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How The States Got Their Shapes Too Part 16

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5. John Preston Arthur, Western North Carolina: A History from 1730 to 1913 (Raleigh, NC: Edwards and Broughton, 1914), 19, 33.

6. Martin Reidinger, "The Walton War and the Georgia-North Carolina Boundary Dispute" (unpublished ma.n.u.script), North Carolina Collection, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, 1981, cited in "State's First Walton County Caused Ruckus," Atlanta Journal-Const.i.tution, December 3, 2007.

7. Cal Carpenter, The Walton War and Tales of the Great Smoky Mountains (Lakewood, GA: Copple House Books, 1979), 26; Atlanta Journal-Const.i.tution, December 3, 2007.

8. Jim Brittain, "History Corner," Mills River, North Carolina Newsletter 1, no. 1 (Winter 2003): 3.

9. Lucian Lamar Knight, A Standard History of Georgia and Georgians, vol. 1 (New York: Lewis, 1917), 456. Similarly, a history of Georgia coauth.o.r.ed by a former governor states, "A number of minor controversies concerning the boundaries have occurred at different times, but they were mostly local in character and have been settled by the mutual agreement of the state authorities. Between 1803 and 1818 several of these disputes arose between Georgia and North Carolina. In the fall of 1881 ..." The transition to 1881 is a considerable leap. See also Allen D. Candler and Clement A. Davis, Georgia: Comprising Sketches of the Counties, Towns, Events, Inst.i.tutions, and Persons, Arranged in Cyclopedic Form, vol. 3 (Atlanta: Georgia State Historical a.s.sociation, 1906), 207.



10. Arthur, Western North Carolina, 33.

Reuben Kemper 1. Andrew McMichael, "The Kemper 'Rebellion': Filibustering and Resident Anglo American Loyalty in Spanish West Florida," Louisiana History: The Journal of the Louisiana Historical a.s.sociation 43, no. 2 (Spring 2002): 136.

2. Isaac Joslin c.o.x, The West Florida Controversy, 17981818 (Baltimore: Johns Hopkins Press, 1918), 152.

3. McMichael, "The Kemper 'Rebellion,' " 149.

Richard Rush 1. Richard Rush, Residence at the Court of London, 3rd ed. (Philadelphia: Lippincott, 1872), 7778.

2. National Intelligencer (Washington, DC), July 28, 1812.

3. National Intelligencer, October 19, 1813; November 30, 1813; March 31, 1815; March 29, 1815.

4. Letter from Charles Bagot to Lord Binning, Sept. 26, 1818, in George Canning, George Canning and His Friends, vol. 2 (New York: E. P. Dutton, 1909), 8586.

5. Rush, Residence, 314.

6. John Adams, The Works of John Adams, vol. 10 (Boston: Little, Brown, 1856), 16061.

7. Rush, Residence, 437.

8. Letter from Rush to Democratic Citizens of Penn District, in Daily National Intelligencer, November 16, 1850.

Nathaniel Pope 1. William A. Meese, "Nathaniel Pope," Journal of the Illinois State Historical Society 3, no. 4 (January 1911): 78.

2. Pope to New York senator Rufus King, in James A. Edstrom, " 'Candour and Good Faith': Nathaniel Pope and the Admission Enabling Act of 1818," Illinois Historical Journal 88, no. 4 (Winter 1995): 244.

3. Ibid., 246.

4. J. Seymour Currey, Chicago: Its History and Its Builders, vol. 1 (Chicago: S. J. Clarke, 1912), 118. In the nineteenth century, the same wording had appeared as a description of Pope's argument in Congress, in John Moses, Illinois: Historical and Statistical, vol. 1 (Chicago: Fergus Printing, 1889), 227. Pope is recorded as saying that access to Lake Michigan "would afford additional security to the perpetuity of the Union, inasmuch as the state would thereby be connected with the states of Indiana, Ohio, Pennsylvania and New York through the Lakes." Annals of Congress, 15th Cong., 1st sess., 1678.

5. Alexander Davidson and Bernard Stuve, A Complete History of Illinois from 1673 to 1873 (Springfield: Illinois Journal, 1874), 29596.

6. William Radebaugh, The Boundary Dispute between Illinois and Wisconsin (Chicago: Chicago Historical Society, 1904).

John Hardeman Walker 1. Robert Sidney Dougla.s.s, History of Southeast Missouri, vol. 1 (Chicago: Lewis Publishing, 1912), 242.

