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Charles Debrille Poston

Charles Debrille Poston (April 20, 1825 – June 24, 1902) was an American explorer, prospector, author, politician, and civil servant. He is referred to as the "Father of Arizona" due to his efforts lobbying for creation of the territory. Poston was also Arizona Territory's first Delegate to the U.S. House of Representatives.

Charles D. Poston
Delegate to the U.S. House of Representatives from Arizona Territory
In office
December 5, 1864 – March 3, 1865
Preceded byNone (new territory)
Succeeded byJohn Noble Goodwin
Personal details
Born(1825-04-20)April 20, 1825
Elizabethtown, Kentucky, US
DiedJune 24, 1902(1902-06-24) (aged 77)
Phoenix, Arizona Territory
Political partyRepublican
Spouse(s)Margaret Haycraft (1848–1884)
Martha Tucker (married 1885)

Background edit

Poston was born near Elizabethtown, Kentucky, to Temple and Judith Debrille Poston. His father was a printer and he served as a printer's devil.[1] Poston was orphaned at the age of twelve, and was apprenticed to the local county clerk, Samuel Haycraft.[1][2] Following his apprenticeship, he moved to Nashville, Tennessee, where he clerked for the Tennessee Supreme Court while reading law.[3] Poston married Haycraft's daughter, Margaret, in November 1849 and the couple had a daughter, Sarah Lee Poston, who reached adulthood. Charles Poston was listed in the 1850 census as owning at least one slave.[4]

Margaret Poston became paralyzed on February 12, 1851, possibly from a stroke while giving birth to a second child, and was cared for by relatives until her death from cancer on February 26, 1884.[1][5] On July 27, 1885, Poston married former newspaper typesetter Martha "Mattie" Tucker. The couple separated shortly afterwards, but there is no evidence they ever divorced.[6]

Early exploration and mining efforts edit

Poston traveled to California as part of the Gold Rush and took a clerk position at the San Francisco Customs House in February 1851. Poston was demoted in 1853 and complained that his replacement was a professional gambler and political appointee.[2] While at this job, he became involved with a group of French bankers interested in the lands of the recently negotiated Gadsden Purchase.[7] In late 1853, with the bankers' backing, Poston joined with mining engineer Herman Ehrenberg to organize an expedition into the territory Mexico was expected to sell to the United States. Taking a ship from San Francisco, the two became shipwrecked near the Mexican port of Guaymas. They were then detained temporarily by Mexican authorities as suspected filibusters before heading north to the Gadsden territory. The expedition visited San Xavier del Bac and Ajo, collecting mineral samples along the way, before traveling down the Gila River.[7][8] At Fort Yuma, a U.S. Army post near the confluence of the Gila and Colorado River, Poston first met the fort's commander Major Samuel P. Heintzelman.[5] While at Fort Yuma Poston surveyed a townsite on the south side of the river a mile below the fort, at Jaeger's Ferry. Poston sold the townsite called Colorado City for $20,000 when he returned to San Francisco.[9]

 
The mining town and fort of Cerro Colorado, established by Poston and Major Heintzelmen.

After returning to San Francisco, Poston left for the East Coast in search of capital to fund a mining operation in the newly acquired territory. After several unsuccessful attempts, he was introduced to several Cincinnati, Ohio, investors by Heintzelman. On March 24, 1856, US$2 million was secured to found the Sonora Exploring and Mining Company with Heintzelman as company president and Poston as managing supervisor.[5][10] The company set up headquarters in Tubac, Arizona, and began mining operations in the nearby Santa Rita Mountains and elsewhere. Poston served as alcalde of the settlement and became known as "Colonel" Poston in the town of roughly 800 people. Using the authority granted to him by the government of New Mexico Territory, he printed his own money and officiated over marriages, divorces, and the baptisms of children.[11] This continued until Father Macheboeuf, the vicar of Bishop Jean-Baptiste Lamy, was sent from Santa Fe to investigate the goings-on in Tubac. The validity of the marriages Poston had performed was questioned by the vicar, and a US$700 donation made before Father Macheboeuf sanctified the unions.[12] Charles Poston's brother, John, was murdered by Mexican outlaws at Cerro Colorado in southern Arizona, the town was established by Charles Poston.[13]

