CINXE.COM

U.S. Senate: Civil War and Reconstruction: 1851-1877

<!DOCTYPE html PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD XHTML 1.0 Transitional//EN" "http://www.w3.org/TR/xhtml1/DTD/xhtml1-transitional.dtd"> <!-- [if lt IE 7]> <html class="ie6 oldie"> <![endif] --><!-- [if IE 7]> <html class="ie7 oldie"> <![endif] --><!-- [if IE 8]> <html class="ie8 oldie"> <![endif] --><!-- [if gt IE 8]> <! --><html class=""> <!-- <![endif] --> <head> <META http-equiv="Content-Type" content="text/html; charset=iso-8859-1"> <meta charset="UTF-8"> <meta name="viewport" content="width=device-width, initial-scale=1"> <meta name="object" content="1851.xml"> <meta name="version" content="21.1"> <meta name="path" content="/Company Home/Sites/senategov/documentLibrary/Senate.gov/pagelayout/history/one_item_and_teasers"> <meta name="date" content="Tuesday, August 8, 2023"> <meta name="time" content="4:57:25 PM EDT"> <meta name="keywords" content=""> <meta name="bucket" content="history"> <meta name="description" content="_Civil War and Reconstruction: 1851-1877"> <title>U.S. Senate: Civil War and Reconstruction: 1851-1877</title> <link type="image/x-icon" rel="shortcut icon" href="/resources/images/us_sen.ico"> <link type="text/css" rel="stylesheet" href="/resources/styles/boilerplate.css"> <link type="text/css" rel="stylesheet" href="/resources/styles/main.css"> <link type="text/css" rel="stylesheet" href="/resources/styles/nav_menu.css"> <link type="text/css" rel="stylesheet" href="/resources/styles/skdslider.css"> <link type="text/css" rel="stylesheet" href="/resources/fonts/gFonts.css?family=Source+Sans+Pro:400,300,600,700,300italic,400italic,600italic,700italic"> <link type="text/css" rel="stylesheet" href="/resources/fonts/gFonts.css?family=Source+Serif+Pro:400,600,700"> <link type="text/css" rel="stylesheet" href="/resources/fonts/gFonts.css?family=Libre+Baskerville:400,400italic,700"> <link rel="stylesheet" href="/resources/fonts/css/font-awesome.min.css"> <link type="text/css" rel="stylesheet" href="/resources/styles/print.css"> <link type="text/css" rel="stylesheet" href="/resources/styles/content.css"> <!-- [if lt IE 9]> <script src="/resources/scripts/html5shiv.js"></script> <![endif] --> <script type="text/javascript"> function MM_goToURL() { //v3.0 var i, args=MM_goToURL.arguments; document.MM_returnValue = false; for (i=0; i<(args.length-1); i+=2) eval(args[i]+".location='"+args[i+1]+"'"); } </script> <script type="text/javascript"> function MM_jumpMenu(targ,selObj,restore){ //v3.0 eval(targ+".location='"+selObj.options[selObj.selectedIndex].value+"'"); if (restore) selObj.selectedIndex=0; } </script><script src="/resources/scripts/jquery-1.11.3.min.js"></script><script src="/resources/scripts/skdslider.min.js"></script><script src="/resources/scripts/main.js"></script><script src="/resources/scripts/floor_status.js"></script> </head> <body onload="myFunction()"> <a href="#skip" class="offscreen">Skip Content</a> <header class="mobilehead clearfix"> <div id="top-header"> <CFPARAM NAME="URL.q" DEFAULT=""> <div id="find-sen" class="row"> <div id="flag" class="fluid "><img src="/resources/images/usFlag.png" alt="U.S. Flag" /></div> <div id="sen-dropdown-container" class="fluid "> <form name="findSenators" method="post"> <label for="findsenator" /> <select name="stateName" class="arrow" id="findsenator" onChange="MM_jumpMenu('parent',this,0)"> <option value="/states/">Find Your Senators</option> <option value="/states/AL/intro.htm">Alabama</option> <option value="/states/AK/intro.htm">Alaska</option> <option value="/states/AZ/intro.htm">Arizona</option> <option value="/states/AR/intro.htm">Arkansas</option> <option value="/states/CA/intro.htm">California</option> <option value="/states/CO/intro.htm">Colorado</option> <option value="/states/CT/intro.htm">Connecticut</option> <option value="/states/DE/intro.htm">Delaware</option> <option value="/states/FL/intro.htm">Florida</option> <option value="/states/GA/intro.htm">Georgia</option> <option value="/states/HI/intro.htm">Hawaii</option> <option value="/states/ID/intro.htm">Idaho</option> <option value="/states/IL/intro.htm">Illinois</option> <option value="/states/IN/intro.htm">Indiana</option> <option value="/states/IA/intro.htm">Iowa</option> <option value="/states/KS/intro.htm">Kansas</option> <option value="/states/KY/intro.htm">Kentucky</option> <option value="/states/LA/intro.htm">Louisiana</option> <option value="/states/ME/intro.htm">Maine</option> <option value="/states/MD/intro.htm">Maryland</option> <option value="/states/MA/intro.htm">Massachusetts</option> <option value="/states/MI/intro.htm">Michigan</option> <option value="/states/MN/intro.htm">Minnesota</option> <option value="/states/MS/intro.htm">Mississippi</option> <option value="/states/MO/intro.htm">Missouri</option> <option value="/states/MT/intro.htm">Montana</option> <option value="/states/NE/intro.htm">Nebraska</option> <option value="/states/NV/intro.htm">Nevada</option> <option value="/states/NH/intro.htm">New Hampshire</option> <option value="/states/NJ/intro.htm">New Jersey</option> <option value="/states/NM/intro.htm">New Mexico</option> <option value="/states/NY/intro.htm">New York</option> <option value="/states/NC/intro.htm">North Carolina</option> <option value="/states/ND/intro.htm">North Dakota</option> <option value="/states/OH/intro.htm">Ohio</option> <option value="/states/OK/intro.htm">Oklahoma</option> <option value="/states/OR/intro.htm">Oregon</option> <option value="/states/PA/intro.htm">Pennsylvania</option> <option value="/states/RI/intro.htm">Rhode Island</option> <option value="/states/SC/intro.htm">South Carolina</option> <option value="/states/SD/intro.htm">South Dakota</option> <option value="/states/TN/intro.htm">Tennessee</option> <option value="/states/TX/intro.htm">Texas</option> <option value="/states/UT/intro.htm">Utah</option> <option value="/states/VT/intro.htm">Vermont</option> <option value="/states/VA/intro.htm">Virginia</option> <option value="/states/WA/intro.htm">Washington</option> <option value="/states/WV/intro.htm">West Virginia</option> <option value="/states/WI/intro.htm">Wisconsin</option> <option value="/states/WY/intro.htm">Wyoming</option> </select> </form> </div> <div id="watch" class="fluid"> <div class="fluid watch_text"><span class="fa fa-video-camera"></span>&nbsp;&nbsp;<a id="floorlink" target="_blank"><span id="contentdata"></span></a></div> </div> </div> </div> </div> <div id="main-header"> <div class="row"> <div id="logo"> <a href="/index.htm"><img src="/resources/images/senate_logo.png" alt="United States Senate Logo" border="0"/></a> </div> <div id="search-elements" class="fluid "> <form name="search" id="search" action="/general/search/search_central_solr-js.htm" method="GET"> <label for="search"><span class="fa fa-search" onClick="document.getElementById('search').submit();"></span></label> <input type="text" name="q" value="Search" id="search3" onfocus="this.value=''" /> <!--commented out by betty<input type="hidden" value="1" name="col" /> <INPUT type="hidden" name="xsl" value="xml" />--> <!