Thomas McKean
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Thomas McKean | |
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December 17, 1799 – December 20, 1808 | |
Preceded by | Thomas Mifflin |
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Succeeded by | Simon Snyder |
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July 28, 1777 – December 17, 1799 | |
Preceded by | Benjamin Chew |
Succeeded by | Edward Shippen |
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September 22, 1777 – October 20, 1777 | |
Preceded by | John McKinly |
Succeeded by | George Read |
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August 2, 1774 – November 7, 1776 December 17, 1777 – February 1, 1783 |
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Born | March 19, 1734 New London Township, Pennsylvania |
Died | June 24, 1817 Philadelphia, Pennsylvania |
Residence | New Castle, Delaware Philadelphia, Pennsylvania |
Political party | Federalist Democratic-Republican |
Spouse | Mary Borden Sarah Armitage |
Profession | lawyer |
Religion | Presbyterian |
Thomas McKean (March 19, 1734 – June 24, 1817) was an American lawyer and politician from New Castle, Delaware and Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. He was an officer of the Continental Army during the American Revolution, a signer of the Declaration of Independence, a Continental Congressman from Delaware, and the second President of the Continental Congress under the Articles of Confederation. He was at various times a member of the Federalist and Democratic-Republican Parties, who served as President of Delaware, Chief Justice of Pennsylvania and Governor of Pennsylvania. McKean is usually pronounced McKane.
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[edit] Early life and family
McKean was born March 19, 1734 in New London Township, Chester County, Pennsylvania, the son of William McKean and Letitia Finney. His father was a tavern keeper in New London and both his parents were Ulster-Scots who came to Pennsylvania from Ireland as children. Mary Borden was his first wife. They married in 1763, lived at 22 The Strand in New Castle, Delaware, and had six children, Joseph, Robert, Elizabeth, Letitia, Mary, and Anne. Mary Borden McKean died in 1773 and is buried at Immanuel Episcopal Church in New Castle. Sarah Armitage was McKean’s second wife. They married in 1774, lived at the northeast corner of 3rd and Pine Streets in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, and had four children, Sarah, Thomas, Sophia, and Maria. They were members of the New Castle Presbyterian Church in New Castle and the First Presbyterian Church in Philadelphia. Sarah's son, Carlos Fernando de Yrujo, would later become Prime Minister of Spain.
[edit] Early career
McKean's education began at the Reverend Francis Allison's New London Academy. At the age of 16, he went to New Castle, Delaware to begin the study of law under his cousin, David Finney. He was admitted to the Bar in Delaware, or the Lower Counties as they were known, in 1755 and likewise in the Province of Pennsylvania the following year. In 1756 he was appointed deputy Attorney General for Sussex County. From the 1762/63 session through the 1775/76 session he was a member of the General Assembly of the Lower Counties, serving as its Speaker in 1772/73. From July 1765, he also served as a judge of the Court of Common Pleas and began service as the customs collector at New Castle in 1771. In November 1765, his Court of Common Pleas became the first such court in the colonies to establish a rule that all the proceedings of the court be recorded on un-stamped paper.
Eighteenth century Delaware was politically divided into loose political factions known as the "Court Party" and the "Country Party." The majority Court Party was generally Anglican, strongest in Kent County and Sussex County, worked well with the colonial Proprietary government, and was in favor of reconciliation with the British government. The minority Country Party was largely Ulster-Scot, centered in New Castle County, and quickly advocated independence from the British. McKean was the epitome of the Country party politician and was, as much as anyone, its leader. As such, he generally worked in partnership with Caesar Rodney from Kent County, and in opposition to their friends and respective neighbors, George Read and John Dickinson.
[edit] American Revolution
[edit] Stamp Act Congress
At the Stamp Act Congress of 1765, McKean and Caesar Rodney represented Delaware. McKean proposed the voting procedure that the Continental Congress later adopted: that each colony, regardless of size or population, has one vote. This decision set the precedent, the Congress of the Articles of Confederation adopted the practice, and the principle of state equality continued in the composition of the United States Senate.
McKean quickly became one of the most influential members of the Stamp Act Congress. He was on the committee that drew the memorial to Parliament, and with John Rutledge and Philip Livingston, revised its proceedings. On the last day of its session, when the business session ended, Timothy Ruggles, the president of the body, and a few other more cautious members, refused to sign the memorial of rights and grievances. McKean arose, and addressing the chair, insisted that the president give his reasons for his refusal. After refusing at first, Ruggles remarked, "it was against his conscience." McKean then disputed his use of the word "conscience" so loudly and so long that a challenge was given and accepted between himself and Ruggles in the presence of the congress. However, Ruggles left the next morning at daybreak, so that the duel did not take place. [1]
[edit] Continental Congress and Declaration of Independence
In spite of his dual residence in Philadelphia, McKean remained the effective leader for American Independence in Delaware. Along with George Read and Caesar Rodney, he was one of Delaware's delegates to the First Continental Congress in 1774 and the Second Continental Congress in 1775 and 1776.
