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Caleb Cushing

Caleb Cushing (January 17, 1800 – January 2, 1879) was an American Democratic politician and diplomat who served as a Member of the U.S. House of Representatives from Massachusetts and the 23rd United States Attorney General under President Franklin Pierce.[1] From 1874 until 1877, he was the United States Minister to Spain.

Caleb Cushing
United States Minister to Spain
In office
May 30, 1874 – April 9, 1877
PresidentUlysses S. Grant
Rutherford B. Hayes
Preceded byDaniel Sickles
Succeeded byJames Russell Lowell
23rd United States Attorney General
In office
March 7, 1853 – March 4, 1857
PresidentFranklin Pierce
Preceded byJohn Crittenden
Succeeded byJeremiah Black
United States Minister to China
In office
June 12, 1844 – August 27, 1844
PresidentJohn Tyler
Preceded byPosition established
Succeeded byAlexander Everett
Member of the U.S. House of Representatives
from Massachusetts's 3rd district
In office
March 4, 1835 – March 3, 1843
Preceded byGayton Osgood
Succeeded byAmos Abbott
Personal details
Born(1800-01-17)January 17, 1800
Salisbury, Massachusetts, U.S.
DiedJanuary 2, 1879(1879-01-02) (aged 78)
Newburyport, Massachusetts, U.S.
Political partyDemocratic-Republican (Before 1825)
National Republican (1825–1833)
Whig (1833–1847)
Democratic (1847–1879)
Spouse
Caroline Wilde
(m. 1824)
EducationHarvard University (AB)
Signature

Cushing was an eager proponent of territorial and commercial expansion, especially regarding the acquisition of Texas, Oregon and Cuba. He believed that enlarging the American sphere would fulfill "the great destiny reserved for this exemplar American Republic."[2] Cushing secured the first American treaty with China, the Treaty of Wangxia of 1844; it gave American merchants trading rights in five Chinese ports.[3] After the Civil War, Cushing negotiated a treaty with Colombia to give the United States a right-of-way for a trans-oceanic Canal. He helped obtain a favorable settlement of the Alabama Claims, and as the ambassador to Spain in 1870s defused the troublesome Virginius Affair.

Biography edit

Early life edit

Cushing was born in Salisbury, Massachusetts, on January 17, 1800; he was the son of John Newmarch Cushing, a wealthy shipbuilder and merchant, and Lydia Dow, a delicate and sensitive woman from Seabrook, New Hampshire, who died when he was ten. The family moved across the Merrimack River to the prosperous shipping town of Newburyport, Massachusetts, in 1802. He entered Harvard University at the age of 13 and graduated in 1817.[4] He was a teacher of mathematics there from 1820 to 1821, and was admitted to practice in the Massachusetts Court of Common Pleas in December 1821; he began practicing law in Newburyport in 1824.[5] There he attended the First Presbyterian Church.

On November 23, 1824, Cushing married Caroline Elizabeth Wilde, daughter of Judge Samuel Sumner Wilde, of the Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court. His wife died about a decade later, leaving him childless and alone. He never married again.

State legislature edit

Cushing served as a Democratic-Republican member of the Massachusetts House of Representatives in 1825, then entered the Massachusetts Senate in 1826, and returned to the House in 1828. Afterwards, he spent two years in Europe from 1829 to 1831. Upon his return, he again served in the lower house of the state legislature in 1833 and 1834. Then, in late 1834, he was elected to the United States House of Representatives.[5]

Washington career edit

Cushing served in Congress from 1835 until 1843 (the 24th, 25th, 26th and 27th Congresses). During the 27th Congress, he was chairman of the U.S. House Committee on Foreign Affairs.

Here the marked inconsistency characterizing his public life became manifest. For when John Tyler had become president, had been read out of the Whig party, and had vetoed Whig measures (including a tariff bill) for which Cushing had voted, Cushing first defended the vetoes and then voted again for the bills. In 1843 President Tyler nominated Cushing for U.S. Secretary of the Treasury, but the U.S. Senate refused to confirm him for this office.[5] He was nominated three times in one day, and rejected all three times.[6] John Canfield Spencer was chosen instead.

