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David Rittenhouse Porter (October 31, 1788 – August 6, 1867) was the ninth governor of Pennsylvania.<ref>"The Governors of Pennsylvania." Mount Union, Pennsylvania: The Mount Union Times, January 27, 1911, p. 1 (subscription required).</ref> Voted into office during the controversial 1838 Pennsylvania gubernatorial election, which was characterized by intense anti-Masonic and anti-abolitionist rhetoric during and after the contest<ref>"The Gathering of the People" and "Democratic Anti-Masonic Meeting." Lancaster, Pennsylvania: Examiner & Herald, June 14, 1838, p. 3 (subscription required).</ref><ref>"To the Democratic Freemen of the City and County of Lancaster." Lancaster, Pennsylvania: Lancaster Intelligencer, August 14, 1838, p.2 (subscription required).</ref> that sparked the post-election Buckshot War,<ref>Egle, William Henry. "The Buckshot War," in The Pennsylvania Magazine of History and Biography, Vol. 23, No. 2 (1899), pp. 137-156. Philadelphia, Pennsylvania: University of Pennsylvania Press.</ref><ref>Hamilton, A. Boyd. "City Saw First Inauguration in 1812 at Gay Fete." Harrisburg, Pennsylvania: Harrisburg Telegraph, January 17, 1939, pp. 20, 26 (subscription required).</ref> he served as the state's chief executive officer from 1839 to 1845.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>

His son, Horace Porter, who was the aide-de-camp of Union General Ulysses S. Grant during the American Civil War,<ref>"Veterans of the Potomac." Buffalo, New York: The Buffalo News, June 14, 1893, p. 4 (subscription required).</ref> served as the United States Ambassador to France from 1897 to 1905.<ref>Hamilton, "City Saw First Inauguration in 1812 at Gay Fete," Harrisburg Telegraph, January 17, 1939.</ref><ref>"Our Two Chief Ambassadors: How Horace Porter and John Hay May Help the Business Situation." Los Angeles, California: The Los Angeles Times, March 21, 1897, p. 21 (subscription required).</ref><ref>"The Thinning Ranks of Blue." Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania: Pittsburgh Daily Post, May 31, 1921, p. 4 (subscription required).</ref>

Early life and educationEdit

Porter, the first governor under the State Constitution of 1838, was born October 31, 1788, near Norristown, Montgomery County, Pennsylvania, spending his boyhood at Selma Mansion, a home built by his father in 1794.<ref name=Cyclopaedia>Template:Cite book</ref> The son of Elizabeth (née Parker) and Andrew Porter, the Revolutionary War officer,<ref>"David Rittenhouse Porter—1839-1845" (brief biography with photo). Wilkes-Barre, Pennsylvania: Semi-Weekly Record, November 23, 1909, p. 2 (subscription required).</ref><ref>"Odds and Ends of History." Carlisle, Pennsylvania: The Sentinel, November 15, 1913, p. 4 (subscription required).</ref> he was also the brother of George Bryan Porter who became the Territorial Governor of Michigan from 1831 to 1834 and James Madison Porter who became the Secretary of War from 1843 to 1844.<ref>Hamilton, "City Saw First Inauguration in 1812 at Gay Fete," Harrisburg Telegraph, January 17, 1939.</ref><ref>Godcharles, F. A. "Today's Story in Penna. History: David R. Porter, Iron Master and Governor of Pennsylvania Born October 31, 1788." Lancaster, Pennsylvania: Intelligencer Journal, October 31, 1924, p. 4 (subscription required).</ref><ref>McCain, George Nox. "A Famous Governor." Philadelphia, Pennsylvania: Evening Public Ledger, June 7, 1921, p. 10 (subscription required).</ref>

Porter received a classical education at Norristown Academy.<ref>Godcharles, "Today's Story in Penna. History: David R. Porter, Iron Master and Governor of Pennsylvania Born October 31, 1788," Intelligencer Journal, October 31, 1924.</ref> In 1813, he moved to Huntingdon where he studied law with Edward Shippen and eventually purchased an iron works.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>

