- Joel Roberts Poinsett
Infobox US Cabinet official
name=Joel Roberts Poinsett
order=15th
title=United States Secretary of War
term_start=March 7 ,1837
term_end=March 4 ,1841
president=Martin Van Buren
predecessor=Lewis Cass
successor=John Bell
birth_date=birth date|1779|3|2|mf=y
birth_place=Charleston, South Carolina , U.S.
death_date=death date and age|1851|12|12|1779|03|02
death_place=Stateburg, South Carolina , U.S.
party=Democratic
spouse=Mary Izard Pringle
profession=Physician ,Botanist ,Politician Joel Roberts Poinsett (
March 2 ,1779 –December 12 ,1851 ) was aphysician ,botanist and Americanstatesman . He was a member of theUnited States House of Representatives , the first United States Minister to Mexico (the United States did not appoint ambassadors until 1896), a U.S. Secretary of War underMartin Van Buren and a cofounder ofNational Institute for the Promotion of Science and the Useful Arts (a predecessor of theSmithsonian Institution ), as well as the namesake ofPoinsett County, Arkansas , the historicPoinsett Bridge inGreenville County, South Carolina ,Poinsett State Park inSumter County, SC , and thepoinsettia , a popularChristmas flower.Born in 1779 in
Charleston, South Carolina to Dr. Elisha Poinsett and his wife Ann Richards, he was educated in Connecticut and Europe, gaining expertise in medicine and the law. He was an early U.S. traveler to the Middle East, where, in 1806, a Persian khan showed him a pool ofpetroleum , which he speculated might someday be used for fuel. [Oren, M. "Power, Faith, and Fantasy--America in the Middle East 1776 to the Present", page 49, Norton, 2007] He served as a "special agent" toSouth America n countries from 1810 to 1814 (he was sent there by PresidentJames Madison in 1809 to investigate the prospects of the revolutionists, in their struggle for independence fromSpain ), and returned to his home state of South Carolina in 1815. He ran for office there and served in theSouth Carolina state legislature from 1816 to 1820 as well as the S.C. Board of Public Works from 1818 to 1820. From 1821 to 1826 he represented South Carolina in the lower house of theUnited States Congress . He simultaneously served as a special envoy to Mexico from 1822 to 1823 and was appointed the first American minister to Mexico in 1825, and became embroiled in the country’s political turmoil until his recall in 1830. It was during this time that he visited the area of southern Mexico called Taxco del Alarcon and discovered what was later to become known as the poinsettia. (TheAztec s referred to the winter-blooming plant as "cuetlaxochitl"; its Latin name is "Euphorbia pulcherrima " or "the most beautiful Euphorbia.") Poinsett, an avid amateur botanist, sent samples of the plant home to the States and by 1836 the plant was most widely known as the "poinsettia."In 1830, Poinsett returned to South Carolina to espouse the Unionist cause in
nullification quarrels and to again serve in the South Carolina state legislature, from 1830 to 1831. He was occupied thus until 1833, when he married Mary Izard Pringle.Poinsett served as Secretary of War from
March 7 ,1837 toMarch 5 ,1841 and presided over the continuing removal of Indians west of the Mississippi and over theSeminole War ; reduced the fragmentation of the Army by concentrating elements at central locations; equipped the light batteries ofartillery regiments as authorized by the 1821 army organization act; and again retired to hisplantation at Georgetown, South Carolina, in 1841.He was a cofounder of the National Institute for the Promotion of Science and the Useful Arts in 1840, a group of politicians advocating for the use of the "Smithson bequest" for a national museum that would showcase relics of the country and its leaders, celebrate American technology and document the national resources of
North America . The group was defeated in its efforts, as other groups wanted scientists, rather than political leaders, guiding the fortunes of what would become the Smithsonian Institution.He died near
Stateburg, South Carolina in 1851 and is buried at the Church of the Holy Cross Episcopal Cemetery.Notes
External links
* [http://www.tsha.utexas.edu/handbook/online/articles/view/PP/fpo6.html Handbook of Texas Online: POINSETT, JOEL ROBERTS]
* [http://www.ecke.com/html/h_corp/corp_joelp.html The History of the Poinsettia]
* [http://owmg.org/Education/STB/STB-1984/STB-DE84.txt Joel Roberts Poinsett: The Man Behind The Flower]
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