Welsh - American Connection
November 2020, the 46th American President, Joe Biden was elected during the November American election. Biden presently is the President-elect, until his inauguration in January 2021.
This blog looks at the various past presidents, who had
family connections with Wales. It starts
and ends with two prominent women
George Washington (1732 – 1799)
Portrait based on the unfinished Athenaeum portrait by Gilbert Stuart, 1796 |
Notable the first president was George Washington, who took office from April 1789 to March 1797. Washington did not belong to any political party; however, he did agree with certain Federalist policies, such that the country should have a national standing army and that a national bank should be established.
By the time Washington became president in April 1789, he
had only one tooth, they started to tall out when he was only 22. A dentist during 1796, pulled out the last
tooth. Washington did have way to replace
his teeth either having them craved from elk’s teeth or ivory.
Even though Washington did not have a connection with Wales, the connection with his wife Martha Dandridge, whom he married 1759. Washington was her second husband, having previously been married to Daniel Perke Curtis, who was tobacco planter and been 20 years older than herself. Curtis, died during 1757, leaving the then 26-year-old Martha, with two young children, John and Martha.
Martha was the daughter of English immigrant John Dandridge,
and Frances Jones, who was the daughter of Reverend Orlando Jones, a Welsh
clergyman.
John Adams (1735 – 1826)
After George Washington, second term as president. The second president to have been elected was John Adams. Adams was one of the official Foundering Fathers of the United States of American. Adams won the election 1796. Prior to this date, Adams, was the Ambassador to Great Britain, 1785. Whilst in this position, a counterpart assumed that Adams, had family from England, Adams, replied “Neither my father or mother, grandfather or grandmother, great grandfather or great grandmother, nor any other relation that I know of, or care a fathering for, has been in England these one hundred and fifty years; so that you see I have not one drop of blood in vein but what is American”
Adams, was the first Federalist candidate, having won the
election on a narrow margin, receiving 71 votes to Jefferson 68. Adams was the first president to live in what
is now the White House.
Adams, ancestors did though originate from Wales, hailing from
Drefach and Felindre Carmarthenshire.
John Adams was president for only term.
Thomas Jefferson (1743 – 1826)
The next president, also another official Foundering Father, was Thomas Jefferson.
Jefferson, was the first Sectary of State from 1790 to 1793
and then was the ice President under John Adams, serving in office from 1797 –
1801. Jefferson was the first Democratic-Republican
president
served as president for two terms, having been re-elected for the second term
during 1804, having defeated the Federalist Charles Cotesworth Pinckney.
Jefferson, is known to have been able to speak, read and
write in Welsh, when he was 77 years, Jefferson wrote in his diaries “The
tradition in my father’s family is that their ancestors came to this country [America]
from Wales, from the region of
Snowdon, highest mountains in Great Britain”
Incidentally both Adams and Jefferson died on the same day,
4th July 1826
James Madison (1751 – 1836)
The next president following Jefferson was James Madison, who like Jefferson was a Democratic-Republican, serving for two terms from 1809 – 1817.
Madison was also a Founding Father, he was also hailed as the
“Father of the Constitution”, for the drafting and the promoting of the
Constitution of the United States and the United States Bill of Rights.
Jefferson, lead the United States into the War of 1812. The war was fought between the United States
and the United Kingdom of Britain and Ireland and her allies. The war lasted for over 2 years. The results at the conclusion of the war, was
stalemate between the two sides. The Treaty
of Ghent, 1814 was signed. America returned
back to Status quo ante bellum. The
only loses during the war, was that Spain lost Florida to United States.
It is through his maternal great-great grandfather, Daniel
Gaines, who was born, 1614, Breconshire.
His parents, Thomas Gaines born, 1590, Newton, Brecon and Blanch Kemins,
1590, Breconshire.
1817, Maddison left office, where he retired to Montpelier. He died nearly 20 years later, 1836.
John Monroe (1758 – 1831)
The next president, James Monroe. Monroe was a Democratic-Republican who also served for two terms, from 1817 to 1825. Like the previous presidents, Monroe was also a Founding Father.
Monroe is the only person to hold
two cabinets posts, whilst serving under Madison, the position of both
Secretary of State and Secretary of War
It is during Monroe presidency
that he wanted a warmer relation with the United Kingdom, and 1817 the Rush-Bagot
Treaty was signed between the two countries. The treaty regulated naval armaments on the
Great Lakes and Lake Champlain and demilitarised the border between the US and British North America. 1818, saw the Treaty of 1818, signed
which fixed the present Canada-United State border from Minnesota to the Rocky
Mountains, at the 49th parallel.
