Talk:37th United States Congress
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Untitled
edit- This article is COMPLETE and meets the current standard for this series of articles.
- suggestions for future improvements:
- supplemental Senate & House committees article
- supplemental district maps article
- narrative for major legislation
- narrative for major events
Major Legislation candidates
editI know better than to rely on 1880s memoirs of the Civil War period. But I do think that they can offer lines of inquiry. Stumbling through the Library of Congress pages (they are getting better; early days had several different uncoordinated contractors with narrow scopes) I found James G. Blaine’s 1884 snippet http://www.archives.gov/exhibits/treasures_of_congress/text/page12_text.html . So with some temerity, I report his “important legislation” items for the 37th Congress:
- expanding the Union Army and Navy
- (Jeff Davis calls for 100,000, 75,000 arms are taken from US armories, and Lincoln calls for 75,000? Need scholarship here.)
- the nation’s first Federal income tax.
- (the whole question of funding the war effort : to wit, it's in the Revenue Act of 1861 http://www.ustreas.gov/education/fact-sheets/taxes/ustax.shtml
- ending slavery in the District of Columbia.
- (something Lincoln had proposed as a one-term Representative, compensation up to $300 per freedman)
- the first Freedman’s Bureau
- (this is earlier than most summary accounts for the general reader; any connection between these and abolition committee influencing the rouge generals abolishing slavery in their command districts?)
- the first Joint Committee on the Conduct of the War.
- (the radical’s voice, one of Lincoln’s thorns, Blaine said it helped Northern strategy and went after inefficiency and corruption. I do remember tales of early Army contractor blankets passed off as woven which were felt. They melted in the first rain.)
The Clerk’s webpage http://clerk.house.gov/art_history/highlights.html lists two pieces of legislation as especially noteworthy in the context of the entire history of Congress:
- Abolishing slavery in the District of Columbia, April 11, 1862.
- The Homestead Act, May 20, 1862 – which we already have.
So I would go with abolishing slavery in DC. Are there any other scholarly sources to support Blaine’s other legislation suggestions? TheVirginiaHistorian (talk) 10:15, 22 September 2010 (UTC)
District bibliography section?
editAh, I think I misunderstood the intent of the Discussion header from 'stilltim' calling for a supplemental Congressional District maps article. Can the earlier section be recast into an annotated bibliography for readers?
- an abbreviated section might read:
Congressional Districts of the 37th
editReaders can find each state’s Congressional Districts in
- (a) The Congressional Directory for the 37th Congress, available in some collections,
- (b) the US Official Congressional Directory,
- (c) Kenneth Martis’ “Historical Atlas of Political Parties in the United States Congress, 1789-1989, which is keyed to the evolution of political parties in the United States, and
- (d) Stanley B. Parson’s “United States congressional districts and data, 1843-1883” which is keyed to county census data in population, commerce and agriculture.
Election histories and some district descriptions listing constituent counties can be found at United States House of Representatives elections, 1860.
- I don't know, but I see no need to add information about congressional districts which has no bearing on this article. Each member is listed by district, so it would just be redundant to list them a second time. I reduced your earlier (otherwise good) addition to a note because that's the only really new and useful information it added to the article.—Markles 21:57, 29 September 2010 (UTC)
- The article concerns the makeup of the 37th Congress. The states are represented in the Senate. The House directly represents the people in districts. Just as states are represented for Senators, the House Congressional Districts as geographic aggregates of about 93,000 persons in this Congress should be addressed.
- This consideration of the people is important in our discussions of the time, as some (15% of 1860 voters)then presumed a sovereignty to the states apart from the sovereign people. To organize an article concerning the national legislature aggregating data by states, omitting sources related to the people may be, perhaps uniquely in the context of the 37th-38th Congresses, a point of view.
- The four sources, listed above for accessing district maps, allow the reader to investigate the people in these places. The two scholarly reference publications are especially powerful for use by the reader in understanding the people there in their political, population, economic and social aspects. Martis is my go-to guy for first look. Parsons, I'm just getting to know. TheVirginiaHistorian (talk) 15:05, 2 October 2010 (UTC)
Residences in DC
editAlso, when I find it, the old Congressional Directories have steet maps of the boarding houses and hotels on Capitol Hill along with an index to where each member was residing during the session. Does that fit in the 37th Congress somewhere under some category? TheVirginiaHistorian (talk) 20:29, 29 September 2010 (UTC)
- Interesting, I'll admit. I don't know if it adds much that's useful because where a Rep/Senator lived during a 2-year period seems too trivial for inclusion. For better guidance, see Wikipedia:Handling trivia.—Markles 21:57, 29 September 2010 (UTC)
- Where a member of the 37th Congress lived on Capitol hill was not trivial to them then.