Mining operations produced US$3000 per day in silver until 1861. With the withdrawal of Union troops due to the American Civil War, Tubac saw an increase in hostilities from local Apaches and the settlement had to be abandoned.[14]

Arizona Territory edit

After being forced to leave Tubac due to the Apache siege, Poston went to Washington, D.C., and worked for General Heintzelman as a civilian aide. During this time Heintzelman introduced him to President Abraham Lincoln.[5] Poston in turn used this time to lobby both Lincoln and Congress for creation of an Arizona Territory, advertising the benefits of the area's mineral wealth to the Union cause. Toward the end of the process Poston attended an oyster dinner where the slate of territorial positions was divided among lame duck congressmen and Poston was selected as an Indian Agent for the new territory.[15]

Poston commissioned Tiffany & Co. to create a US$1500 inkwell from Arizona silver and presented the inkwell to Lincoln upon signing of the Arizona Organic Act. On 12 March 1863 Poston was appointed superintendent of Indian affairs.[16] This appointment was followed by his election as Delegate to the U.S. House of Representatives on 18 July 1864.[17] During his term of service, Poston submitted bills aimed at settling private land claims and to establish Indian reservations along the Colorado river.[5] In 1865, Poston chose not to return to Arizona during his run for reelection, and was defeated by John Noble Goodwin.[18] A final run for election to the territorial delegate position failed in 1866.[19]

Writing edit

After losing his position in Congress, Poston opened a law office in Washington D.C. In 1867 he traveled to Europe, spending time in both London and Paris. He then returned to Washington and in 1868 published a travel book, Europe in the Summer-Time. This was followed by U.S. Secretary of State William H. Seward commissioning Poston to deliver the Burlingame Treaty to the Emperor of China and to study irrigation and immigration in Asia. After China, Poston continued to India where he developed a fascination with the Parsi people and Zoroastrianism. He reached Egypt by early 1869 and was in Paris by April of that year. After living a year in Paris he moved to London where he spent the next six years. During this time he worked as an editor of a London newspaper, foreign correspondent to the New York Tribune, and as a "counselor-at-law".[19] Poston also wrote several books during this time, publishing The Parsees in 1872, The Sun Worshippers of Asia in 1877, and his poem Apache Land in 1878.[20] His work, Building a State in Apache Land was published in installments by Overland Monthly between July and October 1894.[5]

Later life edit

 
Poston in his later years

Poston returned to the United States in time for the Centennial Exposition in Philadelphia. Through his acquaintance with John Bigelow, he then became a campaign worker for Samuel J. Tilden during the U.S. presidential election of 1876. Poston expected a consul position in London if Tilden had won the election, but instead was made Registrar of the United States land office at Florence, Arizona, from July 1877 till June 1879.[20] During his time in Florence he became interested in building a Parsi fire temple on a nearby hill, paying for construction of a road to the summit.[21] The temple itself was decorated with a blue and white flag depicting a red sun and built upon the ruins of an older Indian structure.[22] Construction ended when Poston ran out of funds.[23] He attempted to raise additional money, even writing to the Shah of Iran, but his efforts failed and the temple's eternal flame failed shortly thereafter.[22] This unusual interest led to Poston being criticized as a crank and eccentric.[5]

Following his time in Florence he moved to Tucson and supported himself with a variety of positions including lecturer, mining and railroad promoter, and writer.[6] In 1884 he became a consular agent in Nogales followed by an assignment as a civilian military agent in El Paso, Texas, in 1887 and as employee of U.S. Geological Survey in 1889.[5][24]

 
Inscription on the tomb of Charles D. Poston on Poston Butte in Florence, Arizona

