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Territory of Jefferson

 
US History Encyclopedia: Jefferson Territory

Jefferson Territory was established under a spontaneously formed provisional government that had a precarious existence in Colorado from 1859 to 1861. Legally, the new settlements that grew up in Pikes Peak country following the discovery of gold nearby in 1858 were under Kansas' jurisdiction. They were so far from the seat of the Kansas government, however, that the territory was unable to exercise effective authority. Denver residents took the first step toward organizing a new government in November 1858 when they elected a delegate to Congress and asked that a new territory be created. Torn with dissension over slavery, Congress did not act until January 1861. Meanwhile, through several successive conventions and elections, inhabitants formed Jefferson Territory without Congressional authorization. They adopted a constitution, elected officials, determined territorial boundaries, and established a legislature, which created counties and courts and passed laws pertaining to personal and civil rights. The nascent government's attempt to collect taxes generally failed, however, mainly because the nearby Arapahoe County, the Kansas government, and the local miners' courts remained the chief means of maintaining law and order. Jefferson Territory came to an end after Congress created the Territory of Colorado in 1861. Jefferson Territory stands as an example of many similarly short-lived attempts to establish provisional governments in unorganized territories. As was the case in Jefferson Territory, these territories—including Deseret (Utah) and the State of Franklin (Tennessee)—lasted only until settlers used legal channels to establish territorial governments recognized by Congress.

Bibliography

Abbott, Carl, et al. Colorado: A History of the Centennial State. 3rd ed. Niwot: University Press of Colorado, 1994.

Smith, Duane A. Rocky Mountain West: Colorado, Wyoming, and Montana, 1859–1915. Albuquerque: University of New Mexico Press, 1992.

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Columbia Encyclopedia: Territory of Jefferson
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Jefferson, Territory of, in U.S. history, region that roughly encompassed the present-day state of Colorado, although extending 2° farther south and 1° farther north, organized by its inhabitants (1859-61), but never given congressional sanction. After a great increase in emigration in the 1850s, settlers in Arapahoe co., Kansas Territory, felt the need to be closer to the seat of government. They met in convention in Denver on Aug. 1, 1859, to discuss alternatives to the region's status. The 166 delegates present debated the benefits of reorganization as a state or as a territory and submitted the question on Sept. 5 to the public, which voted overwhelmingly for territorial status. Subsequently, Beverly D. Williams was sent as a representative to Congress, which, however, refused his petition. Nevertheless, the constitution of the Territory of Jefferson was adopted on Oct. 24, and the first session of its legislature met on Nov. 7. Robert W. Steele was elected provisional governor. Although illegal, the new government coexisted peacefully with the official county institutions. Laws were passed regarding taxation, and the franchise was denied Native and African Americans. On Feb. 28, 1861, Congress passed the Organic Act, which created the Territory of Colorado. The provisional government quickly dismantled, and William Gilpin replaced Steele as governor.


Wikipedia: Jefferson Territory
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Map of Jefferson Territory

The Provisional Government of the Territory of Jefferson was an extralegal and unrecognized territory of the United States that existed from October 24, 1859 until the creation of the Territory of Colorado on February 28, 1861. The Territory of Jefferson included land officially part of the Territory of Kansas, the Territory of Nebraska, the Territory of New Mexico, the Territory of Utah, and the Territory of Washington, but remote from the governments of those five territories. The government of the Territory of Jefferson, while democratically elected, was never legally recognized by the United States Government, although it managed the territory with relatively free rein for 16 months. Many of the laws enacted by the Jefferson Territorial Legislature were reenacted and given official sanction by the new Colorado General Assembly in 1861.

Contents

Origins

On August 25, 1855, the Territory of Kansas created Arapahoe County, a huge county that included the entire western portion of the territory. The boundaries of Arapahoe County were defined as:

Beginning at the northeast corner of New Mexico, running thence north to the south line of Nebraska and north line of Kansas; thence along said line to the east line of Utah Territory; thence along said line between Utah and Kansas territories, to where said line strikes New Mexico; thence along the line between said New Mexico and the territory of Kansas to the place of beginning.

