Christopher Gadsden: Difference between revisions
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{{short description|American politician}} |
{{short description|American politician (1724–1805)}} |
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{{For|the Episcopal bishop|Christopher |
{{For|the Episcopal bishop|Christopher Edwards Gadsden}} |
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{{Infobox officeholder |
{{Infobox officeholder |
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| name = Christopher Gadsden |
| name = Christopher Gadsden |
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| birth_date = {{birth date|1724|2|16|mf=yes}} |
| birth_date = {{birth date|1724|2|16|mf=yes}} |
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| death_date = {{death date and age|1805|8|28|1724|2|16|mf=yes}} |
| death_date = {{death date and age|1805|8|28|1724|2|16|mf=yes}} |
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| relatives = |
| relatives = {{ubl |
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|[[Christopher Edwards Gadsden]] (grandson) |
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|[[James Gadsden]] (grandson) |
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|[[John Gadsden]] (grandson) |
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}} |
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|module = {{Infobox military person |
|module = {{Infobox military person |
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==Early life== |
==Early life== |
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Gadsden was born in 1724 in [[Charleston, South Carolina]]. He was the son of Thomas Gadsden, who had been in the [[Royal Navy]] before becoming customs collector for the [[Port of Charleston]]. He was sent to school near [[Bristol|Bristol, England]]. He returned to America in 1740 and served as an apprentice at a [[counting house]] in [[Philadelphia]], Pennsylvania. He inherited a large fortune from his |
Gadsden was born in 1724 in [[Charleston, South Carolina]]. He was the son of Thomas Gadsden (b. 1701), who had been in the [[Royal Navy]] before becoming customs collector for the [[Port of Charleston]]. His grandfather, Edward Gadsden, was born in [[Wiltshire]], [[England]] in 1672 and emigrated to South Carolina in 1695. He was sent to school near [[Bristol|Bristol, England]]. He returned to America in 1740 and served as an apprentice at a [[counting house]] in [[Philadelphia]], Pennsylvania. He inherited a large fortune from his father who died in 1741. From 1745 to 1746 he was a [[purser]] on a British warship during [[King George's War]]. He entered into mercantile ventures and by 1747 had earned enough to return to South Carolina and buy back the land his father had sold because he needed the money to pay off debts. He built [[Beneventum Plantation House]] in about 1750.<ref name="scdah" /> |
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=== Views on |
=== Views on slavery === |
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While Gadsden vehemently supported John Adams, who was opposed to slavery and promoted a gradual approach to abolition, the U.S. [[National Park Service]] writes that "by 1774, Christopher Gadsden owned four stores, several merchant vessels, two rice plantations, a residential district in Charleston called Gadsdenboro, and a large wharf on the [[Cooper River (South Carolina)|Cooper River]]."<ref>{{Cite web |title=Christopher Gadsden (U.S. National Park Service) |url=https://www.nps.gov/people/christopher-gadsden.htm |access-date=2022-09-09 |website=www.nps.gov |language=en}}</ref> Of all the colonies, South Carolina received the highest number of slaves from Africa, and most of these came ashore on [[Gadsden's Wharf]] in Charleston.<ref>{{Cite web |title=Gadsden's Wharf |url=https://www.preservationsociety.org/locations/gadsdens-wharf/ |access-date=2023-07-25 |website=Preservation Society of Charleston |language=en}}</ref> Gadsden himself held slaves, as did many rice plantation owners in South Carolina who used the labor of enslaved Africans to grow and sell agricultural products. In ''A Forgotten Founder: The Life and Legacy of Christopher Gadsden'', Kelcey Eldridge states that, "at the time of his death, he owned enough slaves to 'divide my Estate real and personal as well as my negroes as otherwise into nineteen equal parts or shares{{'"}}; but it is unknown just how many enslaved people he purchased, owned, or used.<ref>{{Cite thesis |last=Eldridge |first=Kelcey |date=August 2018 |title=A Forgotten Founder: The Life and Legacy of Christopher Gadsden |url=https://tigerprints.clemson.edu/all_theses/2949 |type=MA thesis |publisher=Clemson University }}</ref> |
