Cass, Lewis

From New World Encyclopedia
 
(27 intermediate revisions by 9 users not shown)
Line 1: Line 1:
 +
{{Copyedited}}{{Paid}}{{approved}}{{Submitted}}{{Images OK}}
 +
{{epname|Cass, Lewis}}
 
{{Infobox US Cabinet official
 
{{Infobox US Cabinet official
 
| name=Lewis Cass
 
| name=Lewis Cass
 
| image=Cass standing-right.jpg
 
| image=Cass standing-right.jpg
 
| order=14th
 
| order=14th
| title=United States Secretary of War
+
| title=[[United States Secretary of War]]
 
| term_start=August 1, 1831
 
| term_start=August 1, 1831
 
| term_end=October 5, 1836
 
| term_end=October 5, 1836
| predecessor=John Henry Eaton
+
| predecessor=[[John Henry Eaton]]
| successor=Joel Roberts Poinsett
+
| successor=[[Joel Roberts Poinsett]]
 
| order2=22nd
 
| order2=22nd
| title2=United States Secretary of State
+
| title2=[[United States Secretary of State]]
 
| term_start2=March 6, 1857
 
| term_start2=March 6, 1857
 
| term_end2=December 14, 1860
 
| term_end2=December 14, 1860
| predecessor2=William L. Marcy
+
| predecessor2=[[William L. Marcy]]
| successor2=Jeremiah S. Black
+
| successor2=[[Jeremiah S. Black]]
 
| birth_date=October 9, 1782  
 
| birth_date=October 9, 1782  
| birth_place=Exeter, New Hampshire, [[United States|United States]]
+
| birth_place=[[Exeter, New Hampshire]], [[United States|USA]]
| death_date=June 17,1866
+
| death_date={{death date and age|1866|06|17|1782|10|09}}
| death_place=Detroit, Michigan, [[United States|United States]]
+
| death_place=[[Detroit, Michigan]], [[United States|USA]]
| party=Democratic
+
| party=[[Democratic Party (United States)|Democratic]]
 
| spouse=Eliza Spencer Cass
 
| spouse=Eliza Spencer Cass
| profession=[[Lawyer]]
+
| profession=[[Politician]], [[Lawyer]]
 +
| signature=Casssig.jpg
 
}}
 
}}
 
+
'''Lewis Cass''' (October 9, 1782 – June 17, 1866) was an [[United States|American]] military officer and [[politician]]. He was the nominee of the [[Democratic Party (United States)|Democratic Party]] for [[President of the United States]] in 1848. His political position endorsed a Jeffersonian political philosophy. He believed in [[agrarianism]], [[individual liberty]], and limited government.
'''Lewis Cass''' (October 9, 1782 – June 17, 1866) was an [[United States|American]] military officer and politician. He was the nominee of the Democratic Party for [[President of the United States]] in 1848. His political agenda can be described as having endorsed a Jeffersonian political philosophy. Some of the principles reflecting the motivations behind his political actions include: the belief in individual liberty, popular sovereignty, equality of rights and opportunities for all citizens, and a strictly construed and balanced constitutional government of limited powers.
+
{{toc}}
 +
Cass was in full favor of United States expansion and supported [[James K. Polk|President Polk]] throughout the [[Mexican-American War]]. Cass believed the United States could help people start new and productive lives. This belief coincided with the [[Manifest Destiny]]. The people of American at that time truly believed that [[God]] wanted the Americans to expand—that it was the United States' God-given destiny.
  
 
==Early life==
 
==Early life==
Lewis Cass, the oldest of six children, was born in Exeter, New Hampshire on October 9, 1782. Here he attended Phillips Exeter Academy. His parents were Jonathan and Mary Gilman Cass. In 1806 he became a member of the Ohio House committee that was in charge of leading the investigation of the Burr conspiracy. Three years later, in 1809, he was selected to become a defense counselor in the trial for Ohio Supreme Court Justice George Tod.
+
Cass was born on October 9, 1782, in Exeter, [[New Hampshire]] the eldest child of a [[American Revolutionary War]] veteran, Major Jonathan Cass, and Mary Gilman Cass. He attended the Phillips Exeter Academy where he met and befriended [[Daniel Webster]]. In 1799 he moved to [[Delaware]] then [[Ohio]] to teach school. Cass found success in Ohio in 1799, he entered law school and was admitted to the bar at the age of twenty. He then started a law practice in Marietta, he became a member of the Ohio Legislature in 1806 and served as the United States marshal in Ohio from 1807 to 1812. Also, in 1806 he married Elizabeth Spencer.
  