China mission edit

In 1843, Cushing was appointed by President Tyler to be commissioner and United States Ambassador to China, holding this position until March 4, 1845.[5] With the goal of impressing the Royal Chinese court, the Cushing mission consisted of four American warships, loaded with gifts that exalted scientific wonders including revolvers, telescope, and an encyclopedia. His arrival at Macau in February 1844 created a local sensation, but the Chinese government was reluctant to designate another most favored nation. Cushing cleverly mixed the carrot and stick. He warned – against the backdrop of his warships – that not to receive an envoy was a national insult. He threatened to go directly to the Emperor – an unheard of procedure. The Emperor tried delay, but he finally sent an envoy to negotiate with Cushing, leading to the signing of the Treaty of Wanghia in the village of Wanghia on July 3, 1844.[7] In addition to most favored nation status, Cushing made sure that Americans received extraterritoriality. In the following years American trade with China grew rapidly, thanks to the high-speed clipper ships which carried relatively small amounts of high-value cargo, such as ginseng and silk. American Protestant missionaries also began to arrive. The popular Chinese reaction was mostly hostile, but there was a favorable element that provided a base of support for American missionaries and businessmen. By 1850–64, China was enmeshed in the Taiping rebellion, a civil war which caused millions of deaths; foreign trade stagnated.[3][8][9][10]

While serving as commissioner to China he was also empowered to negotiate a treaty of navigation and commerce with Japan.

Return to Massachusetts edit

 
Engraving of Caleb Cushing

In 1847, while again a representative in the Massachusetts state legislature, he introduced a bill appropriating money for the equipment of a regiment to serve in the Mexican–American War; although the bill was defeated, he raised the necessary funds privately.[5]

He served in the Army during the Mexican War first as colonel of the 1st Massachusetts Volunteer Regiment, of which he was placed in command on January 15, 1847. He was promoted to brigadier-general of volunteers on April 14 of the same year. He did not see combat during this conflict, and entered Mexico City with his reserve battalion several months after that city had been pacified. He was discharged from the Army on July 20, 1848.

In 1847 and again in 1848 the Democrats nominated him for Governor of Massachusetts, but on each occasion he was defeated at the polls. He was again a representative in the state legislature in 1851,[5] was offered the position as Massachusetts Attorney General in 1851, but declined; and served as mayor of Newburyport in 1851 and 1852. (He had written a major history of the town when he was 26 years old.)

He became an associate justice of the Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court in 1852. During the presidency Franklin Pierce, from March 7, 1853, until March 3, 1857, he was Attorney General of the United States. Cushing supported the March 1857 Dred Scott decision.[11]

In 1858, 1859, 1862, and 1863 he again served in the Massachusetts House of Representatives.

Also during this time, he founded the Cushing Land Agency in St. Croix Falls, Wisconsin. The building it was housed in, now known as the Cushing Land Agency Building, is listed on the National Register of Historic Places.

1860 and the Civil War edit

In 1860 he presided over the Democratic National Convention, which met first at Charleston and later at Baltimore, until he joined those who seceded from the regular convention. He then presided also over the convention of the seceding delegates, who nominated John C. Breckinridge for the Presidency.[5] Also in 1860 President James Buchanan sent him to Charleston as Confidential Commissioner to the Secessionists of South Carolina.

Despite having favored states' rights and opposed the abolition of slavery, during the Civil War, he supported the Union. He was later appointed by President Andrew Johnson as one of three commissioners assigned to revise and codify the laws of the United States Congress. He served in that capacity from 1866 to 1870.

Return to diplomacy edit

In 1868, in concert with the Minister Resident to Colombia, Cushing was sent to Bogotá, Colombia, and worked to negotiate a right-of-way treaty for a ship canal across the Isthmus of Panama.