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===Seven Years War=== |
===Seven Years' War=== |
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{{further|Great Britain in the Seven Years War}} |
{{further|Great Britain in the Seven Years War}} |
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Gadsden began his rise to prominence as a merchant and patriot in Charleston. He prospered as a merchant and built |
Gadsden began his rise to prominence as a merchant and patriot in Charleston. He prospered as a merchant and built the wharf that bears his name. Between its completion in 1767 until 1787 and 1803 to 1808,<ref name="Parker">{{Cite web|first=Adam|last=Parker|title=A brief history of Gadsden's Wharf|url=https://www.postandcourier.com/features/a-brief-history-of-gadsdens-wharf/article_00cc3aac-b445-11e7-8c6e-9bbd3ea293a2.html|access-date=2021-06-28|website=Post and Courier|date=22 October 2017 |language=en}}</ref> it is estimated that 40% of all African slaves (about 100,000 enslaved people) were brought to America through his wharf.<ref name="Parker" /> He was captain of a militia company during a 1759 expedition against the [[Cherokee]]. He was first elected to the [[Commons House of Assembly]] in 1757 and began a long friction with autocratic royal governors.<ref name=":0">{{Cite book |last=Lowell Underwood |first=James |title=The Constitution of South Carolina: The Relationship of the Legislative, Executive, and Judicial Branches |year=1986 |isbn=978-0872494435 |edition=1 |pages=15–18}}</ref> His re-election to the Commons in 1762 was beset with minor voting irregularities, which resulted in Governor Boone refusing to administer the oath of office for Gadsden and dissolving the entire Commons. This perceived excess of gubernatorial power led to a political culture in South Carolina of legislative dominance over the executive branch.<ref name=":0" /> |
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In 1766, the assembly made him one of their delegates to the [[Stamp Act Congress]] in [[New York City]], which was called to protest the [[Stamp Act 1765|Stamp Act]]. While his fellow delegates [[Thomas Lynch (statesman)|Thomas Lynch]] and [[John Rutledge]] served on committees to draft appeals to the [[House of Lords]] and [[House of Commons of the United Kingdom|Commons]] respectively, Gadsden refused any such assignment, since in his view the British parliament had no rights in the matter. He was outspoken in his support of the [[Declaration of Rights and Grievances]] produced by the Congress. His addresses brought him to the attention of [[Samuel Adams]] of [[Massachusetts]], and the two began a long correspondence and friendship. Gadsden was eventually known as "the Sam Adams of the South".<ref name="ANB" /> |
In 1766, the assembly made him one of their delegates to the [[Stamp Act Congress]] in [[New York City]], which was called to protest the [[Stamp Act 1765|Stamp Act]]. While his fellow delegates [[Thomas Lynch (statesman)|Thomas Lynch]] and [[John Rutledge]] served on committees to draft appeals to the [[House of Lords]] and [[House of Commons of the United Kingdom|Commons]] respectively, Gadsden refused any such assignment, since in his view the British parliament had no rights in the matter. He was outspoken in his support of the [[Declaration of Rights and Grievances]] produced by the Congress. His addresses brought him to the attention of [[Samuel Adams]] of [[Massachusetts]], and the two began a long correspondence and friendship. Gadsden was eventually known as "the Sam Adams of the South".<ref name="ANB" /> |
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==Revolutionary years== |
==Revolutionary years== |
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On his return from New York, Gadsden became one of the founders and leaders of the Charleston [[Sons of Liberty]]. He had risen to the rank of lieutenant colonel in the militia. He was elected as a delegate to the [[First Continental Congress]] in 1774 and the [[Second Continental Congress]] the following year. He left Congress early in 1776 to assume command of the [[1st South Carolina Regiment]] of the Continental Army and to serve in the [[Provincial Congress]] of South Carolina.[[File:US National Park Service marker at Liberty Square, Charleston, for the Gadsden Wharf.jpg|thumb|National Park Service marker depicting Gadsden Wharf]]In February 1776, South Carolina President [[John Rutledge]] named him a brigadier general in charge of the state's military forces. As the British prepared to attack Charleston, Major General [[Charles Lee (general)|Charles Lee]] ordered outlying positions abandoned. Rutledge and the local officers disagreed. A compromise was reached and as [[William Moultrie]] prepared the defenses on [[Sullivan's Island, South Carolina|Sullivan's Island]], Gadsden paid for, and his regiment built, a bridge that would allow their escape if the position were threatened. The British attack was repulsed. |
