Skip to content
Surf Wiki
Save to docs
law

From Surf Wiki (app.surf) — the open knowledge base

William Alexander Richardson

American politician


Summary

American politician

FieldValue
nameWilliam Alexander Richardson
imageWilliam Alexander Richardson - Brady-Handy.jpg
captionPhotograph by Mathew Brady,
officeUnited States Senator
from Illinois
term_startJanuary 12, 1863
term_endMarch 3, 1865
precededOrville H. Browning
succeededRichard Yates
order15th
office1Governor of Nebraska Territory
president1James Buchanan
term_start1January 12, 1858
term_end1December 5, 1858
preceded1Thomas B. Cuming
succeeded1Julius Sterling Morton
state2Illinois
district25th
term_start2March 4, 1861
term_end2January 12, 1863
preceded2Isaac N. Morris
succeeded2Owen Lovejoy
term_start3December 6, 1847
term_end3August 25, 1856
preceded3Stephen A. Douglas
succeeded3Jacob C. Davis
order412th
office4Speaker of the Illinois House of Representatives
term_start4December 5, 1842
term_end4December 2, 1844
preceded4Samuel Hackleton
succeeded4Newton Cloud
office5Member of the Illinois Senate
term51838-1842
office6Member of the Illinois House of Representatives
term61836–1838
1844–1846
partyDemocrat
birth_date
birth_placeLexington, Kentucky, US
death_date
death_placeQuincy, Illinois, US
alma_materCentre College
Transylvania University
professionPolitician, Lawyer
branchUnited States Army
rankMajor
battlesMexican–American War

from Illinois 1844–1846 Transylvania University

William Alexander Richardson (January 16, 1811 – December 27, 1875) was a prominent Illinois Democratic politician before and during the American Civil War. A protege of Stephen Douglas, Richardson was an ardent proponent of Jacksonian democracy, popular sovereignty, and strict constructionism. During the American Civil War, he switched from supporting the conflict to join the Copperhead wing of the Democratic party and bitterly criticize President Abraham Lincoln.

Biography

Early life

Born near Lexington, Kentucky, Richardson came from a distinguished family. His maternal great-grandfather was a veteran of the American Revolutionary War participating in the Battle of Kings Mountain. His maternal grandfather fought in the War of 1812 and was killed in the Battle of Frenchtown. Richardson attended Transylvania University, and then proceeded to teach school and study law. He passed the bar exam in 1831 and started his practice in Shelbyville, Illinois. He served as an officer during the Black Hawk War whose soldiers remembered the "stern coarseness" of his leadership. He was an attorney for the state from 1834 to 1835, and was elected representative to the state house, serving from 1836 to 1838. During this term Richardson served alongside Stephen Douglas and Abraham Lincoln.

In 1837 he supported Lincoln in making Springfield the capital of Illinois, after the charter for Vandalia expired. Richardson was a supporter of President Andrew Jackson against the Second Bank of the United States. At the state level he supported a bill that would make bank directors and stockholders responsible for redemption notes that citizens had with the state. When Governor Joseph Duncan defended the Bank, Richardson and other Democrats introduced a resolution calling such claims "contrary to the assertions of the patriot and statesmen, General Jackson."

He was narrowly elected to the state senate in 1838 by only seven votes which almost led to a duel between Richardson and his opponent's campaign managers. He served to 1842 deciding against reelection. Richardson returned to the house again from 1844 to 1846, briefly serving as speaker of the lower house during his last term. He was a presidential elector in 1844 for successful Democratic nominee James K. Polk.

When the Mexican-American War broke out, Richardson raised a company of volunteers who then chose him as their captain in the U.S. Army. Initially under John J. Hardin's command, Richardson's regiment was later placed under General Zachary Taylor and by the end of the war Richardson was promoted to lieutenant-colonel. A strong defender of the war one of his first actions in congress was introducing an unsuccessful resolution calling the conflict "just and necessary". When his term of service expired in July 1847, he moved to Quincy, Illinois, and then was elected a U.S. congressman to the 30th Congress to fill Stephen A. Douglas's seat. He was then reelected to the 31st, 32nd, 33rd, and 34th Congresses for the same seat (1847 to 1856).

Congressional career

During his time in the House of Representatives, he was the chairman of the Committee on Territories (32nd–33rd Congresses). In congress, Richardson was a loyal protege of Stephen Douglas. During the crisis of 1850, Richardson supported all five parts of the Compromise of 1850. Afterword, when confronted in Illinois about the unpopular Fugitive Slave Act, Richardson said that while he personally opposed the law he supported it in order to ensure the admission of California. That year he won reelection defeating Orville H. Browning. During the crisis Richardson lamented the rise of secessionist sentiment:

After the 1852 Presidential election, Richardson took a leading role in the House in supporting Douglas's policies on the Kansas and Nebraska territories. His initial bill introduced on February 2, 1853, contained no mention of slavery and was supported by representatives Willard P. Hall and Joshua Giddings. When Douglas brought forth the Kansas–Nebraska Act, Richardson acted as his "manger" for the bill in the house and was instrumental in securing its passage. Richardson's role in the Kansas-Nebraska debate made him a national figure and in the 1854 House elections he was the only supporter of the Kansas-Nebraska Act to be reelected by a wider majority.