During the War of 1812, he served as brigadier general fighting at the battle of the Thames. As a reward for his service in the war, he was appointed Governor of the Michigan Territory by President [[James Madison]] on October 29, 1813, and served until 1831. He was frequently absent, and several territorial secretaries often served as acting governor in his place.  
+
==Military Career==
 +
During the [[War of 1812]], he served under Generals [[William Hull]] and [[William Henry Harrison]] and rose from the rank of colonel of volunteers to be major-general of Ohio militia and finally to be a brigadier-general in the regular United States Army. As a reward for his service in the war, he was appointed Governor of the [[Michigan Territory]] by President [[James Madison]] on October 29, 1813, and served until 1831.  
  
In 1820, he led an expedition to the northern part of the territory, in the northern [[Great Lakes]] region in present-day northern Minnesota, in order to map the region and discover the source of the [[Mississippi River]]. The source of the river had been unknown until then, resulting in an undefined border between the United States and [[United Kingdom|Britain]]. The expedition erroneously identified Cass Lake as the source of the river. The source of the river was correctly identified in 1832 by Henry Schoolcraft, who had been Cass's expedition geologist, as nearby Lake Itasca.
+
In 1820, he led an expedition to the northern part of the territory, in the northern [[Great Lakes]] region in present-day northern [[Minnesota]], in order to map the region and discover the source of the [[Mississippi River]]. The source of the river had been unknown until then, resulting in an undefined border between the United States and [[United Kingdom|Britain]]. The expedition erroneously identified [[Cass Lake (Minnesota)|Cass Lake]] as the source of the river. The source of the river was correctly identified in 1832 by [[Henry Schoolcraft]], who had been Cass's expedition geologist, as nearby [[Lake Itasca]].
  
[[Image:Buchanan Cabinet.jpg|thumb|left|300px|''President Buchanan and his Cabinet''<br/>From left to right: Jacob Thompson, Lewis Cass, John B. Floyd, [[James Buchanan]], Howell Cobb, Isaac Toucey, Joseph Holt and Jeremiah S. Black, (c. 1859)]]
+
[[Image:Buchanan Cabinet.jpg|thumb|left|300px|''President Buchanan and his Cabinet''<br/>From left to right: [[Jacob Thompson]], Lewis Cass, [[John B. Floyd]], [[James Buchanan]], [[Howell Cobb]], [[Isaac Toucey]], [[Joseph Holt]] and [[Jeremiah S. Black]], (c. 1859)]]
  
 
==Political career==
 
==Political career==
On August 1, 1831, he resigned as governor of the Michigan Territory to take the post of Secretary of War under President [[Andrew Jackson]], serving until 1836. Cass was a central figure in formulating and implementing the Indian Removal policy of the Jackson administration. From 1836 to 1842, he was ambassador to France.  
+
On August 1, 1831, he resigned as governor of the Michigan Territory to take the post of [[United States Secretary of War|Secretary of War]] under President [[Andrew Jackson]], serving until 1836. Cass was a central figure in formulating and implementing the [[Indian Removal]] policy of the Jackson administration. He was responsible for the direction of the [[Black War War|Black Hawk]] and [[Seminole War|Seminole]] wars. He agreed with Jackson regarding his [[Nullification Crisis|nullification]] controversy with [[South Carolina]] and the eviction of the [[Native American]]s in [[Georgia]].  
  
Cass represented Michigan in the United States Senate from 1845 to 1848. He served as chairman of the [Committee on Military Affairs in the 30th United States Congress. In 1848, he resigned from the Senate to run for President. Cass was a leading supporter of the Doctrine of Popular Sovereignty, which held that the people who lived in a territory should decide whether or not to permit [[slavery]] there. His nomination caused a split in the Democratic party, leading many antislavery Democrats to join the Free Soil Party. He also supported the annexation of Texas.
+
Cass represented [[Michigan]] in the [[United States Senate]] from 1845 to 1848. He served as chairman of the [[United States House Committee on Military Affairs|Committee on Military Affairs]] in the [[30th United States Congress|30th Congress]]. In 1848, he resigned from the Senate to run for President. [[William Orlando Butler]] was his running mate. Cass was a leading supporter of the [[Doctrine of Popular Sovereignty]], which held that the people who lived in a territory should decide whether or not to permit [[slavery]] there. His nomination caused a split in the Democratic party, leading many antislavery Democrats to join the [[Free Soil Party]]. He also supported the annexation of [[Texas]].
  