--<input type="text" name="q" value="Search" id="search" onfocus="this.value=''" /> <input type="hidden" name="site" value="default_collection" /> <input type="hidden" name="num" value="10" /> <INPUT type="hidden" name="filter" value="0" />--> </form> <!--solr search section starts <form method="GET" action="/general/search/search_central_solr.cfm" name="search" style="display: inline;"> <input type="text" onFocus="this.value=&apos;&apos;" class="searchBox" id="search3" value="<CFOUTPUT>#URL.q#</CFOUTPUT>" name="q"/> <input type="image" align="absmiddle" alt="GO" src="/resources/images/uss_button_go.gif"/> </form> solr search section ends--> </div> </div> </div> <div class="nav"> <div id="nav-head-bg"></div> <div class="row"> <nav id="main-nav" class="fluid "> <label for="drop" class="toggle">MENU<span class="fa fa-bars"></span></label><input type="checkbox" id="drop"> <ul class="menu"> <li class="senatorsmenu"> <label for="drop-1" class="plus-minus mobile-plus"></label><a href="/senators/index.htm"> <div>SENATORS</div> </a> <input type="checkbox" id="drop-1"/> <ul class="senatorsmenusub"> <li><a href="/senators/senators-contact.htm">Contact</a></li> <li><a href="/senators/leadership.htm">Leadership</a></li> <li><a href="/senators/former_senators.htm">Former Senators</a></li> <li><a href="/senators/qualifications_termsofservice.htm">Qualifications &amp; Terms of Service</a></li> <li><a href="/senators/facts_milestones.htm">Facts &amp; Milestones</a></li> <li><a href="/states/statesmap.htm">States</a></li> </ul> </li> <li class="committeesmenu"> <label for="drop-2" class="plus-minus mobile-plus"></label><a href="/committees/committees_home.htm"> <div>COMMITTEES</div> </a> <input type="checkbox" id="drop-2"/> <ul class="committeesmenusub"> <li><a href="/committees/membership_assignments.htm">Membership &amp; Assignments </a></li> <li><a href="/committees/hearings_meetings.htm">Hearings &amp; Meetings</a></li> <li><a href="/committees/history.htm">History</a></li> </ul> </li> <li class="legislationmenu"> <label for="drop-3" class="plus-minus mobile-plus"></label><a href="/legislative/legislative_home.htm"> <div>LEGISLATION &amp; RECORDS</div> </a> <input type="checkbox" id="drop-3"/> <ul class="legislationmenusub"> <li><a href="/legislative/bills_acts_laws.htm">Bills, Acts, &amp; Laws</a></li> <li><a href="/legislative/nominations_new.htm">Nominations</a></li> <li><a href="/legislative/treaties_new.htm">Treaties</a></li> <li><a href="/legislative/votes_new.htm">Votes</a></li> <li><a href="/legislative/floor_activity_pail.htm">Floor Proceedings</a></li> <li><a href="/legislative/rules_procedure.htm">Rules &amp; Procedure</a></li> <li><a href="/legislative/landmark_legislation.htm">Landmark Legislation</a></li> <li><a href="/legislative/sessions_of_congress.htm">Sessions of Congress</a></li> <li><a href="/legislative/senate-archives/information-about-senate-archives.htm">Senate Archives</a></li> <li><a href="/legislative/lobbyingdisc.htm#lobbyingdisc=lda">Public Disclosure</a></li> </ul> </li> <li class="artartifactsmenu"> <label for="drop-4" class="plus-minus mobile-plus"></label><a href="/art-artifacts/index.htm"> <div>ART &amp; ARTIFACTS</div> </a> <input type="checkbox" id="drop-4"/> <ul class="artartifactsmenusub"> <li><a href="/general/search/search-art-artifacts-solr-js.htm">Collection Search</a></li> <li><a href="/art-artifacts/fine-art-landing-page.htm">Fine Art</a></li> <li><a href="/art-artifacts/decorative-art-landing-page.htm">Decorative Art</a></li> <li><a href="/art-artifacts/historical-images-landing-page.htm">Historical Images</a></li> <li><a href="/art-artifacts/historical-artifacts-landing-page.htm">Historical Artifacts</a></li> <li><a href="/art-artifacts/thematic-collections-landing-page.htm">Thematic Collections</a></li> </ul> </li> <li class="aboutmenu"> <label for="drop-5" class="plus-minus mobile-plus"></label><a href="/about/index.htm" class="selected"> <div>ABOUT THE SENATE</div> </a> <input type="checkbox" id="drop-5"/> <ul class="aboutmenusub"> <li> <label for="drop-44" class="plus-minus mobile-plus"> </label> <a class="drop-link" href="/about/officers-staff.htm">Officers &amp; Staff</a> <input type="checkbox" id="drop-44"/> <ul class="tertiary-menu"> <li><a href="/about/officers-staff/vice-president.htm">Vice President</a></li> <li><a href="/about/officers-staff/president-pro-tempore.htm">President Pro Tempore</a></li> <li><a href="/about/officers-staff/secretary-of-the-senate.htm">Secretary of the Senate</a></li> <li><a href="/about/officers-staff/sergeant-at-arms.htm">Sergeant at Arms</a></li> <li><a href="/about/officers-staff/party-secretaries.htm">Party Secretaries</a></li> <li><a href="/about/officers-staff/chaplain.htm">Chaplain</a></li> <li><a href="/about/officers-staff/committee-office-staff.htm">Committee &amp; Office Staff</a></li> <li><a href="/about/officers-staff/pages.htm">Pages</a></li> </ul> </li> <li> <label for="drop-45" class="plus-minus mobile-plus"> </label> <a class="drop-link" href="/about/powers-procedures.htm">Powers &amp; Procedures</a> <input type="checkbox" id="drop-45"/> <ul class="tertiary-menu"> <li><a href="/about/powers-procedures/censure.htm">Censure</a></li> <li><a href="/about/powers-procedures/declarations-of-war.htm">Declarations of War</a></li> <li><a href="/about/powers-procedures/expulsion.htm">Expulsion</a></li> <li><a href="/about/powers-procedures/filibusters-cloture.htm">Filibuster &amp; Cloture</a></li> <li><a href="/about/powers-procedures/impeachment.htm">Impeachment</a></li> <li><a href="/about/powers-procedures/investigations.htm">Investigations</a></li> <li><a href="/about/powers-procedures/nominations.htm">Nominations</a></li> <li><a href="/about/powers-procedures/rules.htm">Rules</a></li> <li><a href="/about/powers-procedures/treaties.htm">Treaties</a></li> <li><a href="/about/powers-procedures/voting.htm">Voting</a></li> </ul> </li> <li> <label for="drop-46" class="plus-minus mobile-plus"> </label> <a class="drop-link" href="/about/origins-foundations.htm">Origins &amp; Foundations</a> <input type="checkbox" id="drop-46"/> <ul class="tertiary-menu"> <li><a href="/about/origins-foundations/senate-and-constitution.htm">The Senate &amp; the Constitution</a></li> <li><a href="/about/origins-foundations/electing-appointing-senators.htm">Electing &amp; Appointing Senators</a></li> <li><a href="/about/origins-foundations/committee-system.htm">Committee System</a></li> <li><a href="/about/origins-foundations/idea-of-the-senate.htm">Idea of the Senate</a></li> <li><a href="/about/origins-foundations/parties-leadership.htm">Parties &amp; Leadership</a></li> </ul> </li> <li><a class="drop-link" href="/about/traditions-symbols.htm">Traditions &amp; Symbols</a></li> <li> <label for="drop-47" class="plus-minus mobile-plus"> </label> <a class="drop-link" href="/about/historic-buildings-spaces.htm">Historic Buildings &amp; Spaces</a> <input type="checkbox" id="drop-47"/> <ul class="tertiary-menu"> <li><a href="/about/historic-buildings-spaces/capitol.htm">The Capitol</a></li> <li><a