Candidacy for the Speakership

During the Speaker election after the midterm elections, Richardson was the choice for Speaker of the House of pro-Nebraska Democrats. On the first ballot Richardson won the most votes, with his closest opponent Lewis D. Campbell twenty votes behind, but fell short of the majority needed to be speaker. As balloting went on anti-Nebraska forces began consolidate around Nathaniel P. Banks of the American(Know Nothing) party. On January 10, 1856, Southern Know Nothings in an attempt to embarrass Richardson and stall for time sent the leading candidates (Richardson, Banks, and Henry Mills Fuller) a questionnaire on the issues of slavery in the District of Columbia and the territories, the Fugitive Slave Law, nativism, and racial equality. Richardson responded that the Constitution and the Fugitive slave act applied to the territories. While "hedging" on the question of constitutionality of the Wilmot Proviso, he also asserted that the constitution did not carry slavery into the territories. He opposed the abolition of slavery in the District, asserted the superiority of Whites over Blacks, and condemned nativism. Richardson's stance on the Wilmot Proviso undermined his position with Southern Democrats and three South Carolina reps abandoned him on the next ballot which was the 108th. Under pressure from President Franklin Pierce for a resolution to the stalemate in the house, Democrats replaced Richardson with James Lawrence Orr. Ultimately Banks was elected as speaker.

Gubernatorial election

Richardson was the Democratic nominee for governor in the 1856 Illinois gubernatorial election. He resigned in August 1856 to run for Governor of Illinois, narrowly losing to fellow representative, and first nominee of the newly established Republican Party, William H. Bissell. Richardson carried most of south Illinois while Bissell won most of north Illinois. Bissell won by 4,697 votes, a margin of just under 2%.

Territorial Governor

After being defeated, Richardson was appointed by President James Buchanan as the Governor of the Nebraska Territory for most of 1858. Richardson resigned near the end of the year, remaining loyal to his political mentor, Stephen A. Douglas.

He was a delegate to 1860 Democratic National Convention from Illinois. He then came back to Washington D.C. as a member of the 37th Congress in 1861. In 1863, he was elected to fill Stephen Douglas's old seat in the United States Senate, defeating incumbent Republican Orville Browning. He was not renominated in 1865 and spent the rest of his life engaged in newspaper work.

He died on December 27, 1875, in Quincy, Illinois, where he is buried.

Richardson County, Nebraska, is named after him.

References

Sources

References

  1. Holt, Robert D.. (October 1933). "The Political Career of William A. Richardson". Journal of the Illinois State Historical Society.
  2. Hale, Shawn. (Summer 2016). "A Copperhead in Quincy Goes to Washington: Senator William A. Richardson". Journal of the Illinois State Historical Society.
  3. Holt, Robert D.. (October 1933). "The Political Career of William A. Richardson". Journal of the Illinois State Historical Society.
  4. Holt, Robert D.. (October 1933). "The Political Career of William A. Richardson". Journal of the Illinois State Historical Society.
  5. Holt, Robert D.. (October 1933). "The Political Career of William A. Richardson". Journal of the Illinois State Historical Society.
  6. Holt, Robert D.. (October 1933). "The Political Career of William A. Richardson". Journal of the Illinois State Historical Society.
  7. Holt, Robert D.. (October 1933). "The Political Career of William A. Richardson". Journal of the Illinois State Historical Society.
  8. Holt, Robert D.. (October 1933). "The Political Career of William A. Richardson". Journal of the Illinois State Historical Society.
  9. Holt, Robert D.. (October 1933). "The Political Career of William A. Richardson". Journal of the Illinois State Historical Society.
  10. Holt, Robert D.. (October 1933). "The Political Career of William A. Richardson". Journal of the Illinois State Historical Society.
  11. Holt, Robert D.. (October 1933). "The Political Career of William A. Richardson". Journal of the Illinois State Historical Society.
  12. Potter, David. (1976). "The Impending Crisis, 1848–1861".
  13. Holt, Robert D.. (October 1933). "The Political Career of William A. Richardson". Journal of the Illinois State Historical Society.
  14. Holt, Robert D.. (October 1933). "The Political Career of William A. Richardson". Journal of the Illinois State Historical Society.
  15. Holt, Robert D.. (October 1933). "The Political Career of William A. Richardson". Journal of the Illinois State Historical Society.
  16. Holt, Robert D.. (October 1933). "The Political Career of William A. Richardson". Journal of the Illinois State Historical Society.
  17. Harrington, Fred Harvey. (May 1939). "The First Northern Victory". The Journal of Southern History.
  18. Harrington, Fred Harvey. (May 1939). "The First Northern Victory". The Journal of Southern History.
  19. Harrington, Fred Harvey. (May 1939). "The First Northern Victory". The Journal of Southern History.
  20. Harrington, Fred Harvey. (May 1939). "The First Northern Victory". The Journal of Southern History.
  21. Harrington, Fred Harvey. (May 1939). "The First Northern Victory". The Journal of Southern History.
  22. Harrington, Fred Harvey. (May 1939). "The First Northern Victory". The Journal of Southern History.
  23. Harrington, Fred Harvey. (May 1939). "The First Northern Victory". The Journal of Southern History.
  24. "Our Campaigns - IL Governor Race - Nov 04, 1856".
Wikipedia Source

This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page.

Want to explore this topic further?

Ask Mako anything about William Alexander Richardson — get instant answers, deeper analysis, and related topics.

Research with Mako

Free with your Surf account

Content sourced from Wikipedia, available under CC BY-SA 4.0.

This content may have been generated or modified by AI. CloudSurf Software LLC is not responsible for the accuracy, completeness, or reliability of AI-generated content. Always verify important information from primary sources.

Report