Everything about James Shields totally explained
» This article is about the U.S. Senator. For the pitcher, see James Shields (pitcher). For the U.S. representative from Ohio, see James Shields (1762-1831).
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Altmore,
County Tyrone, Ireland
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Ottumwa, Iowa
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James Shields (
May 10,
1810 –
June 1,
1879) was an
American politician and
U.S. Army officer who was born in
Altmore,
County Tyrone, Ireland. Shields, a
Democrat, is the only person in
United States history to serve as a
U.S. Senator for three different
states. Shields was a senator from
Illinois 1849 to 1855, in the
31st,
32nd, and
33rd congresses, from
Minnesota from
May 11,
1858 to
March 3,
1859, in the
35th congress, and from
Missouri from
January 27,
1879 to
March 3,
1879, in the
45th congress.
Early life and career
Shields was the nephew of another
James Shields, also born in Ireland, who was a
Congressman from
Ohio. The younger Shields immigrated to the
United States around 1826 and settled in
Kaskaskia,
Randolph County, Illinois. He served as a member of the State House of Representatives, beginning to serve in 1836, and then as a state Supreme Court justice and later as the state auditor. (He was elected when not yet a citizen; Illinois then required only that a legislator have been
resident in the state for six months.)
Shields almost fought a duel with
Abraham Lincoln on
September 22,
1842. Lincoln had published an inflammatory letter in a
Springfield,
Illinois, newspaper that poked fun at the
Illinois State Auditor—Shields. Taking offense to the article, Shields demanded "satisfaction" and the incident escalated to the two parties meeting on a Missouri island called Sunflower Island, near Alton, Illinois to participate in a duel. Just prior to engaging in combat, the two participants' seconds intervened and were able to convince the two men to cease hostilities, on the grounds that Lincoln hadn't written the letters.
In 1846, Shields was selected as a
brigadier general of volunteers to fight in the
Mexican-American War. He served under
Zachary Taylor along the
Rio Grande River. He commanded the 3rd Brigade, Volunteer Division, at the battles of
Vera Cruz and
Cerro Gordo, where he was wounded. He returned to fight at the battles of
Contreras and
Churubusco, his brigade now part of the 4th Division. He was again wounded at the
Battle of Chapultepec.
Following the war, on
August 14 1848, he was nominated by President
Polk, and confirmed by the
United States Senate to serve as governor of
Oregon Territory that was created that same day. However, he declined the position and
Joseph Lane was nominated and became the first governor of the new territory. He resigned to run for the Senate from Illinois. His election was voided by the Senate on the grounds that he hadn't been a
United States citizen for the nine years required by the
United States Constitution; having been naturalized
October 21,
1840. He returned to Illinois and campaigned for re-election, and won the special election to replace himself, and was then seated.
In 1855, he was defeated for re-election, so he moved to Minnesota. He was elected as one of the two first Senators from that state, but his term was only from 1858 to 1859, and he was again not re-elected.
Civil War and later career
Shields then moved to
California and served as a brigadier general of volunteers from that state during the
American Civil War. He commanded the 2nd Division of the
V Corps,
Army of the Potomac (subsequently part of the
Army of the Shenandoah), during the
Valley Campaign of 1862. He was wounded at the
Battle of Kernstown on
March 22,
1862, but his troops inflicted the only tactical defeat of General
Thomas J. "Stonewall" Jackson during the campaign (or the war). The day after Kernstown, he was promoted to
major general, but the promotion was withdrawn, reconsidered, and then finally rejected. His overall performance in the rest of the Valley Campaign was poor enough that he resigned his commission, and his departure wasn't resisted by the War Department.
In 1863 he moved to
Mexico and operated mines, and then to
Wisconsin, but in 1866 moved to Missouri, where he served as member of the state House of Representatives, and as railroad commissioner. In 1879, he was elected to fill the seat left vacant by the death of Senator
Lewis V. Bogy. He served only three months and declined to run for re-election.
Shields died in
Ottumwa, Iowa. He is buried in St. Mary's Cemetery,
Carrollton, Missouri. He was the editor of
A History of Illinois, from its Commencement as a State in 1818 to 1847 (1854). He represents Illinois in the
National Statuary Hall.
Further Information
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