- Robert J. Walker
Infobox US Cabinet official
name=Robert John Walker
image_width=200px
order=18th
title=United States Secretary of the Treasury
term_start=March 8 ,1845
term_end=March 5 ,1849
predecessor=George M. Bibb
successor=William M. Meredith
jr/sr2=United States Senator
state2=Mississippi
party2=Democrat
term2=March 4 ,1835 –March 5 ,1845
preceded2=George Poindexter
succeeded2=Joseph W. Chalmers
birth_date=birth date|1801|7|23|mf=y
birth_place=Northumberland, Pennsylvania , U.S.
death_date=death date and age|1869|11|11|1801|7|23
death_place=Washington, D.C. , U.S.
party=Democrat
spouse=
profession=Politician ,Lawyer
religion=Robert John Walker (
July 23 ,1801 –November 11 ,1869 ) was an American economist and statesman.Early life and education
Born in
Northumberland, Pennsylvania , the son of a judge, he graduated in 1819 at the top of his class at theUniversity of Pennsylvania where he was a member of thePhilomathean Society , and was admitted to the bar in Pittsburgh in 1821. He practiced law in Pittsburgh from 1822 until 1826 when he moved toMississippi . There he joined his brother, Duncan Walker, in a lucrative law practice. Walker became a speculator incotton , land and slaves. (In 1838 he freed his own slaves due to immense pressure from Congress.)Political life
He became politically prominent during the
nullification crisis , and from 1836 to 1845 he sat in theUnited States Senate as a Unionist Democrat. Being an ardent expansionist, he voted for the recognition of theRepublic of Texas in 1837 and for the joint annexation resolution of 1845, and advocated the nomination and election ofJames K. Polk in 1844. He favored the award ofpublic land s to new states; endorsed a low tariff; opposed distribution of the federal surplus funds for fear of creating an excuse to raisetariff rates; and, significantly, supported the independent Treasury system idea. He also opposed theBank of the United States .As a Mississippi senator, Walker was a passionate defender of slavery, both for economic benefits, and because he believed Negroes would fall into turpitude or insanity without firm masters. He claimed that independent Texas had to be annexed to prevent it from falling into the hands of Great Britain, which would use it to spread subversion throughout the South. He warned northerners that if Britain succeeded in undermining slavery, the freedmen would go north, where "the poor-house and the jail, the asylums of the deaf and dumb, the blind, the idiot and insane, would be filled to overflowing." cite book |title=Manifest Design, American Exceptionalism and Empire |last=Hietala |first=Thomas |year=2003 |publisher=Cornell University Press |pages=29
He was
U.S. Secretary of the Treasury throughout the Polk administration, fromMarch 8 ,1845 untilMarch 5 ,1849 , and was generally recognized as the most influential member of the President's Cabinet.As Treasury Secretary, Walker financed the
Mexican-American War and drafted the 1849 bill to establish theUnited States Department of the Interior . He also supported the independent Treasury system, pushed for a tariff for revenue, and established a warehousing system for handling imports that has had lasting influence.Walker's greatest work was the preparation of the famous Treasury report of
December 3 ,1845 . It is regarded as the most powerful attack upon the protection system that has ever been made in an American state paper. TheWalker Tariff of 1846 was based upon the principles of this paper and was in fact largely the secretary's own work.After leaving Treasury in 1849, Walker devoted himself to business and land speculation, as well as mining interests.
Walker at first opposed the
Compromise of 1850 , but was won over later by the arguments ofStephen A. Douglas . He was appointed governor ofKansas Territory in the spring of 1857 by PresidentJames Buchanan , but in November of the same year resigned because of his opposition to theLecompton Constitution . He did not, however, break with his party immediately, and favored the so-calledEnglish Bill . It was partly due to his influence that a sufficient number of anti-Lecompton Democrats were induced to vote for that measure to secure its passage.He supported the Union cause during the
American Civil War and in 1863 and 1864, as financial agent of the United States, did much to create confidence inEurope in the financial resources of the United States. During this time Walker was instrumental in securing a loan of $250,000,000 fromGermany .He practiced law in
Washington, D.C. , from 1864 until his death there in 1869. Both during and after the Civil War he was a contributor to the "Continental Monthly ", which for a short time he also, withJames R. Gilmore , conducted.Walker was the father-in-law of
Benjamin H. Brewster , Attorney General underChester A. Arthur .Initially,
Walker County, Texas , was named in his honor. However, due to his support of the Union during the Civil War, the Texas Legislature withdrew the honor and honored Samuel Walker, a Texas Ranger, instead.External links
* [http://www.findagrave.com/cgi-bin/fg.cgi?page=gr&GRid=6654657 Robert J. Walker] at
Find A Grave
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