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Joseph Bradley Varnum

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President
  
James Madison

Preceded by
  
Seth Hastings

Preceded by
  
William H. Crawford

Name
  
Joseph Varnum


Preceded by
  
Nathaniel Macon

Role
  
Former U.S. Congressman

Preceded by
  
Timothy Pickering

Succeeded by
  
John Gaillard

Joseph Bradley Varnum httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommonsthu

President
  
Thomas Jefferson James Madison

Died
  
September 21, 1821, Dracut, Massachusetts, United States

Party
  
Democratic-Republican Party

Battles and wars
  
American Revolutionary War

Previous offices
  
Senator (MA) 1811–1817

Similar People
  
Stephen F Lynch, Barney Frank, Nancy Pelosi

Joseph Bradley Varnum (January 29, 1751 – September 21, 1821) was a U.S. politician of the Democratic-Republican Party from Massachusetts.

Contents

Biography

Joseph Bradley Varnum was born in Dracut, Massachusetts, Middlesex County, January 29, 1750 or 1751, a farmer with little formal education.

At the age of eighteen, he was commissioned captain by the committee of Massachusetts Bay Colony, and in 1787 colonel by the Commonwealth of Massachusetts. He was made brigadier general in 1802, and in 1805 major general of the state militia, holding the latter office at his death in 1821. After serving in the Massachusetts militia during the American Revolutionary War, Varnum helped to destroy the Shays insurrection before he was elected to the Massachusetts House of Representatives (1780–1785) and then the Massachusetts State Senate (1786–1795). He also served as a Justice of the Massachusetts Court of Common Pleas and as Chief Justice of the Massachusetts Court of General Sessions.

In 1794, Varnum was elected to the U.S. House of Representatives, where he served from March 4, 1795 until his resignation on June 29, 1811. During his last four years in the House, he served as its Speaker.

Varnum was elected to the U.S. Senate in 1811 to fill the vacancy in the term. He became the only U.S. Senator from the Democratic-Republican Party in Massachusetts history.

Varnum served as President pro tempore of the U.S. Senate from June 29, 1811 to March 3, 1817, during the Thirteenth Congress. He was also the Chair of the Senate Committee on Militia during the Fourteenth Congress.

After returning to Massachusetts in 1817, Varnum again served in the Massachusetts State Senate, until his death on September 21, 1821.

Varnum died in Dracut, and his body is interred in Varnum Cemetery. His brother was Major General James Mitchell Varnum.

Slavery

Henry Wilson, in his History of Slavery, quotes Varnum in the debate on the bill for the government of the Mississippi Territory before the United States House of Representatives in March 1798 as having been very strong and outspoken in his opposition to Negro servitude.

On March 3, 1805, Varnum submitted a Massachusetts Proposition to amend the Constitution and Abolish the Slave Trade. This proposition was tabled until 1807, when under Varnum's leadership the amendment moved through Congress and passed both houses on March 2, 1807. President Thomas Jefferson signed it into law on March 3, 1807.

References

Joseph Bradley Varnum Wikipedia