Joseph Blunt

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Joseph Blunt
BornFebruary 1792 Edit this on Wikidata
Died16 June 1860 Edit this on Wikidata (aged 67–68)
OccupationLawyer Edit this on Wikidata
Political partyRepublican Party Edit this on Wikidata

Joseph Blunt (February 1792, Newburyport, Massachusetts – June 16, 1860, New York City) was an American lawyer, author, editor and politician from New York.

Life

He was one of four sons of Edmund March Blunt.[1] In 1802, Edmund M. Blunt published the American Practical Navigator by Nathaniel Bowditch, the man who became the godfather of Joseph's younger brother Nathaniel Bowditch Blunt.[citation needed]

Joseph Blunt first came into notice by writing on the Missouri question in 1820. Soon afterward he wrote an article on the Laibach circular, published in the North American Review, which attracted the attention of politicians. In 1825, he published a Historical Sketch of the Formation of the American Confederacy (8 vol.), and from 1827 to 1835 he edited the American Annual Register. He also published Speeches, Reviews, and Reports (1843) and Merchants' and Shipmasters' Assistant (1829 and 1848).[2]

He was long a leading Whig and protectionist. In 1851, Millard Fillmore appointed him Commissioner to China, but he declined to take office. In September 1855, he was a delegate to the Anti-Nebraska state convention in Syracuse which merged with the Whigs to form the Republican Party in the State of New York.

In 1858, he was appointed by Gov. John A. King New York County District Attorney to fill the vacancy caused by the resignation of Peter B. Sweeny.

Brothers

Joseph's youngest brother, N. Bowditch Blunt, was New York County District Attorney from 1851 to 1854. The other two brothers, Edmund (1799–1866) and George William (1802–1878) followed their father's steps and got involved in nautical affairs. Edmund assisted Ferdinand Rudolph Hassler in surveying the port of New York for the United States Coast Survey in 1817. George W. Blunt was for decades a member, and later secretary, of the Board of Pilot Commissioners, and in 1857 was appointed a New York Harbor Commissioner.[2]

References

  1. ^ "A New Chart of Part of the North Pacific Ocean Exhibiting the Various Straits, Islands and Dangers". World Digital Library. Retrieved 23 May 2013.
  2. ^ a b Wilson & Fiske 1900.

Attribution

Sources

Legal offices
Preceded by New York County District Attorney
1858
Succeeded by