- Andrew J. Hanscom
Andrew Jackson Hanscom (
February 3 1828 –September 11 ,1907 ) was a pioneerOmaha, Nebraska lawyer, politician andreal estate broker.Biography
Born in
Pontiac, Michigan , Andrew was the youngest child of Irving Hanscom, a pioneer ofMacomb County, Michigan . He was sent toDetroit for elementary school, and later completed high school there, as well. At 17 Hanscom attendedAntioch College inYellow Springs, Ohio , [(1882) " [http://books.google.com/books?id=THqCbFfxsbAC&dq=%22andrew+j.+hanscom%22&source=gbs_summary_s&cad=0 History of Macomb County, Michigan] ." Leeson Publishing. p 269.] and during this period he served as first lieutenant of Company C., First Michigan Infantry, during theMexican-American War . While in Mexico Hanscom commandedThomas B. Cuming , which would be helpful again to him in the future. [ [http://www.thehistoricalsociety.org/sam%20bayliss%20on%20broadway.htm "Sam Bayliss on Broadway"] , Pottawattamie County Historical Society. Retrieved 5/7/08.]After the war Hanscom came to
Council Bluffs, Iowa and opened a mercantile. In 1854 he attendedJuly 4 picnic during which the city was founded. [Welch, M.J. [http://www.rootsweb.ancestry.com/~nedougla/html/douglas1.htm "Douglas County"] , "Who's who in Nebraska." Retrieved 5/7/08.] That year he moved across theMissouri River and built a claim shack and small frame building near 15th and Farnam Streets in present-dayDowntown Omaha . When Alfred Jones surveyed Omaha later that year he divided it into 320 blocks, after which point Hanscom discovered his claim had been reserved for schools. He quickly traded the land for a 400 acre claim belonging to ColonelSam Bayliss . [ [http://www.thehistoricalsociety.org/sam%20bayliss%20on%20broadway.htm "Sam Bayliss on Broadway"] , Pottawattamie County Historical Society. Retrieved 5/7/08.] Late that year Hanscom was appointed colonel of the First Nebraska Regiment, [ [http://www.rootsweb.com/~neresour/OLLibrary/Nebraskana/pages/nbka0154.htm The Nebraskana Society] . Retrieved 5/7/08.] and he helped found theOmaha Claim Club . [Morton and Watkins. (1892) " [http://www.usgennet.org/usa/ne/topic/resources/OLLibrary/MWHNE/mwhne188.htm History of Nebraska] ". p 188. Retrieved 5/7/08.]Legislative service
While working for A.J. Poppleton's law firm, he served as speaker of the first House of Representatives of the
Nebraska Territory in 1855. He quickly made enemies within the House as a strong anti-slavery advocate, and clashed strongly with pro-slavery racists includingJ. Sterling Morton . [Kruse, L. (2001) "Omaha: The Prairie Blossoms." Paradise Place Publishing. p 31.] As the speaker he was also the unofficial leader of the Omaha promoters in the House. [Bristol, D. (2002) "A Dirty, Wicked Town: Omaha in the 19th Century." Caxton Press. p 55.]Hanscom is attributed as being responsible for stoking a feud between Omaha City and Nebraska City over where a statehood convention would be located. An 1855 motion by Hanscom to designate Omaha City as the place for holding the first statehood convention in 1859 was lost by a vote of 15 to 19. A following motion by Milton W. Reynolds, of Otoe County to bring that event to Nebraska City was carried by 21 to 13. However, Hanscom led a motion to reconsider the next day, which brought the vote in at 21 to 15. Immediately before the vote Hanscom led a motion to substitute "the capital of the territory" without
roll call . [Nebraska State Historical Society . " [http://www.usgennet.org/usa/ne/topic/resources/OLLibrary/collections/vol18/v18p375.htm How Nebraska Was Brought In.] " p 379. Retrieved 5/7/08.]House brawl
In January 1858 another battle ensued when a bill was introduced that would move the state capital away from Omaha to a new, non-existent town. While this had happened every year since the capital was located in Omaha in 1854, it was different this time because Omaha did not have the votes to stop it. Convening in private, political leaders in the city could not decide which method to use to stop the vote. Hanscom proposed violence, and was taken seriously. The scheme led to a large-scale breakdown on the House floor, including a fight between almost all the members of the body. Hanscom led the events, with his ally Poppleton and others throwing fists and chairs and virtually demolishing the chambers. These events led to the illegal convening of several anti-Omaha legislators in the notorious Florence session, in which they called for a new government to rule on the proceedings. The acting governor
Thomas B. Cuming ruled that the capital would not leave Omaha and the session ended before any further antics could happen. [Bristow, D. (2002) p 55-57.] [ [http://www.allaboutomaha.net/Omaha/CapitolHill2.htm "Capitol Hill antics"] , AllAboutOmaha.com. Retrieved 5/7/08.] Omaha remained as the Nebraska capitol until statehood in 1867, when it was ceded to Lincoln. Hanscom was on the committee that wrote the Nebraska State Constitution. [ [http://query.nytimes.com/mem/archive-free/pdf?res=940DE2DB1F30E233A25751C1A96F9C946697D6CF "Death of Colonel AJ Hanscom"] , "The New York Times." Retrieved 5/7/08.]Later life
Hanscom continued to live in Omaha and became wealthy as a
real estate andsecurities broker in the city. In 1872 he donated 72 acres to the City of Omaha which becameHanscom Park . His motives were suspect because his company, theOmaha Horse Railway , ended its line at that location, which was undeveloped after several years. However, within a few years Hanscom Park was lauded for its beauty and was the primary park in Omaha. It still serves as a park in Omaha. [Larsen and Cotrell. (1997) "The Gate City: A history of Omaha."University of Nebraska Press . p 118.]Hanscom lived at the Fifth Avenue Hotel in
New York City for several years before his death. [ [http://query.nytimes.com/mem/archive-free/pdf?res=9D0CEFDA1639E433A25754C0A9609C946297D6CF "One of the elevator men"] , "The New York Times." June 7, 1903. Retrieved 5/7/08.] Hanscom died ofpnemonia in 1907 and was buried in Omaha. [ [http://query.nytimes.com/mem/archive-free/pdf?res=940DE2DB1F30E233A25751C1A96F9C946697D6CF "Death of Colonel AJ Hanscom"] , "The New York Times." Retrieved 5/7/08.]ee also
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History of Omaha References
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