href="/about/historic-buildings-spaces/senate-chamber.htm">Senate Chamber</a></li> <li><a href="/about/historic-buildings-spaces/historic-rooms.htm">Historic Rooms</a></li> <li><a href="/about/historic-buildings-spaces/office-buildings.htm">Senate Office Buildings</a></li> <li><a href="/about/historic-buildings-spaces/meeting-places.htm">Congressional Meeting Places</a></li> <li><a href="/about/historic-buildings-spaces/past-chambers.htm">Past Senate Chambers</a></li> </ul> </li> <li><a class="drop-link" href="/history/oralhistory.htm">Oral History Project</a></li> <li> <label for="drop-48" class="plus-minus mobile-plus"> </label> <a class="drop-link" href="/history/essays.htm">Historical Highlights</a> <input type="checkbox" id="drop-48"/> <ul class="tertiary-menu"> <li><a href="/history/1787.htm">1787-1800</a></li> <li><a href="/history/1801.htm">1801-1850</a></li> <li><a href="/history/1851.htm">1851-1877</a></li> <li><a href="/history/1878.htm">1878-1920</a></li> <li><a href="/history/1921.htm">1921-1940</a></li> <li><a href="/history/1941.htm">1941-1963</a></li> <li><a href="/history/1964.htm">1964-present</a></li> </ul> </li> <li><a class="drop-link" href="/artandhistory/senate-stories/menu.htm">Senate Stories Blog</a></li> <li> <li><a class="drop-link" href="/about/research-tools.htm">Research Tools</a></li> <li> </ul> </li> </ul> </nav> </div> </div> </header> <div id="watch_mobile" class="fluid watch_text"><span class="fa fa-video-camera"></span>&nbsp;&nbsp;<a id="floorlink_mobile" target="_blank"><span id="contentdata_mobile"></span></a></div> <main class="gridContainer clearfix"> <div id="secondary_col2" class="fluid"> <section class="fluid " id="about_header"> <h1>Civil War and Reconstruction: 1851-1877</h1> <div id="h1_action_icons" class="fluid"><a href="javascript:if(window.print)window.print()"><i class="fa fa-print"></i></a> <!--<a href="index.html"><i class="fa fa-share"></i></a>--> </div> <hr class="fluid"> </section> <!-- BEGIN MAIN --> <span tabindex="-1" id="skip"></span> <style> .more { display: none; /* border-top: 1px solid #666; border-bottom: 1px solid #666; */ } .more { display: none; /* border-top: 1px solid #666; border-bottom: 1px solid #666; */ } a.itemLink { text-decoration: none; color: #8c1414; } a.itemLink:hover { text-decoration: underline; } a.showLink, a.hideLink { text-decoration: none; color: #8c1414; padding-left: 3px; background: transparent url('down.gif') no-repeat left; } a.hideLink { background: transparent url('up.gif') no-repeat left; } a.showLink:hover, a.hideLink:hover { border-bottom: 1px dotted #5B85C9; } </style> <script type="text/javascript" language="javascript"> function showHide(shID) { if (document.getElementById(shID)) { if (document.getElementById(shID+'-show').style.display != 'none') { document.getElementById(shID+'-show').style.display = 'none'; document.getElementById(shID+'-hide').style.display = 'inline'; document.getElementById(shID).style.display = 'block'; } else { document.getElementById(shID+'-show').style.display = 'inline'; document.getElementById(shID+'-hide').style.display = 'none'; document.getElementById(shID).style.display = 'none'; } } } </script> <div style="float:left; padding-right:4px"></div> <div> <intro_text> <p>This collection of brief essays describes important events and personalities in Senate history, and highlights recurring themes in the Senate's institutional development during the years of Civil War and Reconstruction, 1851 to 1877 (click on title for full story).</p> </intro_text> </div> <div style="padding-bottom:3px;"> <strong> <entry_title> <a href="/about/historic-buildings-spaces/chamber/president-selects-location-for-new-senate-chamber.htm" target="blank">President Selects Location for New Senate Chamber</a> </entry_title> </strong> </div> <div> <text> <I>May 1, 1851</I> <br>The growth of the nation westward brought many new states to the Union by 1850. For each new state added, two new senators and a varying number of representatives crowded into the Capitol. In 1851 President Millard Filmore was asked to help decide how to expand the Capitol to accommodate the new members.</text> </div> <br style="clear:both;"> <br> <div style="padding-bottom:3px;"> <strong> <entry_title> <a href="/about/historic-buildings-spaces/capitol/capitol-extension-cornerstone.htm" target="blank">Capitol Cornerstone Dedicated</a> </entry_title> </strong> </div> <div> <text> <I>July 4, 1851</I> <br>On the Fourth of July, 1851, a festive crowd watched the dedication of the cornerstone for the Capitol's expansion. Secretary of State, and former senator, Daniel Webster delivered a two-hour speech and included his message in a time capsule sealed in the cornerstone: "Be it known that on this day the Union of the United States of America stands firm&hellip;."</text> </div> <br style="clear:both;"> <br> <div style="padding-bottom:3px;"> <strong> <entry_title> <a href="/about/officers-staff/vice-president/william-r-king-first-senator-to-gain-vp-offer.htm" target="blank">William R. King First Senator to Gain Vice Presidential Offer</a> </entry_title> </strong> </div> <div> <text> <I>June 5, 1852</I> <br>In June of 1852 veteran senator Rufus R. King of Alabama became the first sitting senator to be nominated for vice president, setting a precedent followed by many senators since that time. Running with presidential candidate Franklin Pierce, King won the election, but deteriorating health kept him from fulfilling the duties of his office.</text> </div> <br style="clear:both;"> <br> <div style="padding-bottom:3px;"> <strong> <entry_title> <a href="/artandhistory/history/minute/Henry_Clay_Dies.htm" target="blank">Henry Clay Dies</a> </entry_title> </strong> </div> <div> <text> <I>June 29, 1852</I> <br>"I don't like Clay," proclaimed John C. Calhoun of South Carolina. "He is a bad man, an imposter, a creator of wicked schemes. I wouldn't speak to him, but, by God, I love him!" Henry Clay, the Senate's controversial "Great Compromiser," died of tuberculosis on June 29, 1852, and became the first person to lie in state in the U.S. Capitol Rotunda.</text> </div> <br style="clear:both;"> <br> <div style="padding-bottom:3px;"> <strong> <entry_title> <a href="/artandhistory/history/minute/Kansas_Nebraska_Act.htm" target="blank">The Kansas-Nebraska Act</a> </entry_title> </strong> </div> <div> <text> <I>May 30, 1854</I> <br>In 1854 Senator Stephen Douglas of Illinois presented a bill destined to be one of the most consequential pieces of legislation in our national history. Ostensibly a bill "to organize the Territory of Nebraska," an area covering the present-day states of Kansas, Nebraska, Montana, and the Dakotas, contemporaries called it "the Nebraska bill." Today, we know it as the Kansas-Nebraska Act of 1854.</text> </div> <br style="clear:both;"> <br> <div style="padding-bottom:3px;"> <strong> <entry_title> <a href="/artandhistory/history/minute/The_Crime_Against_Kansas.htm" target="blank">"The Crime Against Kansas"</a> </entry_title> </strong> </div> <div> <text> <I>May 19, 1856</I> <br>On May 19, 1856, Massachusetts senator Charles Sumner, the crusading antislavery Republican, rose to speak on the Senate floor. He intended to address the explosive issue of whether Kansas should be admitted to the Union as a slave state or a free state.