Green, Duff, 1791-1875

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Journalist, politician, and industrial promoter.

From the description of Papers of Duff Green, 1810-1902. (Unknown). WorldCat record id: 71070528

Businessman, publisher, printer for U.S. Congress, 1827-1833.

From the description of Letter : Washington, to W.R. Smith, 1834 Oct. 6. (Unknown). WorldCat record id: 22456195

From the description of Letter : Dalton, Ga., to H. Maynard, 1874 Jan. 13. (Unknown). WorldCat record id: 22456215

Editor, industrial promoter, and resident of Dalton (Whitfield Co.), Ga.

From the description of Duff Green papers, 1865-1872. (Duke University Library). WorldCat record id: 51301466

Journalist, politician, entrepreneur, and industrial promoter.

From the description of Duff Green papers, 1716-1883 (bulk 1827-1845). (Unknown). WorldCat record id: 70979864

Epithet: American politician

British Library Archives and Manuscripts Catalogue : Person : Description : ark:/81055/vdc_100000000982.0x000119

Duff Green was a journalist, politician, and industrial promoter.

From the description of Duff Green papers, 1789-1968. WorldCat record id: 24250534

American politician and journalist.

From the description of Autograph letter signed : Vicksburg, to W.L. Sharkey, 1866 Mar. 6. (Unknown). WorldCat record id: 270505744

Journalist, politician, industrial promoter.

From the description of Letter: [Richmond, Va.], 1864 Dec. 19. (Abraham Lincoln Presidential Library). WorldCat record id: 32038964

From the description of Letter: Washington, [D.C.], 1828 May 1. (Abraham Lincoln Presidential Library). WorldCat record id: 32038948

Biographical Note

  • 1791, Aug. 15: Born, Woodford County, Ky.
  • 1813: Married Lucretia Edwards
  • 1823: Member, Missouri legislature Owner, St. Louis Enquirer, supporting Andrew Jackson in presidential election of 1824
  • 1825 - 1836 : Owner-editor, United States Telegraph, Washington, D.C.
  • 1827 - 1832 : Printer to Congress
  • 1828 - 1830 : Member, “Kitchen Cabinet” of President Andrew Jackson
  • 1836: Organized Union Potomac Co., Va. Founded the Reformer, Washington, D.C.
  • 1839: Organized Union Co., Md.
  • 1840: Founded the Pilot, Baltimore, Md. Established American Land Co., Md.
  • 1840 - 1844 : Unofficial representative of the United States to England and France
  • 1844: Established the Republic, New York Appointed consul, Galveston, Tex.
  • 1857: Published the American Statesman, Washington, D.C.
  • 1861: Organized Duff Green and Son, Ironworks, Jonesboro, Tenn., and Planters Insurance Trust and Loan Co., Ga.
  • 1861 - 1865 : Operated iron manufacturing plants for Confederacy during the Civil War and acted as adviser on fiscal and foreign policy to Confederate leaders
  • 1865 - 1875 : Organized several railroads, including the Sabine & Rio Grande and the Selma, Rome & Dalton
  • 1867: Organized the Maryland Industrial Agency and the Mississippi American Industrial Agency 1875, June 10 Died, Dalton, Ga.
  • 1875, June 10: Died, Dalton, Ga.

From the guide to the Duff Green Papers, 1716-1883, (bulk 1827-1845), (Manuscript Division Library of Congress)

Commodore James Barron, born 15 September 1768 in Hampton, Virginia, died 21 April 1851 in Norfolk, served under his father, Commodore James Barron the Elder, in the Revolutionary War. He was made Captain in the Virginia Navy in 1799 and transferred to the newly formed U.S. Navy in 1803. During the War with Tripoli he commanded the U.S. Frigates New York and President when his brother, Commodore Samuel Barron, was commander of the Mediterranean Squadron. He assisted his brother in that command when the latter's health failed and returned with him to Norfolk in 1805.

