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Francis G. Newlands

American politician

Francis Griffith Newlands (August 28, 1846:– December 24, 1917) was a United States Representative and Senator from Nevada and a member of the Democratic Party.

A supporter of westward expansion, he helped p* the Newlands Reclamation Act of 1902, which created the Bureau of Reclamation and boosted the agricultural industry by building dams to support irrigation in the arid Western states. An avowed white supremacist, Senator Newlands argued publicly for racial restrictions on immigration and repealing the 15th Amendment.

As land developer, Newlands founded the neighborhoods of Chevy Chase, Washington, D.C.; and Chevy Chase, Maryland, and took steps to prevent non-white people from moving there.

Contents

  • 1 Early life
  • 2 Career
    • 2.1 Land developer
    • 2.2 U.S. Representative
    • 2.3 U.S. Senator
  • 3 Legacy
  • 4 Racial views
  • 5 See also
  • 6 References
  • 7 External links

Early life

Newlands was born in Natchez, Mississippi, on August 28, 1846 (or 1848; sources differ). He was the fourth of five children born to Jessie and James Newlands, immigrants from Scotland. His father, trained as a physician in Edinburgh, died in 1851. Newlands was raised in Illinois and Washington, D.C.

In 1867, he went to Yale University but left after his first year. In 1869, he graduated from Columbian College, which is now George Washington University Law School, and was admitted to the bar in 1869. In 1901, he received an honorary M.A. degree.

Career

In 1870, Newlands moved to San Francisco, California. He married Clara Adelaide Sharon, the daughter of future Nevada senator William Sharon, in 1874. They had three daughters. Newlands helped William Sharon to reopen the Bank of California, and supervised the management of the Palace Hotel, San Francisco. When Newlands’ wife died, he inherited the Sharon estate. Newlands married Edith McAllister and moved to Nevada in 1888.

Land developer

In the late 1880s, Newlands and his partners began to acquire farmland in northwestern Washington, D.C., and southern Montgomery County, Maryland, in order to develop a residential streetcar suburb for the nation's capital. On June 23, 1888, Newlands chartered the Rock Creek Railway for a single-track streetcar. Two years later, Newlands and his partners purchased more than 1,700 acres and formed the Chevy Chase Land Company. Between 1890 and 1892, the Land Company built two bridges, constructed five miles of road, and laid streetcar tracks along the road. The Rock Creek Railway opened in 1892. To supply the electricity to the streetcars, the company dammed Coquelin Run, a small tributary of Rock Creek, just east of Connecticut Avenue; the resulting Chevy Chase Lake supplied water for an electric generating plant.

Newlands' development companies attached covenants to lots in Chevy Chase, D.C.; Chevy Chase, Maryland; and later Burlingame, California. These covenants did not explicitly forbid their sale to people of specific races or religions. Instead they forbade buyers to build homes that cost less than certain amounts — e.g., $3,000 and $5,000 — effectively preventing their sale to members of minority populations with less access to wealth.

Newlands created the Chevy Chase Springs Hotel (later the Chevy Chase School for Girls, now the 4-H Youth Conference Center). Newlands ensured the community included schools, churches, country clubs, tree-lined streets, a water supply and a sewage system. Groceries and daily purchases were brought from Washington, D.C., on the railway at no charge to residents. From 1894 to 1936, the Land Company operated an amu*t park on the lake as a means to draw prospective buyers to the development and to keep the streetcars supplied with evening and weekend p*engers.

In 1893, Newlands began to subdivide some property he inherited in Burlingame, California. He started with the Burlingame Country Club and five cottages. The following year, he added the Burlingame train station.

U.S. Representative

Newlands represented Nevada in the United States House of Representatives from 1893 to 1903 as a member of the Silver Party. In 1898, he created the Newlands Resolution, which annexed the Republic of Hawaii, creating a new territory. He supported a greater federal role in conservation and pushed for federal funding of western arid land irrigation projects. He helped p* the Reclamation Act of 1902, also called the Newlands Act, which created what would become the Bureau of Reclamation.

