:''This article is about the
United States politician. For the
Australian politician, see
Thomas Ewing (Australian politician).''
:''For the
Illinois congressman, see
Thomas W. Ewing''
:''For his namesake son, see
Thomas Ewing, Jr.''
'Thomas Ewing, Sr.' (
December 28,
1789 –
October 26,
1871) was a
National Republican and
Whig politician from
Ohio. He served in the
U.S. Senate as well as serving as the
Secretary of the Treasury and the first
Secretary of the Interior.
Born in
West Liberty,
Ohio County,
Virginia (now
West Virginia). After studying at
Ohio University and reading law under
Philemon Beecher, Ewing commenced the practice of law in
Lancaster, Ohio, in
1816.
As a colorful country lawyer, he was elected to the U.S. Senate in
1830 as a Whig and served a single term. He was unsuccessful in seeking a second term in
1836. Ewing served as Secretary of the Treasury from
March 4 1841 –
September 11 1841, serving under Presidents
William Henry Harrison and
John Tyler.
Ewing was later appointed to serve as the first Secretary of the Interior by President
Zachary Taylor. Ewing served in the position from
March 8,
1849–
July 22,
1850 under Taylor and
Millard Fillmore. As first secretary, he consolidated bureaus from various Departments, such as the Land Office from the Treasury Department and the Indian Bureau from the War Department. The bureaus were being kicked out of their offices as unwanted tenants in their former departments. However, the Interior Department had no office space, so Ewing rented space. Later, the Patent Office building, with a new east wing, provided permanent space in 1852. Ewing initiated the Interior Department's culture of corruption by wholesale replacement of officials with political patronage. Newspapers called him "Butcher Ewing" for his efforts.
In
1850 Ewing was appointed to the Senate to fill the vacancy created by the resignation of
Thomas Corwin, and served from
July 20 1850 -
March 3 1851. Ewing was unsuccessful in seeking re-election in 1851. Ewing was appointed by President
Andrew Johnson to a third post as
Secretary of War in
1868 following the firing of
Edwin M. Stanton but the Senate, still outraged at Johnson's firing of Stanton—which had provoked Johnson's impeachment—refused to act on the nomination.
Ewing married
Maria Wills Boyle, a Roman Catholic, and raised their children in her faith. His foster son was the famous general
William Tecumseh Sherman, whose conversion Maria Ewing arranged and he took the Christian name "William" (prior to that he was known simply as "Tecumseh Sherman").
William Tecumseh Sherman married Thomas Ewing Sr.'s daughter. Ewing's son,
Thomas Ewing, Jr., was an
American Civil War Union army general and two-term U.S. Congressman from
Ohio.
Prior to his death in
1871, Ewing had been the last surviving member of the Harrison and Tyler Cabinets. Future
President and
Governor of Ohio Rutherford B. Hayes was a
pallbearer at his funeral.
External links
★
Thomas Ewing at
Find A Grave
★
Ewing Family History Pages
★
★
Biography