 
[[Image:Cass Butler campaign.jpg|thumb|right|270px|Cass/Butler campaign poster]]
 
[[Image:Cass Butler campaign.jpg|thumb|right|270px|Cass/Butler campaign poster]]
After losing the 1848 election to [[Zachary Taylor]], he returned to the Senate, serving from 1849 to 1857.  
+
After losing the election to [[Zachary Taylor]], he returned to the Senate, serving from 1849 to 1857. He was the first non-incumbent Democratic presidential candidate to lose election.
  
From 1857 to 1860, Cass served as Secretary of State under President [[James Buchanan]]. He resigned on December 13, 1860, reportedly disgusted by Buchanan's failure to pursue a stronger policy that might have averted the threatened secession of southern states.
+
From 1857 to 1860, Cass served as [[United States Secretary of State|Secretary of State]] under President [[James Buchanan]]. He resigned on December 13, 1860, reportedly disgruntled by Buchanan's failure to pursue a stronger policy that might have averted the threatened secession of southern states.
  
==American Indian Policy==
+
Cass resigned from Secretary of State in 1860 and retired to Detroit. He died there on June 17, 1866, and is buried in Elmwood Cemetery in Detroit, Michigan.
In 1948 the Detroit Historical Society of Michigan reinstated their lecture series and named it in honor of Lewis Cass who was Governor of the Michigan Territory and one of the founders of the Detroit Historical Society Guild. The purpose of these lectures was to present a discussion on an aspect of Michigan’s history.  Cass and his policies on American Indians were thought to be the appropriate subject for 1948.  The lecture was presented by Francis Paul Prucha and was titled ''Lewis Cass and American Indian Policy''.  Prucha focused his discussion on how Cass successfully prevented the complete collapse of American Indian relations with the United States and described him as an "enlightened man of his times, and there was in him a strong, sincere, and persistent streak of humanitarianism."<ref>Francis Paul Prucha, ''Lewis Cass and American Indian Policy'' (Wayne State University Press., 1967 [[OCLC 1493415]]) 8.</ref>
 
  
 +
==Legacy==
  
The following quote from Lewis Cass himself from his ''Considerations on the Present State of the Indians and their Removal to the West of the Mississppi'' demonstrates the concerns he held towards the conservation of the American Indian population amidst all the factors that contributed to their decline:
+
A statue of Cass is one of the two that was submitted by Michigan to the National Statuary Hall collection in the U.S. Capitol in Washington, D.C. It stands in the National Statuary Hall room. (The other statue is of Zachariah Chandler, which is in the Hall of Columns.)
  
<blockquote>As we shall attempt eventually to prove, that the only means of preserving the Indians from that utter extinction which threatens them, is to remove them from the sphere of influence, we are desirous of showing, that no change has occurred, or probably can occur, in the principles of practice of our intercourse with them, by which the progress of their declension can be arrested, so long as they occupy their present situation.</blockquote><ref>Lewis Cass, ''Considerations on the Present State of the Indians and their Removal to the West of the Mississippi'' (Arno Press., 1975 [[ISBN 0405068581]])</ref>
+
In 1948 the Detroit Historical Society of Michigan reinstated their lecture series and named it in honor of Lewis Cass who was Governor of the Michigan Territory and one of the founders of the Detroit Historical Society Guild. The purpose of these lectures was to present a discussion on an aspect of Michigan’s history. The lecture was presented by Francis Paul Prucha and was titled Lewis Cass and American Indian Policy. Prucha focused his discussion on how Cass successfully prevented the complete collapse of American Indian relations with the United States and described him as an "enlightened man of his times, and there was in him a strong, sincere, and persistent streak of humanitarianism."<ref>Francis Paul Prucha, ''Lewis Cass and American Indian Policy'' (Wayne State University Press., 1967. OCLC 1493415) 8.</ref>
==Conclusion==
 
He died in 1866 and is buried in Elmwood Cemetery in Detroit, Michigan.
 
 
 
A statue of Cass is one of the two that was submitted by Michigan to the National Statuary Hall collection in the [[U.S. Capitol]] in Washington, D.C. It stands in the National Statuary Hall room. (The other statue is of Zachariah Chandler, which is in the Hall of Columns.)
 