On his return from New York, Gadsden became one of the founders and leaders of the Charleston [[Sons of Liberty]]. He had risen to the rank of lieutenant colonel in the militia. He was elected as a delegate to the [[First Continental Congress]] in 1774 and the [[Second Continental Congress]] the following year. He left Congress early in 1776 to assume command of the [[1st South Carolina Regiment]] of the Continental Army and to serve in the [[Provincial Congress]] of South Carolina. |
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[[File:US National Park Service marker at Liberty Square, Charleston, for the Gadsden Wharf.jpg|thumb|National Park Service marker depicting [[Gadsden's Wharf]]]] |
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In February 1776, South Carolina President [[John Rutledge]] named him a brigadier general in charge of the state's military forces. As the British prepared to attack Charleston, Major General [[Charles Lee (general)|Charles Lee]] ordered outlying positions abandoned. Rutledge and the local officers disagreed. A compromise was reached and as [[William Moultrie]] prepared the defenses on [[Sullivan's Island, South Carolina|Sullivan's Island]], Gadsden paid for, and his regiment built, a bridge that would allow their escape if the position were threatened. The British attack was repulsed. |
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In 1778, Gadsden was a member of the South Carolina convention that drafted a new state constitution. That same year he was named the lieutenant governor, to replace [[Henry Laurens]] who was away at the Continental Congress. He served in that office until 1780. |
In 1778, Gadsden was a member of the South Carolina convention that drafted a new state constitution. That same year he was named the lieutenant governor, to replace [[Henry Laurens]] who was away at the Continental Congress.{{citation needed|date=August 2023}} He served in that office until 1780.{{citation needed|date=August 2023}} For the first year and a half, his office was called "Vice President of South Carolina," but when the new constitution was adopted, the title was changed to the modern usage.{{clarify|date=August 2023|reason=When did Gadsden actually served as lieutenant governor of South Carolina? Current text contradicts with that at [[List of lieutenant governors of South Carolina]] and page 633 of https://www.scstatehouse.gov/man22/53_FormerLtGovs.pdf that is published by the State of South Carolina}} |
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[[File:Gadsden flag.svg|thumb|[[Gadsden flag]]|left]]When the British [[Siege of Charleston|laid siege to Charleston]] in 1780, John Rutledge, as president of the council, fled to North Carolina to ensure a "government in exile" should the city fall. Gadsden remained, along with Governor [[Rawlins Lowndes]]. General [[Benjamin Lincoln]] surrendered the Continental Army garrison on May 12 to General [[Henry Clinton (British Army officer, born 1730)|Henry Clinton]]. At the same time, Gadsden represented the civil government and surrendered the city. He was sent on parole to his Charleston house. |
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===Prisoner of war=== |
===Prisoner of war=== |
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After Clinton returned to New York, the new British commander in the South, General [[Charles Cornwallis, 1st Marquess Cornwallis|Charles Cornwallis]], changed the rules. On August 27, 1780, he arrested about 20 of the civil officers then on parole. They were marched as prisoners to a ship and taken to [[St. Augustine, Florida]]. When they arrived, Governor [[Patrick Tonyn]] offered the freedom of the town if they would give their parole. Most accepted, but Gadsden refused claiming that the British had already violated one parole, and he could not give his word to a false system. As a result, he spent the next 42 weeks in solitary confinement in a prison room at the old Spanish fortress of [[Castillo de San Marcos]]. When they were |
