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was promoted captain in 1855; in the Civil War had command of the Minnesota and was active in the operations in the North Carolina Sound and in the blockade of Hampton Roads, where he saved

river, and at Valverde, 7 miles north of in the West Indies; was made lieutenant the fort, a severe battle occurred. Canby in 1827; had command of the brig Etna was about to make a general advance, during the Mexican War; and took part when about 1,000 Texans, horse and foot, in the expedition against Tuspan and armed with carbines, revolvers, and bowie in the second expedition against Tobasco. knives, suddenly burst from a thick wood He was a commissioner to survey the and attacked two of the National bat- boundary-line of California in 1848-50; teries, commanded respectively by Captains McRae and Hall. The cavalry were repulsed, but the infantry pressed forward, while the grape-shot were making fearful lanes in their ranks, and captured the battery of McRae. The brave captain his ship from the Confederate ram, Merridefended his guns with great courage. mac; and was promoted commodore in Seated upon one of them, he fought the 1862. He died in Dedham, Mass., Dec. assailants with a pistol until he was shot 17, 1863. dead. At length the Nationals, panic- Van Buren, ABRAHAM, military officer; stricken by the fierceness of the charge, born in Kinderhook, N. Y., Nov. 27, 1807; broke and fled, and did not stop until son of President Martin Van Buren; they had reached the shelter of Fort graduated at the United States Military Craig. That flight was one of the most disgraceful scenes of the war. Canby was compelled to see the victory snatched from him just as it seemed to be secured. Sibley, alarmed by the sudden development of Canby's strength by accessions to his ranks, hurried towards Santa Fé, captured it, but could not hold it, and was soon afterwards driven over the mountains into Texas.

Van Arsdale, JOHN, military officer; born in Goshen, Orange co., N. Y., Jan. 5, 1756; served throughout the Revolutionary War, first as sergeant and then as captain. He suffered unusual privation and hardship in the expedition against Quebec; was wounded and taken prisoner at the capture of Fort Montgomery and Fort Clinton; and subsequently was engaged in the war against the Indians. He died in New York City, Aug. 14, 1836.

Academy in 1827; served on the Western frontier for two years; aide-de-camp to Gen. Alexander Macomb for seven years; made captain in the 1st Dragoons in 1836; and became private secretary to his father the same year. He re-entered the army at the beginning of the Mexican War as major and paymaster; was with Gen. Zachary Taylor at Monterey, and with General Scott in every engagement from Vera Cruz to the capture of the City of Mexico. He was brevetted lieutenantcolonel for bravery at Contreras and Churubusco in 1847, and served in the paymaster's department till 1854, when he resigned. He died in New York City, March 15, 1873.

Van Buren, JOHN, lawyer; born in Hudson, N. Y., Feb. 18, 1810; son of President Martin Van Buren; graduated at Yale College in 1828; admitted to the bar in Albany, N. Y., in 1830; attorneygeneral of New York State in 1845-46; and for the remainder of his life practised law. He was known as "Prince John," from his imposing figure and manners.

Van Brunt, GERSHOM JAQUES, naval officer; born in Monmouth county, N. J., Aug. 28, 1798; entered the navy as midshipman in 1818; served in Com. David Porter's "Mosquito fleet" against pirates He died at sea, Oct. 13, 1866.

VAN BUREN, MARTIN

Van Buren, MARTIN, eighth President of the United States, from March 4, 1837, to March 4, 1841; Democrat; born in Kinderhook, N. Y., Dec. 5, 1782; was educated at the village academy; studied law

with William P. Van Ness; and was admitted to the bar in 1803. Having a taste for politics, he early engaged in it, being a member of a nominating convention when he was eighteen years of age.

In

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1808 he was appointed surrogate of Co- ination, Mr. Van Buren declared his full

assent to the anti-slavery principles of the platform. The convention declared that Congress had “no more power to make a slave than to make a king," and that it was the duty of the national government to relieve itself of "all responsibility for the existence or continuance of slavery wherever the government possessed constitutional authority to legislate on that subject." General Taylor, candidate of the Whigs, was elected. Mr. Van Buren made a tour in Europe (1853-55). On the outbreak of the Civil War he took decided ground in favor of the national gov ernment. He died in Kinderhook, N. Y., July 24, 1862.

The Treasury and the Panic.-The following is the text of President Van Buren's message to the Congress on the grave financial situation of the country:

WASHINGTON, Sept. 4, 1837.