Porter also became a member of the Huntingdon Lodge of the Freemasons, rising to the levels of Grand Master of his lodge and Deputy Grand Master of the Masonic district in which his lodge was located.<ref>Egle, "The Buckshot War," in The Pennsylvania Magazine of History and Biography, Vol. 23, No. 2 (1899), pp. 137-156.</ref><ref>"Remarkable Coincidence," in "Young Men's Convention." Lancaster, Pennsylvania: Examiner & Herald, May 3, 1838, p. 3 (subscription required).</ref>

Due to the recession that followed the War of 1812 and his resulting business failure, his life changed markedly. Turning to politics in 1819, he also became a family man, marrying Josephine McDermott in 1820.<ref>Hamilton, "City Saw First Inauguration in 1812 at Gay Fete," Harrisburg Telegraph, January 17, 1939.</ref><ref>Godcharles, "Today's Story in Penna. History: David R. Porter, Iron Master and Governor of Pennsylvania Born October 31, 1788," Intelligencer Journal, October 31, 1924.</ref>

CareerEdit

In 1819, Porter became a member of the Pennsylvania House of Representatives, representing Huntingdon County in 1819 and 1820.<ref>"David Rittenhouse Porter—1839-1845," Semi-Weekly Record, November 23, 1909.</ref> He then served in row offices in Huntingdon County and as a member of the Pennsylvania Senate for the 8th district from 1835 to 1838.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref><ref>Hamilton, "City Saw First Inauguration in 1812 at Gay Fete," Harrisburg Telegraph, January 17, 1939.</ref><ref>Godcharles, "Today's Story in Penna. History: David R. Porter, Iron Master and Governor of Pennsylvania Born October 31, 1788," Intelligencer Journal, October 31, 1924.</ref>

A resident of Huntingdon County in 1838,<ref>Here Is Your Pennsylvania: Huntingdon." Pottsville, Pennsylvania: Republican and Herald, October 9, 1950, p. 10 (subscription required).</ref><ref>"The Old Timer: One Hundred Years Ago." Lancaster, Pennsylvania: Intelligencer Journal, March 5, 1938, p. 6 (subscription required).</ref> Porter was nominated for governor by the Jacksonian Democrats in order to mend the split between former Governor George Wolf and the Rev. Henry A. P. Muhlenberg, as well as defeat incumbent Governor Joseph Ritner's bid for a second term.<ref>"David Rittenhouse Porter—1839-1845," Semi-Weekly Record, November 23, 1909.</ref> His list of supporters included U.S. Senator James Buchanan, who would later become the 15th president of the United States.<ref>"Letter from James Buchanan to Reuel William" (U.S. Senator Buchanan discusses David Porter and the 1838 gubernatorial election in Pennsylvania). Carlisle, Pennsylvania: Dickinson College, Archives & Special Collections, retrieved online December 30, 2022.</ref>

A member of the Huntingdon Lodge of the Freemasons, who had risen to the levels of Grand Master of his lodge and Deputy Grand Master of the Masonic district in which his lodge was located, his candidacy received intense scrutiny from his opponents, many of whom were members of the Anti-Masonic Party.<ref>Egle, "The Buckshot War," in The Pennsylvania Magazine of History and Biography, 1899.</ref><ref>"Remarkable Coincidence," in "Young Men's Convention," Examiner & Herald, May 3, 1838.</ref>

After years of Anti-Masonic "witch hunts," however, many prospective voters had tired of the vitriol, giving Porter an opening to effect change. He won the election with a slim 5,500-voter margin. The election result was bitterly contested by Ritner's supporters to the point of violence. Known as the "Buckshot War",<ref>Egle, "The Buckshot War," in The Pennsylvania Magazine of History and Biography, 1899.</ref> Governor Ritner began making plans in Harrisburg to order military intervention to ensure the peaceful transition of government, but members of the legislature worked together to reach consensus and certified the election results before the situation could escalate further, bringing the conflict to an end a few days before Porter's inauguration.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref><ref>"David Rittenhouse Porter—1839-1845," Semi-Weekly Record, November 23, 1909.</ref><ref>Hamilton, "City Saw First Inauguration in 1812 at Gay Fete," Harrisburg Telegraph, January 17, 1939.</ref> A large crowd attended his inaugural ceremonies on January 15, 1839.<ref>Sheridan, Leo W. "Great Crowds Attended Ceremonies of Inaugurals As Capitol Was Filled." Lock Haven, Pennsylvania: The Express, November 30, 1934, p. 4 (subscription required).</ref>

