1st Wisconsin Territorial Assembly | |||||
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Overview | |||||
Legislative body | Legislative Assembly of the Wisconsin Territory | ||||
Meeting place |
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Term | October 25, 1836 – November 5, 1838 | ||||
Election | October 10, 1836 | ||||
Council | |||||
Members | 13 | ||||
President |
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House of Representatives | |||||
Members | 26 | ||||
Speaker |
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Sessions | |||||
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Special sessions | |||||
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The First Legislative Assembly of the Wisconsin Territory convened from October 25, 1836, to December 9, 1836, and from November 6, 1837, to January 20, 1838, in regular session. The Assembly also convened in special session from June 11, 1838, to June 25, 1838.[1][2]
The first session was held at Belmont, Iowa County (in present-day Lafayette County, Wisconsin). The 2nd session and special session were held at Burlington, Des Moines County (in present-day Des Moines County, Iowa).[1]
The three sessions of the 1st Legislative Assembly were the only legislative sessions to take place before the division of the Iowa Territory from the Wisconsin Territory.
Major events
- April 30, 1836: Henry Dodge was appointed the first Governor of the Wisconsin Territory.
- October 10, 1836: George Wallace Jones elected delegate to the United States House of Representatives from Wisconsin Territory's at-large congressional district.
- December 1836: Henry S. Baird appointed the first Attorney General for the Wisconsin Territory.
- January 26, 1837: Michigan was admitted to the United States as the 26th state.
- February 6, 1837: William B. Slaughter appointed the 2nd Secretary of the Wisconsin Territory.
- March 4, 1837: Inauguration of Martin Van Buren as the 8th President of the United States.
- May 10, 1837: The Panic of 1837 began in New York City.
- June 20, 1837: Queen Victoria acceded to the throne of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland upon the death of King William IV at Windsor Castle.
- June 27, 1837: The first edition of the Milwaukee Sentinel was published in Milwaukee.
- November 7, 1837: Abolitionist Elijah Parish Lovejoy was killed by a pro-slavery mob in Alton, Illinois.
- June 12, 1838: President Martin Van Buren signed legislation creating the Iowa Territory from the part of the Wisconsin Territory west of the Mississippi River. The division became effective July 4, 1838.
- June 28, 1838: The coronation of Queen Victoria took place at Westminster Abbey.
- September 1838: James Duane Doty elected delegate to the United States House of Representatives from Wisconsin Territory's at-large congressional district.
- October 3, 1838: The Sauk leader Black Hawk died in the Iowa Territory.
Major legislation
- November 2, 1836: The Council concurs on adoption of the first great seal of the territory
- December 3, 1836: An Act to establish the seat of government of the territory of Wisconsin, and to provide for the erection of public buildings, 1836 Wis. Terr. Act 11. Established Madison as the capital city of Wisconsin.
- December 7, 1836: An Act to divide the counties of Brown and Milwaukee, 1836 Wis. Terr. Act 28. Created the counties of Calumet, Dane, Dodge, Fond du Lac, Jefferson, Manitowoc, Marquette, Portage, Racine, and Washington.
- December 8, 1836: An Act to divide the county of Iowa, 1836 Wis. Terr. Act 31. Created the counties of Grant and Green.
- January 12, 1838: An Act to abolish imprisonment for debt, and other purposes, 1837 Wis. Terr. Act 37.
- January 17, 1838: An Act relating to the militia, and public defense of the territory of Wisconsin, 1838 Wisc. Terr. Act 58.
- January 17, 1838: An Act to incorporate the borough of Green Bay, 1838 Wisc. Terr. Act 66.
- June 23, 1838: An Act to district the territory of Wisconsin into electoral districts and to apportion the representation of each, 1838 Wisc. Terr. Special Session Act 18.