Appointed Commander of the Mediterranean Squadron in 1806 with the rank of Commodore, which title he retained for the rest of his life, he sailed aboard the U.S. Chesapeake. The British ship Leopard attacked the Chesapeake when Barron refused to allow his ship to be boarded in a search for British deserters. After a brief battle, Barron surrendered and on the request of his junior officers he was brought before a Naval court martial. The command was turned over to Capt. Stephen Decatur who in the Algerian War of 1815 became a national hero. Barron was suspended from the Navy for five years in a decision criticized by many, including B. Cocke of Washington and Robert Saunders of Williamsburg.

Barron took command of the merchant ship Portia, and after several voyages was caught in a Danish port by the outbreak of the War of 1812. He attempted to get passage home but was refused it because of the Danish neutrality and remained in Copenhagen until 1819. During this period he supported himself with his inventions including a new type of mill, a rope spinning machine, a cork cutter, and a dough kneading machine. Upon his return he sought a command in the Navy and in the course of this an argument by mail with Decatur resulted in the famous duel in which Barron was seriously injured and Decatur fatally. His second in the duel, Capt. J. D. Elliott was coupled with Barron in responsibility for the duel, though perhaps unfairly.

A Naval Court of Enquiry was held in 1821 to clear the name of Barron for his absence in the War of 1812 and other charges brought against him. The decision was very noncommittal and was criticized by many, including Carter Beverley and John Taliaferro of Williamsburg.

In 1824, Barron was given the command of the Philadelphia Navy Yard, largely through the influence of his friend, General Andrew Jackson. While there he participated in the entertaining of General Lafayette when he visited the U.S.

Commodore Barron took command of the Gosport Navy Yard in 1825 where he remained until 1831 when he returned to the command of the Philadelphia Navy Yard. In 1837, he resigned that command because an officer junior to him had been appointed President of the Naval Board in Washington, and was without command until 1842. From 13 March to 30 November 1842 he commanded the Navy Asylum, a retirement home for Naval men in Philadelphia. In that position he was also in charge of the training and examination of Midshipmen for the Navy, and his advice was asked when plans were being made for organization of the Naval Academy at Annapolis in 1847. In 1845, he returned to Norfolk where he lived in retirement until his death in 1851.

During all this time he continued his interest in inventions which included a new type of pump and bellows ventilator for ships, a steam-powered battleship, a new type of dry dock, and a cylinder steam for ships developed with Amos Kendali. He was instrumental in the development of the Naval flag signal, which he first revised in 1798.

Commodore Barron supported the education of his grandson, James Barron Hope, whose early letters, a poem on Washington, and other poems are included at the end of Box 11. (See the James Barron Hope Papers for a continuation of these papers, and the Samuel Barron Papers for a chart to the genealogy of the Barron family.)

From the guide to the James Barron Papers (1), 1766-1899., (Special Collections, Earl Gregg Swem Library, College of William and Mary)

Duff Green was born on 15 August 1791 in Woodford County, Ky. At the age of seven, he was sent to a field school attended chiefly by children of his father's tenants. At fourteen, he entered Danville Academy, but returned home a year and a half later and remained until 1811 to educate his brothers and sisters. He was briefly a teacher at Elizabethtown Academy before he enlisted as a private in the War of 1812. Green served at Vincennes and Fort Harrison under General William Henry Harrison and later was made a captain. After the war, he married Lucretia Maria Edwards, sister of Governor Ninian Edwards of Illinois, with whom he had nine children.

In 1816, Green went to Missouri to survey public lands and remained there for almost ten years engaging in profitable land speculation, building up a large mercantile business in and around St. Louis, and securing contracts for the carrying of mails. During this time, he founded the town of Chariton, Mo., near St. Louis. He also studied law, was admitted to the bar, and built up a large and lucrative legal practice. His political affairs included being a member of the state constitutional convention in 1820, serving in both houses of the state legislature, and being appointed by President Monroe a brigadier general in the Missouri state militia.