Since Arapahoe County was occupied primarily by Cheyenne and Arapaho with only a few white settlers, the county was never organized. (A remnant of this county survives today as Arapahoe County, Colorado, in the Denver metropolitan area.)

The Pike's Peak Gold Rush began with the discovery of gold in July 1858 at the Dry Creek Diggings in Arapahoe County, Kansas Territory (now Englewood in Arapahoe County, Colorado.) The gold rush brought 100,000 gold seekers to the area known as the Pike's Peak Country, which included Arapahoe County in the Kansas Territory and the unorganized southwestern corner of the Nebraska Territory. The leaders of the Kansas Territory were much preoccupied with the violent events of Bloody Kansas in the populous eastern portion of the territory, so little time or attention was available to attend to the needs of the far western portion of the territory. The United States Congress was likewise preoccupied with threats of secession by the slave states.

The settlers in the region attempted to organize Arapahoe County on their own. On March 28, 1859, an election was held to elect officers for Arapahoe County. A total of 774 votes were cast, including 231 from Auraria and 144 from Denver City. Unfortunately, the voters did not realize that the Kansas Territorial Legislature had replaced Arapahoe County with six new unorganized counties on February 7, 1859. When no word was received from Kansas Territorial officials, many settlers decided that they should establish a separate government themselves.

Establishment

In April 1859, a tiny convention was held at Wootton's Hall in Auraria about the need for a local government. The name Jefferson was chosen and a constitutional convention was planned for June 6, 1859. The conventioneers met that day, and then adjourned until August 1, 1859, when 37 district representatives met to draft a constitution for the State of Jefferson, which was subsequently rejected in a popular referendum on September 24. The original authors determined to hold another convention on October 3, and drafted a provisional constitution for the Territory of Jefferson, named in honor of Thomas Jefferson, the principal author of the United States Declaration of Independence. As the third President of the United States, Jefferson famously authorized the 1803 Louisiana Purchase that included much of this territory.

The proposed Territory of Jefferson included all of the present State of Colorado, but it was 70 percent more extensive. The territory had the same southern boundary as the present State of Colorado, the 37th parallel north, but it extended 138.1 miles (222.2 kilometers) farther north to the 43rd parallel north, about 2.7 miles (4.3 kilometers) farther east to the 102nd meridian west, and about 50 miles (81 kilometers) farther west to the 110th meridian west.[1][2][3] The territory was divided into eight council districts and 19 representative districts.

On October 24, 1859, an election was held to approve the formation of the Provisional Government of the Territory of Jefferson and to elect officials for the territory. The formation of a provisional government was approved by a vote of 1,852 to 280 and the following officials were elected:[1][4]

Officials of the Provisional Government of the
Territory of Jefferson 1859-1861
Governor R.W. Steele
Secretary Lucien W. Bliss
Treasurer George W. Cook
Attorney General Samuel McLean
Chief Justice A.J. Allison
Associate Justice John M. Odell
Associate Justice E. Fitzgerald
Clerk of Supreme Court Oscar B. Totten
Marshall John L. Merrick
Superintendent of Public Instruction H.H. McAffee
Auditor C.R. Bissell


On November 7, 1859, Governor Robert Williamson Steele opened the first session of the provisional Jefferson Territorial Legislature in Denver City with the following proclamation:

Let us then enter upon our duties with a determination of spirit that conquers all difficulties: working for the benefit of the whole commonwealth, encouraging moderation and conservation in all our acts, that we may never be ashamed of having taken an humble part of the organization of a Provisional Government for the Territory of Jefferson.

During this first session, the legislature organized 12 counties. (The Colorado General Assembly would create 17 counties with somewhat similar boundaries in 1861.) The legislature adjourned on December 7, 1859.

Many settlers from eastern Kansas preferred to be governed by that territory. Those resistant to the self-government of Jefferson Territory held an election on December 8, 1859, and elected Captain R. Sopris as their representative to the Kansas Territorial Legislature.

Governor Steele called the second session of the provisional Jefferson Territorial Legislature to meet at Denver City on January 23, 1860.

Many disappointed gold seekers left the region in 1860. The United States Census of 1860 counted approximately 35,000 persons in the region of the Jefferson Territory. Governor Steele pointed out that many gold seekers were working claims in remote areas and estimated that the total number of people in the Jefferson Territory was 60,000.