2. Samuel c.u.mmings, The Western Pilot (Cincinnati: G. Conclin, 1848), 13842; "Account by John Hardeman Walker," transcription and notes by Susan E. Hough, U.S. Geological Survey, July 2000, http://pasadena.wr.usgs.gov/office/hough/walker.html.

3. Ibid., 142.

4. Floyd Calvin Shoemaker, Missouri's Struggle for Statehood: 18041821 (Jefferson City, MO: Hugh Stevens Printing, 1916), 39.

5. H. Dwight Weaver, "Bootheel Politics, Frontier Style," Missouri Resources Magazine (Winter 19992000), 21.

John Quincy Adams 1. John Quincy Adams, Memoirs of John Quincy Adams, ed. Charles Francis Adams, vol. 4 (Philadelphia: Lippincott, 1875), 2089.

2. Worthington Chauncey Ford, ed., Writings of John Quincy Adams, vol. 6 (New York: Macmillan, 1916), 384.

3. Adams, Memoirs, vol. 4, 10810, 115.

4. Ford, Writings, vol. 6, 346.

5. Ibid., 306.

6. William Graham Sumner, American Statesmen: Andrew Jackson (Boston: Houghton Mifflin, 1899), 104.

7. Adams, Memoirs, vol. 8, 484.

Sequoyah 1. Two notable critics of Sequoyah historiography are John B. Davis, "The Life and Work of Sequoyah," Chronicles of Oklahoma 8, no. 2 (June 1930): 49180, and Traveller Bird, Tell Them They Lie: The Sequoyah Myth (Los Angeles: Westernlore Press, 1971).

2. Samuel C. Williams, "The Father of Sequoyah: Nathaniel Gist," Chronicles of Oklahoma 15, no. 1 (March 1937): 320.

3. Traveller Bird, Tell Them They Lie, 4546, 113.

4. S. Charles Bolton, "Jeffersonian Indian Removal and the Emergence of Arkansas Territory," Arkansas Historical Quarterly 62, no. 3 (Autumn 2003): 25371.

5. Thomas Valentine Parker, The Cherokee Indians (New York: Grafton, 1907), 13.

6. American State Papers: Indian Affairs, vol. 2 (Washington, DC: Gales and Seaton, 1834), 145.

7. George E. Foster, Se-quo-yah, the American Cadmus and Modern Moses (Philadelphia: Indian Rights a.s.sociation, 1885), 106.

8. Daily National Journal (Washington, DC), May 5, 1828; Harold D. Moser et al., The Papers of Andrew Jackson, vol. 3 (Knoxville: University of Tennessee Press, 1991), 5253.

9. Charles Russell Logan, The Promised Land: The Cherokees, Arkansas, and Removal, 17941839 (Little Rock: Arkansas Historic Preservation Program, n.d.), 21.

Stevens T. Mason 1. Quite possibly John Quincy Adams did make this statement, or something much like it. The bill was highly controversial and strongly opposed by Adams, who had returned to Congress after his presidency. Adams's statement of outrage at the beginning of this chapter has previously been cited in Thomas M. Cooley, Michigan: A History of Governments (Boston: Houghton Mifflin, 1905), 219; Henry M. Utley and Byron M. Cutcheon, Michigan as a Province, Territory, and State, vol. 2 (New York: Publishing Society of Michigan, 1906), 358; Willis F. Dunbar and George S. May, Michigan: A History of the Wolverine State (Grand Rapids, MI: Eerdman, 1980), 257; and other sources. None of these sources, however, is a history of Ohio. Ohio historians may be censoring Adams, or they may have excluded the statement because there is no evidence that he said it. Adams did say, "The report of the committee of the Senate simply declares that the committee had no doubt of the right of Congress to settle the disputed boundary conformably to the claim of Ohio. That report, I think I have seen qualified in one of the official doc.u.ments from the State of Ohio, as a very able report. Yes sir, and this great ability consisted in a simple declaration ... of the power of Congress to settle the boundary-but not one iota of argument, nor one single allusion, to any question of right between the parties." See Congressional Globe, 24th Cong., 1st sess., 2095.

2. The map used was by John Mitch.e.l.l, Amerique septentrionale avec les routes, distances en miles, villages, et etabliss.e.m.e.nts francois et anglois (Paris: M. Hawkins, Brigardier des armees du roi, 1776).

3. Don Faber, The Toledo War: The First Michigan-Ohio Rivalry (Ann Arbor: University of Michigan Press, 2008), 25.

4. Report of the Committee on the Business of the State of Ohio (Feb. 4, 1803), in the Scioto Gazette (Ohio), February 2, 1804.

