This article will be permanently flagged as inappropriate and made unaccessible to everyone. Are you certain this article is inappropriate? Excessive Violence Sexual Content Political / Social
Email Address:
Article Id: WHEBN0000051176 Reproduction Date:
John Eager Howard (June 4, 1752 – October 12, 1827) was an American soldier and politician from Maryland. He was elected as governor of the state in 1788, and served three one-year terms. He also was elected to the Continental Congress, the Congress of the United States and the U.S. Senate.[2] He was born in and died in Baltimore County.[2][3] Howard County, Maryland, is named for him.[3]
He was the son of Cornelius Howard and Ruth (Eager) Howard, of the Maryland planter elite and was born at their plantation "Belvedere," which he inherited after their deaths. Howard grew up in an Anglican slaveholding family. Anglicanism was the established church of the Chesapeake Bay colonies.
Howard joined the Baltimore lodge of Freemasonry and eventually became a Brother.[3]
Commissioned a captain at the beginning of the American Revolutionary War, Howard rose in 1777 to the rank of colonel in the Continental Army,[2] fighting in the Battle of White Plains and in the Battle of Monmouth. He was awarded a silver medal by Congress for his leadership at the 1781 Battle of Cowpens,[2] during which he commanded the 2nd Maryland Regiment, Continental Army.[4] In September 1781, he was wounded in a bayonet charge at the Battle of Eutaw Springs.[5]
Following his army service, Howard held several electoral political positions: elected to the Federalist Party and was elected to the 4th Congress from November 30, 1796, through 1797 as a United States Senator for the remainder of the term of Richard Potts, who had resigned. He was elected for a Senate term of his own in 1797, which included the 5th Congress, the 6th Congress of 1799-1801 during which he was President pro tempore, and the 7th Congress, serving until March 3, 1803.[2]
After 1803, Howard returned to Baltimore, where he avoided elected office but continued in public service and philanthropy as a leading citizen.[6] In the 1816 presidential election, he received 22 electoral votes for Vice President[3] as the running mate of Federalist Rufus King, losing to James Monroe and Governor Daniel Tompkins. No formal Federalist nomination had been made, and it is not clear whether Howard, who was one of several Federalists who received electoral votes for Vice President, ran as a candidate for the office.
Although Howard was offered an appointment as the Brigadier General during the preparations for the coming Quasi-War with France.[2]
John Eager Howard married Margaret ("Peggy") Chew, daughter of the Pennsylvania justice [3] was born on November 21, 1789 in Jennings House during Howard's term as Governor.
Howard developed the property "Benjamin Chew Howard, was also a prominent politician in Maryland, elected for four terms in the U.S. Congress.[3] A grandson, Francis Key Howard, was a notable figure in Maryland at the start of the American Civil War.
John Eager Howard is buried at the Old Saint Paul's Cemetery, located between West Lombard Street and present-day Martin Luther King Boulevard in Baltimore.[2]
Federal Reserve System, Television in the United States, Agriculture in the United States, Banking in the United States, Energy in the United States
Barack Obama, Ted Kennedy, Democratic Party (United States), Ted Stevens, West Virginia
Democratic Party (United States), Republican Party (United States), United States, United States House of Representatives, United States Congress
Towson, Maryland, Anne Arundel County, Maryland, Democratic Party (United States), Baltimore, Carroll County, Maryland
Democratic Party (United States), Republican Party (United States), Columbia, Maryland, Anne Arundel County, Maryland, Ellicott City, Maryland
United States Senate, 5th United States Congress, United States presidential election, 1796, John Adams, List of United States Senators from Connecticut
World War II, War of 1812, Spanish–American War, Baltimore, Theodore Roosevelt
National Register of Historic Places, Washington, D.C., United States, Concrete, Washington Monument (Baltimore)
James Monroe, Pennsylvania, Virginia, New York, Federalist Party