Being an outspoken advocate, his was a key voice in persuading others to vote for the Declaration of Independence. When George Read voted against independence, it was McKean who requested that the absent Caesar Rodney ride all night from Dover, Delaware to break the tie on Delaware's vote in favor of independence.
A few days after McKean cast his vote, he left the Continental Congress as Colonel in command of the fourth Battalion of Philadelphia "Associators," to join Washington's defense of New York at Perth Amboy, New Jersey. Along with John Dickinson, he was one of only two members of the Continental Congress to serve in the Continental Army. Being away, he was not available when most of the Signers placed their signatures on the Declaration of Independence on August 2, 1776. Since his signature did not appear on the printed copy that was authenticated on January 17, 1777, it is assumed that he signed after that date.
[edit] U.S. Congress and the Articles of Confederation
Because of their strong advocacy of American Independence, the conservative 1776/77 Delaware General Assembly did not reelect either McKean or Caesar Rodney to the Continental Congress in October 1776. However, McKean was returned a year later, in October 1777, by the 1777/78 Delaware General Assembly and served until February 1, 1783. He helped draft the Articles of Confederation and voted for their adoption on March 1, 1781. When poor health caused the Congress' first president, Samuel Huntington, to resign in July 1781, McKean was elected its second president, serving from July 10, 1781, until November 4, 1781. In this position, McKean presided over the unicameral assembly of the United States Congress and held the highest political office in the United States at the time. He was the first person to whom the title “President of the United States” was applied in an official document. However, it was not an executive position in any way comparable to the Presidency as configured in the later U.S. Constitution of 1787. During his term in office, the British Army surrendered at Yorktown.
Leadership positions | ||
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Preceded by Samuel Huntington |
President of the U.S. Confederation Congress July 10, 1781 - November 4, 1781 |
Succeeded by John Hanson |
[edit] Government of Delaware
Meanwhile McKean led the effort in the General Assembly of the Lower Counties to declare its separation from the British government, which it did on June 15, 1776. Then, in August, he was elected to the special convention to draft a new state constitution. Upon hearing of it, McKean made the long ride to Dover, Delaware from Philadelphia in a single day, went to a room in an Inn, and that night, virtually by himself, drafted the document, which was adopted September 20, 1776. The Delaware Constitution of 1776 thus became the first state constitution to be produced after the Declaration of Independence.
McKean was then elected to Delaware's first House of Assembly for both the 1776/77 and 1778/79 sessions, succeeding John McKinly as Speaker on February 12, 1777 when McKinly became President of Delaware. Shortly after President McKinly's capture and imprisonment, McKean served as the President of Delaware for a month from September 22, 1777 until October 20, 1777. That was the time needed for the rightful successor to John McKinly, the Speaker of the Legislative Council, George Read, to return from the Continental Congress in Philadelphia and assume the duties.
At this time Delaware was about as chaotic as anytime in its history. After the Battle of Brandywine, the British Army occupied Wilmington and much of northern New Castle County. Its navy controlled the lower Delaware River and Delaware Bay. As a result the state capital, New Castle, was unsafe as a meeting place, and the Sussex County seat, Lewes, was sufficiently disrupted by Loyalists that it was unable to hold a valid general election that autumn. As President, McKean was primarily occupied with recruitment of the militia and with keeping some semblance of civic order in the portions of the state still under his control.
Delaware General Assembly (sessions while President) |
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Year | Assembly | Senate Majority | Speaker | House Majority | Speaker | ||||||
1776-1777 | 1st | non-partisan | George Read | non-partisan | vacant |
[edit] Government of Pennsylvania
McKean started his long tenure as Chief Justice of Pennsylvania on July 28, 1777, and served in that capacity until 1799. There he largely set the rules of justice for revolutionary Pennsylvania. According to biographer John Coleman "only the historiographical difficulty of reviewing court records and other scattered documents prevents recognition that McKean, rather than John Marshall, did more than anyone else to establish an independent judiciary in the United States. As chief justice under a Pennsylvania constitution he considered flawed, he assumed it the right of the court to strike down legislative acts it deemed unconstitutional, preceding by ten years the U.S. Supreme Court's establishment of the doctrine of judicial review. He augmented the rights of defendants and sought penal reform, but on the other hand was slow to recognize expansion of the legal rights of women and the processes in the state's gradual elimination of slavery."
