James Hamilton Jr. (May 8, 1786 – November 15, 1857) was an
American lawyer and politician. He represented
South Carolina
South Carolina ( ) is a U.S. state, state in the Southeastern United States, Southeastern region of the United States. It borders North Carolina to the north and northeast, the Atlantic Ocean to the southeast, and Georgia (U.S. state), Georg ...
in the
U.S. Congress (1822–1829) and served as its 53rd
governor
A governor is an politician, administrative leader and head of a polity or Region#Political regions, political region, in some cases, such as governor-general, governors-general, as the head of a state's official representative. Depending on the ...
(1830–1832). Prior to that, Hamilton achieved widespread recognition and public approval for his actions as Intendant (mayor) of the city of
Charleston, South Carolina
Charleston is the List of municipalities in South Carolina, most populous city in the U.S. state of South Carolina. The city lies just south of the geographical midpoint of South Carolina's coastline on Charleston Harbor, an inlet of the Atla ...
in 1822, during the period when plans for a
slave rising were revealed. As governor, he led the state during the
Nullification Crisis of 1832, at the peak of his power.
Hamilton organized a city militia in June 1822 to arrest suspects, including the purported free black leader
Denmark Vesey, supported the City Council in commissioning a Court of Magistrates and Freeholders, and defended their actions, including ordering the execution of Vesey and 34 other blacks, and deporting of tens of others. He helped shape the public perception of the Court proceedings and the reasons for the revolt, as well as gaining legislation in 1822 for more controls on slaves and
free people of color. Because of problems with crippling debt after 1839, Hamilton's reputation suffered.
Early life and career
James Hamilton was born on May 8, 1786, in
Charleston, South Carolina
Charleston is the List of municipalities in South Carolina, most populous city in the U.S. state of South Carolina. The city lies just south of the geographical midpoint of South Carolina's coastline on Charleston Harbor, an inlet of the Atla ...
, to James and Elizabeth (Lynch) Hamilton, both of the Lowcountry planter elite; his mother was the daughter of Congressman
Thomas Lynch and sister of
Thomas Lynch Jr.
His parents sent him to preparatory schools in New England; he studied in
Newport, Rhode Island
Newport is a seaside city on Aquidneck Island in Rhode Island, United States. It is located in Narragansett Bay, approximately southeast of Providence, Rhode Island, Providence, south of Fall River, Massachusetts, south of Boston, and nort ...
, and
Dedham, Massachusetts, before returning to Charleston. In the city he
read law under prominent attorneys Daniel Huger and William Drayton. Hamilton passed the bar and went into
practice in Drayton's office; he later was in partnership with
James L. Petigru.
[Sean R. Busick, "Hamilton, James Jr. (1786–1857)"](_blank)
, ''The South Carolina Encyclopædia,'' ed. Walter Edgar; Columbia, South Carolina: University of South Carolina Press, 2006
Marriage and family
On November 15, 1813, Hamilton married Elizabeth Mathews Heyward, daughter of wealthy low country South Carolina planter Daniel Heyward and Ann SarahTrezevant; her paternal grandfather was
Thomas Heyward Jr., a South Carolinian who served in the Continental Congress and signed the Declaration of Independence. She brought three plantations and approximately 200 slaves to the marriage. The couple had eleven children, ten males and one female.
Political career
Hamilton entered politics in the state. He was elected in 1818 to the South Carolina state House of Representatives, serving from 1819 until early 1822.
That year Hamilton was elected as Intendant, or mayor, of the city of Charleston. He was serving when plans were revealed in the spring to white officials of a
slave "rising," reportedly led by
Denmark Vesey, a
free black carpenter and former slave, who was a leader of the large
AME African-American Church. Hamilton quickly organized a
militia
A militia ( ) is a military or paramilitary force that comprises civilian members, as opposed to a professional standing army of regular, full-time military personnel. Militias may be raised in times of need to support regular troops or se ...
to defend the city and round up and arrest slave suspects. Its forces roamed the city and its environs for weeks.