Green purchased the St. Louis Enquirer in 1823, through which he supported Jackson in the election of 1824. After he purchased the United States Telegraph in 1825, he moved to Washington, D.C. Through the Telegraph, he assailed the Adams administration and advocated Jackson and reform.

Green was a member of Jackson's Kitchen Cabinet and acted as printer to Congress, 1829-1833. His political views changed during the Eaton controversy when Green opposed Jackson and Van Buren in favor of John C. Calhoun, whose son had married Green's daughter. Throughout the 1830s, he continued to attack the Jackson and Van Buren faction through the Telegraph, the Reformer (1837-1838), and the Pilot (1840).

Green supported Harrison in 1840 and was largely responsible for Tyler's placement on the Whig ticket. Tyler later rewarded him by sending Green as an unofficial representative of the United States to England and France. Here, through personal contracts and publications, he advocated reduction of duties, direct trade with the South, a modification of England's attitude toward slavery and the United States' interest in Texas, and the settlement of the Oregon boundary dispute.

Green returned to the United States and vocalized his support for the Southern cause in the Republic (1844) and later in the weekly American Statesman (1857), advocating expansion into Texas, Cuba, and Santo Domingo. Tyler appointed him consul at Galveston, Tex., in 1844 and sent him to Mexico with the view of acquiring Texas, New Mexico, and California. Green strongly supported the Mexican War, and, after the war, acted as agent in making payment to Mexico under the Treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo.

Green's conviction that the South either had to develop to the fullest its natural resources or be crushed by the North motivated at least partially a wide variety of business enterprises. He purchased and mined vast tracts of land in Maryland and Virginia, but the difficulty of obtaining railroad and canal links limited the success of the scheme and turned Green's attention to building these links in the forties and fifties. Green projected plans for a canal from the Sabine River south to the Rio Grande River and north to the Red and Mississippi Rivers; secured a contract for the construction of the Baltimore and Ohio Railroad sixty miles beyond Cumberland, Md.; and built the East Tennessee and Georgia Railroad from Knoxville to Dalton, Ga. Green also sought to consolidate the railroads of the South and envisioned a line that would extend from Washington to the Pacific coast of Mexico. To further this mammoth design, he organized the Pennsylvania Fiscal Agency, reorganized by Northern capitalists during the Civil War as the Credit Mobilier of America. This agency was to provide the necessary capital for railroad construction, but the Civil War cut the scheme short.

Although Green was neither a slaveholder nor a secessionist, he supported the Confederacy by sending large amounts of guns, munitions, and other support to Southern troops from his iron works in Georgia and Tennessee. He remained, however, a man respected by both North and South, and, in 1865, he had a private audience with Lincoln at Richmond concerning peace proposals.

During the war Green published Facts and Suggestions on the Subjects of Currency and Direct Trade (1861) and Fact and Suggestions Relative to Finance and Currency (1864). These books were followed by Facts and Suggestions, Biographical, Historical, Financial, and Political (1866), A Memorial and A Bill Relating to Finance, National Currency, Debt, Revenue, etc. (1869), and How to Pay Off the National Debt, Regulate the Value of Money and Maintain Stability in the Values of Property and Labor (1872).

After the war Green sought to raise capital for rebuilding the defeated South by organizing the American Industrial Agency, with branches in several states. He also revived his interest in railroad construction and drew plans for the establishment of a model industrial city in Tennessee. These plans failed because of turbulent political and uncertain economic conditions. Green died in Dalton, Ga., on 10 June 1875.

Benjamin Edwards Green, lawyer, diplomat, and industrial promoter, was closely connected with many of his father's business enterprises. He received his education at Georgetown College and the University of Virginia Law School. He served as charge d'affaires in Mexico in 1844 and was sent to the West Indies in 1849 to investigate the possibility of purchasing Cuba and to negotiate with the Dominican Republic and Haiti.

