Lucius Lyon

Lucius Lyon

Infobox Officeholder
name = Lucius Lyon


imagesize =
small

caption =
district = 2
state = Michigan
term_start = March 4, 1843
term_end= March 3, 1845
predecessor = none
successor = John S. Chipman
order2 = United States Senator from Michigan
term_start2 = January 26, 1837
term_end2 = March 3, 1839
predecessor2 = none
successor2 = Augustus S. Porter
birth_date = February 26, 1800
birth_place = Shelburne, Vermont
death_date = September 24, 1851
death_place = Detroit, Michigan
constituency =
party = Democrat
spouse =
alma_mater =
profession = Engineer
religion =


footnotes =

Lucius Lyon (February 26, 1800–September 24, 1851) was a U.S. statesman from the state of Michigan. He was born in Shelburne, Vermont, where he received a common school education and studied engineering and surveying. He moved to Bronson, Michigan, in 1821 where he became a land surveyor, eventually becoming the Deputy Surveyor General of the Michigan Territory.

In 1829, he was commissioned to rebuild the Fort Gratiot Lighthouse at the entrance to the St. Clair River from Lake Huron.

In the 1830s, he surveyed a portion of what would become the boundary between Illinois and Wisconsin. He also participated in the survey parties which established the baseline and meridian used to define townships in Wisconsin. His field notebooks recorded considerable detail about the land he surveyed, providing a rich source of information for later researchers.

He was elected as a non-voting Delegate to the U.S. Congress for the Michigan Territory, serving 1833-1834. On December 11, 1833, he presented a formal petition to Congress requesting Michigan's admission into the Union. Congress delayed consideration of statehood, in part due to a dispute with Ohio over the Toledo Strip and also in part due to opposition from southern states to admit another free state.

From May 11 to June 24, 1835, he was a member of the convention that drafted the first Michigan Constitution, which voters adopted in October, 1835. In November 1835, Lyon was elected as U.S. Senator. However Michigan's delegation to Congress was seated as "spectators", pending Michigan's admission as a state. Upon Michigan's admission as a state on January 26, 1837, Lyon served as a full U.S. Senator until 1839.

On March 28, 1836, Lyon was a witness to the Treaty of Washington of 1836, in which the Ottawa and Chippewa nations of Indians ceded much of the land in the northern portion of the Lower Peninsula of Michigan. He was also witness to a separate treaty on May 9 1836 with the Chippewa in which additional land was ceded.

He did not run for reelection in 1839 and moved to Grand Rapids, Michigan. He was a member of the Board of Regents of the University of Michigan, 1837-1839, and was appointed Indian commissioner at La Pointe, Wisconsin in 1839. He was elected as a Democrat from the newly formed 2nd district in Michigan to the 28th Congress, serving one term from March 4, 1843 to March 3, 1845. He was the first person to represent Michigan in both the U.S. Senate and U.S. House. In both houses of Congress he served on the Committee on Public Lands.

He did not run for reelection and was appointed by President James K. Polk in 1845 as surveyor general for Ohio, Indiana, and Michigan. He moved the office for this post from Cincinnati, Ohio to Detroit, Michigan and served in this capacity until 1850.

Lyon was also a major financial backer of Hiram Moore, an inventor and a founder of the village of Climax, Michigan. Moore reportedly invented a working farm machine in the 1830s and 1840s that "combined" the functions of a threshing machine and a reaper, decades before combines were commonly available. Moore's designs were allegedly copied by Cyrus McCormick and despite many years of legal wrangling, Moore was unsuccessful in pursuing his patent claims.

He also owned a large tract of land in Grand Rapids, Michigan and engaged in a feud over platting the area with the other major land owner, Louis Campau. Lyon wanted to call it the village of Kent rather than Grand Rapids. Lyon is also remembered in Grand Rapids for attempting to commercialize salt deposits in the city by boring a hole and extracting salt from the brine water below.

In politics he was Democrat, in religion a Swedenborgian. He was also a temperance advocate associated with the Washingtonian movement.

Lucius Lyon died in Detroit and was interred in Elmwood Cemetery.

South Lyon, Michigan, Lyon Township, Oakland County, Michigan, Lyon Township, Roscommon County, Michigan, and Lyons Township, Michigan are all named after Lucius Lyon. Notably, in 1836, Lucius Lyon purchased much of the property in a small village in Ionia County, Michigan and renamed it Lyons, Michigan. He platted the village, established the first post office and installed his brother, Truman, as the first postmaster, although he never lived in the village.

References

*CongBio|L000544
* [http://politicalgraveyard.com/bio/lyon.html#R9M0J4T39 The Political Graveyard]
* [http://www.wisconsinhistory.org/localhistory/articles/surveyor.asp U.S. General Land Office Surveyors' Field Notes] from Wisconsin Historical Society
* [http://www.michigan.gov/hal/0,1607,7-160-17451_18670_18793-79532--,00.html Important Dates in Michigan's Quest for Statehood]
* [http://www.kalamazooshow.com/2002/Articles_html/KLHS_Articles_Grain_Harvester_page.html The Grain Harvester and the Kalamazoo Connection]
* [http://www.rootsweb.com/~mikent/etten1926/gr-kent.html Grand Rapids or Kent?]
* [http://www.davidrumsey.com/maps890108-24421.html David Rumsey Map Collection: Lyon Field Notes]

Further reading

*"Lucius Lyon: An Eminently Useful Citizen" by Kit Lane; Publisher: Pavilion; Published Date: 1991; ISBN 1-877703-21-4


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