Monroe’s connection to Wales is
via his mother, Elizabeth Jones, whose own father James Jones had emigrated
from Wales and settled in Virginia.
After his presidency, 1825, Monroe
resided at Monroe Hill, now in the grounds of the University of Virginia, where
her served on the university’s Board of Visitors until his death 4th
July 1831.
John Quincy Adams (1767 –
1848)
Adams 1843–48, photographed by Matthew Brady |
Adams was the son of the aforementioned mentioned second president John Adams. Adams, junior only serving for one term. He was also Democratic-Republican. He also the leader of the National Republication Party. The party evolved from the fractions of the Democratic-Republican, during the 1824 elections. It was dissolved during 1834.
Adams was regarding as one of
America’s greatest ever diplomates. Adams
died 1846.
William Henry Harrison (1773 –
1841)
Harrison holds two records. His inaugural speech, delivered during a heavy rainstorm March 1841, was one of the longest speeches, however, this resulted in his death a month later, April 31 days in his term.
Harrison was a descendant from
Sir Thomas Harrison, a general in Oliver Cromwell’s Army. His great-grandfather,
Henry Harris, was a smallholder from Llanfyllian, Montgomeryshire. Henry’s son, also another Henry moved to Wrexham
then to Nantwich, Cheshire before changing the surname from Harris to Harrison. It is his son, Benjamin, who emerging to
America, and signing the Declaration of Independence.
Abraham Lincoln (1809 – 1865)
Abraham Lincoln is regarded as one of the famous presidents of the United States, having led the country successful through the American Civil War, preserving the Union and abolishing slavery. He also bolstered the federal government and modernized the U.S. economy
Lincoln, who was assassinated
during his second term, 1865. He was both a Republican and National Unionist.
Lincoln’s connections with Wales
are vast. John Morris, Lincoln’s great-great-grandfather,
was a farmer from Ysbyty Ifan, North Wales.
His daughter, Ellen, who emigrated to the United States with a group of Quarters. Whilst in America, she married Cadwalader
Evans.
Evans, himself was born 1664,
Ucheldre, a small hamlet near Bara. Both Cadwalader’s father and grandfather
were buried in nearby Llanfor.
After marrying Ellen and
Cadwalader, had a daughter, Sarah who in 1711 married a John Hanks. Its their granddaughter,
Nancy, who was Lincoln’s mother.
During the election of 1860,
Lincoln, who was aware of his Welsh ancestry printed 100,000 Welsh language election
pamphlets.
James Abraham Garfield (1831 –
1881)
James Garfield is the only member of the Senate to have been elected as president. Garfield a Republican only served for six and half months as president dying from an infection was subject to an assassination attempt.
it is through Garfield’s great-great-grandfather
and his ancestors were served as a knight at Caerphilly Castle.
Richard Nixon (1913 – 1994)
Richard Nixon, a member of the Republican Party, was elected as president 1969. Nixon had risen to national prominence as a representative and senator of California. Whilst as President Nixon, saw the conclusion to the US involvement in the Vietnam War, with the Soviet Union and China. The Environment Protection Agency was established during his period as president.
During his second term, Nixon
reigned as president due to his impeached for his involvement int eh Watergate
scandal.
Nixon connections with Wales dates
back the early settlers, with a Howell Griffiths, from Carmarthenshire who in
1690 emigrated to Philadelphia. The previous
year, 1689, Huw Harris from Montgomeryshire emigrated to Pennsylvania. Nixon’s great-grandmother was descended from Thomas
Price who emigrated to America 14 years after the Mayflower landed.
Nixon, after his presidency became
an author publishing 10 books. Hied died
1994.
Barack Obama (1961 - )
Barack Obama, a member of the Democratic party, served as president from 2009 to 2017. Obama was the first African-American president.
His connections with Wales, is
that his sixth times great grandparents, Henry and Margaret Price, hailing from
Anglesey emigrated at the beginning of the 19th century to Ohio.
Finally
Hillary Clinton (1947 - )
This blog started with a lady, and now it ends with a lady. Hillary Clinton, the wife of Bill Clinton, a diplomat, lawyer, writer and public speaker. She ran for second presidential election during 2016, however, being defeated by Donald Trump.
The following year, 2017, she received
an honorary degree from Swansea University.
The degree of Doctor of Laws in recognition of her commitment to
promoting the rights of families and children around the world.
Both, her great grandfather, John
Jones a miner from Llangyndir and great grandmother, Mary Griffiths from Abergavenny,
emigrated to Pennsylvania during 1879.
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