5. Lewis Ca.s.s to Howard Tiffin, November 1, 1817, in T. C. Mendenhall and A. A. Graham, "Boundary Line between Ohio and Indiana, and between Ohio and Michigan," Ohio Archaeological and Historical Publications, vol. 4 (Columbus: Ohio Historical Society, 1895), 161.

6. Over a century later, it was discovered that Congress had never voted specifically on an act to admit Ohio into the Union. In 1953 Congress retroactively admitted Ohio to the Union as of March 1803.

7. Lawton T. Hemans, The Life and Times of Stevens Thomson Mason (Lansing: Michigan Historical Commission, 1920), 5354.

8. Scioto Gazette, August 17, 1831.

9. "Attorney General Opinion," Message of the Governor of Ohio at the Second Session of the Thirty-third General a.s.sembly (Columbus, OH: James B. Gardiner, 1835), 39.

10. Monroe Sentinel (Michigan), reprinted in Cleveland Herald, July 23, 1835.

11. Hemans, Life and Times, 42344.

Robert Lucas 1. Robert Lucas to William Kendall, in "Biography of Robert Lucas by a Citizen of Columbus," Ohio Archaeological and Historical Publications 17 (1908): 16768.

2. In the first case, which involved New York and New Jersey, New York boycotted the proceedings. The second, between Ma.s.sachusetts and Rhode Island, came before the court in 1834, and not until 1838-the year Lucas became governor-did it finally decide how to rule on it. New Jersey v. New York, 30 U.S. 5 Pet. 284 (1831); Rhode Island v. Ma.s.sachusetts, 37 U.S. 12 Pet. 657 (1838).

3. Ohio Statesman (Columbus), November 22, 1839.

4. Missouri Argus (St. Louis), November 29, 1839.

5. Claude S. Larzelere, Harlow Lindley, and Bernard C. Steiner, "The Iowa-Missouri Dispute Boundary," Mississippi Valley Historical Review 3, no. 1 (June 1916): 8081.

Daniel Webster 1. Wendell Phillips, Speeches, Lectures, and Letters (Boston: Lee and Shepard, 1894), 45.

2. Maryland Gazette and Political Intelligencer (Annapolis), May 23, 1822.

3. Bangor Register (Maine), April 6, 1826.

4. J. Chris Arndt, "Maine in the Northeastern Boundary Controversy: States' Rights in Antebellum New England," New England Quarterly 62, no. 2 (June 1989): 20523; Boston Courier, January 16, 1832.

5. Maurice G. Baxter, One and Inseparable: Daniel Webster and the Union (Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 1984), 41, 27677, 285, 502; Irving H. Bartlett, Daniel Webster (New York: Norton, 1978), 200207, 28186.

6. Wilfred Ellsworth Binkley and Malcolm Charles Moos, A Grammar of American Politics: The National Government (New York: Knopf, 1949), 265.

7. Ephraim Dougla.s.s Adams, "Lord Ashburton and the Treaty of Washington," American Historical Review 17, no. 4 (July 1912): 779.

8. Arndt, "Maine," 219220; George Ticknor Curtis, Life of Daniel Webster, 5th ed., vol. 1 (New York: D. Appleton, 1893), 27883; Richard N. Current, "Webster's Propaganda and the Ashburton Treaty," Mississippi Valley Historical Review 34, no. 2 (September 1947): 189.

9. Current, "Webster's Propaganda," 189; Arndt, "Maine," 221; J. P. D. Dunbahin, "Red Lines of the Maps: The Impact of Cartographical Errors on the Border between the United States and British North America," Imago Mundi: The International Journal for the History of Cartography 50 (1998): 10525; Lawrence Martin and Samuel Flagg Bemis, "Franklin's Red-Line Map Was a Mitch.e.l.l," New England Quarterly 10, no. 1 (March 1937): 10511.

10. Machias Seal Island, between the Gulf of Maine and the Bay of Fundy, remains under dispute to this day. See Paul Schmidt, "Machias Seal Island: A Geopolitical Anomaly" (master's thesis, University of Vermont, 1991), http://www.siue.edu/GEOGRAPHY/online/Schmidt.htm.

11. "An Account of the Post-Mortem Examination of the late Hon. Daniel Webster," New York Journal of Medicine (1853): 281.