At the Geneva conference for the settlement of the Alabama claims in 1871–1872 he was one of the counsels appointed by President Ulysses S. Grant for the United States before the Geneva Tribunal of Arbitration on the Alabama claims.[5]

From January 6, 1874, to April 9, 1877, Cushing was Minister to Spain. He defused tensions over the Virginius Affair, and proved popular in the country.

Supreme Court nomination edit

 
Cushing's Chief Justice nomination

On January 9, 1874, Grant nominated Cushing as Chief Justice of the United States Supreme Court. The nomination came soon after Grant withdrew the nomination of George Henry Williams to the position.[12] The selection caught many off-guard, including Cushing himself.[13] Radical Republicans in the U.S. Senate immediately challenged Cushing's loyalties on account of his earlier close personal rapport with Andrew Johnson and his alleged pre-Civil War Copperhead sympathies. Their feelings of distrust turned into all out opposition to his confirmation when a (non-political) letter that Cushing had written in 1861 to President of the Confederacy Jefferson Davis was found and made public. As a result of rising furor, the nomination was withdrawn on January 13, 1874.[14][15]

Death and legacy edit

Cushing died in Newburyport on January 2, 1879, where he was laid to rest in the town's Highland Cemetery.

The United States Revenue Cutter Caleb Cushing was named after Cushing. The Caleb Cushing served during the American Civil War and was destroyed by Confederate raiders during the Battle of Portland Harbor on June 27, 1863. [16]

Works edit

  • History and Present State of the Town of Newburyport, Mass. (1826)
  • Review of the late Revolution in France (1833)
  • Reminiscences of Spain (1833);
  • Oration on the Material Growth and Territorial Progress of the United States (1839)
  • Life and Public Services of William H. Harrison (1840)
  • The Treaty of Washington (1873)[5]
  • Oration delivered by the Hon. Caleb Cushing, of Massachusetts, before the Tammany society, or Columbian order, at Tammany hall, on Monday, July 5th, 1858

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ "Office of the Attorney General | Attorney General: Caleb Cushing | United States Department of Justice". www.justice.gov. 2014-10-23. Retrieved 2024-01-17.
  2. ^ Caleb Cushing (1838). Speech ... on the Continuation of the Cumberland Road. Delivered in the House of Representatives, April 19, 1838. Gales & Seaton. p. 15.
  3. ^ a b Yeewan Koon (2012). "The Face of Diplomacy in 19th-Century China: Qiying's Portrait Gifts". In Johnson, Kendall (ed.). Narratives of Free Trade: The Commercial Cultures of Early US-China Relations. Hong Kong University Press. pp. 131–148.
  4. ^ "Caleb Cushing". Library of Congress, Washington, D.C. 20540 USA. Retrieved 2024-01-17.
  5. ^ a b c d e f g h i   One or more of the preceding sentences incorporates text from a publication now in the public domainChisholm, Hugh, ed. (1911). "Cushing, Caleb". Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 7 (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press. pp. 666–667.
  6. ^ "PRESIDENTS HAVE FAILED 8 TIMES TO WIN CABINET CONFIRMATIONS". DeseretNews.com. 1989-02-24. Retrieved 2018-02-10.
  7. ^ "Caleb Cushing | Diplomat, Lawyer, Politician | Britannica". www.britannica.com. 2024-01-13. Retrieved 2024-01-17.
  8. ^ Richard E. Welch (1957). "Caleb Cushing's Chinese Mission and the Treaty of Wanghia: A Review". Oregon Historical Quarterly. 58 (4): 328–357. JSTOR 20612361.
  9. ^ Ping Chia Kuo (1933). "Caleb cushing and the treaty of Wanghia, 1844". The Journal of Modern History. 5 (1): 34–54. doi:10.1086/235965. JSTOR 1872280. S2CID 144511935.
  10. ^ Eldon Griffin (1938) Clippers and Consuls: American consular and commercial relations with eastern Asia, 1845-1860.
  11. ^ "Letter, Roger Brooke Taney to Caleb Cushing thanking Cushing for his support of Taney's decision in the Dred Scott case, 9 November 1857". Washington, D.C.: Library of Congress. Retrieved April 2, 2022.
  12. ^ McMillion, Barry J. (January 28, 2022). Supreme Court Nominations, 1789 to 2020: Actions by the Senate, the Judiciary Committee, and the President (PDF) (Report). Washington, D.C.: Congressional Research Service. Retrieved February 15, 2022.
  13. ^ "THE CHIEF JUSTICESHIP.; CALEB CUSHING NOMINATED. NO ACTION YET BY THE SENATE--SENATORS AND OTHERS TAKEN BY SURPRISE. OBJECTIONS URGED AGAINST MR. CUSHING. MR. CUSHING HIMSELF SURPRISED". The New York Times. January 10, 1874. Retrieved April 2, 2022.
  14. ^ Swindler, William F. (1970). "The Politics of "Advice and Consent"". Popular Media. 269. William & Mary Law School Scholarship Repository. Retrieved April 2, 2022.
  15. ^ John S. Goff (1961). "The Rejection of United States Supreme Court Appointments". The American Journal of Legal History. 5 (4): 357–368. doi:10.2307/844034. JSTOR 844034.
  16. ^ "Blowing Up of the Cutter Caleb Cushing". No. Friday. The Boston Globe, Boston, MA. 27 June 1913. p. 12. Retrieved 24 June 2021.

