1st Minnesota Territorial Legislature

Minnesota legislative session

First Minnesota Territorial Legislature
5th Wisconsin Territorial Assembly 2nd
Overview
Legislative bodyMinnesota Territorial Legislature
JurisdictionMinnesota Territory, United States
TermSeptember 3, 1849 (1849-09-03) – January 1, 1851 (1851-01-01)
Minnesota Territorial Council
Members9 Councillors
PresidentDavid Olmsted
Party controlDemocratic Party
Minnesota House of Representatives
Members18 Representatives
SpeakerJoseph W. Furber
Party controlDemocratic Party

The 1st Minnesota Territorial Legislature first convened on September 3, 1849. The 9 members of the Minnesota Territorial Council and the 18 members of the Minnesota House of Representatives were elected during the General Election of August 1, 1849.

Sessions

The territorial legislature met in a regular session from September 3, 1849, to November 1, 1849. There were no special sessions of the first territorial legislature.[1]

Party summary

Council

Party[nb 1]
(Shading indicates majority caucus)
TotalVacant
DemocraticWhig
Begin6390
Latest voting share67%33%
Beginning of the next Legislature6390

House of Representatives

Party[nb 1]
(Shading indicates majority caucus)
TotalVacant
DemocraticWhigUnknown
Begin1242180
Latest voting share67%22%11%
Beginning of the next Legislature837180

Leadership

President of the Council
David Olmsted (D-Long Prairie)[2]
Speaker of the House
Joseph W. Furber (W-Cottage Grove)[3]

Members

Council

NameDistrictCityParty
Boal, James McClellan03St. PaulWhig
Burkleo, Samuel02StillwaterWhig[nb 2]
Forbes, William Henry03Saint PaulDemocratic
Loomis, David B.04MarineWhig
Martin McLeod07BloomingtonDemocratic[nb 3]
Norris, James S.01Cottage GroveDemocratic
Olmsted, David06Long PrairieDemocratic
Rollins, John05Saint Anthony FallsDemocratic
Sturgis, William R.06Elk RiverDemocratic

House of Representatives

NameDistrictCityParty
Babcock, Lorenzo A.06Sauk RapidsWhig
Bailly, Alexis07MendotaDemocratic
Black, Mahlon02StillwaterDemocratic
Brunson, Benjamin Wetherill03Saint PaulWhig
Dewey, John J.03Saint PaulDemocratic
Dugas, William05Little CanadaDemocratic
Furber, Joseph Warren01Cottage GroveWhig
Holmes, Thomas A.06Sauk RapidsDemocratic
Jackson, Henry03Saint PaulDemocratic
Johnson, Parsons King03Saint PaulDemocratic
Marshall, William Rainey05Saint Anthony FallsDemocratic
Morrison, Allan06Crow WingDemocratic
Pond, Gideon H.07Oak GroveUnknown
Russell, Jeremiah06Crow WingUnknown
Setzer, Henry N.04StillwaterDemocratic
Trask, Sylvanus02StillwaterDemocratic
Wells, James01Lake CityDemocratic
Wilkinson, Morton Smith02StillwaterWhig

Notes

  1. ^ a b Known party affiliations taken from the members' profiles in Minnesota Legislators Past & Present.
  2. ^ Minnesota Legislators Past & Present does not provide information on Samuel Burkleo's party affiliation; however, Samuel Burkleo signed on to an open letter from the Whig members of the legislature published in The Minnesota Pioneer newspaper[4] which would imply that Burkleo was a Whig.
  3. ^ Minnesota Legislators Past & Present does not provide information on Martin McLeod's party affiliation; however, it has been documented that McLeod was a close political ally of Democratic future-Governor Henry Hastings Sibley,[5] which fact would imply that McLeod was a Democrat.

References

  1. ^ "Sessions of the Minnesota State Legislature and the Minnesota Territorial Legislature, 1849-present". Minnesota Legislative Reference Library. Retrieved November 9, 2016.
  2. ^ "President and President Pro Tempore of the Minnesota Senate, 1849-present". Minnesota Legislative Reference Library. Retrieved November 9, 2016.
  3. ^ "Speakers of the Minnesota House of Representatives, 1849-present". Minnesota Legislative Reference Library. Retrieved November 9, 2016.
  4. ^ "Circular of the Whig Members of the Legislature in Relation to the Disposition of the Public Printing". The Minnesota Pioneer. February 13, 1851. Retrieved May 2, 2020.
  5. ^ Davis, Jane Spector (1968). "Guide to a Microfilm Edition of The Henry Hastings Sibley Papers" (PDF). St. Paul: Minnesota Historical Society. p. 15. Retrieved November 15, 2016. ... Three of Sibley's fur trade associates—Joseph R. Brown, William H. Forbes, and Martin McLeod—were now his political allies ...
  • Minnesota Legislators Past & Present - Session Search Results (Session 0.1, Senate)
  • Minnesota Legislators Past & Present - Session Search Results (Session 0.1, House)
Preceded by
None
First Minnesota Territorial Legislature
1849
Succeeded by
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