After Clinton returned to New York, the new British commander in the South, General [[Charles Cornwallis, 1st Marquess Cornwallis|Charles Cornwallis]], changed the rules. On August 27, 1780, he arrested about 20 of the civil officers then on parole. They were marched as prisoners to a ship and taken to [[St. Augustine, Florida]]. When they arrived, Governor [[Patrick Tonyn]] offered the freedom of the town if they would give their parole. Most accepted, but Gadsden refused claiming that the British had already violated one parole, and he could not give his word to a false system. As a result, he spent the next 42 weeks in solitary confinement in a prison room at the old Spanish fortress of [[Castillo de San Marcos]]. When they were released in 1781, they were sent by merchant ship to Philadelphia. Once there, Gadsden learned of the defeat of Cornwallis' subordinate [[Banastre Tarleton]] at [[Battle of Cowpens|Cowpens]] and Cornwallis' subsequent movement to [[Yorktown, Virginia|Yorktown]]. Gadsden hurried home to help the restoration of South Carolina's civil government. |
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==Later life== |
==Later life== |
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In 1798, he built the imposing house at 329 East Bay Street in the [[Ansonborough]] area of Charleston that remained in the family for more than a century;<ref name="house" /> famous ironworker [[Philip Simmons]] built the gates that incorporate a snake motif, drawn from the "Don't Tread on Me" flag that Gadsden designed. |
In 1798, he built the imposing house at 329 East Bay Street in the [[Ansonborough]] area of Charleston that remained in the family for more than a century;<ref name="house" /> famous ironworker [[Philip Simmons]] built the gates that incorporate a snake motif, drawn from the "Don't Tread on Me" flag that Gadsden designed. |
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Gadsden was married three times and had four children with his second wife. |
Gadsden was married three times and had four children with his second wife. Three of his grandsons, all brothers, were also notable:<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://politicalgraveyard.com/bio/gabaldon-gafney.html|title=The Political Graveyard: Index to Politicians: Gaa to Gagan|website=politicalgraveyard.com}}</ref> |
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* [[Christopher Edwards Gadsden]], who served as the fourth [[Episcopal Church (United States)|Episcopal]] [[Episcopal Diocese of South Carolina (before 2012)|Bishop of South Carolina]] |
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* [[James Gadsden]], for whom the [[Gadsden Purchase]] of Arizona was named |
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* [[John Gadsden]], who served two terms as the [[Mayor of Charleston]] |
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Gadsden died from an accidental fall on August 28, 1805, in Charleston, and is buried there in [[St. Philip's Episcopal Church (Charleston, South Carolina)|St. Philip's Churchyard]]. |
Gadsden died from an accidental fall on August 28, 1805, in Charleston, and is buried there in [[St. Philip's Episcopal Church (Charleston, South Carolina)|St. Philip's Churchyard]]. |
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== Legacy == |
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The Gadsden flag has come to symbolize [[individualism]], the American Revolution, and [[liberty]].<ref>{{Cite web |date=2016-05-20 |title=Battery Gadsden |url=https://www.scpictureproject.org/charleston-county/battery-gadsden.html |access-date=2020-08-02 |website=SC Picture Project |language=en-US}}</ref> |
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[[Battery Gadsden]], an extension of Fort Moultrie on Sullivan's Island, is named after him.<ref>{{Cite web |date=2016-05-20 |title=Battery Gadsden |url=https://www.scpictureproject.org/charleston-county/battery-gadsden.html |access-date=2020-08-02 |website=SC Picture Project |language=en-US}}</ref> |
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==References== |
==References== |
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==Further reading== |
==Further reading== |
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*Godbold, E. Stanly, Jr., and Robert Woody. ''Christopher Gadsden and the American Revolution''. |
*Godbold, E. Stanly, Jr., and Robert Woody (1983). ''Christopher Gadsden and the American Revolution''. The [[University of Tennessee Press]]. {{ISBN|0-87049-363-9}}. |
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*McDonough, Daniel. ''Christopher Gadsden and Henry Laurens: The Parallel Lives of Two American Patriots.'' [[Susquehanna University Press]], |
