Nathaniel P. Tallmadge

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Nathaniel P. Tallmadge (February 8, 1795Template:Spaced ndashNovember 2, 1864) was an American lawyer, politician, and Wisconsin pioneer. He served two terms as United States senator from New York (1833–1839; 1840–1844) and was the 3rd governor of the Wisconsin Territory (1844–1845). Originally active in politics as a Jacksonian Democrat, he fell out with the party during the presidency of Martin Van Buren and eventually became a Whig.

Tallmadge was also one of the first landowners in what is now Fond du Lac, Wisconsin. His former estate outside Fond du Lac is now the site of the city's oldest cemetery, Rienzi Cemetery.

He was a member of the Tallmadge (or Talmadge) family of New England, which had many notable members in American political and cultural history. His eldest son, Isaac S. Tallmadge, was a member of the Wisconsin Legislature, and his grandson, Charles R. Boardman, was adjutant general of Wisconsin.

His middle name is a matter of dispute. His Congressional biography and other sources list it as Pitcher, indicating association with New York governor Nathaniel Pitcher; his gravestone, however, lists his middle name as Potter—his mother's maiden name.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn

Early life

Tallmadge was born in Chatham, New York, on February 8, 1795. He attended Williams College before transferring to Union College, from which he graduated in 1815.Template:Sfn He then moved to Poughkeepsie to study law with his first cousin, James Tallmadge Jr.Template:Sfn He attained admission to the bar in 1818, and entered into a legal practice in partnership with his cousin, James. The partnership continued until James Tallmadge's election as Lieutenant Governor of New York in 1825, after which Nathaniel Tallmadge continued to practice on his own.Template:Sfn

Career

Tallmadge became active in politics as a Jacksonian. He was a member of the New York State Assembly (Dutchess Co.) in 1828, and he served in the New York State Senate (2nd D.) from 1830 to 1833, sitting in the 53rd, 54th, 55th and 56th New York State Legislatures.

United States Senator

In 1833, he was elected as a Jacksonian Democrat to the United States Senate for the term beginning on March 4, 1833. In 1838, he was a member of the "Conservatives," a faction of former Democrats unhappy with the policies of Andrew Jackson's successor, Martin Van Buren and Van Buren's grip on New York politics as head of the Albany Regency political machine.Template:Sfn The conservatives endorsed the Whig candidates for Governor and Lieutenant Governor, William H. Seward and Luther Bradish, who were narrowly elected over incumbents William L. Marcy and John Tracy.Template:Sfn The defection of the conservatives was considered a harbinger for the 1840 presidential election, at which Van Buren was defeated by William Henry Harrison.Template:Sfn

By the time of New York's 1839 election for U.S. Senator, Tallmadge had become identified with the Whigs, who nominated him for reelection.Template:Sfn Democrats controlled the State Senate, and they objected to Tallmadge because of his decision to abandon Van Buren.Template:Sfn By refusing to vote, the Democrats in the State Senate prevented any candidate from obtaining a majority.Template:Sfn As a result of the legislature's failure to make a choice, Tallmadge's seat became vacant on March 4, 1839.Template:Sfn By 1840, the Whigs controlled both houses of the legislature.Template:Sfn On January 13, 1840, they reelected Tallmadge to the Senate, and indicated in their approved resolutions that the effective date was as of March 4, 1839.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn He took his seat on January 27, 1840, and served until June 17, 1844, when he resigned to accept appointment as a territorial governor.Template:Sfn

In 1840, Tallmadge was offered the Whig nomination for vice president.Template:Sfn He declined, and John Tyler was nominated and elected on the Whig ticket with Harrison.Template:Sfn According to published accounts in 1841, Tallmadge also declined a cabinet post and an ambassadorship, because he preferred to remain in the Senate.Template:Sfn

Governor of Wisconsin Territory

In the early 1840s, Tallmadge purchased a large tract of land in what became Fond du Lac, Wisconsin, in anticipation of constructing a home for his retirement.Template:Sfn In 1844, John Tyler, who had become president following Harrison's death, offered Tallmadge the governorship of Wisconsin Territory.Template:Sfn He accepted, and moved to Fond du Lac. The Senate confirmed the appointment in June, and Tallmadge arrived in Wisconsin in August.Template:Sfn James Duane Doty, who had been governor since 1841, had a contentious relationship with the territorial legislature.Template:Sfn Although legislators were initially suspicious of Tallmadge, who had not lived in Wisconsin prior to his appointment, he won them over by taking a conciliatory approach in his initial message. Promising not to take an overly partisan approach, he advocated for the expansion of railroads, in keeping with the position he had taken as a state legislator and a U.S. Senator.Template:Sfn He also argued against extending the naturalization period for Wisconsin citizenship to 21 years, and promoted experimental farms and agricultural societies.Template:Sfn The legislature authorized printing and distribution of his message, including 750 copies in German, the first time Wisconsin legislators had ever taken such an action.Template:Sfn

