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・ Thomas B. Kidner
・ Thomas B. Klakring
・ Thomas B. Kornberg
・ Thomas B. Kyle
・ Thomas B. L. Webster
・ Thomas B. Larkin
・ Thomas B. Lawson
・ Thomas B. Manuel
・ Thomas B. Marsh
・ Thomas B. Mason
・ Thomas B. McCabe
・ Thomas B. Miller
・ Thomas B. Mitchell
・ Thomas B. Molloy
・ Thomas B. Murray
Thomas B. Robertson
・ Thomas B. Robinson
・ Thomas B. Russell
・ Thomas B. Scott
・ Thomas B. Sheridan
・ Thomas B. Silver
・ Thomas B. Smith
・ Thomas B. Smith (disambiguation)
・ Thomas B. Stanley
・ Thomas B. Symons
・ Thomas B. Thrige
・ Thomas B. Townsend House
・ Thomas B. Turley
・ Thomas B. Ward
・ Thomas B. Warren


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Thomas B. Robertson : ウィキペディア英語版
Thomas B. Robertson

Thomas Bolling Robertson (February 27, 1779 – October 5, 1828) was the first member of the U.S. House of Representatives to represent the state of Louisiana, its third Governor, the Attorney General of Louisiana before and after statehood, and a United States federal judge.
Robertson was born near Petersburg, Virginia. After graduating from the College of William and Mary in 1795,〔( William and Mary alumni )〕 he read law to enter the bar in 1806 and briefly practiced in Petersburg. He moved to the Territory of Orleans (today's Louisiana) and was appointed Territorial Attorney General by Governor William C.C. Claiborne, from 1806 to 1807. He was then Secretary of the Territory of Orleans from 1807 until 1812, in which year Louisiana became a state, on April 30th.
Thomas Robertson was the state's first representative in Congress. He served four terms as a Democratic-Republican, until his resignation in 1818. He briefly returned to private practice in Louisiana at that time, where he was appointed Attorney General of Louisiana from 1819 to 1820. He was elected a member of the American Antiquarian Society in 1821.〔(American Antiquarian Society Members Directory )〕
Robertson was elected Governor of Louisiana in the 1820 election and served from 1820 until his resignation in 1824. During his term as Governor, factional discord between established Creole citizens and newly arriving American settlers created a political crisis. Robertson was seen as weak for not acting to resolve the ethnic differences; and when he proposed moving the capital from New Orleans to Baton Rouge, riots broke out in the Crescent City and he was forced to resign.
He saved face by accepting a federal judgeship, and on May 24, 1824, he was appointed by President James Monroe to a seat jointly held on the Eastern and Western Districts of Louisiana, both seats having been vacated by John Dick. Robertson was confirmed by the United States Senate on May 26, 1824, receiving his commission the same day, and serving thereafter until his death.
In 1827, Robertson, along with Armand Duplantier, Fulwar Skipwith, Antoine Blanc and Sebastien Hiriart received permission from the Louisiana State Legislature to organize a corporation called the Agricultural Society of Baton Rouge.〔(A general digest of the acts of the legislature of Louisiana, Vol II ) accessed 1 July 2012〕
He became ill and died while recuperating in White Sulphur Springs, Virginia (now West Virginia).
Robertson had two brothers with political legacies: U.S. Representative John Robertson and Wyndham Robertson, a Governor of Virginia.
Robertson Street in New Orleans is named for the former Governor.
==References==


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