  
 
==Notes==
 
==Notes==
Line 60: Line 61:
  
 
==References==
 
==References==
1. Cass, Lewis. 1975. ''Considerations on the Present State of the Indians and their Removal to the West of the Mississippi''. Arno Press.  
+
* Klunder, Willard Carl. ''Lewis Cass and the politics of moderation''. Kent, Ohio: Kent State University Press, 1996. ISBN 0873385365
 +
* McLaughlin, Andrew Cunningham. ''Lewis Cass''. American statesmen series. New York: Chelsea House, 1980. ISBN 9780877541929
 +
* Woodford, Frank B. ''Lewis Cass: the last Jeffersonian''. New York: Octagon Books, 1973. ISBN 9780374987183
  
2. Klunder, Willard Carl. 1996. ‘’Lewis Cass and the Politics of Moderation’’. The Kent State University Press.
+
==External links==
3. Prucha, Francis Paul. 1967.  ''Lewis Cass and American Indian Policy''.  Wayne State University Press.
+
All links retrieved October 25, 2022.
  
==External links==
+
*[http://www.nndb.com/people/224/000050074/ Lewis Cass Biography]
  
*[http://www.army.mil/cmh-pg/books/sw-sa/Cass.htm Secretaries of War and Secretaries of the Army]
 
  
 
{{start box}}
 
{{start box}}
 
{{succession box
 
{{succession box
| title=Territoral Governor of Michigan
+
| title=[[Governors of Michigan Territory|Territoral Governor of Michigan]]
| before=William Hull
+
| before=[[William Hull]]
| after=George Bryan Porter
+
| after=[[George Bryan Porter]]
 
| years=1813 &ndash; 1831}}
 
| years=1813 &ndash; 1831}}
 
{{succession box
 
{{succession box
| title=United States Secretary of War
+
| title=[[United States Secretary of War]]
| before=John Henry Eaton
+
| before=[[John Henry Eaton]]
| after=Joel Roberts Poinsett
+
| after=[[Joel Roberts Poinsett]]
 
| years=August 1, 1831 &ndash; October 5, 1836}}
 
| years=August 1, 1831 &ndash; October 5, 1836}}
 
{{succession box
 
{{succession box
| title=U.S. Ambassador to France
+
| title=[[United States Ambassador to France|U.S. Minister to France]]
| before=Edward Livingston
+
| before=[[Edward Livingston]]
| after=William R. King
+
| after=[[William R. King]]
 
| years=October 4, 1836 &ndash; November 12, 1842}}
 
| years=October 4, 1836 &ndash; November 12, 1842}}
{{succession box
+
{{U.S. Senator box
| title=United States Senator from Michigan
 
 
| state=Michigan
 
| state=Michigan
 
| class=1
 
| class=1
| before=Augustus S. Porter
+
| before=[[Augustus S. Porter]]
| after=Thomas Fitzgerald
+
| after=[[Thomas Fitzgerald]]
| years=March 4, 1845 &ndash; May 29, 1848  
+
| alongside=[[William Woodbridge]] and [[Alpheus Felch]]
<small>(alongside William Woodbridge and Alpheus Felch)</small>}}
+
| years=March 4, 1845 &ndash; May 29, 1848}}
 
{{succession box
 
{{succession box
| title=Democratic Party presidential candidate
+
| title=[[List of United States Democratic Party presidential tickets|Democratic Party presidential candidate]]
 
| before=[[James K. Polk]]
 
| before=[[James K. Polk]]
 
| after=[[Franklin Pierce]]
 
| after=[[Franklin Pierce]]
| years=1848 (lost)}}
+
| years=[[U.S. presidential election, 1848|1848]] (lost)}}
{{succession box
+
{{U.S. Senator box
 
| state=Michigan
 
| state=Michigan
| title=United States Senator from Michigan
 
 
| class=1
 
| class=1
| before=Thomas Fitzgerald
+
| before=[[Thomas Fitzgerald]]
| after=Zachariah Chandler
+
| after=[[Zachariah Chandler]]
| years=January 20, 1849 &ndash; March 3, 1857  
+
| alongside=[[Alpheus Felch]] and [[Charles E. Stuart]]
<small>(alongside Alpheus Felch and Charles E. Stuart)</small>}}
+
| years=January 20, 1849 &ndash; March 3, 1857}}
 
