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The Collector of Customs at the Port of Buffalo, most often referred to as Collector of the Port of Buffalo, sometimes referred to as Buffalo Creek, was a federal officer who was in charge of the collection of import duties on foreign goods that entered the United States by ship at the Port of Buffalo.
History
Buffalo Creek was made a Port of Entry in 1805 by President Thomas Jefferson. On March 11, 1811, President James Madison issued a proclamation removing the port of entry for the Buffalo district to Black Rock (which was not a part of Buffalo at the time), in pursuance of an act of Congress dated March 2, 1811, which provided that "the office of the Collector of Customs for the District of Buffaloe Creek shall be kept at such place or places in the town of Buffalo as President of the United States shall designate." In 1817, Forward, as Collector of the Port, was authorized by the Treasury Department to purchase a site for a light house. Forward negotiated with Joseph Ellicott, agent of the Holland Land Company, to purchase the property near the outlet of the Buffalo Creek for $350.
In August 1965, it was announced that the Buffalo Customs District was enlarged under President Lyndon B. Johnson's national reorganization plan to include the Toronto Airport and the ports of Buffalo and Niagara Falls. The two U.S. ports were consolidated and became known as "Buffalo-Niagara Falls". Additionally, the Buffalo district absorbed the Rochester Customs District which included the ports of Rochester, Oswego, Sodus Point, Syracuse and Utica. The Buffalo Customs District became part of the Boston region. In the reorganization, the collectors, who were appointed by the president, were abolished and replaced by port directors under a district director.
List of collectors
(1804ā1812) Erastus Granger; appointed by Thomas Jefferson (Callender Irvine was appointed in February 1804 but declined)
(1812ā1822) Oliver Forward; appointed by James Madison;
(1822ā1829) Myndert M. Dox; appointed by James Monroe
(1829ā1838) Pierre A. Barker; appointed by Andrew Jackson
(1838ā1842) George W. Clinton; appointed by Martin Van Buren
(1842ā1845) Jedediah Hyde Lathrop; appointed by John Tyler
(1845ā1849) Henry W. Rogers; appointed by James K. Polk
(1850ā1851) Levi Allen; appointed by Zachary Taylor
(1851ā1854) William Ketchum, appointed by Millard Fillmore
(1854ā1858) John T. Hudson, appointed by Franklin Pierce
(1858ā1861) Warren Bryant; appointed by James Buchanan
(1861ā1865) Christian Metz Jr.; appointed by Abraham Lincoln
(1865ā1867) Charles Davis Norton; appointed by Andrew Johnson
(1867ā1869) Joseph K. Tyler; appointed by Andrew Johnson
(1869ā1870) Samuel J. Holley; appointed by Ulysses S. Grant
(1870ā1877) Rodney W. Daniels; appointed by Ulysses S. Grant
(1877ā1881) John Tyler; appointed by Rutherford B. Hayes
(1881ā1885) Charles A. Gould, appointed by Chester A. Arthur
(1885ā1889) Arthur D. Bissell, appointed by Grover Cleveland
(1889ā1893) William J. Morgan, appointed by Benjamin Harrison
(1893ā1897) Peter C. Doyle; appointed by Grover Cleveland
(1897ā1906) Henry W. Brendel; appointed by William McKinley
(1906ā1914) Fred O. Murray; appointed by Theodore Roosevelt
(1914ā1918) George Bleistein; appointed by Woodrow Wilson
(1918ā1922) George G. Davidson Jr.; appointed by Woodrow Wilson
(1922ā1934) Fred A. Bradley; appointed by Warren G. Harding
(1934ā1935) William J. O'Brian; appointed by Franklin D. Roosevelt
(1936ā1944) Martin O. Bement; appointed by Franklin D. Roosevelt
(1945ā1954) Ross E. Brown; appointed by Franklin D. Roosevelt
(1954ā1962) Harold R. Becker; appointed by Dwight D. Eisenhower
(1962ā1965) Frank A. Sedita; appointed by John F. Kennedy
References
Notes
Citations
External links
Department of the Treasury. Customs Service. Collection District of Buffalo
U. S. Custom House, Washington & Seneca Streets, Buffalo, Erie County, NY at the Library of Congress