Poston declined into obscurity until 1897 when Whitelaw Reid published an account detailing Poston's situation. As a result, the Arizona Territorial legislature awarded Poston a pension of US$25/month in 1899 and increased this to US$35/month in 1901.[25] Poston died from apparent heart failure on June 24, 1902, in Phoenix, Arizona Territory.[26]

Despite his previously stated wish to be buried at the summit of Primrose Hill, Poston was initially buried in a pauper's grave in Phoenix.[23] His remains were removed from Phoenix and moved to Florence, Arizona, on the 100th anniversary of his birth, and buried on Primrose Hill, renamed, Poston Butte where he had never completed his "Temple to the Sun". He was entombed in an official ceremony led by Governor George W. P. Hunt.[27]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b c Goff 1985, p. 17.
  2. ^ a b Sacks 1963, p. 34.
  3. ^ "Col. C. D. Poston Died Suddenly". Arizona Republican. June 25, 1902. p. 1.
  4. ^ Weil, Julie Zauzmer (February 14, 2022). "Asked to help, Post readers sent searing evidence about dozens more enslavers in Congress". Washington Post. Retrieved February 14, 2022.
  5. ^ a b c d e f g h Dillon 1999, pp. 735–36.
  6. ^ a b Goff 1985, p. 26.
  7. ^ a b Goff 1985, p. 18.
  8. ^ Trimble 1977, p. 213.
  9. ^ Lingenfelter 1978, p. 15.
  10. ^ Goff 1985, p. 19.
  11. ^ Trimble 1977, p. 215.
  12. ^ Powell 1976, p. 42.
  13. ^ Sherman & Sherman 1969, p. 23.
  14. ^ Trimble 1977, p. 216.
  15. ^ Goff 1985, p. 15.
  16. ^ Powell 1976, pp. 43–44.
  17. ^ Goff 1985, p. 21.
  18. ^ Powell 1976, p. 46.
  19. ^ a b Goff 1985, p. 24.
  20. ^ a b Goff 1985, p. 25.
  21. ^ Goff 1985, pp. 25–26.
  22. ^ a b Stanley, John (March 25, 2014). "Arizona Explained: Charles Poston was an eccentric". Arizona Republic.
  23. ^ a b Barney, James M. (July 19, 1951). "Last Days of Charles Poston, State Pioneer". Prescott Evening Courier. p. 6.
  24. ^ Goff 1985, p. 27.
  25. ^ Goff 1985, p. 29.
  26. ^ "Father of Arizona Passes to the Beyond". The San Francisco Call. June 25, 1902. p. 9.
  27. ^ Powell 1976, p. 49.

Bibliography

  • Dillon, Richard H. (1999). "Poston, Charles Debrille". In Garraty, John A.; Carnes, Mark C. (eds.). American national Biography. New York: Oxford University Press. pp. (pg 735–6). ISBN 978-0-19-512796-6.
  • Goff, John S. (1985). Arizona Territorial Officials Volume III: The Delegates to Congress 1863–1912. Cave Creek, Arizona: Black Mountain Press. OCLC 12559708.
  • Gressinger, Alfred William. Charles D. Poston, Sunland Seer (DS King, 1961). Full-skill biography
  • Lingenfelter, Richard E. (1978). (PDF). Tucson: University of Arizona Press. ISBN 978-0-8165-0567-8. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2016-01-18.
  • Powell, Lawrence Clark (1976). Arizona, A Bicentennial History. W. W. Norton & Company. ISBN 978-0-393-05575-7.
  • Sacks, B. (Spring 1963). "The Creation of the Territory of Arizona, Part 1". Arizona and the West. 5 (1). University of Arizona Press: 29–62. JSTOR 40167044.
  • Sherman, James E.; Sherman, Barbara H. (1969). Ghost Towns of Arizona. Norman: University of Oklahoma Press. ISBN 978-0-8061-0843-8.
  • Trimble, Marshall (1977). Arizona, A Panoramic History of a Frontier State. Garden City, New York: Doubleday & Company. ISBN 978-0-385-12806-3.