When he assumed office, Porter faced the difficulties of a statewide recession that had begun in 1837 and a state bureaucracy that had spent heavily during the previous years. He pushed for, and then obtained, a tax on persons in professions and the trades similar to the state's income tax, and also secured Pennsylvania's first capital stock share tax while reducing state spending and hiring. Despite these financial changes, his administration was able to continue the state's expansion of its canal and railroad systems, including efforts to connect those systems to the Mississippi River and St. Louis, Missouri, as well as state capitals in Illinois, Indiana and Ohio.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref><ref>"David Rittenhouse Porter—1839-1845," Semi-Weekly Record, November 23, 1909.</ref><ref>Godcharles, "Today's Story in Penna. History: David R. Porter, Iron Master and Governor of Pennsylvania Born October 31, 1788," Intelligencer Journal, October 31, 1924.</ref>

In 1840, Porter called a special session of the legislature "for consideration of certain financial matters of the Commonwealth."<ref>Rough Road Ahead for Legislators." Hazleton, Pennsylvania: Standard-Speaker, January 9, 1959, p. 9 (subscription required).</ref>

Porter then easily won re-election in 1841, defeating John Banks, the first Whig gubernatorial candidate to run without having to form a coalition with the Anti-Masonic Party. During his Inaugural Address on January 18, 1842, Porter recalled the state's financial difficulties and presented an overview of his plan for his second term:<ref>"Inaugural Address of David Rittenhouse Porter: Delivered January 18, 1842." Sunbury, Pennsylvania: The Sunbury Gazette, January 22, 1842, p. 2 (subscription required).</ref>

"The public debt is substantially the same,—the public burdens only increased to meet obligations then incurred—the public improvements are more productive, and the public revenues essentially augmented. Our banking system, then tottering to its fall, has been examined with searching scrutiny by the public eye—its faults have been detected, its unsoundness exposed, and its dangers guarded against by the dissemination of correct information. The wild and headlong spirit of speculation has been checked. The undue multiplication of the public debt has been restrained, and improvident and wasteful expenditures of the public funds arrested. Experience has painfully demonstrated to the conviction of all, what the sagacious foresight of some apprehended—that nations, like individuals, when they make 'too great haste to get rich' are in danger of bankruptcy and ruin. We had not yet fortunately, reached the fatal point, from which there was no prospect of escape; but we were verging so near, as to render our rescue alike timely and perilous. Cases of individual hardship no doubt exist; patience, industry and enterprise will effect a cure in most of them; and for those that are remediless, we can but express our sympathy and sorrow.... The Commonwealth, herself, after a short struggle borne with fortitude characteristic of her citizens, and the integrity that they would scorn to tarnish, will overcome all her pecuniary difficulties—will faithfully fulfill her engagements and proudly maintain her honesty and her fame."

By the time Porter had begun that address in 1842, Pennsylvania's legislature had already begun what would become one of the longest sessions in state history, during which it took up the review and debate of a one-mill real estate and personal property tax increase that was pushed by Porter. Lasting two hundred and four calendar days, that session ran from January 4 to July 26. After it was over, Porter signed the new tax increase into effect.<ref>"Assembly Nears Record Session: Session of 204 Calendar Days Recorded in 1842 When Tax Measure Was Issue." Chambersburg, Pennsylvania: Public Opinion, July 17, 1951, p. 12 (subscription required).</ref>

Porter's second term also saw legislative action which abolished the practice of imprisoning people for not paying their debts, as well as the Philadelphia nativist riots of 1844, during which Porter sent in state military troops to quell anti-Catholic violence.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref><ref>Godcharles, "Today's Story in Penna. History: David R. Porter, Iron Master and Governor of Pennsylvania Born October 31, 1788," Intelligencer Journal, October 31, 1924.</ref>

