Montgomery, Cora, 1807-1878
Variant namesJournalist, author, promoter, and unofficial diplomat, Jane Maria Eliza McManus Storms Cazneau (1807-1878) wrote under the pen name Cora or Corinne Montgomery. Born in Troy, New York, she was the daughter of U. S. Congressman William T. McManus and his wife Catharina, née Coons. In 1825, she married Allen Storms (or Storm), with whom she had a son, but they divorced six years later. She later married politician William Leslie Cazneau in 1849.
In the 1830s, Cazneau began her affiliation with Texas, after the Mexican government granted her land in Texas to bring families as part of Stephen F. Austin’s colony. Although the plan failed, her family eventually moved to Matagorda. During the Texas Revolution, Cazneau pledged money to the Independence movement after moving back to New York, and in the 1840s she advocated the annexation of Texas to the U.S. in her columns for the New York Sun . Cazneau moved in 1850 to Eagle Pass, Texas, a town her husband helped to establish, and became closely associated with her husband’s friend former Texas president Mirabeau B. Lamar.
During the Mexican War, Cazneau became a war correspondent, playing an unofficial role in her friend and New York Sun editor Moses Yale Beach’s peace mission to Mexico City. She also began to promote the All Mexico movement, which argued for the annexation of Mexico to the U.S. in order to establish peace. She also supported U.S. annexation of or intervention in Cuba, the Dominican Republic, and Nicaragua, all displaying her endorsement of Manifest Destiny.
William Cazneau was appointed diplomatic agent to the Dominican Republic in the 1850s, only leaving in 1863 when Spanish troops destroyed their estate. After two years in Jamaica, they returned to the Dominican Republic and aided Presidents Andrew Johnson and Ulysses S. Grant in their attempts to acquire land in the country.
Throughout her life, Cazneau was a prolific author, commentating in newspaper editorials and publishing several books about her life and political ideology. She wrote for the New York Sun, Philadelphia Public Ledger, New York Tribune, Democratic Review, and New York Morning Star, which she part-owned. Her books include Texas and Her Presidents (1845), The Queen of Islands (1850), Eagle Pass, or Life on the Border (1852), Life in Santo Domingo (1873), and Our Winter Eden: Pen Pictures of the Tropics (1878).
Sources:
May, Robert E. Cazneau, Jane Maria Eliza McManus. Handbook of Texas Online http://www.tshaonline.org/handbook/online/articles/CC/fcaad.html (accessed July 2, 2010).
Hudson, Linda S. Mistress of Manifest Destiny: A Biography of Jane McManus Storm Cazneau, 1807-1878 . Austin: Texas State Historical Association, 2001.
From the guide to the Cazneau, Jane McManus Storms, Papers 1927; 2002-032., 1834-1836, 1849-1865, 1877-1878, 1919, (Dolph Briscoe Center for American History, The University of Texas at Austin)
Journalist, author, promoter, and unofficial diplomat, Jane Maria Eliza McManus Storms Cazneau (1807-1878) wrote under the pen name Cora or Corinne Montgomery.
Born in Troy, New York, she was the daughter of U. S. Congressman William T. McManus and his wife Catharina, née Coons. In 1825, she married Allen Storms (or Storm), with whom she had a son, but they divorced six years later. She later married politician William Leslie Cazneau in 1849.
In the 1830s, Cazneau began her affiliation with Texas, after the Mexican government granted her land in Texas to bring families as part of Stephen F. Austin's colony.
Although the plan failed, her family eventually moved to Matagorda. During the Texas Revolution, Cazneau pledged money to the Independence movement after moving back to New York, and in the 1840s she advocated the annexation of Texas to the U.S. in her columns for the New York Sun. Cazneau moved in 1850 to Eagle Pass, Texas, a town her husband helped to establish, and became closely associated with her husband's friend former Texas president Mirabeau B. Lamar.
During the Mexican War, Cazneau became a war correspondent, playing an unofficial role in her friend and New York Sun editor Moses Yale Beach's peace mission to Mexico City.
She also began to promote the All Mexico movement, which argued for the annexation of Mexico to the U.S. in order to establish peace. She also supported U.S. annexation of or intervention in Cuba, the Dominican Republic, and Nicaragua, all displaying her endorsement of Manifest Destiny.
William Cazneau was appointed diplomatic agent to the Dominican Republic in the 1850s, only leaving in 1863 when Spanish troops destroyed their estate.
After two years in Jamaica, they returned to the Dominican Republic and aided Presidents Andrew Johnson and Ulysses S. Grant in their attempts to acquire land in the country.
Throughout her life, Cazneau was a prolific author, commentating in newspaper editorials and publishing several books about her life and political ideology.
She wrote for the New York Sun, Philadelphia Public Ledger, New York Tribune, Democratic Review, and New York Morning Star, which she part-owned. Her books include Texas and Her Presidents (1845), The Queen of Islands (1850), Eagle Pass, or Life on the Border (1852), Life in Santo Domingo (1873), and Our Winter Eden: Pen Pictures of the Tropics (1878).
Sources:
May, Robert E. Cazneau, Jane Maria Eliza McManus.Handbook of Texas Onlinehttp://www.tshaonline.org/handbook/online/articles/CC/fcaad.html (accessed July 2, 2010).
Hudson, Linda S. Mistress of Manifest Destiny: A Biography of Jane McManus Storm Cazneau, 1807-1878. Austin: Texas State Historical Association, 2001.
From the description of Cazneau, Jane McManus Storms, Papers, 1834-1836, 1849-1865, 1877-1878, 1919 (University of Texas Libraries). WorldCat record id: 776187578
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associatedWith | Beach, Moses Sperry, 1822-1892 | person |
associatedWith | Beers, Joseph D. | person |
associatedWith | Cazneau, William Leslie, 1807-1876 | person |
associatedWith | Hill, Caryl Clyde | person |
associatedWith | Hill, Caryl Clyde | person |
associatedWith | Montgomery, Cora, 1807-1878 | person |
associatedWith | Texas. Adjutant General's Dept. | corporateBody |
associatedWith | Williams, Samuel May, 1795-1858 | person |
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Santo Domingo (Dominican Republic) | |||
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Cuba | |||
Eagle Pass (Tex.) | |||
Jamaica. | |||
United States | |||
Santo Domingo (Dominican Republic) | |||
Nicaragua | |||
Eagle Pass (Tex.) | |||
Matagorda (Tex.) | |||
Matagorda (Tex.) | |||
New York (State). | |||
Dominican Republic | |||
New York (State) | |||
Texas |
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Journalists |
Journalists |
Land speculation |
Land speculation |
Manifest Destiny |
Political messianism |
Political messianism |
Revolutionaries |
Revolutionaries |
Women journalists |
Women journalists |
Women revolutionaries |
Women revolutionaries |
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Person
Birth 1807
Death 1878