</text> </div> <br style="clear:both;"> <br> <div style="padding-bottom:3px;"> <strong> <entry_title> <a href="/artandhistory/history/minute/The_Caning_of_Senator_Charles_Sumner.htm" target="blank">The Caning of Senator Charles Sumner</a> </entry_title> </strong> </div> <div> <text> <I>May 22, 1856</I> <br>As Charles Sumner sat franking mail at his desk on a warm May day in 1856, it was an unusually quiet moment for the senator from Massachusetts. Just three days earlier the abolitionist Sumner had released all his oratorical fire to condemn pro-slavery senators in his infamous "Crime Against Kansas" speech. In retaliation, Representative Preston Brooks attacked Sumner as he sat at his desk.</text> </div> <br style="clear:both;"> <br> <div style="padding-bottom:3px;"> <strong> <entry_title> <a href="/about/historic-buildings-spaces/chamber/constructing-senate-theater.htm" target="blank">Constructing a Senate Theater</a> </entry_title> </strong> </div> <div> <text> <I>November 1857</I> <br>During the first half of the 19th century the Senate Chamber became not only the workplace of the U.S. Senate, but the focus of Washington society and setting for many theatrical productions.</text> </div> <br style="clear:both;"> <br> <div style="padding-bottom:3px;"> <strong> <entry_title> <a href="/about/origins-foundations/electing-appointing-senators/1858-midterm.htm" target="blank">The 1858 Midterm Election</a> </entry_title> </strong> </div> <div> <text> <I>November 2, 1858</I> <br>Almost by spontaneous combustion, the Republican Party burst forth in 1854 in response to the controversial Kansas-Nebraska Act. Beginning at the local level, a coalition of former Whigs and northern Democrats organized under a new party label&mdash;Republican&mdash;and called for the immediate repeal of the Kansas-Nebraska Act. It took several years and a series of dramatic events to fuel the movement toward electoral success, but after the 1858 midterm election, Republicans took control of the House and swept northern gubernatorial races. This set the stage for 1860, when Republicans took control of the Senate, the House, and the presidency.</text> </div> <br style="clear:both;"> <br> <div style="padding-bottom:3px;"> <strong> <entry_title> <a href="/artandhistory/history/minute/Duel_By_The_Lake.htm" target="blank">Senator Killed in Duel</a> </entry_title> </strong> </div> <div> <text> <I>September 13, 1859</I> <br>Early in the morning of September 13, 1859, on the shores of Lake Merced just south of San Francisco, Senator David Broderick of California became the only sitting senator to die in a duel. The victor: California's Chief Justice David Terry.</text> </div> <br style="clear:both;"> <br> <div style="padding-bottom:3px;"> <strong> <entry_title> <a href="/artandhistory/history/minute/Senate_Prisoner_Goes_Free.htm" target="blank">Senate Prisoner Goes Free</a> </entry_title> </strong> </div> <div> <text> <I>June 25, 1860</I> <br>In June 1860, the Senate freed a man whom it had previously sent to the District of Columbia jail. Nearly four months earlier, the Senate sergeant at arms had arrested Thaddeus Hyatt, who failed to answer a summons to appear before a Senate investigating committee.</text> </div> <br style="clear:both;"> <br> <div style="padding-bottom:3px;"> <strong> <entry_title> <a href="/artandhistory/history/minute/Crittenden_Compromise.htm" target="blank">The Crittenden Compromise</a> </entry_title> </strong> </div> <div> <text> <I>December 18, 1860</I> <br>In the wake of Abraham Lincoln's election as president in November of 1860, Southern senators began leaving the Senate to attend secession conventions, while Northern senators called for military preparedness. The nation faced its greatest crisis. Was a peaceful solution to this crisis still possible? Could Congress take action to avert civil war? One Kentucky senator proposed just such a plan.</text> </div> <br style="clear:both;"> <br> <div style="padding-bottom:3px;"> <strong> <entry_title> <a href="/artandhistory/history/minute/Jefferson_Davis_Farewell.htm" target="blank">Jefferson Davis's Farewell</a> </entry_title> </strong> </div> <div> <text> <I>January 21, 1861</I> <br>In one of the most dramatic moments in Senate history, Senator Jefferson Davis of Mississippi delivered his farewell address to a packed audience in the Senate Chamber on January 21, 1861, before leaving the Senate to become president of the Confederacy.</text> </div> <br style="clear:both;"> <br> <div style="padding-bottom:3px;"> <strong> <entry_title> <a href="/artandhistory/history/minute/Hannibal_the_corporal.htm" target="blank">Hannibal Hamlin Takes Vice Presidential Oath</a> </entry_title> </strong> </div> <div> <text> <I>March 4, 1861</I> <br>On March 4, 1861, Hannibal Hamlin, who had represented Maine in the United States Senate for 12 years, became vice president of the United States. With little to do as vice president, he enlisted as a private in the Maine state coast guard at the start of the Civil War, and later was promoted to corporal. When the Republicans chose Andrew Johnson as Lincoln's running mate in 1864, Hamlin rejoined the political ranks, and in 1869, he happily resumed his old seat in the Senate.</text> </div> <br style="clear:both;"> <br> <div style="padding-bottom:3px;"> <strong> <entry_title> <a href="/artandhistory/history/minute/Civil_War_Begins.htm" target="blank">Civil War Begins</a> </entry_title> </strong> </div> <div> <text> <I>April 12, 1861</I> <br>Traditionally, Fort Sumter has been used to mark the beginning of the Civil War. In the Senate, however, the fall of Sumter was the latest in a series of events that culminated in war. Long before those fateful shots were fired, the Senate faced its own civil war. Yet, it managed to fulfill its constitutional duties during these months, confirming five cabinet secretaries and a Supreme Court justice, and passing important legislation, such as the 1861 tariff bill that provided badly needed revenue.</text> </div> <br style="clear:both;"> <br> <div style="padding-bottom:3px;"> <strong> <entry_title> <a href="/about/historic-buildings-spaces/chamber/soldiers-occupy-chamber.htm" target="blank">Soldiers Occupy the Senate Chamber</a> </entry_title> </strong> </div> <div> <text> <I>April 19, 1861</I> <br>The fall of Fort Sumter in April of 1861 and President Abraham Lincoln's subsequent call for troops brought thousands of Union soldiers to Washington, D.C. To accommodate the numbers, the U.S. Capitol became a barrack, and even the new Senate Chamber served as dormitory, mess hall, and medical office.