During Porter's two terms of executive leadership, Pennsylvania's total debt rose twenty-five percent, but the state was able to pay off the interest on that debt by using revenues that had been generated during his tenure. In addition, he was able to curtail efforts by some General Assembly members to redefine constitutional separations between the executive, judicial and legislative branches of the state's government.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>

As his second term wound down, Porter decided to retire from politics because Pennsylvania's revised state constitution prohibited him from seeking a third term and because he had developed increasingly difficult relations with both his own party, which opposed his support of protective tariffs, and members of the assembly who had tried to impeach him.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>

Returning to the private sector, where he resumed his iron manufacturing business in 1844, he oversaw construction of the first anthracite coal furnace for iron in south central Pennsylvania <ref>Hamilton, "City Saw First Inauguration in 1812 at Gay Fete," Harrisburg Telegraph, January 17, 1939.</ref><ref>"Our Two Chief Ambassadors: How Horace Porter and John Hay May Help the Business Situation," The Los Angeles Times, March 21, 1897.</ref><ref>"Short Stories of Harrisburg." Harrisburg, Pennsylvania: Harrisburg Telegraph, November 9, 1939, p. 8 (subscription required).</ref> and operated his own railroad, which linked his furnace to Pennsylvania's larger railroad and canal lines.<ref>"Short Walks In and About Harrisburg: When Business Men Ran Their Own Railroads." Harrisburg, Pennsylvania: Harrisburg Telegraph, February 9, 1926, p. 6 (subscription required).</ref> He then endorsed James Buchanan during his 1856 run for president of the United States.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref><ref>Godcharles, "Today's Story in Penna. History: David R. Porter, Iron Master and Governor of Pennsylvania Born October 31, 1788," Intelligencer Journal, October 31, 1924.</ref>

Porter also subsequently helped to promote the extension of the transcontinental railroad through Texas,<ref>Godcharles, "Today's Story in Penna. History: David R. Porter, Iron Master and Governor of Pennsylvania Born October 31, 1788," Intelligencer Journal, October 31, 1924.</ref> becoming an associate in the incorporation of the New Mexican Railway Company in 1860.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>

A vocal opponent of the secession of southern states from the Union, Porter's views were shared by his son, Horace Porter,<ref>Hamilton, "City Saw First Inauguration in 1812 at Gay Fete," Harrisburg Telegraph, January 17, 1939.</ref> who distinguished himself in battle during the American Civil War, first as a lieutenant colonel and then as a general. As aide-de-camp to General Grant,<ref>Godcharles, "Today's Story in Penna. History: David R. Porter, Iron Master and Governor of Pennsylvania Born October 31, 1788," Intelligencer Journal, October 31, 1924.</ref><ref>"The Meanings of Your Name—What They Stand for and Why: Is It Porter?" El Paso, Texas: El Paso Herald, January 8, 1921, p. 31 (subscription required).</ref><ref>"Our Two Chief Ambassadors: How Horace Porter and John Hay May Help the Business Situation," The Los Angeles Times, March 21, 1897, p. 21.</ref> the younger Porter was present to witness the surrender of General Lee, and later wrote a book that has been described as the definitive account of the events at Appomattox Court House.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>

Illness, death and intermentEdit

Falling ill after attending a church meeting in Harrisburg during the winter of 1866-1867, Porter's health continued to decline over a period of several months. He died on August 6, 1867, at the age of 78,<ref>Template:Cite news</ref><ref>Hamilton, "City Saw First Inauguration in 1812 at Gay Fete," Harrisburg Telegraph, January 17, 1939.</ref> and was buried in the Harrisburg Cemetery.<ref>Godcharles, "Today's Story in Penna. History: David R. Porter, Iron Master and Governor of Pennsylvania Born October 31, 1788," Intelligencer Journal, October 31, 1924.</ref>

LegacyEdit

Porter Street in Philadelphia is named in his honor. His grandson William Wagener Porter was a prominent Philadelphia attorney and legal author.<ref>"President Unveiled It." Baltimore, Maryland: The Baltimore Sun, May 17, 1897, p. 7 (subscription required).</ref>

ReferencesEdit

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External linksEdit

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