lumbia county, and was sent to the State Senate in 1812. From 1815 to 1819 he was attorney-general of the State of New York; and was again Senator in 1816, holding both offices at the same time. He began a new organization of the Democratic party in 1818, and became the lead-. er of a body of politicians known as the ALBANY REGENCY (q. v.). It held the political control of the State for nearly twenty years. Mr. Van Buren was elected to the United States Senate in 1821, and was also in the convention that revised the State constitution. In the latter body he was favorable to the extension of the elective franchise, but not of universal suffrage. He opposed a proposition to deprive colored people of the elective franchise, but voted in favor of requiring of them a freehold qualification of $250. He was again elected United States Senator in 1827; governor of New York in 1828: entered Jackson's cabinet as Secretary of State in March, 1829; but re- Fellow-Citizens of the Senate and House signed in 1831, when he was appointed of Representatives,-The act of June 23, minister to England. He arrived there in 1836, regulating the deposits of the pubSeptember, but in December the Senate lic money and directing the employment rejected his nomination, and he returned. of State, District, and Territorial banks In May, 1832, he was nominated for Vice-President by the convention that renominated Andrew Jackson for the Presidency. He received all the electoral votes that were cast for Jackson excepting Pennsylvania. In 1836 he was elected President by 170 votes out of 283, and he was inaugurated March 4, 1837. The business of the country was in a depressed state during most of his administration, and his political opponents, unfairly holding him responsible for the grievance, accomplished his defeat at the next Presidential election. When his name was proposed at the Democratic nominating convention at Baltimore in 1844 as a candidate for the Presidency, it was rejected, because Mr. Van Buren was opposed to the annexation of Texas to the Union. In 1848, when the Democrats had nominated General Cass to please the slave-holders, the friends of Mr. Van Buren, in convention at Utica, adopting as their political creed a phase of anti-slavery, nominated him as a Freesoil candidate for the Presidency, with Charles Francis Adams, of Massachusetts, for Vice-President. In accepting the nom

for that purpose, made it the duty of the Secretary of the Treasury to discontinue the use of such of them as should at any time refuse to redeem their notes in specie, and to substitute other banks, provided a sufficient number could be obtained to receive the public deposits upon the terms and conditions therein prescribed. The general and almost simultaneous suspension of specie payments by the banks in May last rendered the performance of this duty imperative in respect to those which had been selected under the act, and made it at the same time impracticable to employ the requisite number of others upon the prescribed conditions. The specific regulations established by Congress for the deposit and safe-keeping of the public moneys having thus unexpectedly become inoperative, I felt it to be my duty to afford you an early opportunity for the exercise of your supervisory powers over the subject.

I was also led to apprehend that the suspension of specie payments, increasing the embarrassments before existing in the pecuniary affairs of the country, would so

far diminish the public revenue that the with propriety avoid subjecting you to the accruing receipts into the treasury would inconvenience of assembling at as early not, with the reserved five millions, be sufficient to defray the unavoidable expenses of the government until the usual period for the meeting of Congress, while the authority to call upon the States for a portion of the sums deposited with them was too restricted to enable the department to realize a sufficient amount from

that source. These apprehensions have been justified by subsequent results, which render it certain that this deficiency will occur if additional means be not provided by Congress.

a day as the state of the popular representation would permit. I am sure that I have done but justice to your feelings in believing that this inconvenience will be cheerfully encountered in the hope of rendering your meeting conducive to the good of the country.

During the earlier stages of the revulsion through which we have just passed much acrimonious discussion arose and great diversity of opinion existed as to its real causes. This was not surprising. The operations of credit are so diversiThe difficulties experienced by the mer- fied and the influences which affect them cantile interest in meeting their engage- so numerous, and often so subtle, that ments induced them to apply to me pre- even impartial and well-informed persons viously to the actual suspension of specie are seldom found to agree in respect to payments for indulgence upon their bonds them. To inherent difficulties were also for duties, and all the relief authorized by added other tendencies which were by no law was promptly and cheerfully granted. means favorable to the discovery of truth. The dependence of the treasury upon the It was hardly to be expected that those avails of these bonds to enable it to make who disapproved the policy of the governthe deposits with the States required by ment in relation to the currency would, law led me in the outset to limit this in the excited state of public feeling proindulgence to Sept. 1, but it has since duced by the occasion, fail to attribute to been extended to Oct. 1, that the matter that policy any extensive embarrassment might be submitted to your further direc- in the monetary affairs of the country. tion. The matter thus became connected with

Questions were also expected to arise the passions and conflicts of party; in the recess in respect to the October instalment of those deposits requiring the interposition of Congress.

A provision of another act, passed about the same time, and intended to secure a faithful compliance with the obligation of the United States to satisfy all demands upon them in specie or its equivalent, prohibited the offer of any bank-note not convertible on the spot into gold or silver at the will of the holder; and the ability of the government, with millions on deposit, to meet its engagements in the manner thus required by law was rendered very doubtful by the event to which I have referred.

opinions were more or less affected by political considerations, and differences were prolonged which might otherwise have been determined by an appeal to facts, by the exercise of reason, or by mutual concession. It is, however, a cheering reflection that circumstances of this nature cannot prevent a community so intelligent as ours from ultimately arriving at correct conclusions. Encouraged by the firm belief of this truth, I proceed to state my views, so far as may be necessary to a clear understanding of the remedies I feel it my duty to propose and of the reasons by which I have been led to recommend them.

Sensible that adequate provisions for The history of trade in the United States these unexpected exigencies could only be for the last three or four years affords made by Congress; convinced that some the most convincing evidence that our of them would be indispensably necessary present condition is chiefly to be attributed to the public service before the regular to overaction in all the departments of period of your meeting, and desirous also business-an overaction deriving, perhaps, to enable you to exercise at the earliest its first impulses from antecedent causes, moment your full constitutional powers but stimulated to its destructive conse for the relief of the country, I could not quences by excessive issues of bank-paper

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