Robert Milligan McLane
(1815 - 1898)
Robert M. McLane was born in Wilmington, Delaware in 1815, the son of
Louis McLane and Catherine Mary Milligan. He received early education
from a private school conducted by John Bullock, a Quaker. He received
higher education from St. Mary’s College in Baltimore, Maryland until
he moved with his family to Europe, after his father had been appointed
as an ambassador to England. He was sent to Paris to receive further
education from College Bourbon, where he became acquainted with the
Marquis de Lafayette.
McLane and his family moved back to the United States in 1833 when
his father was appointed Secretary of the Treasury. The same year,
McLane was appointed as a cadet in the United States Military Academy at
West Point by President Andrew Jackson, and graduated in July 1837 with
a commission as second lieutenant of Artillery in the United States
Army. McLane was deployed with his regiment to Florida during the
Seminole War in 1837 under the command of General Thomas S. Jesup, and
in 1838 was re-deployed to the west under General Winfield Scott.
In 1838, he was transferred to the Corps of Topographical Engineers
under Colonel J. J. Abert. In 1841, he was sent to the Northern Lakes
for survey work and later sent to Europe to examine the dikes and
drainage systems in the Netherlands and Italy. While in Europe, he met
his future wife, Georgine Urquhart, and eventually fathered two children
with her. McLane resigned his commission in 1843 to pursue the study of
law, and was admitted to the bar the same year. He commenced practice in
Baltimore thereafter.
In 1845, McLane was elected as a representative of Baltimore City to
the Maryland House of Delegates after successfully campaigning for
President James K. Polk a year previous. In 1847, McLane ran for
Congress and defeated his Whig opponent, John P. Kennedy, by 500 votes.
He was re-elected two years later, and served from March 4, 1847 to
March 3, 1851. In Congress, McLane was seen as an exceptional orator,
and, during his second term, was chosen as chairman of the Committee on
Commerce. He was not a candidate for renomination in 1850. After his
tenure in Congress, McLane moved to the Western United States to become
a counsel for a mining corporation, which was engaged in legal
activities regarding property in California. He remained out West until
1852, when he returned to Maryland to serve as Presidential elector for
Franklin Pierce.
In 1853, during the Taiping Rebellion, President Pierce appointed
McLane as commissioner to China, with the powers of a Minister
Plenipotentiary, and at the same time accredited to Japan, Siam, Korea,
and Cochin China. Despite the civil war, McLane was ordered to secure
commercial trade relations between China and the United States, and was
also ordered to negotiate with the rebels while also retaining
diplomatic relations with the Imperial Government. He successfully
renewed trade relations between both nations, but returned to the United
States in 1854 due to poor health. After his return to the United
States, he resumed his political activity by serving as delegate to the
Democratic National Convention in 1856, during which he supported future
President James Buchanan.
The United States and Mexico had broken off diplomatic relations in
1858, after which civil war broke out in Mexico. McLane was appointed
Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary to Mexico on March 7,
1859 and was charged to determine if the government of Benito Juárez,
in opposition to the Emperor, was worthy of recognition. He also
negotiated, as ambassador, the McLane-Ocampo Treaty, which would have
expanded the transit rights of the U.S. across the Isthmus of
Tehuantepec to include an interoceanic canal concession. However, the
treaty was not ratified by the United States Senate. McLane retired as
Ambassador to Mexico on December 22, 1860.
During the American Civil War, the Federal Government, under
President Abraham Lincoln, forcibly forbade the state of Maryland from
joining the Confederacy. McLane was a member of the delegation sent to
Washington, D.C. to question the actions of the Federal Government.
McLane personally believed that the Federal Government did not have the
Constitutional right to force Maryland into submission, but determined,
along with the rest of the delegation, that Maryland should not secede.
During the rest of the War, McLane refocused his attention back towards
his law practice, as he had been appointed counsel for the Western
Pacific Railroad in the winter of 1863.
McLane would continue to devote his energies towards his law practice
until well after the end of the Civil War, and did not re-enter politics
until the Democratic National Convention in 1876. He entered the
Maryland State Senate in 1877, representing Baltimore City. He left the
State Senate in 1879 to again run for election to Congress. He was
successful, and served two terms from March 4, 1879 to March 3, 1883.
During his first term in Congress, he was chairman of the Committee on
Pacific Railroads.
In 1883, the Maryland Democratic Party nominated McLane to be the
next Governor of Maryland. In the election, McLane handily defeated his
Republican opponent, Hart Benton Holton, by 12,000 votes. During his
tenure, several notable pieces of legislation were passed, including the
establishment of the Bureau of Statistics and Labor Information, and the
establishment of a universal time standard throughout the state. McLane
only served as governor for slightly over a year, from January 8, 1884
until his resignation on March 27, 1885, having been appointed by
President Grover Cleveland as United States Minister Plenipotentiary to
France.
McLane moved to France with his wife, whom he had met there many
years previously, to carry out his ambassadorial duties. He established
permanent residence in Paris even after his tenure as ambassador expired
in 1889, due to his wife's declining health. His own health began to
decline in 1891 and he died in 1898. His body was returned to Baltimore,
and was interred at Greenmount Cemetery.
Portrait of Robert Milligan McLane by George Peter Alexander Healy
(1858). The Annapolis Complex Collection, Maryland State Archives
References.
Robert Milligan McLane in the Biographical Directory of
the United States Congress
Frank F. White, Jr., The Governors of Maryland 1777-1970
(Annapolis: The Hall of Records Commission, 1970), 201-205.
Adapted from Robert Milligan McLane; Wikipedia, The Free
Encyclopedia, persistent URL: http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Robert_Milligan_McLane&oldid=170291569
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