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Senate Years of Service: 1836-1848 Party: Jacksonian; Democrat
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| Arkansas History Commission
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SEVIER, Ambrose Hundley, (cousin of Henry Wharton Conway),
a Delegate and a Senator from Arkansas; born in Greene County, Tenn., November
4, 1801; completed preparatory studies; moved to Missouri in 1820 and to Little Rock, Ark., in
1821; clerk of the Territorial house of representatives; studied law; admitted to the bar in 1823 and
practiced; member, Territorial house of representatives 1823-1827, serving as speaker in 1827;
elected as a Delegate to the Twentieth Congress to fill the vacancy caused by the death of Henry W.
Conway; reelected to the Twenty-first and to the three succeeding Congresses and served from
February 13, 1828, to June 15, 1836, when the Territory was admitted as a State into the Union;
elected as a Democrat to the United States Senate in 1836; reelected in 1837 and 1843 and served
from September 18, 1836, until his resignation on March 15, 1848; served as President pro tempore
of the Senate during the Twenty-ninth Congress; chairman, Committee on Indian Affairs (Twenty-sixth
and Twenty-ninth Congresses), Committee on Foreign Relations (Twenty-ninth and Thirtieth
Congresses); was appointed Minister to Mexico to negotiate the treaty of peace between that
Republic and the United States 1848; died on his plantation near Little Rock, Pulaski County, Ark.,
December 31, 1848; interment in Mount Holly Cemetery, where the State erected a monument to his
memory.
BibliographyDictionary of American Biography;
Walton, Brian. Ambrose Hundley Sevier in the United States Senate, 1836-1848. Arkansas
Historical Quarterly 32 (Spring 1973): 25-60.
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