- In the 37th Congress, Charles Sumner had returned to the Senate after his three years' absence. According to biogaphers such as David Herbert Donald, Members lived together with others who had their back in a street-smart sense. They went to the Capitol in armed groups, and returned home in armed groups. They chose streets to navigate their commute so as to avoid political enemies. Sumner had considerable experience in Europe, and was fluent in French, Spanish, German and Italian. He was elevated to Chairmanship of the Senate Foreign Affairs Committee in the 37th Congress. TheVirginiaHistorian (talk) 12:15, 2 October 2010 (UTC)
- Although there is a danger that such inclusion in our contemporary world would set off a new frenzy for bronze commemorative plaques and yet another elevated plateau of inflated real estate prices on The Hill. If an editor is in the market to purchase, let me ensure them that is not my intent. And anyway, the chance passed me by in the 1970s. Rats. Wouldda, Couldda, Shouldda.TheVirginiaHistorian (talk) 12:15, 2 October 2010 (UTC)
- Yes, I'm sure they cared where they lived. There is always more information we could include: Chiefs of staff; Spouses (mistresses); shoe sizes; etc. But where Charles Sumner slept is of little importance to the 37th Congress. WP has some standards for inclusion. Perhaps your sentence above ("Members lived together with others who had their back in a street-smart sense…") could be included in the lede to give us a flavor of life in the 37th Congress, but an all-inclusive list of addresses would be excessive. —Markles 13:17, 2 October 2010 (UTC)
History of 37th in events and legislation.
editper StillTim above, the narrative is taken primarily from a chapter in a collection of essays edited by Julian E. Zelizer, "The American Congress: the building of democracy", 2004, 765pp. The chapter on the Civil War congresses was written by Mark Neely.
- Mark E. Neely, Jr., is the McCabe-Greer Professor of Civil War History at The Pennsylvania State University since 1998. He won a Pulitzer Prize for History is 1992 for his “The Fate of Liberty”. TheVirginiaHistorian (talk) 13:41, 24 October 2010 (UTC)
the first two sessions were special
editBetween Neely and Bassett, I think I have the first two special sessions sorted out. The Congressional Globe confirms the legislators meeting and addressing the topics as represented by the two sources.
- The March session was special since a President called for it (splendidly phrased by Buchanan to address national concerns, quoted in its entirety in the Globe online at Library of Congress. The July 4 session was special, not only because Lincoln called it before the calendar agreed to at adjournment, but because regular sessions did not usually start until December ... Washington heat in the summer ...
so "special" still can be confusing relative to the meeting sessions versus enactment sessions, versus composition of the sessions, versus calendar resolutions and presidential calls. It just makes the pursuit more interesting. TheVirginiaHistorian (talk) 18:38, 31 October 2010 (UTC)
Political Science is differ'nt
editI expanded "Congress as election machinery" from two interesting political science surveys of Congress from the First Congress to the close of the twentieth century.
Stephen C. Erikson on incumbency (Cato Journal, 1995) and John W. Swain on turnover (American Politics Research, 2000). Both use the Party Era/System/Period categories which Kenneth Martis uses. Both systemmatically apply each of their criteria and each of their methodology cross almost two-hundred years of Membership and Congresses.
Spikes and valleys in these kinds of long term graphics seem to me to be a more useful way to suggest avenues for historic inquiry ... an alternative to the time tested sifting through documents which fall to hand, this suggests aggressively pursuing sources to explain the anomalies manifest in the data ... these are not always novel, they can be confirming: we see turnover spikes in Swain's work associated with the Civil War, Reconstruction and the Populist protests, for instance.