{{succession box
 
{{succession box
| title=President ''pro tempore'' of the United States Senate
+
| title=[[President pro tempore of the United States Senate|President ''pro tempore'' of the United States Senate]]
| before=David Rice Atchison
+
| before=[[David Rice Atchison]]
 
| years=December 4, 1854
 
| years=December 4, 1854
| after=Jesse D. Bright}}
+
| after=[[Jesse D. Bright]]}}
 
{{succession box
 
{{succession box
| title=United States Secretary of State
+
| title=[[United States Secretary of State]]
| before=William L. Marcy
+
| before=[[William L. Marcy]]
| after=Jeremiah S. Black
+
| after=[[Jeremiah S. Black]]
 
| years=March 6, 1857 &ndash; December 14, 1860}}
 
| years=March 6, 1857 &ndash; December 14, 1860}}
 
{{end box}}
 
{{end box}}
  
[[Category:History and biography]]
+
{{USSecState}}
 
[[Category:Biography]]
 
[[Category:Biography]]
 +
[[Category:Politics and social sciences]]
  
{{credit|131411101}}
+
{{credit|138460798}}

Latest revision as of 22:19, 25 October 2022

Lewis Cass
Lewis Cass

14th United States Secretary of War
In office
August 1, 1831 – October 5, 1836
Preceded by John Henry Eaton
Succeeded by Joel Roberts Poinsett

22nd United States Secretary of State
In office
March 6, 1857 – December 14, 1860
Preceded by William L. Marcy
Succeeded by Jeremiah S. Black

Born October 9, 1782
Exeter, New Hampshire, USA
Died June 17 1866 (aged 83)
Detroit, Michigan, USA
Political party Democratic
Spouse Eliza Spencer Cass
Profession Politician, Lawyer
Signature Casssig.jpg

Lewis Cass (October 9, 1782 – June 17, 1866) was an American military officer and politician. He was the nominee of the Democratic Party for President of the United States in 1848. His political position endorsed a Jeffersonian political philosophy. He believed in agrarianism, individual liberty, and limited government.

Cass was in full favor of United States expansion and supported President Polk throughout the Mexican-American War. Cass believed the United States could help people start new and productive lives. This belief coincided with the Manifest Destiny. The people of American at that time truly believed that God wanted the Americans to expand—that it was the United States' God-given destiny.

Early life

Cass was born on October 9, 1782, in Exeter, New Hampshire the eldest child of a American Revolutionary War veteran, Major Jonathan Cass, and Mary Gilman Cass. He attended the Phillips Exeter Academy where he met and befriended Daniel Webster. In 1799 he moved to Delaware then Ohio to teach school. Cass found success in Ohio in 1799, he entered law school and was admitted to the bar at the age of twenty. He then started a law practice in Marietta, he became a member of the Ohio Legislature in 1806 and served as the United States marshal in Ohio from 1807 to 1812. Also, in 1806 he married Elizabeth Spencer.

Military Career

During the War of 1812, he served under Generals William Hull and William Henry Harrison and rose from the rank of colonel of volunteers to be major-general of Ohio militia and finally to be a brigadier-general in the regular United States Army. As a reward for his service in the war, he was appointed Governor of the Michigan Territory by President James Madison on October 29, 1813, and served until 1831.

In 1820, he led an expedition to the northern part of the territory, in the northern Great Lakes region in present-day northern Minnesota, in order to map the region and discover the source of the Mississippi River. The source of the river had been unknown until then, resulting in an undefined border between the United States and Britain. The expedition erroneously identified Cass Lake as the source of the river. The source of the river was correctly identified in 1832 by Henry Schoolcraft, who had been Cass's expedition geologist, as nearby Lake Itasca.

President Buchanan and his Cabinet
From left to right: Jacob Thompson, Lewis Cass, John B. Floyd, James Buchanan, Howell Cobb, Isaac Toucey, Joseph Holt and Jeremiah S. Black, (c. 1859)

Political career

On August 1, 1831, he resigned as governor of the Michigan Territory to take the post of Secretary of War under President Andrew Jackson, serving until 1836. Cass was a central figure in formulating and implementing the Indian Removal policy of the Jackson administration. He was responsible for the direction of the Black Hawk and Seminole wars. He agreed with Jackson regarding his nullification controversy with South Carolina and the eviction of the Native Americans in Georgia.