</text> </div> <br style="clear:both;"> <br> <div style="padding-bottom:3px;"> <strong> <entry_title> <a href="/artandhistory/history/minute/Clara_Bartons_Benefactor.htm" target="blank">Clara Barton's Benefactor</a> </entry_title> </strong> </div> <div> <text> <I>April 19, 1861</I> <br>When President Abraham Lincoln issued a call for volunteers on April 15, 1861, the first group of soldiers to arrive was the 6th Massachusetts Regiment. Attacked by Confederate sympathizers in Baltimore, they arrived at the Capitol bloodied and bruised and were housed in the Senate Chamber. Among those aiding the soldiers was a young government clerk named Clara Barton. Thus began a career that culminated in the creation of the American Red Cross in 1881. This is a familiar tale, no doubt, but less known is the essential role played in this story by Senator Henry Wilson of Massachusetts.</text> </div> <br style="clear:both;"> <br> <div style="padding-bottom:3px;"> <strong> <entry_title> <a href="/artandhistory/history/minute/Senator_Stephen_Douglas_Dies.htm" target="blank">Senator Stephen Douglas Dies</a> </entry_title> </strong> </div> <div> <text> <I>June 3, 1861</I> <br>On June 3, 1861, Illinois senator Stephen Douglas died in a Chicago hotel room after an exhausting effort to rally public support for the Union. Known as the "Little Giant," Douglas fought for passage of the Compromise of 1850 to preserve the Union and avoid civil war. He then undid his own handiwork by promoting the Kansas-Nebraska Act to enable westward expansion in the young nation.</text> </div> <br style="clear:both;"> <br> <div style="padding-bottom:3px;"> <strong> <entry_title> <a href="/artandhistory/history/minute/Dramatic_Session.htm" target="blank">A Dramatic Session</a> </entry_title> </strong> </div> <div> <text> <I>July 4, 1861</I> <br>This emergency first session of the 37th Congress lasted only five weeks, but circumstances of the day made it an extraordinary session. Under the threat of Confederate forces, Congress enacted 67 major public laws, making this one of the most productive legislative sessions.</text> </div> <br style="clear:both;"> <br> <div style="padding-bottom:3px;"> <strong> <entry_title> <a href="/artandhistory/history/minute/George_Norris.htm" target="blank">George Norris</a> </entry_title> </strong> </div> <div> <text> <I>July 11, 1861</I> <br>Nebraska's George Norris, the man many consider history's "greatest United States senator," was born on July 11, 1861. He served in the Senate for 30 years, from 1913 until 1943. In his 1956 book, Profiles in Courage, John F. Kennedy wrote of Norris, "Nothing could sway [George Norris] from what he thought was right, from his determination to help all the people, from his hope to save them from the twin tragedies of poverty and war."</text> </div> <br style="clear:both;"> <br> <div style="padding-bottom:3px;"> <strong> <entry_title> <a href="/artandhistory/history/minute/Witness_Bull_Run.htm" target="blank">Senators Witness the First Battle of Bull Run</a> </entry_title> </strong> </div> <div> <text> <I>July 21, 1861</I> <br>On July 21, 1861, United States senators and other spectators gathered near Centreville, Virginia, to witness the first land battle of the Civil War&mdash;the Battle of Bull Run. Northerners expected an easy Union victory that day, but they soon learned that war was unpredictable. The "picnic battle," as it became known, resulted in a major Union defeat.</text> </div> <br style="clear:both;"> <br> <div style="padding-bottom:3px;"> <strong> <entry_title> <a href="/artandhistory/history/minute/Senator_Killed_In_Battle.htm" target="blank">Senator Killed in Battle</a> </entry_title> </strong> </div> <div> <text> <I>October 21, 1861</I> <br>Senator Edward Dickinson Baker, veteran of the Mexican War, well-known lawyer and orator, and confidante of President Abraham Lincoln, answered his country's call to battle in 1861. Leaving the Senate Chamber behind, Baker led his troops into the Battle of Ball's Bluff and became the Senate's first and only sitting member to die in battle.</text> </div> <br style="clear:both;"> <br> <div style="padding-bottom:3px;"> <strong> <entry_title> <a href="/artandhistory/history/minute/Creating_a_new_Senate.htm" target="blank">Creating a Confederate Senate</a> </entry_title> </strong> </div> <div> <text> <I>February 18, 1862</I> <br>On February 18, 1862, the Confederate Congress convened for the first time at the Virginia state capitol in Richmond. On its first day of operation, the Confederate Senate counted 20 of its 26 members present and elected a president pro tempore. Because the Confederate Senate held many of its sessions in secret, did not use official reporters of debates to record public proceedings, and lost extensive records to the chaos of war, today we know very little about its operations.</text> </div> <br style="clear:both;"> <br> <div style="padding-bottom:3px;"> <strong> <entry_title> <a href="/about/traditions-symbols/washingtons-farewell-address.htm" target="blank">Washington's Farewell Address</a> </entry_title> </strong> </div> <div> <text> <I>February 22, 1862</I> <br>It is a Senate tradition dating back to 1862. On February 22 of that year, to boost morale during the bloody days of civil war, members of the Senate, the House of Representatives, the Supreme Court, and the president's cabinet gathered in the House Chamber to hear Secretary of the Senate John Forney read Washington's Farewell Address. Eventually becoming a yearly event, Washington's famous farewell has been read in the Senate every year since 1893.</text> </div> <br style="clear:both;"> <br> <div style="padding-bottom:3px;"> <strong> <entry_title> <a href="/about/historic-buildings-spaces/capitol/dome-national-symbol.htm" target="blank">Constructing a National Symbol</a> </entry_title> </strong> </div> <div> <text> <I>December 2, 1863</I> <br>At noon on December 2, 1863, a solemn ceremony marked completion of the dome and the placement of the Statue of Freedom. "I shall always identify Washington with that huge...towering bulge of pure white," exclaimed Walt Whitman, that "vast eggshell, built of iron and glass...a beauty and [a] genuine success." Completed against all odds during an era of tragic and violent disunion, the Capitol dome became a lasting symbol of a nation both strong and unified.</text> </div> <br style="clear:both;"> <br> <div style="padding-bottom:3px;"> <strong> <entry_title> <a href="/about/origins-foundations/senate-and-constitution/protest-loyalty-oath.htm" target="blank">Senator Resigns to Protest Loyalty Oath</a> </entry_title> </strong> </div> <div> <text> <I>January 29, 1864</I> <br>Senator James A. Bayard of Delaware objected to Congress' new oath of office, the infamous "Ironclad Test Oath" written during the Civil War to weed out traitors. Bayard argued that the new oath was unconstitutional and interfered with the president's pardoning power. When the oath became mandatory in 1864, Bayard dutifully swore the oath and then resigned from the Senate.</text> </div> <br style="clear:both;"> <br> <div style="padding-bottom:3px;"> <strong> <entry_title> <a href="/about/origins-foundations/senate-and-constitution/senate-passes-the-thirteenth-amendment.htm" target="blank">The Senate Passes the Thirteenth Amendment</a> </entry_title> </strong> </div> <div> <text> <I>April 8, 1864</I> <br>The 2012 film <i>Lincoln</i> told the story of President Abraham Lincoln and the final month of debate over the Thirteenth Amendment, leading to its passage by the House of Representatives on January 31, 1865. What the film did not portray, however, was the Senate's part of that story.