词条 | David L. Gregg |
释义 |
|name = David L. Gregg |image = David Lawrence Gregg.jpg |imagesize = 150px |office = United States Commissioner to the Kingdom of Hawaii |term_start = 1853 |term_end = 1857 |predecessor = Luther Severance |successor = James W. Borden |president = Franklin Pierce |order2 = 11th |office2 = Illinois Secretary of State |term_start2 = 1850 |term_end2 = 1853 |governor2 = Augustus C. French | office3 = Minister of Finance | term3 = | term_start3 = May 26, 1858 | term_end3 = August 18, 1862 | monarch3 = | predecessor3 = Robert C. Wyllie | successor3 = Robert C. Wyllie |predecessor2 = Horace S. Cooley |successor2 = Alexander Starne |birth_date = July 21, 1819 |birth_place = Pennsylvania |death_date = {{death date and age|1868|12|23|1819|7|21|mf=y}} |death_place = Carson City, Nevada |party = Democrat |otherparty = |spouse = Rebecca Eads |relations = |children = |profession = Attorney, publisher }} David Lawrence Gregg (July 21, 1819 – December 23, 1868) was an American politician from Pennsylvania. He rose to prominence in Illinois politics, first in the Illinois House of Representatives, then as United States Attorney, and Illinois Secretary of State. In 1853, Franklin Pierce appointed Gregg the Commissioner to the Kingdom of Hawaii to negotiate its annexation at the request of its king, Kamehameha III. Incorrectly, he cited the U.S. Constitution as not allowing annexation of a foreign state. (Texas was in fact allowed to be annexed.) His later years were spent in Carson City, Nevada. BiographyDavid Lawrence Gregg was born in Pennsylvania on July 21, 1819. He moved west and settled in Joliet, Illinois, to practice law. He edited the Juliet Courier, the first paper in Will County, Illinois. Gregg was elected to the Illinois House of Representatives in 1842, serving two two-year terms. Gregg then accepted an appointment by President James K. Polk as United States Attorney for the District of Illinois. He was a delegate to the Illinois Constitutional Convention of 1847, representing Cook County. In 1850, he was named the Illinois Secretary of State as a Democrat, filling the unexpired term of the deceased Horace S. Cooley. Gregg was then re-elected to a two-year term. He then was a presidential elector for the 1852 election. He was a leading candidate in 1852 for the Democratic nomination as Governor of Illinois, but was defeated by Joel Aldrich Matteson.[1] President Franklin Pierce then appointed Gregg the Commissioner to the Kingdom of Hawaii. He was involved with unsuccessful annexation discussions with the Hawaiian monarchy. In 1857, he left the office to become Hawaiian finance minister. Gregg returned to the United States, settling in Carson City, Nevada. President Andrew Johnson commissioned him receiver of public moneys for the district of lands subject to sale in the city.[1] Gregg married Rebecca Eads on September 1, 1850. He died in Carson City on December 23, 1868 and was buried in Lone Mountain Cemetery.[1] References1. ^1 2 {{cite journal |title=Original Letter |journal=Journal of the Illinois State Historical Society |url=https://archive.org/stream/journalofillinoi09illi#page/n639/mode/2up |date=October 1916 |volume=9 |number=3 |p=311}} {{s-start}}{{s-off}}{{succession box | title=Secretary of State of Illinois | before=Horace S. Cooley | after=Alexander Starne| years= 1850–1853 }}{{s-end}}{{Hawaiian Ministers of Finance}}{{Illinois Secretaries of State}}{{authority control}}{{DEFAULTSORT:Gregg, David L.}} 19 : 1819 births|1868 deaths|Ambassadors of the United States to Hawaii|Editors of Illinois newspapers|Kingdom of Hawaii Finance Ministers|Illinois Democrats|Illinois lawyers|Members of the Illinois House of Representatives|People from Pennsylvania|Politicians from Carson City, Nevada|People from Joliet, Illinois|Secretaries of State of Illinois|19th-century American journalists|American male journalists|19th-century American male writers|19th-century American politicians|Journalists from Illinois|People from Carson City, Nevada|Pennsylvania Democrats |
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