I look for this outside corroberation ever since learning that both Allied and German newspapers wrote of battles that were not, and did not report battles that were. Since after every major battle, both sidees had to quickly bury tens of thousands nearby the site, outside confirmation of WWI battles could be made by a survey of German and Allied burial reports. The burial reports of the two sides corresponded, even when the newspapers of each side did not. Anthropological surveys and soundings of burial reports confirmed their accuracy. TheVirginiaHistorian (talk) 16:34, 4 November 2010 (UTC)
Generations
edit"Strauss and Howe" as historical reference is ably described in the Wikipedia article on them. This is another comprehensive source surveying an aspect of each Congress, in this case, the age cohorts and the characteristics of their beliefs, thought, families, life styles, and action. In the box summary page of each generation, there is "period of political leadership" noting the years of each plurality in the House, Senate, and majority of the Supreme Court. A list of the Presidents from that generation follows. Each write-up includes historically important figures, including politicians and political movements. In appendix B, Table 3 lists the National leadership share, principally Congress, 1775-1989, by generation. TheVirginiaHistorian (talk) 19:24, 7 November 2010 (UTC)
five-state dual representation
editFor the 37th Congress, most narratives I've seen make a nod in the general direction to those leaving Congress for the secessionist movement, with an example or two, and expulsions as in the case of Senator R.M.T. Hunter of Virginia (did he think he could hold dual office in both US and CS Congresses?!???)
I thought it worthwhile to include those included in our narrative introduction.
During the 37th Congress, Lincoln declared in the Emancipation Proclamation that several places were not in rebellion, including Virginia tidewater (three of nine remaining seats after WV's three), Louisiana (three of four) and Tennessee (all eight).
I have not found the rationale Congress used in the 38th Congress to strip representation from those presidentially declared not in rebellion less than four months before; all three states changed numbers of representatives following the 1860 Census ... did the Radical Republicans suggest that no members would be seated until loyal state legislatures met to redraw Congressional District boundaries?
Any help? TheVirginiaHistorian (talk) 17:32, 17 January 2011 (UTC)
Did 37th Congress set the 50% standard too high?
editOn the subject of representation seated in Congress, I would like to develop an addition to the article. Here is the line of inquiry.
In the preliminary Sep 1862 Emancipation Proclamation, the standard for representation in Congress seems to be of half the votes of 1860. Tennessee was not 'in rebellion' as of January 1 proclamation, but still out of the 38th Congress March 4. Virginia (Alexandria) and Louisiana (New Orleans) got partial delegations in the 37th, none in the 38th.
- Was the referenced 50% standard Lincoln's or that of the 37th Congress? Did Tennessee meet it, or not?
- Did Congress pass legislation, a Joint Resolution, a floor vote from elections committee, or a ruling from the Chair?
- Did the 37th or the 38th Congress act to deny previous TN, VA, LA seats only AFTER midterm Republican losses?
- Was Congress side-stepping the issue of black suffrage by denying those three delegations?
- Did the same rationale denying representatives then serve to deny elected TN and LA Electoral College votes in 1864?
The Confederate Congress let their Tennessee, Virginia and Lousiana men (Kentucky and Missouri, too) stay on for the duration, independent of any elections among the people there.
Was Tennessee unable to meet the US standard, including the Union soldier vote? Was that part of choosing Andrew Johnson, who as US Senator would be out of office? Was it why Lincoln proposed 10% of 1860 voting for readmission, never passed by Congress?
With 10%,'reconstructed' Louisiana might vote black suffrage. Lincoln's speech on this very subject steeled John Wilkes Booth to declare "that is the last speech he will ever make" ...
Along this line of inquiry into the US - CS dual representation, does anyone have any reading suggestions? TheVirginiaHistorian (talk) 16:23, 5 February 2011 (UTC)
If the Texans were certified, seated and attending, they were there.
editSome would count Texas seceded at the popular referendum, February 23. Nevertheless, in an Article about the 37th Congress, an account should be made of the men certified, seated and attending. The detail is further down in the article, Texas Senators, Louis T. Wigfall (D), served until March 23, 1861, vacant thereafter. But John Hemphill (senator) (D), served to July 11, 1861, until expelled by Congress. His seat went vacant thereafter. TheVirginiaHistorian (talk) 04:10, 10 March 2011 (UTC)
- Didn't want to leave it at the above on this page. The cite was from the History of the Senate webpage, quoting the retired Secretary of the Senate memoirs. Sumter is fired on in April, Texas' most esteemed jurist, John Hemphill, withdraws only on expulsion in July. Makes me want to find out his rationale. He, at least, apparently believed he was representing Texas in some way.