</text> </div> <br style="clear:both;"> <br> <div style="padding-bottom:3px;"> <strong> <entry_title> <a href="/about/officers-staff/vice-president/andrew-johnson-inauguration.htm" target="blank">Andrew Johnson Under the Weather</a> </entry_title> </strong> </div> <div> <text> <I>March 4, 1865</I> <br>The second inauguration of Abraham Lincoln began with the traditional swearing in of the vice president in the Senate Chamber. After delivering brief farewell remarks, outgoing vice president Hannibal Hamlin yielded to his successor, Andrew Johnson. As Johnson stood to address the Senate, it was immediately apparent that the man was seriously intoxicated.</text> </div> <br style="clear:both;"> <br> <div style="padding-bottom:3px;"> <strong> <entry_title> <a href="/artandhistory/history/minute/Musical_chairs.htm" target="blank">Musical chairs</a> </entry_title> </strong> </div> <div> <text> <I>March 9, 1865</I> <br>South Carolina holds a significant Senate record. For thirty-six years, from 1966 to 2003, it sent the same two senators to Washington: Strom Thurmond and Ernest Hollings. Virginia, by contrast, holds a uniquely different record. In eight years of the Civil War-era, between 1861 and 1869, it sent nine senators. This number appears even larger considering that Virginia had no senators for four of those eight years.</text> </div> <br style="clear:both;"> <br> <div style="padding-bottom:3px;"> <strong> <entry_title> <a href="/about/historic-buildings-spaces/rooms/telegraph.htm" target="blank">"Telegraph"</a> </entry_title> </strong> </div> <div> <text>The Vatican fresco artist Constantino Brumidi came to the United States from Italy in 1852 looking for work. Brumidi had the good fortune of arriving in Washington just as the superintendent of the project to construct new wings for the Capitol was looking for skilled artists. From the mid 1850s until his death twenty-five years later, he earned the title "Michelangelo of the Capitol."</text> </div> <br style="clear:both;"> <br> <div style="padding-bottom:3px;"> <strong> <entry_title> <a href="/artandhistory/history/minute/Solomon_Foot_Dies.htm" target="blank">Solomon Foot Dies</a> </entry_title> </strong> </div> <div> <text> <I>March 28, 1866</I> <br>The March 1866 death of the Senate's senior member, 64-year-old Solomon Foot of Vermont, inspired revealing tributes by his colleagues. Regrattably, we know little of this esteemed senator today. He seldom spoke in the Senate, and, most unfortunately, he ordered his survivors to burn his papers.</text> </div> <br style="clear:both;"> <br> <div style="padding-bottom:3px;"> <strong> <entry_title> <a href="/about/origins-foundations/committee-system/appropriations-committee-created.htm" target="blank">Appropriations Committee Created</a> </entry_title> </strong> </div> <div> <text> <I>March 6, 1867</I> <br>The Senate established its Committee on Appropriations in 1867, half a century after creating its other permanent "standing" committees. Quickly, the committee became a Senate powerhouse, and its members the envy of other senators.</text> </div> <br style="clear:both;"> <br> <div style="padding-bottom:3px;"> <strong> <entry_title> <a href="/about/powers-procedures/treaties/sumners-alaskan-project.htm" target="blank">Charles Sumner's Alaskan Project</a> </entry_title> </strong> </div> <div> <text> <I>April 8, 1867</I> <br>It's been called "Seward's Folly," but it could just as well be known as "Sumner's Project." As history books tell the story, in 1867 Secretary of State William Seward secretly negotiated with Russian officials to purchase the Alaskan territory for $7.2 million, putting Alaska on the road toward statehood in 1959. That is just part of the story. That treaty had to be approved by the Senate. To clear that hurdle, the Secretary of State needed the support of the chairman of the Foreign Relations Committee, Charles Sumner.</text> </div> <br style="clear:both;"> <br> <div style="padding-bottom:3px;"> <strong> <entry_title> <a href="/about/officers-staff/committee-office-staff/senator-and-his-secretary.htm" target="blank">The Senator and his Secretary</a> </entry_title> </strong> </div> <div> <text> <I>November 1867</I> <br>In 1867 Senator William Stewart of Nevada hired the brother of a Nevada official as his personal secretary. In those days, senators had no Capitol Hill offices and they paid staff from personal funds. The new staffer, a down-on-his-luck character known as Mark Twain, needed a salary and a place to finish writing his first book. Twain moved into Stewart's downtown boardinghouse. As he struggled to finish Innocents Abroad, he also answered constituent correspondence.</text> </div> <br style="clear:both;"> <br> <div style="padding-bottom:3px;"> <strong> <entry_title> <a href="/about/officers-staff/committee-office-staff/kate-brown-story.htm" target="blank">The Kate Brown Story</a> </entry_title> </strong> </div> <div> <text> <I>February 8, 1868</I> <br>In 1868 a Senate employee named Kate Brown was seriously injured when she was denied a seat in a railroad car and ejected onto the platform&mdash;because she was African American. When her story gained the attention of Massachusetts senator Charles Sumner, a Senate committee investigated the incident and reported in her favor. Brown then sued the railway. When the District of Columbia Court ruled in her favor, the railway appealed. The case went all the way to the Supreme Court.</text> </div> <br style="clear:both;"> <br> <div style="padding-bottom:3px;"> <strong> <entry_title> <a href="/artandhistory/history/minute/Smiler.htm" target="blank">"Smiler"</a> </entry_title> </strong> </div> <div> <text> <I>March 4, 1869</I> <br>In his day, Republican Schuyler Colfax was widely considered a cunning and duplicitous vice president. Today, he is virtually unknown.</text> </div> <br style="clear:both;"> <br> <div style="padding-bottom:3px;"> <strong> <entry_title> <a href="/artandhistory/history/minute/Leader_Forgotten.htm" target="blank">Leader Forgotten</a> </entry_title> </strong> </div> <div> <text> <I>September 8, 1869</I> <br>Largely forgotten today, Senator William Pitt Fessenden played a key role in the Senate during the tumultuous years of Civil War and Reconstruction. Less controversial than contemporaries such as Charles Sumner, Fessenden's quiet but efficient management of the Senate Finance Committee, and later the Committee on Appropriations, helped fund the war and devise a workable system of Reconstruction.