Upon his return to the United States, he settled in Dalton, Ga., and, both before and after the Civil War, devoted himself with his father to the industrial development of Georgia and the South. Among the enterprises in which he was interested were the Dalton and Morganton and the Dalton and Jacksonville railroads, the Central Transit Company, the Cherokee Iron Foundry, the Texas Land Company, and the American Industrial Agency. Green played an important part in Georgia politics after the war, being largely instrumental in the calling of the Georgia state convention of the Greenback Part in 1880. He died in Dalton, Ga., on 12 May 1907.

[ Dictionary of American Biography . Fletcher M. Green: Ben E. Green and Greenbackism in Georgia,   Georgia Historical Quarterly, XXX (March, 1946), 1-13; Duff Green: Industrial Promoter,   Journal of Southern History, II (February, 1936), 28-42; and Duff Green, Militant Journalist of the Old School,   American Historical Review, LII (January, 1947), 247-268.]

From the guide to the Duff Green Papers, ., 1810-1902, (University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. Library. Southern Historical Collection.)

Archival Resources
Role Title Holding Repository
creatorOf Green, Duff, 1791-1875. Duff Green papers, 1865-1872. Duke University Libraries, Duke University Library; Perkins Library
creatorOf Maynard, Lafayette. Letters to Duff Green, 1847-1850. Huntington Library, Art Collections & Botanical Gardens
referencedIn Griffin John King, 1789-1841. Letter, 1831 Dec. 7, Washington [D.C.], to Dr. John H. Davis, Milton, Laurens District, S.C. University of South Carolina, System Library Service, University Libraries
referencedIn Grundy, Felix, 1777-1840. Felix Grundy papers, 1807-1889 (bulk 1824-1840) [manuscript]. University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill
referencedIn Unrelated papers largely documents and correspondence chiefly from Warrenton and Fredericksburg and Orange, Culpeper, Fairfax, and Fauquier Counties, Va. [manuscript] 1821-1880. University of Virginia. Library
creatorOf Lee, Charles Carter, 1798-1871. Papers of Charles Carter Lee and the Lee family [manuscript], 1768-1931 (bulk 1780-1871). University of Virginia. Library
creatorOf Green, Duff, 1791-1875. Letter : Washington, to W.R. Smith, 1834 Oct. 6. George Washington University
creatorOf Barron, James, 1769-1851. Papers, 1776-1899. William & Mary Libraries
referencedIn Morfit, Henry Mason, d. 1868. Henry Mason Morfit papers, 1819-1858 (bulk 1844-1855). Library of Congress
creatorOf Edwards, Ninian, 1775-1833. Ninian Edwards papers, 1798-1833. Chicago History Museum
creatorOf Green, Duff, 1791-1875. Autograph letter signed : Vicksburg, to W.L. Sharkey, 1866 Mar. 6. Pierpont Morgan Library.
referencedIn Selected personal papers from the Library of Congress [microform], 1817-1830. Wisconsin Historical Society, Newspaper Project
creatorOf Lee, Charles Carter, 1798-1871, collector. Collection, 1768-1931 (bulk 1813-1870) [microform]. Library of Virginia
referencedIn St. George L. Sioussat Papers, 1831-1959 Library of Congress. Manuscript Division
creatorOf Green, Duff, 1791-1875. Letter: Washington, [D.C.], 1828 May 1. Abraham Lincoln Presidential Library
referencedIn Tallmadge, Nathaniel Pitcher, 1795-1864. Papers, 1812-1860. Wisconsin Historical Society, Newspaper Project
creatorOf Royall, Anne Newport, 1769-1854. Letter : Washington, to Messrs. Green & Jarvis, 1828 June 7. George Washington University
creatorOf Duff Green letters, 1814-1866 New York Public Library. Manuscripts and Archives Division
referencedIn John McLean Papers, 1817-1861, (bulk 1829-1860) Library of Congress. Manuscript Division