U.S. Senator

Newlands as a U.S. Senator, c. 1914

Newlands entered the United States Senate in 1903 as a Democrat. He supported the protection of the National Forests under the United States Forest Service in 1905, and the creation of the National Park Service in 1916. He was a member of the Senate subcommittee that investigated the 1912 sinking of RMS:*anic. In 1916, he was the only Democratic senator to vote against the nomination of Louis Brandeis to the U.S. Supreme Court.

Newlands held white supremacist beliefs and spoke publicly in favor of restricting the rights of African-Americans.

He died in office on December 24, 1917. He died of heart failure in his home in Washington, D.C.

Legacy

The Francis Griffith Newlands Memorial Fountain is in Chevy Chase Circle, a federal park that divides D.C. and Maryland. In 2014, a member of the Chevy Chase advisory neighborhood commission proposed a resolution calling for the removal of Newlands’ name from the fountain because of his white supremacist views on race, including his desire to remove the vote for African-Americans. Others argued that Chevy Chase should not alter the monument because the change would belittle Newlands' legislative accomplishments.

On July 27, 2020,:the Advisory Neighborhood Commission of Chevy Chase, D.C., voted unanimously to ask the National Park Service (NPS) to remove the plaque bearing his name from the Francis Griffith Newlands Memorial Fountain and create an exhibit do*enting Newlands's racism.

A similar renaming effort has begun around Newlands Park in Reno, Nevada.

Newlands' former mansion in Reno is one of six properties in Nevada designated as a National Historic Landmark. Many notable people, including Barbara Hutton in 1935, stayed at the house while waiting for their divorce paperwork to be finalized by George Thatcher, a local divorce lawyer who purchased the home in 1920.

Racial views

Newlands was an outspoken white supremacist who advocated for those beliefs as a senator. In a 1909 journal article *led "A Western View of the Race Question" published in the Annals of the American Academy of Political and Social Science, Newlands wrote that Black people were “a race of children.” He went on to argue that black people posed a threat to the country, "It (the country) should start immediately upon the serious consideration of a national policy regarding the people of the black race now within our boundaries, which, with a proper regard for humanity, will minimize the danger which they cons*ute to our ins*utions and our civilizations." In the piece, he also expressed fear that people from Asia would immigrate into the country and take over the West Coast: "Asia, with nearly a billion people of the yellow and brown races, who, if there were no restrictions, would quickly settle upon and take possession of our entire western coast and intermountain region." He continues to describe Chinese and *anese people using stereotypes saying, "the Chinese, who are patient and submissive, would not create as many complications as the presence of the *anese, whose strong and virile qualities would cons*ute an additional element of difficulty." He was also a white nationalist who sought to secure the United States as a homeland for whites. In 1905, he advocated for the paid resettlement of African Americans to the Caribbean. In an article written in the New York Times on June 17, 1912, Newlands wrote,:“I believe this should be a white man’s country and that we should frankly express our determination that it shall be.” During the 1912 Democratic National Convention, he proposed for the Democratic Convention platform a “White Plank" that would advocate for repeal the 15th Amendment to the United States Cons*ution and restrict of immigration to whites.

See also

  • National Irrigation Congress
  • List of United States Congress members who died in office (1900–49)

References

    External links

    • Francis Griffith Newlands papers MS 371 M*cripts and Archives, Yale University Library.
    • Video: "A Closer Look at Chevy Chase Founder Francis G. Newlands," the Spring 2021 Chevy Chase Historical Society Lecture by historian and author William Rowley, emeritus professor of history at the University of Nevada-Reno
    • United States Congress. "Francis G. Newlands (id: N000069)". Biographical Directory of the United States Congress.
    • Memorial addresses for Francis G. Newlands delivered in the Senate on Jan. 3, 1918, and in the House on September 2, 1918.
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    (4th district established in 2013)