</text> </div> <br style="clear:both;"> <br> <div style="padding-bottom:3px;"> <strong> <entry_title> <a href="/about/officers-staff/committee-office-staff/floor-privileges.htm" target="blank">Floor Privileges</a> </entry_title> </strong> </div> <div> <text> <I>December 9, 1869</I> <br>The matter of Senate Chamber floor access for non-members has provoked controversy for as long as there has been a Senate Chamber. On December 9, 1869, when most senators had no other office space but their desk in the Chamber, the Senate adopted a rule directing its sergeant at arms to clear the floor of visitors minutes before going into session. The problem of floor congestion persisted until all members finally got their own personal offices with the opening of the Russell Building nearly a century ago in March 1909.</text> </div> <br style="clear:both;"> <br> <div style="padding-bottom:3px;"> <strong> <entry_title> <a href="/artandhistory/history/minute/Personality_profiles.htm" target="blank">Personality Profiles</a> </entry_title> </strong> </div> <div> <text> <I>February 7, 1870</I> <br>In 1870, a <i>New York Times</i> reporter looked down from the Senate press gallery to offer his readers word-portraits of several dozen notable senators. Eight of those senators included Charles Sumner, Matthew Carpenter, Lyman Trumbull, Carl Schurz, William Stewart, Roscoe Conkling, Edmund Ross, and Garrett Davis.</text> </div> <br style="clear:both;"> <br> <div style="padding-bottom:3px;"> <strong> <entry_title> <a href="/artandhistory/history/minute/Senate_Ends_Franked_Mail_Priviledge.htm" target="blank">Senate Ends Franked Mail Privilege</a> </entry_title> </strong> </div> <div> <text> <I>January 22, 1873</I> <br>Since the days of the Continental Congress, members have enjoyed "franking privileges"&mdash;the ability to send mail by signature rather than postage. The invention of rubber stamps, however, led to the abuse of franking privileges, leading Congress to temporarily suspend the practice in the 1870s.</text> </div> <br style="clear:both;"> <br> <div style="padding-bottom:3px;"> <strong> <entry_title> <a href="/artandhistory/history/minute/Alcorns_Great_Insult.htm" target="blank">Alcorn's Great Insult</a> </entry_title> </strong> </div> <div> <text> <I>March 5, 1875</I> <br>On March 5, 1875, newly elected Mississippi senator Blanche K. Bruce stood to take the oath of office as the Senate's second African American member. Senate tradition dictates that a new senator be escorted to the presiding officer's desk by the senior senator from his state, but Mississippi's senior senator refused to provide that escort. Senator James Alcorn's refusal to accompany Bruce to the well of the Senate is one of the "great insults" of Senate history, but what motivated that insult?</text> </div> <br style="clear:both;"> <br> <div style="padding-bottom:3px;"> <strong> <entry_title> <a href="/artandhistory/history/minute/Death_of_Andrew_Johnson.htm" target="blank">Death of Andrew Johnson</a> </entry_title> </strong> </div> <div> <text> <I>July 31, 1875</I> <br>Controversy always swirled around Andrew Johnson. In 1861 he was the only Southern senator to remain loyal to the Union. Four years later, Vice President Johnson succeeded to the presidency following the assassination of Abraham Lincoln. In 1868, he became the first president to be impeached. In 1875, six years after leaving the White House, Johnson returned to Washington as a senator, taking his seat in the very chamber that witnessed his impeachment trial.</text> </div> <br style="clear:both;"> <br> <div style="padding-bottom:3px;"> <strong> <entry_title> <a href="/about/powers-procedures/impeachment/impeachment-belknap.htm" target="blank">War Secretary's Impeachment Trial</a> </entry_title> </strong> </div> <div> <text> <I>May 1876</I> <br>An impeachment trial for a secretary of war occupied much of the Senate&rsquo;s time during May 1876. At issue was the behavior of William Belknap, war secretary in the administration of President Ulysses Grant. Many questioned how he managed such a grand lifestyle on his $8,000 government salary. By early 1876, answers began to surface. A House of Representatives committee uncovered evidence supporting a pattern of corruption blatant even by the standards of the scandal-tarnished Grant administration.</text> </div> <br style="clear:both;"> <br> <div style="padding-bottom:3px;"> <strong> <entry_title> <a href="/about/origins-foundations/electing-appointing-senators/florida-election-case.htm" target="blank">The Florida Case</a> </entry_title> </strong> </div> <div> <text> <I>January 29, 1877</I> <br>On the third floor of the U.S. Capitol hangs Cornelia Fassett's dramatic painting, The Florida Case before the Electoral Commission. In brilliant color and rich detail, the artist captured the Electoral Commission's deliberations over the disputed presidential election of 1876.</text> </div> <br style="clear:both;"> <br> <!-- END MAIN --> </div> <div id="secondary_col1" class="fluid"> <!DOCTYPE noindex PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD XHTML 1.0 Transitional//EN" "http://www.w3.org/TR/xhtml1/DTD/xhtml1-transitional.dtd"> <noindex> <div class="fluid" id="about"> <ul> <li class="accordion"> <a href="/about/officers-staff.htm">Officers &amp; Staff</a> </li> <li class="panel"> <ul> <li> <a href="/about/officers-staff/vice-president.htm">Vice President</a> </li> <li> <a href="/about/officers-staff/president-pro-tempore.htm">President Pro Tempore</a> </li> <li> <a href="/about/officers-staff/secretary-of-the-senate.htm">Secretary of the Senate</a> </li> <li> <a href="/about/officers-staff/sergeant-at-arms.htm">Sergeant at Arms</a> </li> <li> <a href="/about/officers-staff/party-secretaries.htm">Party Secretaries</a> </li> <li> <a href="/about/officers-staff/chaplain.htm">Chaplain</a> </li> <li> <a href="/about/officers-staff/committee-office-staff.htm">Committee &amp; Office Staff</a> </li> <li> <a href="/about/officers-staff/pages.htm">Pages</a> </li> </ul> </li> <li class="accordion"> <a href="/about/powers-procedures.htm">Powers &amp; Procedures</a> </li> <li class="panel"> <ul> <li> <a href="/about/powers-procedures/censure.htm">Censure</a> </li> <li> <a href="/about/powers-procedures/declarations-of-war.htm">Declarations of War</a> </li> <li> <a href="/about/powers-procedures/expulsion.htm">Expulsion</a> </li> <li> <a href="/about/powers-procedures/filibusters-cloture.htm">Filibuster &amp; Cloture</a> </li> <li> <a href="/about/powers-procedures/impeachment.htm">Impeachment</a> </li> <li> <a href="/about/powers-procedures/investigations.htm">Investigations</a> </li> <li> <a href="/about/powers-procedures/nominations.htm">Nominations</a> </li> <li> <a href="/about/powers-procedures/rules.htm">Rules</a> </li> <li> <a href="/about/powers-procedures/treaties.htm">Treaties</a> </li> <li> <a href="/about/powers-procedures/voting.htm">Voting</a> </li> </ul> </li> <li class="accordion"> <a href="/about/origins-foundations.htm">Origins &amp; Foundations</a> </li> <li class="panel"> <ul> <li> <a href="/about/origins-foundations/senate-and-constitution.htm">The Senate &amp; the Constitution</a> </li> <li> <a href="/about/origins-foundations/electing-appointing-senators.htm">Electing &amp; Appointing Senators</a> </li> <li> <a href="/about/origins-foundations/committee-system.htm">Committee System</a> </li> <li> <a href="/about/origins-foundations/idea-of-the-senate.htm">Idea