He was a member of the convention of Pennsylvania, which ratified the Constitution of the U.S. In the Pennsylvania State Constitutional Convention of 1789/90, he argued for a strong executive and was himself at that time a Federalist. Nevertheless, in 1796, dissatisfied with Federalist domestic policies and compromises with England, he became an outspoken Jeffersonian Republican or Democratic-Republican.
McKean was elected Governor of Pennsylvania, and served three terms from December 17, 1799 until December 20, 1808. In 1799 he defeated the Federalist Party nominee, James Ross, and again more easily in 1802. At first, McKean ousted Federalists from state government positions. Because of that, he has been called the father of the spoils system. However, in seeking a third term in 1805, McKean was at odds with factions of his own Democratic-Republican Party and the Pennsylvania General Assembly instead nominated Speaker Simon Snyder for Governor. McKean then forged an alliance with Federalists, called "the Quids," and defeated Snyder. Afterwards, he began removing Jeffersonian or Democratic-Republicans from state positions.
The governor's beliefs in strong executive and judicial powers were bitterly denounced by the influential Aurora newspaper publisher, William Duane, and the Philadelphia populist Dr. Michael Leib. After they led public attacks calling for impeachment, McKean filed a partially successful libel suit against Duane in 1805. The Pennsylvania House of Representatives impeached the governor in 1807, but his friends prevented a trial for the rest of his term and the matter was dropped. When the suit was settled after McKean left office, his son Joseph angrily criticized Duane's attorney for alleging, out of context, that McKean referred to the people of Pennsylvania as "Clodpoles" (clodhoppers). [2]
Some of McKean's other accomplishments included expanding free education for all and, at age eighty, leading a Philadelphia citizens group to organize a strong defense during the War of 1812. McKean retired to Philadelphia, where he spent the remainder of his life writing, discussing political affairs and enjoying the considerable wealth he had earned through investments and real estate.
[edit] Death and legacy
McKean died June 24, 1817 in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania and was buried in the First Presbyterian Church Cemetery in Philadelphia. In 1843, his body was moved to the Laurel Hill Cemetery, also in Philadelphia. Thomas McKean High School in New Castle County, Delaware is named in his honor, as is McKean Street in Philadelphia, McKean County, Pennsylvania, and the McKean Hall dormitory at the University of Delaware.
McKean was over six feet tall, always wore a large cocked hat and carried a gold-headed cane. He was a man of quick temper and vigorous personality, "with a thin face, hawk's nose and hot eyes." He was known for a "lofty and often tactless manner that antagonized many people," as well as for being "cold, proud and vain." Some thought, "his popularity with his clients was difficult to understand. He seldom mixed with people except on public occasions. Many people found his company insufferable. Still others concluded that he attracted so much business because people simply had confidence in his integrity and impressive credentials." John Adams described him as "one of the three men in the Continental Congress who appeared to me to see more clearly to the end of the business than any others in the body." As Chief Justice and Governor of Pennsylvania he was frequently the center of controversy. [3] [4]
[edit] Almanac
Delaware elections were held October 1st, and members of the General Assembly took office on October 20th, or the following weekday. State Assemblymen had a one year term. The General Assembly chose the Continental Congressmen for a one year term and the State President for a three year term.
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Year | Office | State | Subject | Party | Votes | % | Opponent | Party | Votes | % | ||
1799 | Governor | Pennsylvania | Thomas McKean | Republican | 38,036 | 54% | James Ross | Federalist | 32,641 | 46% | ||
1802 | Governor | Pennsylvania | Thomas McKean | Republican | 47,879 | 83% | James Ross | Federalist | 9,499 | 17% | ||
1805 | Governor | Pennsylvania | Thomas McKean | Independent | 43,644 | 53% | Simon Snyder | Republican | 38,438 | 47% |
[edit] Notes
- ^ Lives of the Signers to the Declaration of Independence. Colonial Hall. Retrieved on 2006-11-01.
- ^ Pennsylvania Governors. Pennsylvania Historical and Museum Commission. Retrieved on 2006-11-01.
- ^ Thomas McKean biography. Smithsonian Institution. Retrieved on 2006-11-01.
- ^ Pine Run Farms - The McKean Estate. Talamore. Retrieved on 2006-11-01.
- ^ Members of the Delaware Assembly acted unofficially in selecting these delegates as the assembly was not in session.
- ^ elected Speaker on February 12, 1777 when John McKinly became State President
- ^ As Speaker of the State Assembly was third in line of succession and assumed position upon the capture of John McKinly, in the absence of George Read.
- ^ elected President on July 10, 1781 and served until November 4, 1781
[edit] References
- Wilson, James Grant.; John Fiske (1888). Appletons Encyclopedia of American Biography. New York: D. Appleton and Company.
