Jane Cazneau

Jane Maria Eliza Cazneau (née McManus, widowed Storm; April 6, 1807 – December 12, 1878) was an American journalist, lobbyist, and publicist who advocated the annexation of all of Mexico during the Mexican-American War.

Education and early career

She was born on April 6, 1807, in Brunswick, Rensselaer County, New York, the daughter of Congressman William McManus and Catharine (Coons) McManus. She attended Troy Female Seminary, one of the earliest colleges for women, but did not graduate. On August 22, 1825, she married Allen B. Storm. Their son, William Mt. Storm (b. August 2, 1826), became an inventor who patented in April 1853 an "Improved Process for Mixing Air and Steam for Actuating Engines.".[1] They separated in 1831, and Allen Storm died 1838 in New York City. Around this time, she is believed to have been both Aaron Burr's lover and partner in land speculation.[2]

In 1832, Jane's father ventured into land speculation, and was one of the founders of the Galveston Bay and Texas Land Company, and Jane and her brother Robert traveled to Texas, which was then still part of Mexico, to buy land. The next year, Jane, her father, her brother Robert and a company of German settlers set out to take possession of the land, but the scheme failed when the German settlers refused to go beyond Matagorda. She returned home with her father to Brunswick, NY. Her brother Robert remained in Texas and eventually became a wealthy planter.

Writing

Then she turned to journalism, working for Horace Greeley's The New Yorker, and Moses Yale Beach's New York Sun and the Democratic Review, strongly advocating manifest destiny. Storm embraced this with enthusiasm, and was to go on to be a firm believer, northerner though she was, in the expansion of the South, and of slavery, its 'peculiar institution', into Central America and the Caribbean. In Mistress of Manifest Destiny (2001), Linda S. Hudson argued that it was Storm who actually wrote the "Annexation" editorial, and thus coined the phrase "Manifest Destiny". Since many editorials in John L. O'Sullivan's publications were unsigned, Hudson used computer-aided "textual analysis" to support her argument. O'Sullivan biographer Robert D. Sampson disputes Hudson's claim for a variety of reasons.

Mexican-American War and Peace

Cazneau was sent by President Polk on a secret peace mission to Mexico in 1845; she rode there on horseback.[3] With the outbreak of the Mexican-American War, she went to the front, where she witnessed Winfield Scott's capture of the fortress of Vera Cruz in March 1847, the first female war correspondent in American history. She helped negotiate the Treaty of Guadalupe-Hidalgo (1848), which included guarantees of property rights to both male and female nonresident landowners. While in Mexico, she worked on canal-building expeditions and banking projects.[4] At the end of the Mexican-American War she turned her attention to Cuba, and the potential it represented, advocating its annexation, and denouncing its Spanish colonial overlords. She later settled at Eagle Pass, a frontier village three hundred miles up the Rio Grande from the Gulf of Mexico, getting to know many of the local Indian chiefs.

Caribbean

In 1849, she married William Leslie Cazneau. They moved to the Dominican Republic in 1855. Despite her earlier sympathies for southern expansionism she disapproved of secession, and was hired by William H. Seward, Lincoln's Secretary of State, to write denunciations of the Confederacy. It was a matter of simple principle for her: the war was a serious interruption to further prospects of American expansion in the Caribbean.

In 1878, she was drowned on her way to Santo Domingo, after the steamer on which she was travelling was caught in a huge storm.

References

  1. Patent Nr. 9,654, April 5th, 1853 in Commissioner of Patents Annual Report for 1853 issued by the U.S. Commissioner of Patents in 1854 (Part 1; pages 168f)
  2. Goetzmann, William H. (2000-01-01). When the Eagle Screamed: The Romantic Horizon in American Expansionism, 1800-1860. University of Oklahoma Press. ISBN 9780806132235.
  3. Ruthe Winegarten (ed.), Finder’s Guide to the "Texas Women: A Celebration of Texas History” Archives (Denton: Texas Woman’s University Library, 1984), 34.
  4. Ruthe Winegarten and Frieda Werden, “Women in Texas History,” Texas Almanac 1986-1987 (Dallas: The Dallas Morning News, 1985), 234

External links

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