of the Senate</a> </li> <li> <a href="/about/origins-foundations/parties-leadership.htm">Parties &amp; Leadership</a> </li> </ul> </li> <li class="accordion-nochild"> <a href="/about/traditions-symbols.htm">Traditions &amp; Symbols</a> </li> <li class="accordion"> <a href="/about/historic-buildings-spaces.htm">Historic Buildings &amp; Spaces</a> </li> <li class="panel"> <ul> <li> <a href="/about/historic-buildings-spaces/capitol.htm">The Capitol</a> </li> <li> <a href="/about/historic-buildings-spaces/senate-chamber.htm">Senate Chamber</a> </li> <li> <a href="/about/historic-buildings-spaces/historic-rooms.htm">Historic Rooms</a> </li> <li> <a href="/about/historic-buildings-spaces/office-buildings.htm">Senate Office Buildings</a> </li> <li> <a href="/about/historic-buildings-spaces/meeting-places.htm">Congressional Meeting Places</a> </li> <li> <a href="/about/historic-buildings-spaces/past-chambers.htm">Past Senate Chambers</a> </li> </ul> </li> <li class="accordion-nochild"> <a href="/history/oralhistory.htm">Oral History Project</a> </li> <li class="accordion active"> <a class="active" href="/history/essays.htm">Historical Highlights</a> </li> <li class="panel show"> <ul> <li> <a href="/history/1787.htm">1787-1800</a> </li> <li> <a href="/history/1801.htm">1801-1850</a> </li> <li> <a href="/history/1851.htm">1851-1877</a> </li> <li> <a href="/history/1878.htm">1878-1920</a> </li> <li> <a href="/history/1921.htm">1921-1940</a> </li> <li> <a href="/history/1941.htm">1941-1963</a> </li> <li> <a href="/history/1964.htm">1964-present</a> </li> </ul> </li> <li class="accordion-nochild"> <a href="/artandhistory/senate-stories/menu.htm">Senate Stories Blog</a> </li> <li class="accordion-nochild"> <a href="/about/research-tools.htm">Research Tools</a> </li> </ul> </div> </noindex> <!-- BEGIN TEASERS --> <!--****** Email_Historian.xml Version: 24.2 was generated at: Wednesday, June 7, 2023: 9:34 AM EDT in folder: /Company Home/Sites/senategov/documentLibrary/Senate.gov/artandhistory/history/common/teaser **--><aside class="fluid sidebar_link_container"> <div class="fluid content_column_container"> <h3>Senate Historical Office </h3> <span style="padding-top:5px" class="teasertext"> <P> Information provided by the <A href="/history/senate-historical-office.htm">Senate Historical Office</A>. </P> <P> Questions about Senate History?<br> <A href="mailto:historian@sec.senate.gov">Email a Senate historian</A>.<br> </P> </span> </div> </aside> <br> <br> <!-- END TEASERS --> </div> <div id="social_background_white" class="fluid "> <div id="logo_social_footer_center" class="fluid "> <div id="footer_logo" class="fluid "><a href="/index.htm"><img src="/resources/images/senate_logo_footer.png" alt="Senate Logo"/></a></div> </div> </div> </main> <footer id="footer" class="fluid gridContainer clearfix"> <div id="footer_menu_center"> <div id="footer_menu_senators" > <h3><a href="/senators/contact/">SENATORS</a></h3> <ul class="fluid fluidList footer_links"> <li><a href="/senators/senators-contact.htm">Contact</a></li> <li><a href="/senators/leadership.htm">Leadership &amp; Officers</a></li> <li><a href="/senators/former_senators.htm">Former Senators</a></li> <li><a href="/senators/qualifications_termsofservice.htm">Qualifications &amp; Terms of Service</a></li> <li><a href="/senators/facts_milestones.htm">Facts &amp; Milestones</a></li> <li><a href="/states/statesmap.htm">States</a></li> </ul> <div id="footer_menu_committees" > <h3 style="padding-top: 75px;"><a href="/committees/committees_home.htm">COMMITTEES</a></h3> <ul class="fluid fluidList footer_links"> <li><a href="/committees/membership_assignments.htm">Membership &amp; Assignments</a></li> <li><a href="/committees/hearings_meetings.htm">Hearings &amp; Meetings</a></li> <li><a href="/committees/history.htm">History</a></li> </ul></div> </div> <div id="footer_menu_legislation" > <h3><a href="/legislative/legislative_home.htm">LEGISLATION &amp; <br> RECORDS</a></h3> <ul class="fluid fluidList footer_links"> <li><a href="/legislative/bills_acts_laws.htm">Bills, Acts, & Laws</a></li> <li><a href="/legislative/nominations_new.htm">Nominations</a></li> <li><a href="/legislative/treaties_new.htm">Treaties</a></li> <li><a href="/legislative/votes_new.htm">Votes</a></li> <li><a href="/legislative/floor_activity_pail.htm">Floor Proceedings</a></li> <li><a href="/legislative/rules_procedure.htm">Rules &amp; Procedure</a></li> <li><a href="/legislative/landmark_legislation.htm">Landmark Legislation</a></li> <li><a href="/legislative/sessions_of_congress.htm">Sessions of Congress</a></li> <li><a href="/legislative/senate-archives/information-about-senate-archives.htm">Senate Archives</a></li> <li><a href="/legislative/lobbyingdisc.htm#lobbyingdisc=lda">Public Disclosure</a></li> </ul></div> <div id="footer_menu_artartifacts" > <h3><a href="/art-artifacts/index.htm">ART &amp; ARTIFACTS</a></h3> <ul class="fluid fluidList footer_links"> <li><a href="/art-artifacts/fine-art-landing-page.htm">Fine Art</a></li> <li><a href="/art-artifacts/decorative-art-landing-page.htm">Decorative Art</a></li> <li><a href="/art-artifacts/historical-images-landing-page.htm">Historical Images</a></li> <li><a href="/art-artifacts/historical-artifacts-landing-page.htm">Historical Artifacts</a></li> <li><a href="/art-artifacts/thematic-collections-landing-page.htm">Thematic Collections</a></li> </ul></div> <div id="footer_menu_about" > <h3><a href="/about/index.htm">ABOUT THE SENATE</a></h3> <ul class="fluid fluidList footer_links"> <li><a href="/about/officers-staff.htm">Officers &amp; Staff</a></li> <li><a href="/about/powers-procedures.htm">Powers &amp; Procedures</a></li> <li><a href="/about/origins-foundations.htm">Origins &amp; Foundations</a></li> <li><a href="/about/traditions-symbols.htm">Traditions &amp; Symbols</a></li> <li><a href="/about/historic-buildings-spaces.htm">Historic Buildings &amp; Spaces</a></li> <li><a href="/history/oralhistory.htm">Oral History Project</a></li> <li><a href="/history/essays.htm">Historical Highlights</a></li> <li><a href="/artandhistory/senate-stories/menu.htm">Senate Stories Blog</a></li> <li><a href="/about/research-tools.htm">Research Tools</a></li> </ul></div> </div> <div id="footer_legal" class="fluid " > <p><!--<span class="speaker legal"><a href="/general/common/generic/browsealoud.htm">BrowseAloud</a></span> &nbsp; | &nbsp; --> <a href="/general/contacting.htm">Contact</a> &nbsp; | &nbsp; <a href="/general/content_responsibility.htm">Content Responsibility</a> &nbsp; | &nbsp; <a href="/usage/internetpolicy.htm">Usage Policy</a> &nbsp; | &nbsp; <a href="/general/privacy.htm">Privacy Policy</a> &nbsp; | &nbsp; <a href="/visiting/employment.htm">Employment &amp; Internships</a> &nbsp; | &nbsp; <a href="/visiting/procurement.htm">Procurement</a> &nbsp; | &nbsp; <a href="/index.htm">www.senate.gov</a> </p> </div> </footer> <script src="https://assets.adobedtm.com/566dc2d26e4f/843d2f589d53/launch-01bbfeb2a9a5.min.js" async></script> </body> </html>

Pages: 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10