The Senate Could Stop it".
  11. "Governors of California - Romualdo Pacheco".
  12. ''[[Sacramento Bee]]'' [https://www.sacbee.com/article242708631.html "Republican flips California congressional seat. What does that mean for November?"] (2020)
  13. "department of state cable secretary of state to usdel secretary july 29 1975 secret nara".
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