Sessions
- 1st session: October 25, 1836 – December 9, 1836
- 2nd session: November 6, 1837 – January 20, 1838
- Special session: June 11, 1838 – June 25, 1838
Leadership
Council President
- Henry S. Baird (W) - during the 1st session
- Arthur B. Ingram - during the 2nd and special sessions
Speaker of the House of Representatives
- Peter H. Engle (D) - during the 1st session
- Isaac Leffler (W) - during the 2nd session
- William B. Sheldon (D) - during the special session
Members
Members of the Council
Counties | Councillor | Session(s) | Party | ||
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1st | 2nd | Spec. | |||
Brown | Henry S. Baird | Whig | |||
John P. Arndt | Whig | ||||
Joseph Dickinson | [note 1] | ||||
Alexander J. Irwin | [note 2] | ||||
Des Moines | Jeremiah Smith Jr. | ||||
Joseph B. Teas | |||||
Arthur B. Ingram | |||||
Dubuque | Thomas McCraney | ||||
John Foley | |||||
Thomas McKnight | Whig | ||||
Iowa | Ebenezer Brigham | ||||
John B. Terry | |||||
James R. Vineyard | |||||
Milwaukee | Alanson Sweet | Dem. | |||
Gilbert Knapp | Whig |
Members of the House of Representatives
Counties | Representative | Session(s) | Party | ||
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1st | 2nd | Spec. | |||
Brown | Ebenezer Childs | ||||
Albert G. Ellis | Dem. | ||||
Alexander J. Irwin | [note 1] | ||||
George McWilliams | [note 3] | ||||
Charles C. Sholes | |||||
Crawford | James H. Lockwood | Whig | |||
James B. Dallam | |||||
Ira B. Brunson | Dem. | ||||
Jean Brunet | |||||
Des Moines | Isaac Leffler | Whig | |||
Thomas Blair | |||||
John Box | |||||
George W. Teas | |||||
David R. Chance | |||||
Warren L. Jenkins | |||||
Eli Reynolds | |||||
John Reynolds | |||||
Dubuque | Loring Wheeler | ||||
Hardin Nowlin | |||||
Hosea T. Camp | [note 4] | ||||
Peter H. Engle | Dem. | ||||
Patrick Quigley | [note 5] | ||||
Alexander W. McGregor | [note 6] | ||||
Lucius H. Langworthy | |||||
Iowa | William Boyles | ||||
George F. Smith | |||||
Daniel M. Parkinson | Dem. | ||||
Thomas McKnight | |||||
Thomas Shanley | Whig | ||||
James P. Cox | Whig | ||||
James Collins | Whig | ||||
Milwaukee | William B. Sheldon | Dem. | |||
Madison W. Cornwall | Dem. | ||||
Charles Durkee | Dem.[4] |
Employees
Council employees
- Secretary:
- Edward McSherry, 1st session
- George Beatty, 2nd & special sessions
- Sergeant-at-Arms:
- William Henry, 1st session
- Levi Sterling, 2nd session
- George W. Harris, special session
House employees
- Chief Clerk:
- Warren Lewis, 1st session
- John Catlin, 2nd & special sessions
- Sergeant-at-Arms:
- Jesse M. Harrison, 1st session
- William Morgan, 2nd & special sessions
Notes
References
- 1 2 Heg, J. E., ed. (1882). "Annals of the Legislature" (PDF). The Blue Book of the State of Wisconsin (Report). State of Wisconsin. pp. 161–163. Retrieved August 29, 2021.
- ↑ Acts Passed at the First Session of the Legislative Assembly of the Territory of Wisconsin. Wisconsin Territory. 1836. Retrieved August 29, 2021.
- ↑ Belmont Gazette October 25, 1836; p. 3, col. 3; via Newspapers.com
- ↑ Smith, Theodore Clarke. The Free Soil Party in Wisconsin [From Proceedings of State Historical Society of Wisconsin, 1894]. Madison: State Historical Society of Wisconsin, 1895; p. 136
External links
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