Everything about Thomas B Catron totally explained
Thomas Benton Catron (
October 6 1840–
May 15 1921) was an
American politician and
lawyer who was influential in the establishment of the
U.S. state of
New Mexico. He later represented the state in the
United States Senate.
Early life
Catron was born near
Lexington,
Missouri, and was named after Missouri senator
Thomas Hart Benton. He was educated in Lexington's public schools, and at the
Masonic College in Lexington. He graduated with a
degree in law from the
University of Missouri in 1860 .
During the
American Civil War, Catron served four years in the
Confederate Army. With his home in Missouri destroyed, he sought to move west after the end of the war. Following other Confederate veterans, he arrived in the
Territory of New Mexico in
1866, and settled in
Las Cruces.
Move to New Mexico
Catron decided to pursue his original career choice, law, and was admitted to the bar in 1867 . Due to the area's lack of lawyers, he quickly became
District Attorney for the territory's third judicial district (
1867-
1868), and was appointed New Mexico's Attorney General in 1869 . He resigned the post to take the position of United States attorney, to which he'd been appointed by
President Ulysses S. Grant.
Early political career
After getting involved in territorial politics in the
1870s, he impressed the
Republican Party. He was a member of every New Mexico Territorial council from 1884 to
1909, and was an unsuccessful candidate for election as New Mexico's Congressional Delegate in 1892 . He was elected to the office in
1894, but was defeated for re-election in 1896 .
Land Acquisitions
Catron was a lawyer familiar with Mexican land grants and through a variety of measures he gained an interest or clear title in 34 grants totalling 3 million acres. He became an influential member of a group of land speculators known as 'The Santa Fe Ring' and was the largest single land owner in New Mexico and one of the largest land owners in the United States.
Advocate for statehood
Catron was an early advocate for New Mexico's statehood. Many credit him as the single driving force within the territorial Republican Party which brought together all the necessary people and resources to call for the national Republican Party to push for the admission of New Mexico as a state. Though he wasn't actively involved in politics from 1897 to
1910, he was the go-to for Republicans in the territory on almost every issue, and even moved his law practice to the territorial capital of
Santa Fe to be closer to his friends in the legislature.
Upon New Mexico's 1912 entry to the union as the 47th state, Catron was elected the state's first senator by a wide margin on the merit of his efforts to admit the state. He was sworn in on
March 27, 1912.
Alliance with Fall
Perhaps more than any other person, Catron is responsible for the Republican Party's dominance during New Mexico's first decade of statehood. However, he made one mistake that would inevitably sink his career, and the entire New Mexico Republican Party. He made a personal alliance with a good friend,
Albert Fall, to ensure Fall the state's other senate seat.
Fall would go on to be one of the most corrupt individuals in Congress, and was utterly despised by the New Mexico Republican Party. In
1916, the party, ashamed with Catron's actions in helping Fall, asked him not to run again. He acquiesced, and retired to Santa Fe.
He died in May of 1921, long enough to see Fall appointed as
U.S. Secretary of the Interior. Three years later, Fall was involved in the
Teapot Dome scandal which inevitably sunk the Republican Party in New Mexico Catron had painstakingly shaped.
Monuments and memorials
Catron County, New Mexico is named in his honor.
Further Information
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