|
|
![]() Helping San Diego, California and beyond since 1997.
|
|
Click here and add this page to your favorites!

|
Encyclopedia Britannica - Main :: DAH-DEM |
|
|
DALLAS, ALEXANDER JAMES (1759-1817) , American statesman and financier, was born on the island of Jamaica, West Indies, on the 21st of June 1759, the son of Dr Robert C. Dallas (d. 1774), a Scottish physician then practising there. Dr Dallas soon returned to England with his family, and Alexander was educated at Edinburgh and Westminster. He studied law for a time in the Inner Temple, and in 178o returned to Jamaica. There he met the younger Lewis Hallam (1738-18o8), a pioneer
Pennsylvania
impeachment trial. Dallas was United States attorney for the eastern district of Pennsylvania
interest
establishment of a national bank, by which means he expected to increase the stability and uniformity of the circulating medium, and furnish the government with a powerful engine
establishment of a national bank, became law on the loth of April 1816. Meanwhile (12th of February 1816) Dallas, in a notable report, recommended a protective tariff, which was enacted late in April, largely in accordance with his recommendation. Although Dallas, left the cabinet in October 1816, it was through his efforts that the new bank began its operations in the following January, and specie payments were resumed in February. Dallas, who belonged to the financial school of Albert Gallatin, deserves to rank among America's greatest financiers. He found the government bankrupt, and after two years at the head of the treasury he left it with a surplus of $20,000,000; moreover, as Henry Adams points out, his measures had "fixed the financial system in a firm groove for twenty years." He retired from office to resume his practice of the law, but the burden of his official duties had undermined his health, and he died suddenly at Philadelphia on the 16th of June 1817. He was the author of several notable political pamphlets and state papers, and in addition edited The Laws of Pennsylvania, r7oo-18or (18or), and Reports of Cases ruled and adjudged by the Courts of the United States and of Pennsylvania before and since the Revolution (4 vols., 1790-1807; new edition with notes by Thomas J. Wharton, 1830). He wrote An Exposition of the Causes and Character of the War of 1812-15 (1815), which was republishedby government authority in New York
His brother, ROBERT CHARLES DALLAS (1754-1824), was born in Jamaica, and lived at various times in the West Indies, the United States, England and France. He was an intimate friend of Lord Byron. He wrote Recollections of Lord Byron (1824), and several novels, plays and miscellaneous works. See G. M. Dallas, Life and Writings of Alexander James Dallas (Philadelphia, 1871). End of Article: DALLAS, ALEXANDER JAMES (1759-1817) If you wish, you can link directly to this article.
<a href="http://jcsm.org/StudyCenter/Encyclopedia/DAH_DEM/DALLAS_ALEXANDER_JAMES_1759_18.html"> DALLAS, ALEXANDER JAMES (1759-1817) </a> |
|
|
(Previous) DALLAS |
(Next) DALLAS, GEORGE MIFFLIN (1792-1864) |
|
Sponsored Advertisements