- While St.onge addressed the facts on the ground in Texas at the time, my guess is there was a mindset in the Senate and with its Secretary, that as long as Mr. Hemphill was present in the US Senate each morning, Texas was represented in the US Congress in some way. I would speculate there was an "inside the beltway" mentality in the Congress before there was a beltway. Towards concensus, I agree to the edit. It is well enough to have the dates of service in the Senate roll. Thanks for the good eye to chronology. TheVirginiaHistorian (talk) 16:33, 12 March 2011 (UTC)
Major events - lots going on during a war.
editI kept all previous events and references, and used the convention of linking major events to other WP articles. Added developments altering the strategic balance by water: blockade and riverine. Habeas corpus and conscription are of considerabe interest, so both Davis and Lincoln's actions are noted with citations. Both were supported by their respective Congresses. TheVirginiaHistorian (talk) 16:23, 12 March 2011 (UTC)
- Lincoln issued preliminary proclamation in time to make it a feature of midterm election campaign, but did not risk another offensive (Fredericksburg) until after elections. Included Richmond descriptor to Peninsular Campaign for new readers, and linked good WP articles on Richmond and Washington 'during the Civil War'. TheVirginiaHistorian (talk) 12:39, 11 April 2011 (UTC)
- Savannah is closed within two months of the capture of Fort Pulaski, nothing in, nothing out, per the National Park Service "Fort Pulaski NM Historical Handbook, No. 18" by Ralston B. Lattimore. Disambiguation posted on WP:Battle of Savannah. TheVirginiaHistorian (talk) 02:28, 4 June 2011 (UTC)
.
The "people" vs the "electorate"
editContribution moved from User:GoldRingChip's talk page:
- Under Major Events the article is biased. It states "the people" of particular states voted for secession. The ELECTORATE would be accurate whereas "the people" is highly inaccurate. Blacks were people and were excluded from voting of course. Claiming "the people" were for secession disregards history. For instance in Tennessee the first vote was AGAINST secession, but no mention is made of this. The second vote succeeded because the secessionists had enough time to corrupt the vote, scare off pro-Union voters & because a change probably did occur with a small tilt towards secession.
- I am unable to make the change from "people" to "electorate". Could you? — Preceding unsigned comment added by 99.32.60.7 (talk) 06:45, 22 August 2011 (UTC)
- In my opinion the point is well taken, since the EXCLUSION of a large part of the people, reduces the white population to "the electorate". Although in a current election only let's say 40% of the population vote, the other 60% are tacitly concurring with the result, because they chose not to vote. Or would one contend that the blacks were not part of "the people" at the time of this Congress? I'd rather finish this discussion before reverting back and forth... Kraxler (talk) 12:45, 27 August 2011 (UTC)
- In political contexts, "the people" does not mean every person. Even where every person is allowed to vote, the results attributed to "the people" do not represent everyone's views (viz., those who lost the referendum). Saying that the people decided a thing is standard English for announcing the results of an election that was put to the people, regardless of voter turnout, breadth of the electorate, etc. Saying that the electorate did this or that is not standard English. The arguments for using "the electorate" rather than "the people" seem to suggest that standard English is incorrect and ought to be changed. Perhaps these arguments are sound. But Wikipedia is not the place to introduce politically-motivated alterations to the language, regardless of how good those alterations would be. Instead, we should go with what is now the most idiomatic usage until the scholarly consensus has become to avoid speaking of "the people" in these contexts. RJC TalkContribs 16:49, 27 August 2011 (UTC)
- Your argument is still beside the point. I already admitted your idiomatic use of "the people" (see above), but you do not consider the historical context. You mix up voter turnout (people who do not vote, but tacitly and explicitly concur with the result) with the forcible exclusion of a large part (perhaps the majority) of the people who openly rioted against the decision of the minority. I think in this context, if "electorate" seems to be "unidiomatic", one would rather say "Tennessee ratified a Secession Ordinance" using the name of the State, not "the people". At the appropriate place one could explain further. That the State seceded is a fact, that "the people" were for it, is contested by the above anonymous user. I think there is a guideline that says "Avoid controversial content" or some such. The question is whether this can be considered controversial. Kraxler (talk) 13:34, 28 August 2011 (UTC)
- How about "Virginia/Tennessee approved its Ordinance of Secession by popular referendum"? That parallels the other statement and retains the fact that these states put the issue to a vote (rather than held a convention, as did the other states). It also does not use words that serve no purpose other than to weaken the connection between the outcome and the will of the people. (Incidentally, the article on Tennessee in the American Civil War does not mention massive voter fraud, so we shouldn't tip-toe around the issue because an IP wants to mitigate Tennessee's role in the Confederate cause. Violence, fraud, and oh yes a small change in opinion is how the IP wants Tennessee's vote represented, rather than the way it is usually represented: the federal government's willingness to use force changed Tennessee's mind about staying within the Union. The reason the first referendum is not mentioned is because it was taken during the 36th Congress, but the IP wants it mentioned here to further set Tennessee's vote "in context.") RJC TalkContribs 16:12, 28 August 2011 (UTC)
- "approved (or ratified) its Ordinance of Secession by popular referendum" sounds good to me. Much better than the possibly misleading "the people". To go deeper into explanations in this article is certainly out of scope. Thank you, RJC. Kraxler (talk) 17:15, 28 August 2011 (UTC)
Events - southern states' delegations
edit- - Copy edit for neutrality: four more states delegations see members withdraw, as alternative assertions about states is not admitted by the 37th Congress.