With Hamilton's leadership, the City Council commissioned a Court of Magistrates and Freeholders to review the cases, hear testimony, and determine guilt and punishment. They conducted their proceedings in secret, beginning in the middle of June. Suspects were arrested throughout the city. On July 1, the court published its initial findings related to the first 30 suspects: declaring Denmark Vesey and five slaves guilty of conspiracy and condemning them to death. They were executed on July 2 by hanging. In total, most during the next weeks, the courts examined a total of 131 men, convicted a total of 67 men of conspiracy and hanged 35 (including Vesey and others of the first group), through July 1822. A total of 31 men were transported, 27 reviewed and acquitted, and 38 questioned and released.
[Wade, Richard C. “The Vesey Plot: A Reconsideration”](_blank)
''Journal of Southern History'', XXX (May 1964), 143-161
The court proceedings were controversial, criticized by
United States Supreme Court Justice William Johnson and South Carolina Governor
Thomas Bennett Jr. for their secrecy and lack of due process, as defendants were not allowed to confront accusers and witnesses were promised secrecy. But, Hamilton captured the public opinion of the events, publishing a 46-page article in August, taking credit for the city's actions in preventing a huge uprising and bloodbath. He also shaped the Court's official Report of its proceedings, published in October. Historian Lacy K. Ford has said, "the balance of the evidence clearly points to the exaggeration of the plot and the misappropriation of its lessons by Hamilton, the Court, and their allies for their own political advantage."
[Lacy Ford, "An Interpretation of the Denmark Vesey Insurrection Scare"](_blank)
''The Proceedings of the South Carolina Historical Association,'' 2012, pp. 16-18 Robert Tinkler, biographer of Hamilton, thinks he was ruthless about pursuing suspects because he believed the plot was real.
Hamilton built his political career on these events. In the fall, he lobbied the legislature to gain his agenda of increasing controls on slaves and free blacks in the state. He opposed the increasing paternalism in slave treatment which was based on Christian teachings. Hamilton was successful in gaining passage of state laws to achieve his goals,
including the
Seaman's Act of 1822, which required free black sailors to be imprisoned when their ships were in port in Charleston, to prevent their coming into contact with slaves in the city. As this violated international treaties, the law caused conflict with the federal government. Hamilton upheld the state's right to make such a law, but it was declared unconstitutional.
[William H. Freehling, ''The Road to Disunion: Secessionists at Bay 1776–1854,'' Oxford University Press, 1990, pp. 253-270] Hamilton gained increased restrictions on free blacks, with a state law that prohibited them from returning to the state to live if they left for any reason, and controls on slave worship and gatherings.
He ordered the congregation of the AME Church to be dispersed, and the building destroyed.
The minister Morris Brown thanked Hamilton for helping him escape the state; historian
Robert L. Paquette credits Hamilton with helping contain white vigilantism.
[ Robert L. Paquette]
Review: 'James Hamilton of South Carolina' by Robert Tinkler
" ''The South Carolina Historical Magazine'', Vol. 107, No. 4, Oct., 2006
When South Carolina Congressman
William Lowndes resigned from the U.S. Congress in May 1822, Hamilton was well known and had much public support. He was appointed to complete Lowndes' term, starting his congressional career on December 13, 1822, while still serving as mayor. He was elected to the
U.S. House of Representatives in 1824 to a full term, and re-elected in 1826 and 1828, serving until 1829. He had led opposition to the administration of
John Quincy Adams and opposed the
Tariff Acts of 1824 and 1828. Increasingly at odds with the national government, Hamilton declined to be nominated for another term and returned to his home state to prepare for confrontation.
Hamilton was elected by the state legislature as Governor of South Carolina in 1830, and built up the
States' Rights and Free Trade Party. He led the state during the
Nullification Crisis of 1832, when more than 80% of the state convention's 162 delegates voted to nullify the federal tariffs of 1828 and 1832.
After
Robert Y. Hayne was elected by the legislature to governor, he commissioned Hamilton as a brigadier general in the state's militia. Hamilton prepared for possibly defending the state against federal forces on nullification.