External links edit

U.S. House of Representatives
Preceded by
None (new territory)
Delegate to the U.S. House of Representatives
from Arizona Territory

1864–1865
Succeeded by

charles, debrille, poston, louisiana, state, senator, from, 1960, 1964, charles, poston, april, 1825, june, 1902, american, explorer, prospector, author, politician, civil, servant, referred, father, arizona, efforts, lobbying, creation, territory, poston, als. For the Louisiana state senator from 1960 to 1964 see Charles M Poston Charles Debrille Poston April 20 1825 June 24 1902 was an American explorer prospector author politician and civil servant He is referred to as the Father of Arizona due to his efforts lobbying for creation of the territory Poston was also Arizona Territory s first Delegate to the U S House of Representatives Charles D PostonDelegate to the U S House of Representatives from Arizona TerritoryIn office December 5 1864 March 3 1865Preceded byNone new territory Succeeded byJohn Noble GoodwinPersonal detailsBorn 1825 04 20 April 20 1825Elizabethtown Kentucky USDiedJune 24 1902 1902 06 24 aged 77 Phoenix Arizona TerritoryPolitical partyRepublicanSpouse s Margaret Haycraft 1848 1884 Martha Tucker married 1885 Contents 1 Background 2 Early exploration and mining efforts 3 Arizona Territory 4 Writing 5 Later life 6 See also 7 References 8 External linksBackground editPoston was born near Elizabethtown Kentucky to Temple and Judith Debrille Poston His father was a printer and he served as a printer s devil 1 Poston was orphaned at the age of twelve and was apprenticed to the local county clerk Samuel Haycraft 1 2 Following his apprenticeship he moved to Nashville Tennessee where he clerked for the Tennessee Supreme Court while reading law 3 Poston married Haycraft s daughter Margaret in November 1849 and the couple had a daughter Sarah Lee Poston who reached adulthood Charles Poston was listed in the 1850 census as owning at least one slave 4 Margaret Poston became paralyzed on February 12 1851 possibly from a stroke while giving birth to a second child and was cared for by relatives until her death from cancer on February 26 1884 1 5 On July 27 1885 Poston married former newspaper typesetter Martha Mattie Tucker The couple separated shortly afterwards but there is no evidence they ever divorced 6 Early exploration and mining efforts editPoston traveled to California as part of the Gold Rush and took a clerk position at the San Francisco Customs House in February 1851 Poston was demoted in 1853 and complained that his replacement was a professional gambler and political appointee 2 While at this job he became involved with a group of French bankers interested in the lands of the recently negotiated Gadsden Purchase 7 In late 1853 with the bankers backing Poston joined with mining engineer Herman Ehrenberg to organize an expedition into the territory Mexico was expected to sell to the United States Taking a ship from San Francisco the two became shipwrecked near the Mexican port of Guaymas They were then detained temporarily by Mexican authorities as suspected filibusters before heading north to the Gadsden territory The expedition visited San Xavier del Bac and Ajo collecting mineral samples along the way before traveling down the Gila River 7 8 At Fort Yuma a U S Army post near the confluence of the Gila and Colorado River Poston first met the fort s commander Major Samuel P Heintzelman 5 While at Fort Yuma Poston surveyed a townsite on the south side of the river a mile below the fort at Jaeger s Ferry Poston sold the townsite called Colorado City for 20 000 when he returned to San Francisco 9 nbsp The mining town and fort of Cerro Colorado established by Poston and Major Heintzelmen After returning to San Francisco Poston left for the East Coast in search of capital to fund a mining operation in the newly acquired territory After several unsuccessful attempts he was introduced to several Cincinnati Ohio investors by Heintzelman On March 24 1856 US 2 million was secured to found the Sonora Exploring and Mining Company with Heintzelman as company president and Poston as managing supervisor 5 10 The company set up headquarters in Tubac Arizona and began mining operations in the nearby Santa Rita Mountains and elsewhere