referencedIn King, Mitchell, 1783-1862. Mitchell King papers, 1814-1911. University of South Carolina, System Library Service, University Libraries
creatorOf Crall\'e, Richard K. (Richard Kenner), 1800-1864. Richard K. Crallé collection 1818-1856. Clemson University Libraries, Robert Muldrow Cooper Library
referencedIn Calhoun, John C. (John Caldwell), 1782-1850,. Letters to Benjamin Watkins Leigh [manuscript] 1819-1842. University of Virginia. Library
creatorOf Green, Duff, 1791-1875. Letter: [Richmond, Va.], 1864 Dec. 19. Abraham Lincoln Presidential Library
referencedIn Peale-Sellers family collection, 1686-1963 American Philosophical Society
referencedIn Vol. CCLXXXIX, ff. 308, 7 May 1841-Dec. 1842.William Ewart Gladstone, Prime Minister: Correspondence with Sir R. Peel: 1834-1849.Trade and Plantations; Board of Commissioners for: Correspondence of Lord Ripon and W. E. Gladstone, as successive Presid... British Library
referencedIn John Anthony Quitman papers, 1833-1858 (inclusive) 1847-1858 (bulk). Houghton Library
creatorOf Duff Green Papers, ., 1810-1902 University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. Library. Southern Historical Collection
creatorOf Tazewell family. Papers, 1790-1848. Library of Virginia
creatorOf González Ortega, Jesús, 1822-1881. Jesús González Ortega papers, 1884, 1844-1866. UC Berkeley Libraries
referencedIn Floyd, John, 1783-1837. John Floyd papers, 1823-1867. Library of Congress
creatorOf Breckenridge, John R.,. Letters to Socrates Maupin and others [manuscript], 1783-1866. University of Virginia. Library
creatorOf Randolph, Sarah N. (Sarah Nicholas), 1839-1892. Papers of the Randolph family [manuscript], 1790-1903. University of Virginia. Library
creatorOf Green, Duff, 1791-1875. Letter : Dalton, Ga., to H. Maynard, 1874 Jan. 13. George Washington University
creatorOf Wright, W. Lloyd (William Lloyd), 1876-1950,. W. Lloyd Wright papers. George Washington University
creatorOf Green, Duff, 1791-1875. Duff Green papers, 1789-1968. University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill
referencedIn Ethel Armes Collection of Lee Family Papers, 1671-1936 Library of Congress. Manuscript Division
referencedIn Harvard University. Autograph File, G. 1641-2009. Houghton Library
creatorOf Cabell, J. L. (James Lawrence), 1813-1889. Virginiana [manuscript], 1824-1921. University of Virginia. Library
referencedIn William Henry Harrison Papers, 1734-1939, (bulk 1796-1841) Library of Congress. Manuscript Division
creatorOf Duff Green Papers, 1716-1883, (bulk 1827-1845) Library of Congress. Manuscript Division
referencedIn Cheves family. Cheves family papers, 1808-1934. University of South Carolina, System Library Service, University Libraries
creatorOf James Barron Papers (1), 1766-1899. Special Collections Research Center, Earl Gregg Swem Library, College of William and Mary
Role Title Holding Repository
Relation Name
associatedWith Adams, John, 1735-1826 person
associatedWith A. P. (Abel Parker) Upshur, 1790-1844 person
correspondedWith Armes, Ethel, 1876-1945. person
associatedWith Barron, James person
associatedWith Barron, James, 1769-1851. person
correspondedWith Buchanan, James, 1791-1868 person
correspondedWith Cabell, John J. person
correspondedWith Calhoun, John C. (John Caldwell), 1782-1850 person
correspondedWith Cass, Lewis, 1782-1866 person
associatedWith Cheves family. family
correspondedWith Cobden, Richard, 1804-1865 person
associatedWith Crall\'e, Richard K. (Richard Kenner), 1800-1864. person
correspondedWith Crallé, Richard K. (Richard Kenner), 1800-1864 person
associatedWith Credit Mobilier of America. corporateBody
