- Jane McManus Storm Cazneau
Jane Maria Eliza McManus (1807-1878) was an American journalist, lobbyist, and publicist who advocated the annexation of all of
Mexico during theMexican-American War . After her marriage to Allen Storm she took to signing herself simply as "Storms". A second marriage was to add "Cazenau" to her array of names.Growing up in
Troy, New York , she attended the local female academy, one of the earliest colleges for women. In 1832 she and her brother Robert moved toTexas , then still part of Mexico, and became involved in land speculation. When this failed she turned to journalism, working first forHorace Greeley , editor of the "New Yorker". Later she wrote for a number of other papers, including the "New York Sun " and the "Democratic Review ", both strong advocates ofmanifest destiny .Storms embraced this with enthusiasm, and was to go on to be a firm believer, northerner though she was, in the expansion of the South, and of slavery, its 'peculiar institution', into
Central America and theCaribbean . In "Mistress of Manifest Destiny" (2001), Linda S. Hudson argued that it was Storms who actually wrote the "Annexation" editorial, and thus coined the phrase "Manifest Destiny". Since many editorials inJohn L. O'Sullivan 's publications were unsigned, Hudson used computer-aided "textual analysis" to support her argument. O'Sullivan biographer Robert D. Sampson disputes Hudson's claim for a variety of reasons.With the outbreak of the
Mexican-American War , Storms went to the front, where she witnessedZachary Taylor 's capture of the fortress ofVera Cruz in March 1847, the first female war correspondent in American history. At the end of theMexican-American War she turned her attention toCuba , and the potential it represented, advocating its annexation, and denouncing its Spanish colonial overlords. She later settled at Eagle Pass, a frontier village three hundred miles up theRio Grande from theGulf of Mexico , getting to know many of the local Indian chiefs.With her second husband Storms moved to the
Dominican Republic in 1855, where she was to remain for most of what was left of her life. Despite her earler sympathies for southern expansionism she disapproved of secession, and was hired byWilliam H. Seward , Lincoln's Secretary of State, to write denunciations of the Confederacy. It was a matter of simple principle for Storms: the war was a serious interruption to further prospects of American expansion in the Caribbean.She had lived a life of storms, and met death in the same fashion. In 1878 she was drowned on her way to
Santo Domingo , after the steamer on which she was travelling was caught in a huge storm.References
* Hudson, Linda S. "Mistress of Manifest Destiny: A Biography of Jane McManus Storm Cazneau, 1807-1878". Texas State Historical Association, 2001. ISBN 0876111797.
* The Handbook of Texas Online: Jane McManus Cazneau
* Notable American Women: Jane McManus CazneauExternal links
* [http://www.tamu.edu/upress/BOOKS/2000/hudson.htm Brief summary of Storm's life]
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