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Stockton first made his reputation as "Fighting Bob" in the defense
of Baltimore in the War of 1812, and, on his first naval command,
he founded Liberia for freed slaves. Yet he also owned slaves on
his sugar plantation in Georgia, and later probably used "rented"
slave labor his in Virginia gold mines. As a naval officer, he
chased pirates with the West Indies Squadron and may have been
responsible for the death of Jean Lafitte; yet he acted like a
pirate himself in ruthlessly protecting his Joint Companies'
monopoly of railroad and canal traffic across New Jersey. Stockton
achieved nautical design prominence by bringing John Ericsson to
America to create the first steam-powered, propeller-driven warship
and the most powerful cannon in the world. (Ericsson later designed
USS Monitor in the Civil War.) However, in demonstrating his cannon
to high government officials, the cannon backfired killing nearly
half of President Tyler's cabinet. From Congress and the President,
Stockton brought the invitation of annexation to Texas, but then he
tried to initiate a war between Texas and Mexico that he would
clandestinely underwrite with profits from his transportation
monopoly. He sailed to California arriving at the start of the
Mexican-American war so that he was the commander-in-chief of all
US forces, and joined with John C. Fremont and his filibusters to
take California for the United States-yet he never had specific
orders to take California. Upon his return, he became the first
naval officer to become a U. S. Senator, and then he sought the
nomination for president twice: once on the 1852 Democratic Party
ticket almost nosing out Franklin Pierce and once on the American
Party or Know-Nothing ticket. His nomination from the nativist
American Party is particularly ironic because he has been
instrumental twelve years earlier in suppressing nativist riots in
Philadelphia. In 1861, on the eve of the Civil War, New Jersey sent
him as a member of a delegation to the Peace Conference in
Washington that attempted to avert the Civil War. However at the
peace conference, Stockton threatened to beat up a member who
opposed his policies. Stockton eventually retired from public life
to the New Jersey seashore where he founded the community of Sea
Girt, and sat idle during the Civil War. He died in 1867 just after
witnessing the expulsion of his son who had attempted to succeed
him in the U. S. Senate. Historians of the Early Republic and
antebellum naval operations will discover hitherto unknown or
unappreciated materials and texts in the protean odyssey of this
unsung American hero.
By 1838, over two thousand Americans had been killed and many
hundreds injured by exploding steam engines on steamboats. After
calls for a solution in two State of the Union addresses, a Senate
Select Committee met to consider an investigative report from the
Franklin Institute of Philadelphia, the first federally funded
investigation into a technical.
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