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GIDEON WELLES (1802-1878)

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Originally appearing in Volume V28, Page 506 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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GIDEON WELLES (1802-1878)  ,
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American
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political leader, was born at
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Glastonbury,
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Connecticut, on the 1st of
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July 1802 . He studied for a time at Norwich University,
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Vermont, but did not graduate . From 1826 to 1837 he edited the
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Hartford Times, making it the official
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organ of the Jacksonian Democracy in south-ern New England . He served in the state House of Representatives in 1827, 1829-30, 1832 and 1834-35, was state
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comptroller in 1835 and 1842-43, was postmaster at Hartford in 1835-42, and was chief of the bureau of provisions and clothing in the
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Navy Department at Washington in 1846-1849 . Leaving the Democratic party on the Kansas-
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Nebraska issue, he assisted in the formation of the Republican party in Connecticut, and was its
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candidate for governor in 1856; he was a delegate to the Republican
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national conventions of 1856 and 186o . On the inauguration of President Lincoln in 1861 he was appointed secretary of the navy, a'position which he held until the close of President Andrew Johnson's administration in 1869 . Although deficient in technical training, he handled with
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great skill the difficult problems which were presented by the
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Civil War . The number of
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naval
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ships was increased between 1861 and 1865 from 90 to 670, the
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officers from 1300 to 6700, the seamen from 7500 to 51,500, and the
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annual
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expenditure from $12,000,000 to $123,000,000; important changes were made in the
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art of naval construction, and the blockade of the Confederate ports was effectively maintained . Welles supported President Johnson in his
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quarrel with Congress, took
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part in the Liberal Republican
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movement of 1872, and returning to the Democratic party, warmly advocated the election of Samnel J . Tilden in 1876 . He died at Hartford, Connecticut, on the 11th of
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February 1878 . In 1874 Welles published Lincoln and Seward, in which he refutes the charge that Seward dominated the Administration during the Civil War .

His

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Diary, which appeared in the
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Atlantic Monthly (19o9-1911), is extremely valuable for the study of the Civil War and Reconstruction . See also Albert Welles,
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History of the Welles
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Family (New York, 1876) .

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