*McDonough, Daniel (2000). ''Christopher Gadsden and Henry Laurens: The Parallel Lives of Two American Patriots.'' [[Susquehanna University Press]], {{ISBN|1-57591-039-X}}. |
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*Walsh, Richard, ed. ''The Writings of Christopher Gadsden, 1746–1805''. [[University of South Carolina Press]] |
*Walsh, Richard, ed. (1996). ''The Writings of Christopher Gadsden, 1746–1805''. [[University of South Carolina Press]]. |
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*{{cite web|author=Lewis, J.D.|title=The American Revolution in South Carolina, Christopher Gadsden|url=http://www.carolana.com/SC/Revolution/patriot_leaders_sc_christopher_gadsden.html|access-date=March 25, 2019}} |
* {{cite web|author=Lewis, J.D.|title=The American Revolution in South Carolina, Christopher Gadsden|url=http://www.carolana.com/SC/Revolution/patriot_leaders_sc_christopher_gadsden.html|access-date=March 25, 2019}} |
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==External links== |
==External links== |
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[[Category:Accidental deaths in South Carolina]] |
[[Category:Accidental deaths in South Carolina]] |
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[[Category:American Revolutionary War prisoners of war held by Great Britain]] |
[[Category:American Revolutionary War prisoners of war held by Great Britain]] |
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[[Category: |
[[Category:American people of English descent]] |
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[[Category:Continental Congressmen from South Carolina]] |
[[Category:Continental Congressmen from South Carolina]] |
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[[Category:18th-century Anglicans]] |
[[Category:18th-century Anglicans]] |
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[[Category:American slave owners]] |
[[Category:American slave owners]] |
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[[Category:Signers of the Continental Association]] |
[[Category:Signers of the Continental Association]] |
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[[Category:18th-century American slave traders]] |
Latest revision as of 19:33, 21 October 2024
Christopher Gadsden | |
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7th Lieutenant Governor of South Carolina | |
In office January 24, 1780 – January 31, 1782 | |
Governor | John Rutledge |
Preceded by | Thomas Bee |
Succeeded by | Richard Hutson |
Personal details | |
Born | Charleston, South Carolina, British America | February 16, 1724
Died | August 28, 1805 Charleston, South Carolina, U.S. | (aged 81)
Relatives |
|
Military Service | |
Allegiance | United States |
Service | South Carolina Militia, Continental Line, State Troops |
Years of service | 1776–1777 |
Rank | Brigadier General |
Commands | South Carolina 1st Regiment (Infantry) |
Christopher Gadsden (February 16, 1724 – August 28, 1805) was an American politician who was the principal leader of the South Carolina Patriot movement during the American Revolution. He was a delegate to the Continental Congress, a brigadier general in the Continental Army during the American Revolutionary War, Lieutenant Governor of South Carolina, a merchant, and the designer of the Gadsden flag. He is a signatory to the Continental Association.
Early life
[edit]Gadsden was born in 1724 in Charleston, South Carolina. He was the son of Thomas Gadsden (b. 1701), who had been in the Royal Navy before becoming customs collector for the Port of Charleston. His grandfather, Edward Gadsden, was born in Wiltshire, England in 1672 and emigrated to South Carolina in 1695. He was sent to school near Bristol, England. He returned to America in 1740 and served as an apprentice at a counting house in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. He inherited a large fortune from his father who died in 1741. From 1745 to 1746 he was a purser on a British warship during King George's War. He entered into mercantile ventures and by 1747 had earned enough to return to South Carolina and buy back the land his father had sold because he needed the money to pay off debts. He built Beneventum Plantation House in about 1750.[1]
Views on slavery
[edit]While Gadsden vehemently supported John Adams, who was opposed to slavery and promoted a gradual approach to abolition, the U.S. National Park Service writes that "by 1774, Christopher Gadsden owned four stores, several merchant vessels, two rice plantations, a residential district in Charleston called Gadsdenboro, and a large wharf on the Cooper River."[2] