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JOHN ARMSTRONG (1758—1843)

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Originally appearing in Volume V02, Page 591 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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JOHN ARMSTRONG (1758—1843)  ,
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American soldier, diplomatist and
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political leader, born at Carlisle, Pennsylvania, on the 25th of November 1758 . His
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father, also named John Armstrong (172 1795), a native of the north of Ireland, who had emigrated to the Pennsylvania frontier between 1745 and 1748, served successively as a brigadier-general in the
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Continental army (1776—77), as brigadier-general and then major-general of the Pennsylvania militia (1777—83), during the War of Independence, and was a member of the Continental Congress in 1779—178o and again in 1787—1788 . The son studied for a time at the College of New Jersey (now
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Princeton University), and served as a major in the War of Independence . In March 1783, while the Continental army was stationed at Newburgh (q.v.), New York, he wrote and issued, anonymously, the famous " Newburgh Addresses." In 1784 he led a force of Pennsylvania militia against the
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Connecticut settlers in
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Wyoming Valley, and treated them in such a high-handed manner as to incur the disapproval even of the Pennsylvania legislature . In 1789 he married the
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sister of Chancellor Robert R . Livingston of New York, and removed to New York city, where his own ability and his
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family connexion gave him
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great political influence . In 1801-2 and again in 1803—4 he was a member of the
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United States Senate . From 1804 to 1810 he was the United States minister to France, and in March 18o6 he was joined with James Bowdoin as a
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special minister to treat through France with Spain concerning the acquisition of
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Florida,
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Spanish spoliations of American commerce, and the "
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Louisiana " boundary . During the War of 1812, he was a brigadier-general in the United States army from
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July 1812 until
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January 1813, and from then until August 1814 secretary of war in the
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cabinet of President Madison, when his unpopularity forced him to resign . " In spite of Armstrong'sservices, abilities and experience," says Henry Adams, " some-thing in his character always created distrust . He had every
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advantage of
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education, social and political connexion, ability and self-confidence; . . . but he suffered from the reputation of indolence and intrigue." Nevertheless, he " introduced into the army an energy wholly new," an energy the results of which were apparent " for
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half a century." After his resignation he lived in retirement at Red Hook, New York, where he died on the 1st of
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April 1843 .

He published Notices of the War of 1812 (2 vols., 1836; new ed., 1840), the value of which is greatly impaired by its obvious partiality . The best

account of Armstrong's career as minister to France and as secretary of war may be found in Henry Adams's
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History of the United States, 2801–1817 (9 vols., New York, 1889–189o) .

End of Article: JOHN ARMSTRONG (1758—1843)
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