Interested in supporting the expansion of slavery in western territories, Hamilton personally lent $216,000 to the young
Republic of Texas
The Republic of Texas (), or simply Texas, was a country in North America that existed for close to 10 years, from March 2, 1836, to February 19, 1846. Texas shared borders with Centralist Republic of Mexico, the Republic of the Rio Grande, an ...
in the 1830s. Subsequent to that, he made a number of poor business decisions, aggravated by the
Panic of 1837
The Panic of 1837 was a financial crisis in the United States that began a major depression (economics), depression which lasted until the mid-1840s. Profits, prices, and wages dropped, westward expansion was stalled, unemployment rose, and pes ...
, and leaving him deeply in debt for hundreds of thousands of dollars by 1839 – a condition often shared by other planters. Perhaps because his condition reminded them unpleasantly of their own, Hamilton's struggles with debt and poor decision-making caused a steep decline over the next twenty years in his reputation among the planter class in South Carolina. At the time of his death in 1857, he received no recognition from his home state.
He was appointed as loan commissioner for Texas by President
Mirabeau Lamar and traveled to Europe to try to secure much-needed credit for the new republic. He did succeed in negotiating some commercial treaties. He also gained diplomatic recognition for Texas from Great Britain and the Netherlands. After being replaced in 1842, Hamilton struggled over several years to try to obtain federal reimbursement for his personal loan to Texas.
Hamilton moved with his family to Texas in 1855, nearly ten years after the republic had been annexed and made a
U.S. state. In 1857, while Hamilton was returning by the steamboat ''Opelousas'' to Texas from Washington, D.C., his ship was hit by the ''Galveston'' and exploded on fire; it sank within half an hour off
Avery Island, Louisiana, in the
Gulf of Mexico
The Gulf of Mexico () is an oceanic basin and a marginal sea of the Atlantic Ocean, mostly surrounded by the North American continent. It is bounded on the northeast, north, and northwest by the Gulf Coast of the United States; on the southw ...
. Twenty people died from the ''Opelousas,'' including Hamilton after he gave up his seat in a lifeboat to a woman and her child.
Legacy
*Hamilton helped gain approval by the South Carolina legislature to authorize and appropriate $100,000 for an armory and defensive installation in Charleston against
slave revolts; what became known as
the Citadel was completed in the city in 1829.
*Hamilton was the first governor of South Carolina to have his photograph taken.
*
Hamilton County, Texas is named in his honor.
References
Further reading
Johnson, Michael P. “Denmark Vesey and his Co-Conspirators” ''William and Mary Quarterly'', LVIII, No. 4. (October 2001), 915-976 .
Johnson, Michael P., Douglas R. Egerton, Edward A. Pearson, David Robertson, Winthrop Jordan, et al. in "Forum: The Making of a Slave Conspiracy, Part 2" ''William and Mary Quarterly'', LViV, No. 1, (January 2002)
*Tinkler, Robert, ''James Hamilton of South Carolina.'' Baton Rouge: Louisiana State University Press, 2004.
External links
NGA Biography of James Hamilton Jr.United States Congress Biography of James Hamilton Jr.*
*Busick, Sean R
"Hamilton, James Jr.South Carolina Encyclopedia.
{{DEFAULTSORT:Hamilton, James Jr.
1786 births
1857 deaths
19th-century American lawyers
19th-century mayors of places in South Carolina
South Carolina lawyers
Democratic Party members of the South Carolina House of Representatives
Democratic Party governors of South Carolina
University of South Carolina trustees
Democratic Party South Carolina state senators
Mayors of Charleston, South Carolina
Deaths due to shipwreck at sea
Nullifier Party state governors of the United States
Democratic-Republican Party members of the United States House of Representatives from South Carolina
Jacksonian members of the United States House of Representatives from South Carolina
American lawyers admitted to the practice of law by reading law
Politicians from Dedham, Massachusetts
Lawyers from Dedham, Massachusetts
19th-century members of the United States House of Representatives
19th-century members of the South Carolina General Assembly