The 1844 presidential election was won by Democrat James K. Polk.Template:Sfn In April 1845, Polk nominated Henry Dodge to serve as territorial governor.Template:Sfn Dodge, who had also been Wisconsin Territory's first governor, was easily confirmed by the U.S. Senate, and assumed his new post on April 8, 1845.Template:Sfn

Later years

Tallmadge decided to stay in Wisconsin, and built his planned residence in Fond du Lac, where he practiced law while living in semi-retirement.Template:Sfn He also maintained a home in Washington, D.C., where he frequently traveled to serve as an unofficial ambassador for Wisconsin to the federal government and lobbyist for its interests.Template:Sfn

Later in his life Tallmadge became a spiritualist, and was convinced of the existence of the afterlife.Template:Sfn He had previously been a believer in premonitions, and claimed he had one that resulted in him narrowly escaped death aboard the USS Princeton when a cannon exploded and took the lives of five people.Template:Sfn In the 1840s, he began to claim that he was visited by spirits, and he authored introduction to Charles Linton's The Healing of the Nations, a book which Linton claimed had been dictated to him by ghosts.Template:Sfn He also wrote an Appendix to the first volume of Spiritualism by John W. Edmonds and George T. Dexter.Template:Sfn After the death of John C. Calhoun, Tallmadge claimed to be visited by his spirit, and said that it could communicate with him.Template:Sfn Tallmadge was also reported to be a believer in other supposed spirit communications, including the floor and table rappings that typically accompanied séances.Template:Sfn

Personal life and family

Nathaniel Tallmadge was the eighth of at least ten children born to Joel Tallmadge (1756–1834) and his wife Phebe Rhoda (Template:Nee Potter; 1779–1842).Template:Sfn Joel Tallmadge was a veteran of the American Revolutionary War and a blacksmith before attaining success as a farmer and lumber merchant at his home on Tallmadge Hill in Barton, New York.Template:Sfn The Tallmadge family were descendants of Thomas Talmadge, who emigrated from England to the Massachusetts Bay Colony about 1633.

Nathaniel's first cousin, James Tallmadge Jr., was a U.S. representative from New York (1817–1819), Lieutenant Governor of New York (1825–1826), and first President of New York University from its founding (which James had helped with) in 1831 until 1850. James's sister, another first cousin of Nathaniel, was Rebecca Tallmadge, who married Theodorus Bailey, a U.S. representative and United States senator from New York, as well as postmaster of New York City. Nathaniel's other contemporary first cousins also included Benjamin Tallmadge, the celebrated leader of the Culper spy ring, which operated against the British occupation of New York City during the American Revolutionary War, and John J. Tallmadge, who served as mayor of Milwaukee in the 1860s. Through the Tallmadge family's many lines and descendants, Nathaniel is a distant cousin of Ernest Hemingway and Ben Affleck.

In 1824, Tallmadge was married to Abigail Lewis Smith (1804–1857), the daughter of Judge Isaac Smith of Washington, New York.Template:Sfn He had nine children with her before her death in 1857. In 1864, Tallmadge married for a second time, to Clementine Ring.Template:Sfn The children of Nathaniel Tallmadge were:

Through his daughter Mary Louisa Tallmadge (wife of Napoleon Boardman), he was a grandfather of Charles Ruggles Boardman, who served as adjutant general of Wisconsin from 1897 to 1913.Template:Sfn

When his son William died in 1845, Tallmadge buried him on a piece of his land outside Fond du Lac. In 1853, Tallmadge donated eight and a half acres around his son's grave to be used in creating a cemetery, now known as Rienzi Cemetery.Template:Sfn The cemetery trustees subsequently purchased 24 additional acres, which it used for expansion.Template:Sfn The cemetery is now 60 acres and represents the final resting place for 24,000 people, including most of the notable residents of Fond du Lac throughout history.

In his later years, Tallmadge resided in Harmonia, a planned community for spiritualists in Battle Creek, Michigan.Template:Sfn He died in Battle Creek on November 2, 1864,Template:Sfn and was buried at Rienzi Cemetery in Fond du Lac.Template:Sfn

References

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Sources

Books

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Notes

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External links

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Preceded byTemplate:S-bef/check Member of the New York Senate from the 2nd District (Class 3)
1830–1833 Template:S-ttl/check
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Political offices
Preceded byTemplate:S-bef/checkTemplate:Succession box/check Governor of the Wisconsin Territory
1844–1845 Template:S-ttl/check
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