Further reading edit

  • United States Congress. "Caleb Cushing (id: C001016)". Biographical Directory of the United States Congress.
  • Belohlavek, John M. Broken Glass: Caleb Cushing & the Shattering of the Union (2005)
  • Belohlavek, John M. Race, Progress, and Destiny: Caleb Cushing and the Quest for American Empire (1996)
  • Fuess, Claude Moore The Life of Caleb Cushing, New York: Harcourt, Brace and Co., 1923. (2 vols.)
  • Haddad, John R. America's First Adventure in China: Trade, Treaties, Opium, and Salvation (2013) pp. 136–159. online.
  • Johnson, Kendall A. The New Middle Kingdom: China and the Early American Romance of Free Trade, Baltimore, MD: Johns Hopkins University Press, 2017.
  • Kuo, Ping Chia. "Caleb Cushing and the Treaty of Wanghia, 1844". The Journal of Modern History 5, no. 1 (1933): 34–54. Online
  • Schurz, Carl.   Reminiscences. New York: McClure Publ. Co., 1907. Schurz reports his impressions of seeing Cushing, in an effort to discourage anti-slavery sentiment, speak at a "Conservative Union Meeting" at Faneuil Hall in Boston just before the Civil War (Volume II, Chapter IV, p. 162): "While speaking he turned his left shoulder to the audience, looking at his hearers askance, and with a squint, too, as it seemed to me, but I may have been mistaken. There was something like a cynical sneer in his manner of bringing out his sentences, which made him look like Mephistopheles alive, and I do not remember ever to have heard a public speaker who stirred in me so decided a disinclination to believe what he said. In later years I met him repeatedly at dinner tables which he enlivened with his large information, his wit, and his fund of anecdote. But I could never quite overcome the impression he had made upon me at that meeting. I could always listen to him with interest, but never with spontaneous confidence."
  • Welch, Richard E. "Caleb Cushing's Chinese Mission and the Treaty of Wanghia: A Review." Oregon Historical Quarterly 58.4 (1957): 328–357. Online
  • "Caleb Cushing" (Fee required). The Liberator, Boston, MA. 11 Dec 1857. Retrieved 24 June 2021.

External links edit

U.S. House of Representatives
Preceded by Member of the U.S. House of Representatives
from Massachusetts's 3rd congressional district