correspondedWith Dallas, George Mifflin, 1792-1864 person
associatedWith Decatur, Stephen, 1779-1820 person
correspondedWith Eaton, John Henry, 1790-1856 person
associatedWith Edwards, Ninian, 1775-1833. person
associatedWith Elliott, Jesse Duncan, 1782-1845 person
correspondedWith Ellis, Henry, 1777-1869 person
correspondedWith Everett, Edward, 1794-1865 person
correspondedWith Floyd, John, 1783-1837. person
associatedWith Ford collection corporateBody
associatedWith González Ortega, Jesús, 1822-1881. person
associatedWith Greenback Labor Party (U.S.) corporateBody
associatedWith Green, Ben. E. (Benjamin Edwards), 1822-1907. person
associatedWith Green, Fletcher Melvin, 1895-1978. person
correspondedWith Green, Lucretia person
associatedWith Griffin John King, 1789-1841. person
associatedWith Grundy, Felix, 1777-1840. person
correspondedWith Harrison, William Henry, 1773-1841 person
correspondedWith Hill, Isaac, 1789-1851 person
associatedWith Jackson, Andrew, 1767-1845. person
associatedWith Jefferson, Thomas, 1743-1826 person
correspondedWith Kendall, Amos, 1789-1869 person
associatedWith King, Mitchell, 1783-1862. person
associatedWith Lee, Charles Carter, 1798-1871 person
correspondedWith MacGregor, John, 1825-1892 person
correspondedWith Madison, James, 1751-1836 person
associatedWith Maynard, Horace, 1814-1882. person
associatedWith Maynard, Lafayette. person
correspondedWith McLean, John, 1785-1861. person
correspondedWith Morfit, Henry Mason, d. 1868. person
associatedWith Peale-Sellers families. person
correspondedWith Peel, Robert, 1788-1850 person
associatedWith Quitman, John Anthony. person
associatedWith Royall, Anne Newport, 1769-1854. person
associatedWith Sharkey, William Lewis, 1798-1873, person
associatedWith Sioussat, St. George L. (St. George Leakin), 1878-1960. person
associatedWith Smith, W. R. person
associatedWith Stevens, William Oliver, 1878-1955 person
associatedWith Tallmadge, Nathaniel Pitcher, 1795-1864. person
correspondedWith Taylor, Zachary, 1784-1850 person
associatedWith Tazewell family. family
associatedWith Tyler, John, 1790-1862. person
associatedWith Upshur, A. P. (Abel Parker), 1790-1844 person
correspondedWith Van Buren, Martin, 1782-1862 person
correspondedWith Webster, Daniel, 1782-1852 person
associatedWith Wright, W. Lloyd (William Lloyd), 1876-1950, person
Place Name Admin Code Country
Richmond (Va.)
Texas
Southern States
United States
Texas
Southern States
United States
United States
Virginia
Northwest boundary of the United States.
United States
Cornwall, England
Georgia
Mexico
Tennessee
United States
France
United States
Central America
West Indies
Great Britain
Tennessee
United States of America
West Virginia
Mexico
Confederate States of America
United States
Great Britain
Maryland
France
Northwest boundary of the United States
Subject
Slavery
Slavery
United States
Education
African Americans
Banks and banking
Canals
Cherokee Indians
Chesapeake
Coal mines and mining
Courts-martial and courts of inquiry
Dueling
Elections
Elections
Finance
Freedom of the press
Free trade
Industrialization
Industries
International trade
Investments, Foreign
Iron industry and trade
Iron mines and mining
Mines and mineral resources
Money
Money
United States. Navy
United States. Navy
Oregon question
Patents
Postal service
Presidents
Presidents
Presidents
Public schools
Railroads
Railroads
Railroads
States' rights (American politics)
Subject: Inventions
Tariff
Tariff
Occupation
Entrepreneurs
Journalists
Politicians
Promoters
Activity

Person

Birth 1791-08-15

Death 1875-06-10

Information

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