- - Links for reader assistance are found in three various WP sources: for Virginia, the restored government of Virginia; for Tennessee, a section in the Andrew Johnson article; for Louisiana, from the "[state] in the American Civil War" series article.
- - As the withdrawal of members where rebellion occurs merits inclusion in the article's "major events", so -- in the context of the 37th Congress -- members who REMAIN from delegations where the Confederacy recognizes membership in THEIR Congress is of some interest and import for the course of the rebellion and efforts by the 37th Congress to suppress it.
- - In the copy-edit just made, Missouri and Kentucky delegations are mentioned as notes -- leaving aside a more detailed representation in this summary of the continuance of Missouri's entire delegation in the face of secessionist challenge at arms in the southeast and southwest of the state, -- and the continuance of Kentucky's entire delegation which did not admit organized rebellion internally, but tries neutrality before declaring itself Union. -- I am not sure how to fairly represent these two additional major developments in the 37th Congress -- though Lincoln said to lose Kentucky was to lose the entire issue [of sustaining the Union].
- - Still undetermined on my part -- should ad hoc secessionist conventions which do no follow any regular procedure from either the U.S. or the C.S. Congress merit the label, "Secession Convention", or should it read, "Secessionist Convention", especially since in terms of the 37th Congress, there were no secessions, only secessionists. TheVirginiaHistorian (talk) 15:02, 28 October 2012 (UTC)
Subsection titled "secession"
editThe subsection titled "secession" is renamed "rebellion" to conform with contemporaneous terminology used in the United States Congress. TheVirginiaHistorian (talk) 08:43, 14 April 2014 (UTC)
Error at House of Representatives section
editAn error at the #House of Representatives section, the citation notes that, "Once source reports no Virginians in this Congress, (Parsons 1986, Greenwood Publishing Group) while another source recognizes five (Martis). Parsons is reported to reference the Biographical Directory of the United States Congress on page 165. However my edition of 1913 on page 224 includes them.
Additonally, articles can be found currently online in the Biographical Directory of the United States Congress for the following Virginia delegation in the 37th Congress 1861-1863 elected under the Restored Virginia Government: U.S. Senator Waitman T. Willey, U.S. Senator John S. Carlile, and Representatives William G. Brown, Jacob B. Blair, Kellian V. Whaley, Charles H. Upton, from Fairfax and Loudoun Counties, who served almost a year1861-1862 before Congress determined he was not entitled to his seat on being appointed consul to Switzerland, replaced by elected Lewis McKenzie, and Joseph E. Segar, though Segar alone from the Eastern Shore was not seated.
Without objection, I will correct the error. TheVirginiaHistorian (talk) 18:12, 10 October 2016 (UTC)
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Independent Democrats
editIn the "House of Representatives" table in the "Party summary" section, "Independent Democratic" is listed as having 56 seats at the end of the previous Congress, far more than the regular Democratic Party. But then on the next row, the regular Democratic Party is listed as having 44 seats. Are these number accurate? Orser67 (talk) 03:24, 26 May 2019 (UTC)