Governor Steele attempted to reach accommodation with the officials of the Kansas Territory. On August 7, 1860, Steele issued a proclamation requesting that the Provisional Government of the Jefferson Territory be merged into the Kansas Territory. Kansas officials would have no merger with what they considered to be an outlaw government, so the stalemate continued.

On November 7, 1860, the U.S. presidential election produced a victory for Abraham Lincoln and precipitated the secession of seven slave states and the formation of the Confederate States of America. These events eliminated any chance for federal endorsement of the Territory of Jefferson and any role in government for Governor Steele, a staunch pro-Union Democrat and vocal opponent of Lincoln and the Republican Party.

Seeking to augment the political power of the free states, the Republican led U.S. Congress hurriedly admitted the portion of the Territory of Kansas east of the 25th meridian west from Washington to the Union as the free State of Kansas on 1861-01-29. Kansas statehood left the western portion of the now defunct Kansas Territory, which the Jefferson Territory also claimed, officially unorganized. While the federal government refused to sanction the Jefferson Territory, it had effectively acknowledged the eastern border of the region.

Counties

On November 28, 1859, the Territory of Jefferson created 12 counties: [5]

  1. Cheyenne County evolved into Laramie County, Wyoming
  2. St. Vrain County evolved into Weld County, Colorado
  3. Arrappahoe County evolved into Arapahoe County, Adams County, and the City and County of Denver, Colorado
  4. El Paso County evolved into El Paso County and Pueblo County, Colorado
  5. Fountain County encompassed most of southeastern Colorado
  6. Park County evolved into Park County, Colorado
  7. Saratoga County evolved into Grand County, Colorado and Summit County
  8. North County evolved into Jackson County, Colorado
  9. Jefferson County evolved into Jefferson County, Colorado
  10. Jackson County evolved into Boulder County, Colorado
  11. Heele County evolved into Larimer County, Colorado
  12. Mountain County evolved into Gilpin County and Clear Creek County, Colorado

Capitals

Most administrative affairs of the Territory of Jefferson were handled at the home of Governor Steele at Mount Vernon and later Apex.

Dissolution

On February 26, 1861, Congress passed a bill organizing the Territory of Colorado. The bill was signed into law by U.S. President James Buchanan two days later on February 28, 1861.[6] On May 29, 1861, William Gilpin, newly appointed Governor of the Territory of Colorado, arrived in Denver City. Most citizens of the region welcomed their new government. On June 6, 1861, Governor Steele issued a proclamation declaring the Territory of Jefferson disbanded and urging all employees and residents to abide by the laws governing the United States.

See also

References

  1. ^ a b J.E. Wharton and D.O. Wilhelm (1866). "History of Denver with a Full and Complete Business Directory" (HTML). Leona L. Gustafson. http://www.genealogybug.net/1866_History/cover.html. Retrieved 2008-08-13. 
  2. ^ Bulletin, U.S. Geographical Survey, p. 63 Government Printing Office, 1922
  3. ^ Paxson, Frederic Logan, The Last American Frontier, pp. 147-149, The Macmillan company, 1918
  4. ^ "Provisional Laws and Joint Resolutions of the General Assembly of Jefferson Territory". General Assembly of the Territory of Jefferson. 1859-1860. http://books.google.com/books?id=kBc4AAAAIAAJ&ots=jReCf0jHdG&pg=PP5. Retrieved 2009-08-27. 
  5. ^ "An Act Defining the Boundaries of Counties and for other purposes". Provisional Laws and Joint Resolutions of the General Assembly of Jefferson Territory. General Assembly of the Territory of Jefferson. November 28, 1859. http://books.google.com/books?id=kBc4AAAAIAAJ&ots=jReCf0jHdG&pg=PA190. Retrieved 2009-08-27. 
  6. ^ Thirty-sixth United States Congress (1861-02-28). "An Act to provide a temporary Government for the Territory of Colorado" (PDF). State of Colorado, Department of Personnel and Administration, Colorado State Archives. http://www.colorado.gov/dpa/doit/archives/territory.pdf. Retrieved 2007-11-29. 

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