'John Chandler' (
February 1,
1762—
September 25,
1841) was an
American politician and
soldier of
Maine. The political career of Chandler, a
Democratic-Republican, was interspersed with his involvement in the state
militia during both the
American Revolutionary War and
War of 1812.
Chandler was born in
Epping,
New Hampshire, the brother of
Thomas Chandler. His father was a
captain in the
French and Indian War and the Revolutionary War, and had died in 1776. Chandler was self-educated and enlisted in the
Continental Army at age 15. After the end of the war, he settled on a farm near
Monmouth, then a part of
Massachusetts. At the time, Chandler was both illiterate and without money. However, he had become the protégé of General
Henry Dearborn, the future
Secretary of War. Dearborn borrowed $400 from the Dearborns and bought 200 acres (0.8 km²) of land. He became wealthy as a
blacksmith.
From 1803 to 1805, Chandler served in the
Massachusetts Senate; he later was elected to the
U.S. House of Representatives as a Republican, serving from
March 4,
1805 to
March 3,
1809. Chandler was not a candidate for renomination in 1808 and was appointed
sheriff of
Kennebec County the same year.
During the War of 1812, Chandler served in the Maine Militia (1812-1815). On
July 8,
1812, he was
commissioned as a
brigadier general. Chandler was wounded and captured during the
Niagara Campaign at the
Battle of Stoney Creek in
Canada, when he wandered into the British line, thinking it was his own. After the war ended, Chandler returned to politics as a member of the
Massachusetts General Court in 1819.
Chandler was the first president of the Maine senate and a member of the Maine Constitutional Convention. Upon the admission of Maine to the Union, Chandler was elected to the
U.S. Senate. Chandler began his term on
June 14,
1820, and was reelected in 1823. During his time in the Senate, Chandler was the
chairman of the Committee on Militia during the
18th through
20th Congresses and played a key role in establishing the arsenal at
Augusta, as well as the construction of the military road from
Bangor to
Houlton. He resigned on
March 3,
1829, to become the customs collector of
Portland, a post he held until 1837. Chandler died in Augusta at age 79 and was buried in Mount Pleasant Cemetery.
Chandler was a trustee of
Bowdoin College. He was the uncle of
Zachariah Chandler.
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