- Racino, John W. (1980). Biographical Directory of American and Revolutionary Governors 1607-1789. Westport, CT: Meckler Books. ISBN 0-930466-00-4.
- Rodney, Richard S. (1975). Collected Essays on Early Delaware. Wilmington, Delaware: Society of Colonial Wars in the State of Delaware.
- Ward, Christopher L. (1941). Delaware Continentals, 1776-1783. Wilmington, Delaware: Historical Society of Delaware. ISBN 0-924117-21-4.
- Hoffecker, Carol E. (2004). Democracy in Delaware. Wilmington, Delaware: Cedar Tree Books. ISBN 1-892142-23-6.
- Munroe, John A. (1954). Federalist Delaware 1775-1815. New Brunswick, New Jersey: Rutgers University.
- Scott, Jane Harrington (2000). Gentleman as Well as a Whig. Newark, Delaware: University of Delaware Press. ISBN 0-87413-700-4.
- Swetnam, G. (1941). The Governors of Pennsylvania, 1790-1990. McDonald/Sward. ISBN 0-945437-04-8.
- Futhey, J. S.; G. Cope (1881). History of Chester County, Pennsylvania. Philadelphia: Louis H. Everts. ISBN 0-945437-04-8.
- Munroe, John A. (1993). History of Delaware. Newark, Delaware: University of Delaware Press. ISBN 0-87413-493-5.
- Scharf, John Thomas (1888). History of Delaware 1609-1888. 2 vols.. Philadelphia: L. J. Richards & Co..
- Conrad, Henry C. (1908). History of the State of Delaware, 3 vols.. Lancaster, Pennsylvania: Wickersham Company.
- Martin, Roger A. (1984). A History of Delaware Through its Governors. Wilmington, Delaware: McClafferty Press.
- Martin, Roger A. (1995). Memoirs of the Senate. Newark, Delaware: Roger A. Martin.
- Klos, Stanley L. (2004). Preisdent Who? Forgotten Founders. Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania: Evisum, Inc., 261. ISBN 0-9752627-5-0.
- Munroe, John A. (2004). The Philadelawareans. Newark, Delaware: University of Delaware Press. ISBN 0-87413-872-8.
- Ferris, Robert G (1973). Signers of the Declaration of Independence. Flagstaff, Arizona: Interpretive Publications, Inc.. ISBN 0-936478-07-1.
- Barthelmas, D.G. (1977). Signers of the Declaration of Independence: A Biographical and Genealogical Record. Jefferson, North Carolina: McFarland Press.
- Coleman, John M. (1984). Thomas McKean, Forgotten Leader of the Revolution. Rockaway, New Jersey: American Faculty Press. ISBN 0-912834-07-2.
- Rowe, G.S. (1984). Thomas McKean, The Shaping of an American Republicanism. Boulder, Colorado: Colorado University Press. ISBN 0-87081-100-2.
[edit] Images
- Carpenter's Hall [2] Courtesy of Independence National Historical Park.
- Hall of Governors Portrait Gallery [3] Portrait courtesy of Historical and Cultural Affairs, Dover.
[edit] External links
- Appletons Encyclopedia [4]
- Biographical Directory of the U.S. Congress [5]
- Centennial Book of Signers [6]
- Delaware’s Governors [7]
- Discovering Lewis & Clark [8]
- Find a Grave [9]
- Historical Society of Delaware [10]
- History of Chester County, Pennsylvania [11]
- History of Delaware 1609-1888 [12]
- Keith J. McLean biography [13]
- Lives of the Signers to the Declaration of Independence [14]
- National Governors Association [15]
- National Park Service [16]
- Presidential Biography by Stanley L. Klos *[17]
- Pennsylvania Historical and Museum Commission [18]
- The Political Graveyard [19]
- Russell Pickett biography [20]
- Smithsonian Institution [21]
- Talamore [22]
- U.S. History.org [23]
- University of Pennsylvania [24]
[edit] Places with more information
- Historical Society of Delaware [25] 505 Market St., Wilmington, Delaware (302) 655-7161
- Historical Society of Pennsylvania [26] 1300 Locust St. Philadelphia, Pennsylvania (215) 732-6200
- Laurel Hill Cemetery [27] 3822 Ridge Ave., Philadelphia, Pennsylvania (215) 228-8200
- University of Delaware Library [28] 181 South College Ave., Newark, Delaware (302) 831-2965
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Categories: 1734 births | 1817 deaths | American Presbyterians | Continental Army officers | Continental Congressmen | Delaware Democratic-Republicans | Delaware lawyers | Delaware State Representatives | Governors of Delaware | Governors of Pennsylvania | Pennsylvania lawyers | People from New Castle County, Delaware | People from Philadelphia | Signers of the U.S. Declaration of Independence