1835–1843
Succeeded by
Preceded by Chair of the House Foreign Affairs Committee
1841–1842
Succeeded by
Diplomatic posts
New office United States Minister to China
1844
Succeeded by
Preceded by United States Minister to Spain
1874–1877
Succeeded by
Party political offices
Preceded by Democratic nominee for Governor of Massachusetts
1847, 1848
Succeeded by
Preceded by Permanent Chair of the Democratic National Convention
1860
Succeeded by
Legal offices
New seat Associate Justice of the Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court
1852–1853
Succeeded by
Preceded by United States Attorney General
1853–1857
Succeeded by

caleb, cushing, attorney, general, cushing, redirects, here, york, state, attorney, general, stephen, cushing, this, article, includes, list, general, references, lacks, sufficient, corresponding, inline, citations, please, help, improve, this, article, introd. Attorney General Cushing redirects here For the New York state attorney general see Stephen B Cushing This article includes a list of general references but it lacks sufficient corresponding inline citations Please help to improve this article by introducing more precise citations June 2021 Learn how and when to remove this template message Caleb Cushing January 17 1800 January 2 1879 was an American Democratic politician and diplomat who served as a Member of the U S House of Representatives from Massachusetts and the 23rd United States Attorney General under President Franklin Pierce 1 From 1874 until 1877 he was the United States Minister to Spain Caleb CushingUnited States Minister to SpainIn office May 30 1874 April 9 1877PresidentUlysses S GrantRutherford B HayesPreceded byDaniel SicklesSucceeded byJames Russell Lowell23rd United States Attorney GeneralIn office March 7 1853 March 4 1857PresidentFranklin PiercePreceded byJohn CrittendenSucceeded byJeremiah BlackUnited States Minister to ChinaIn office June 12 1844 August 27 1844PresidentJohn TylerPreceded byPosition establishedSucceeded byAlexander EverettMember of the U S House of Representatives from Massachusetts s 3rd districtIn office March 4 1835 March 3 1843Preceded byGayton OsgoodSucceeded byAmos AbbottPersonal detailsBorn 1800 01 17 January 17 1800Salisbury Massachusetts U S DiedJanuary 2 1879 1879 01 02 aged 78 Newburyport Massachusetts U S Political partyDemocratic Republican Before 1825 National Republican 1825 1833 Whig 1833 1847 Democratic 1847 1879 SpouseCaroline Wilde m 1824 wbr EducationHarvard University AB Signature Cushing was an eager proponent of territorial and commercial expansion especially regarding the acquisition of Texas Oregon and Cuba He believed that enlarging the American sphere would fulfill the great destiny reserved for this exemplar American Republic 2 Cushing secured the first American treaty with China the Treaty of Wangxia of 1844 it gave American merchants trading rights in five Chinese ports 3 After the Civil War Cushing negotiated a treaty with Colombia to give the United States a right of way for a trans oceanic Canal He helped obtain a favorable settlement of the Alabama Claims and as the ambassador to Spain in 1870s defused the troublesome Virginius Affair Contents 1 Biography 1 1 Early life 1 2 State legislature 1 3 Washington career 1 4 China mission 1 5 Return to Massachusetts 1 6 1860 and the Civil War 1 7 Return to diplomacy 1 8 Supreme Court nomination 2 Death and legacy 3 Works 4 See also 5 References 6 Further reading 7 External linksBiography editEarly life edit Cushing was born in Salisbury Massachusetts on January 17 1800 he was the son of John Newmarch Cushing a wealthy shipbuilder and merchant and Lydia Dow a delicate and sensitive woman from Seabrook New Hampshire who died when he was ten The family moved across the Merrimack River to the prosperous shipping town of Newburyport Massachusetts in 1802 He entered Harvard University at the age of 13 and graduated in 1817 4 He was a teacher of mathematics there from 1820 to 1821 and was admitted to practice in the Massachusetts Court of Common Pleas in December 1821 he began practicing law in Newburyport in 1824 5 There he attended the First Presbyterian Church On November 23 1824 Cushing married Caroline Elizabeth Wilde daughter of Judge Samuel Sumner Wilde of the Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court His wife died about a decade later leaving him childless and alone He never married again State legislature edit Cushing served as a Democratic Republican member of the Massachusetts House of