Cass represented Michigan in the United States Senate from 1845 to 1848. He served as chairman of the Committee on Military Affairs in the 30th Congress. In 1848, he resigned from the Senate to run for President. William Orlando Butler was his running mate. Cass was a leading supporter of the Doctrine of Popular Sovereignty, which held that the people who lived in a territory should decide whether or not to permit slavery there. His nomination caused a split in the Democratic party, leading many antislavery Democrats to join the Free Soil Party. He also supported the annexation of Texas.

Cass/Butler campaign poster

After losing the election to Zachary Taylor, he returned to the Senate, serving from 1849 to 1857. He was the first non-incumbent Democratic presidential candidate to lose election.

From 1857 to 1860, Cass served as Secretary of State under President James Buchanan. He resigned on December 13, 1860, reportedly disgruntled by Buchanan's failure to pursue a stronger policy that might have averted the threatened secession of southern states.

Cass resigned from Secretary of State in 1860 and retired to Detroit. He died there on June 17, 1866, and is buried in Elmwood Cemetery in Detroit, Michigan.

Legacy

A statue of Cass is one of the two that was submitted by Michigan to the National Statuary Hall collection in the U.S. Capitol in Washington, D.C. It stands in the National Statuary Hall room. (The other statue is of Zachariah Chandler, which is in the Hall of Columns.)

In 1948 the Detroit Historical Society of Michigan reinstated their lecture series and named it in honor of Lewis Cass who was Governor of the Michigan Territory and one of the founders of the Detroit Historical Society Guild. The purpose of these lectures was to present a discussion on an aspect of Michigan’s history. The lecture was presented by Francis Paul Prucha and was titled Lewis Cass and American Indian Policy. Prucha focused his discussion on how Cass successfully prevented the complete collapse of American Indian relations with the United States and described him as an "enlightened man of his times, and there was in him a strong, sincere, and persistent streak of humanitarianism."[1]

Notes

  1. Francis Paul Prucha, Lewis Cass and American Indian Policy (Wayne State University Press., 1967. OCLC 1493415) 8.

References
ISBN links support NWE through referral fees

  • Klunder, Willard Carl. Lewis Cass and the politics of moderation. Kent, Ohio: Kent State University Press, 1996. ISBN 0873385365
  • McLaughlin, Andrew Cunningham. Lewis Cass. American statesmen series. New York: Chelsea House, 1980. ISBN 9780877541929
  • Woodford, Frank B. Lewis Cass: the last Jeffersonian. New York: Octagon Books, 1973. ISBN 9780374987183

External links

All links retrieved October 25, 2022.


Preceded by:
William Hull
Territoral Governor of Michigan
1813 – 1831
Succeeded by:
George Bryan Porter
Preceded by:
John Henry Eaton
United States Secretary of War
August 1, 1831 – October 5, 1836
Succeeded by:
Joel Roberts Poinsett
Preceded by:
Edward Livingston
U.S. Minister to France
October 4, 1836 – November 12, 1842
Succeeded by:
William R. King
Preceded by:
Augustus S. Porter
United States Senator (Class 1) from Michigan
March 4, 1845 – May 29, 1848
Succeeded by: Thomas Fitzgerald
Preceded by:
James K. Polk
Democratic Party presidential candidate
1848 (lost)
Succeeded by:
Franklin Pierce
Preceded by:
Thomas Fitzgerald
United States Senator (Class 1) from Michigan
January 20, 1849 – March 3, 1857
Succeeded by: Zachariah Chandler
Preceded by:
David Rice Atchison
President pro tempore of the United States Senate
December 4, 1854
Succeeded by:
Jesse D. Bright
Preceded by:
William L. Marcy
United States Secretary of State
March 6, 1857 – December 14, 1860
Succeeded by:
Jeremiah S. Black

Credits

New World Encyclopedia writers and editors rewrote and completed the Wikipedia article in accordance with New World Encyclopedia standards. This article abides by terms of the Creative Commons CC-by-sa 3.0 License (CC-by-sa), which may be used and disseminated with proper attribution. Credit is due under the terms of this license that can reference both the New World Encyclopedia contributors and the selfless volunteer contributors of the Wikimedia Foundation. To cite this article click here for a list of acceptable citing formats.The history of earlier contributions by wikipedians is accessible to researchers here:

The history of this article since it was imported to New World Encyclopedia:

Note: Some restrictions may apply to use of individual images which are separately licensed.