Poston served as alcalde of the settlement and became known as Colonel Poston in the town of roughly 800 people Using the authority granted to him by the government of New Mexico Territory he printed his own money and officiated over marriages divorces and the baptisms of children 11 This continued until Father Macheboeuf the vicar of Bishop Jean Baptiste Lamy was sent from Santa Fe to investigate the goings on in Tubac The validity of the marriages Poston had performed was questioned by the vicar and a US 700 donation made before Father Macheboeuf sanctified the unions 12 Charles Poston s brother John was murdered by Mexican outlaws at Cerro Colorado in southern Arizona the town was established by Charles Poston 13 Mining operations produced US 3000 per day in silver until 1861 With the withdrawal of Union troops due to the American Civil War Tubac saw an increase in hostilities from local Apaches and the settlement had to be abandoned 14 Arizona Territory editAfter being forced to leave Tubac due to the Apache siege Poston went to Washington D C and worked for General Heintzelman as a civilian aide During this time Heintzelman introduced him to President Abraham Lincoln 5 Poston in turn used this time to lobby both Lincoln and Congress for creation of an Arizona Territory advertising the benefits of the area s mineral wealth to the Union cause Toward the end of the process Poston attended an oyster dinner where the slate of territorial positions was divided among lame duck congressmen and Poston was selected as an Indian Agent for the new territory 15 Poston commissioned Tiffany amp Co to create a US 1500 inkwell from Arizona silver and presented the inkwell to Lincoln upon signing of the Arizona Organic Act On 12 March 1863 Poston was appointed superintendent of Indian affairs 16 This appointment was followed by his election as Delegate to the U S House of Representatives on 18 July 1864 17 During his term of service Poston submitted bills aimed at settling private land claims and to establish Indian reservations along the Colorado river 5 In 1865 Poston chose not to return to Arizona during his run for reelection and was defeated by John Noble Goodwin 18 A final run for election to the territorial delegate position failed in 1866 19 Writing editAfter losing his position in Congress Poston opened a law office in Washington D C In 1867 he traveled to Europe spending time in both London and Paris He then returned to Washington and in 1868 published a travel book Europe in the Summer Time This was followed by U S Secretary of State William H Seward commissioning Poston to deliver the Burlingame Treaty to the Emperor of China and to study irrigation and immigration in Asia After China Poston continued to India where he developed a fascination with the Parsi people and Zoroastrianism He reached Egypt by early 1869 and was in Paris by April of that year After living a year in Paris he moved to London where he spent the next six years During this time he worked as an editor of a London newspaper foreign correspondent to the New York Tribune and as a counselor at law 19 Poston also wrote several books during this time publishing The Parsees in 1872 The Sun Worshippers of Asia in 1877 and his poem Apache Land in 1878 20 His work Building a State in Apache Land was published in installments by Overland Monthly between July and October 1894 5 Later life edit nbsp Poston in his later years Poston returned to the United States in time for the Centennial Exposition in Philadelphia Through his acquaintance with John Bigelow he then became a campaign worker for Samuel J Tilden during the U S presidential election of 1876 Poston expected a consul position in London if Tilden had won the election but instead was made Registrar of the United States land office at Florence Arizona from July 1877 till June 1879 20 During his time in Florence he became interested in building a Parsi fire temple on a nearby hill paying for construction of a road to the summit 21 The temple itself was decorated with a blue and white flag depicting a red sun and built upon the ruins of an older Indian structure 22 Construction ended when Poston ran out of funds 23 He attempted to raise additional money even writing to the Shah of Iran but