Representatives in 1825 then entered the Massachusetts Senate in 1826 and returned to the House in 1828 Afterwards he spent two years in Europe from 1829 to 1831 Upon his return he again served in the lower house of the state legislature in 1833 and 1834 Then in late 1834 he was elected to the United States House of Representatives 5 Washington career edit Cushing served in Congress from 1835 until 1843 the 24th 25th 26th and 27th Congresses During the 27th Congress he was chairman of the U S House Committee on Foreign Affairs Here the marked inconsistency characterizing his public life became manifest For when John Tyler had become president had been read out of the Whig party and had vetoed Whig measures including a tariff bill for which Cushing had voted Cushing first defended the vetoes and then voted again for the bills In 1843 President Tyler nominated Cushing for U S Secretary of the Treasury but the U S Senate refused to confirm him for this office 5 He was nominated three times in one day and rejected all three times 6 John Canfield Spencer was chosen instead China mission edit In 1843 Cushing was appointed by President Tyler to be commissioner and United States Ambassador to China holding this position until March 4 1845 5 With the goal of impressing the Royal Chinese court the Cushing mission consisted of four American warships loaded with gifts that exalted scientific wonders including revolvers telescope and an encyclopedia His arrival at Macau in February 1844 created a local sensation but the Chinese government was reluctant to designate another most favored nation Cushing cleverly mixed the carrot and stick He warned against the backdrop of his warships that not to receive an envoy was a national insult He threatened to go directly to the Emperor an unheard of procedure The Emperor tried delay but he finally sent an envoy to negotiate with Cushing leading to the signing of the Treaty of Wanghia in the village of Wanghia on July 3 1844 7 In addition to most favored nation status Cushing made sure that Americans received extraterritoriality In the following years American trade with China grew rapidly thanks to the high speed clipper ships which carried relatively small amounts of high value cargo such as ginseng and silk American Protestant missionaries also began to arrive The popular Chinese reaction was mostly hostile but there was a favorable element that provided a base of support for American missionaries and businessmen By 1850 64 China was enmeshed in the Taiping rebellion a civil war which caused millions of deaths foreign trade stagnated 3 8 9 10 While serving as commissioner to China he was also empowered to negotiate a treaty of navigation and commerce with Japan Return to Massachusetts edit nbsp Engraving of Caleb Cushing In 1847 while again a representative in the Massachusetts state legislature he introduced a bill appropriating money for the equipment of a regiment to serve in the Mexican American War although the bill was defeated he raised the necessary funds privately 5 He served in the Army during the Mexican War first as colonel of the 1st Massachusetts Volunteer Regiment of which he was placed in command on January 15 1847 He was promoted to brigadier general of volunteers on April 14 of the same year He did not see combat during this conflict and entered Mexico City with his reserve battalion several months after that city had been pacified He was discharged from the Army on July 20 1848 In 1847 and again in 1848 the Democrats nominated him for Governor of Massachusetts but on each occasion he was defeated at the polls He was again a representative in the state legislature in 1851 5 was offered the position as Massachusetts Attorney General in 1851 but declined and served as mayor of Newburyport in 1851 and 1852 He had written a major history of the town when he was 26 years old He became an associate justice of the Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court in 1852 During the presidency Franklin Pierce from March 7 1853 until March 3 1857 he was Attorney General of the United States Cushing supported the March 1857 Dred Scott decision 11 In 1858 1859 1862 and 1863 he again served in the Massachusetts House of Representatives Also during this time he founded the Cushing Land Agency in St Croix Falls Wisconsin The building it was housed in now known as the Cushing Land Agency Building is listed on the National Register of Historic Places 1860 and the Civil War edit In 1860 he presided over the Democratic