12. Ralph Waldo Emerson, The Works of Ralph Waldo Emerson, vol. 2 (New York: Hearst's International Library, 1914), 557.

James K. Polk 1. Hans Sperber, " 'Fifty-Four Forty or Fight': Facts and Fictions," American Speech 32, no. 1 (February 1957): 511; Edwin A. Miles, " 'Fifty-Four Forty or Fight': An American Political Legend," Mississippi Valley Historical Review 44, no. 2 (September 1957): 291309.

2. Translated in The Liberator (Boston), May 23, 1845.

3. Walter R. Borneman, Polk: The Man Who Transformed the Presidency and America (New York: Random House, 2008), 19496.

4. R. L. Schuyler, "Polk and the Oregon Compromise," Political Science Quarterly 26, no. 3 (September 1911): 46061.

Robert M. T. Hunter 1. Robert M. T. Hunter, Speech on the Subject of the Retrocession of Alexandria to Virginia in the House of Representatives, May 8, 1846 (Alexandria: Printed at offices of Alexandria Gazette, 1846), 8, 11.

2. South Port American (Wisconsin), July 10, 1846.

3. Raymond Gazette (Mississippi), July 17, 1846.

4. National Intelligencer (Washington, DC), May 23, 1803.

5. The ca.n.a.l to which Hunter referred was the Alexandria Ca.n.a.l, which crossed the Potomac from the terminus of the C&O Ca.n.a.l at Georgetown and continued along the Virginia side of the river to Alexandria.

6. Amos B. Ca.s.selman, "The Virginia Portion of the District of Columbia," Records of the Columbia Historical Society, vol. 12 (1909): 11617.

7. Frederick Merk, "Dissent in the Mexican War," Proceedings of the Ma.s.sachusetts Historical Society, 3rd series, vol. 81 (1969): 12036.

8. National Intelligencer, January 1, 1838; January 14, 1846.

9. Mark David Richards, "The Debates over the Retrocession of the District of Columbia, 18012004," Washington History 16, no. 1 (Spring/Summer 2004): 5482.

Sam Houston 1. James L. Haley, Sam Houston (Norman: University of Oklahoma Press, 2002), 726.

2. John P. Erwin, son-in-law of the secretary of state, was appointed postmaster for Nashville (Sam Houston's congressional district) over numerous nominees Houston had forwarded to President John Quincy Adams. Houston had some choice words regarding the fitness of the secretary of state's son-in-law, who took offense and enlisted a well-known duelist, John T. Smith, to deliver the note bearing his challenge. Smith, accompanied by General White, serving as his witness, approached Houston, but Houston refused to accept a note from one who was of lower station, as provided in the code duello. White took issue with Houston's interpretation of the code duello, thus insulting Houston's honor and resulting in White's accepting Houston's challenge to meet on the field of honor.

3. Alex W. Terrell, "Recollections of General Sam Houston," Southwestern Historical Quarterly 16, no. 2 (October, 1912): 11336.

4. Haley, Sam Houston, 5261.

5. M. K. Wisehart, Sam Houston: American Giant (Washington, DC: Luce Publishers, 1962), 56.

6. Niles' Weekly Register (Washington, DC), August 27, 1831, citing the Nashville Banner with a note stating "The editor of that paper says it is published as a 'matter of business.' "

7. New York Herald, December 7, 1836. The copy of the president's message obtained by the New York Herald differs, in the section quoted, from the final draft sent to Congress, which appears in the Register of Debates, appendix, 24th Cong., 2nd sess., 1.

8. William Carey Crane, Life and Select Literary Remains of Sam Houston (Philadelphia: Lippincott, 1884), 36869.

9. Congressional Globe, appendix, 31st Cong., 1st sess., 102. Later, Abraham Lincoln, in his acceptance speech for the Illinois Republican Party's nomination for Senate in 1858, declared, "A house divided against itself cannot stand." Though stated without attribution, the words in his printed text were enclosed in quotation marks.

John A. Sutter 1. John A. Sutter Sr., "Reminiscences," ma.n.u.script (Bancroft Library, University of California-Berkeley), 23; Albert L. Hurtado, John Sutter: A Life on the North American Frontier (Norman: University of Oklahoma Press, 2006), 58.

2. Report of Thomas O. Larkin (April 12, 1844), New York Herald, June 22, 1844.

3. Hurtado, John Sutter, 158.

4. John A. Sutter Jr., The Sutter Family and the Origins of the Gold Rush Sacramento, ed. Allan R. Ottley (Norman: University of Oklahoma Press, 2002), 17.

5. Hurtado, John Sutter, 23941.

6. The Alta California (San Francisco), August 1, 1850.

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