his efforts failed and the temple s eternal flame failed shortly thereafter 22 This unusual interest led to Poston being criticized as a crank and eccentric 5 Following his time in Florence he moved to Tucson and supported himself with a variety of positions including lecturer mining and railroad promoter and writer 6 In 1884 he became a consular agent in Nogales followed by an assignment as a civilian military agent in El Paso Texas in 1887 and as employee of U S Geological Survey in 1889 5 24 nbsp Inscription on the tomb of Charles D Poston on Poston Butte in Florence Arizona Poston declined into obscurity until 1897 when Whitelaw Reid published an account detailing Poston s situation As a result the Arizona Territorial legislature awarded Poston a pension of US 25 month in 1899 and increased this to US 35 month in 1901 25 Poston died from apparent heart failure on June 24 1902 in Phoenix Arizona Territory 26 Despite his previously stated wish to be buried at the summit of Primrose Hill Poston was initially buried in a pauper s grave in Phoenix 23 His remains were removed from Phoenix and moved to Florence Arizona on the 100th anniversary of his birth and buried on Primrose Hill renamed Poston Butte where he had never completed his Temple to the Sun He was entombed in an official ceremony led by Governor George W P Hunt 27 See also edit nbsp Arizona portal nbsp Biography portal List of United States representatives from Arizona Hole in the Rock Papago Park References edit a b c Goff 1985 p 17 a b Sacks 1963 p 34 Col C D Poston Died Suddenly Arizona Republican June 25 1902 p 1 Weil Julie Zauzmer February 14 2022 Asked to help Post readers sent searing evidence about dozens more enslavers in Congress Washington Post Retrieved February 14 2022 a b c d e f g h Dillon 1999 pp 735 36 a b Goff 1985 p 26 a b Goff 1985 p 18 Trimble 1977 p 213 Lingenfelter 1978 p 15 Goff 1985 p 19 Trimble 1977 p 215 Powell 1976 p 42 Sherman amp Sherman 1969 p 23 Trimble 1977 p 216 Goff 1985 p 15 Powell 1976 pp 43 44 Goff 1985 p 21 Powell 1976 p 46 a b Goff 1985 p 24 a b Goff 1985 p 25 Goff 1985 pp 25 26 a b Stanley John March 25 2014 Arizona Explained Charles Poston was an eccentric Arizona Republic a b Barney James M July 19 1951 Last Days of Charles Poston State Pioneer Prescott Evening Courier p 6 Goff 1985 p 27 Goff 1985 p 29 Father of Arizona Passes to the Beyond The San Francisco Call June 25 1902 p 9 Powell 1976 p 49 Bibliography Dillon Richard H 1999 Poston Charles Debrille In Garraty John A Carnes Mark C eds American national Biography New York Oxford University Press pp pg 735 6 ISBN 978 0 19 512796 6 Goff John S 1985 Arizona Territorial Officials Volume III The Delegates to Congress 1863 1912 Cave Creek Arizona Black Mountain Press OCLC 12559708 Gressinger Alfred William Charles D Poston Sunland Seer DS King 1961 Full skill biography Lingenfelter Richard E 1978 Steamboats on the Colorado River 1852 1916 PDF Tucson University of Arizona Press ISBN 978 0 8165 0567 8 Archived from the original PDF on 2016 01 18 Powell Lawrence Clark 1976 Arizona A Bicentennial History W W Norton amp Company ISBN 978 0 393 05575 7 Sacks B Spring 1963 The Creation of the Territory of Arizona Part 1 Arizona and the West 5 1 University of Arizona Press 29 62 JSTOR 40167044 Sherman James E Sherman Barbara H 1969 Ghost Towns of Arizona Norman University of Oklahoma Press ISBN 978 0 8061 0843 8 Trimble Marshall 1977 Arizona A Panoramic History of a Frontier State Garden City New York Doubleday amp Company ISBN 978 0 385 12806 3 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Charles D Poston United States Congress Charles D Poston id P000458 Biographical Directory of the United States Congress Works by Charles Debrille Poston at Project Gutenberg Works by or about Charles Debrille Poston at Internet Archive Works by Charles Debrille Poston at LibriVox public domain audiobooks nbsp U S House of Representatives Preceded byNone new territory Delegate to the U S House of Representatives from Arizona Territory1864 1865 Succeeded byJohn Noble Goodwin Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Charles Debrille Poston amp oldid 1198326100, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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