National Convention which met first at Charleston and later at Baltimore until he joined those who seceded from the regular convention He then presided also over the convention of the seceding delegates who nominated John C Breckinridge for the Presidency 5 Also in 1860 President James Buchanan sent him to Charleston as Confidential Commissioner to the Secessionists of South Carolina Despite having favored states rights and opposed the abolition of slavery during the Civil War he supported the Union He was later appointed by President Andrew Johnson as one of three commissioners assigned to revise and codify the laws of the United States Congress He served in that capacity from 1866 to 1870 Return to diplomacy edit In 1868 in concert with the Minister Resident to Colombia Cushing was sent to Bogota Colombia and worked to negotiate a right of way treaty for a ship canal across the Isthmus of Panama At the Geneva conference for the settlement of the Alabama claims in 1871 1872 he was one of the counsels appointed by President Ulysses S Grant for the United States before the Geneva Tribunal of Arbitration on the Alabama claims 5 From January 6 1874 to April 9 1877 Cushing was Minister to Spain He defused tensions over the Virginius Affair and proved popular in the country Supreme Court nomination edit nbsp Cushing s Chief Justice nomination On January 9 1874 Grant nominated Cushing as Chief Justice of the United States Supreme Court The nomination came soon after Grant withdrew the nomination of George Henry Williams to the position 12 The selection caught many off guard including Cushing himself 13 Radical Republicans in the U S Senate immediately challenged Cushing s loyalties on account of his earlier close personal rapport with Andrew Johnson and his alleged pre Civil War Copperhead sympathies Their feelings of distrust turned into all out opposition to his confirmation when a non political letter that Cushing had written in 1861 to President of the Confederacy Jefferson Davis was found and made public As a result of rising furor the nomination was withdrawn on January 13 1874 14 15 Death and legacy editCushing died in Newburyport on January 2 1879 where he was laid to rest in the town s Highland Cemetery The United States Revenue Cutter Caleb Cushing was named after Cushing The Caleb Cushing served during the American Civil War and was destroyed by Confederate raiders during the Battle of Portland Harbor on June 27 1863 16 Works editHistory and Present State of the Town of Newburyport Mass 1826 Review of the late Revolution in France 1833 Reminiscences of Spain 1833 Oration on the Material Growth and Territorial Progress of the United States 1839 Life and Public Services of William H Harrison 1840 The Treaty of Washington 1873 5 Oration delivered by the Hon Caleb Cushing of Massachusetts before the Tammany society or Columbian order at Tammany hall on Monday July 5th 1858See also editUnsuccessful nominations to the Cabinet of the United StatesReferences edit Office of the Attorney General Attorney General Caleb Cushing United States Department of Justice www justice gov 2014 10 23 Retrieved 2024 01 17 Caleb Cushing 1838 Speech on the Continuation of the Cumberland Road Delivered in the House of Representatives April 19 1838 Gales amp Seaton p 15 a b Yeewan Koon 2012 The Face of Diplomacy in 19th Century China Qiying s Portrait Gifts In Johnson Kendall ed Narratives of Free Trade The Commercial Cultures of Early US China Relations Hong Kong University Press pp 131 148 Caleb Cushing Library of Congress Washington D C 20540 USA Retrieved 2024 01 17 a b c d e f g h i nbsp One or more of the preceding sentences incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain Chisholm Hugh ed 1911 Cushing Caleb Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol 7 11th ed Cambridge University Press pp 666 667 PRESIDENTS HAVE FAILED 8 TIMES TO WIN CABINET CONFIRMATIONS DeseretNews com 1989 02 24 Retrieved 2018 02 10 Caleb Cushing Diplomat Lawyer Politician Britannica www britannica com 2024 01 13 Retrieved 2024 01 17 Richard E Welch 1957 Caleb Cushing s Chinese Mission and the Treaty of Wanghia A Review Oregon Historical Quarterly 58 4 328 357 JSTOR 20612361 Ping Chia Kuo 1933 Caleb cushing and the treaty of Wanghia 1844 The Journal of Modern History 5 1 34 54 doi 10 1086 235965 JSTOR 1872280 S2CID 144511935 Eldon Griffin 1938 Clippers and Consuls American consular and commercial relations with eastern Asia 1845 1860 Letter Roger Brooke Taney to Caleb Cushing thanking Cushing for his support of Taney s decision in the Dred Scott case 9 November 1857 Washington D C Library of Congress Retrieved April 2 2022 McMillion Barry J January 28 2022 Supreme Court Nominations 1789 to 2020 Actions by the Senate the Judiciary Committee and the President PDF Report Washington D C Congressional Research Service Retrieved February 15 2022 THE CHIEF JUSTICESHIP CALEB CUSHING NOMINATED NO ACTION YET BY THE SENATE SENATORS AND OTHERS TAKEN BY SURPRISE OBJECTIONS URGED AGAINST MR CUSHING MR CUSHING HIMSELF SURPRISED The New York Times January 10 1874 Retrieved April 2 2022 Swindler William F 1970 The Politics of Advice and Consent Popular Media 269 William amp Mary Law School Scholarship Repository Retrieved April 2 2022 John S Goff 1961 The Rejection of United States Supreme Court Appointments The American Journal of Legal History 5 4 357 368 doi 10 2307 844034 JSTOR 844034 Blowing Up of the Cutter Caleb Cushing No Friday The Boston Globe Boston MA 27 June 1913 p 12 Retrieved 24 June 2021 Further reading editWeidemeyer John William 1900 Cushing Caleb In Wilson J G Fiske J eds Appletons Cyclopaedia of American Biography New York D Appleton United States Congress Caleb Cushing id C001016 Biographical Directory of the United States Congress Belohlavek John M Broken Glass Caleb Cushing amp the Shattering of the Union 2005 Belohlavek John M Race Progress and Destiny Caleb Cushing and the Quest for American Empire 1996 Fuess Claude Moore The Life of Caleb Cushing New York Harcourt Brace and Co 1923 2 vols Haddad John R America s First Adventure in China Trade Treaties Opium and Salvation 2013 pp 136 159 online Johnson Kendall A The New Middle Kingdom China and the Early American Romance of Free Trade Baltimore MD Johns Hopkins University Press 2017 Kuo Ping Chia Caleb Cushing and the Treaty of Wanghia 1844 The Journal of Modern History 5 no 1 1933 34 54 Online Schurz Carl nbsp Reminiscences New York McClure Publ Co 1907 Schurz reports his impressions of seeing Cushing in an effort to discourage anti slavery sentiment speak at a Conservative Union Meeting at Faneuil Hall in Boston just before the Civil War Volume II Chapter IV p 162 While speaking he turned his left shoulder to the audience looking at his hearers askance and with a squint too as it seemed to me but I may have been mistaken There was something like a cynical sneer in his manner of bringing out his sentences which made him look like Mephistopheles alive and I do not remember ever to have heard a public speaker who stirred in me so decided a disinclination to believe what he said In later years I met him repeatedly at dinner tables which he enlivened with his large information his wit and his fund of anecdote But I could never quite overcome the impression he had made upon me at that meeting I could always listen to him with interest but never with spontaneous confidence Welch Richard E Caleb Cushing s Chinese Mission and the Treaty of Wanghia A Review Oregon Historical Quarterly 58 4 1957 328 357 Online Caleb Cushing Fee required The Liberator Boston MA 11 Dec 1857 Retrieved 24 June 2021 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Caleb Cushing United States Congress Caleb Cushing id C001016 Biographical Directory of the United States Congress Works by Caleb Cushing at Project Gutenberg Works by or about Caleb Cushing at Internet Archive U S House of Representatives Preceded byGayton Osgood Member of the U S House of Representativesfrom Massachusetts s 3rd congressional district1835 1843 Succeeded byAmos Abbott Preceded byFrancis Pickens Chair of the House Foreign Affairs Committee1841 1842 Succeeded byJohn Quincy Adams Diplomatic posts New office United States Minister to China1844 Succeeded byAlexander Everett Preceded byDaniel Sickles United States Minister to Spain1874 1877 Succeeded byJames Lowell Party political offices Preceded byIsaac Davis Democratic nominee for Governor of Massachusetts1847 1848 Succeeded byGeorge Boutwell Preceded byJohn Ward Permanent Chair of the Democratic National Convention1860 Succeeded byDavid Tod Legal offices New seat Associate Justice of the Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court1852 1853 Succeeded byPliny Merrick Preceded byJohn Crittenden United States Attorney General1853 1857 Succeeded byJeremiah Black Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Caleb Cushing amp oldid 1200152237, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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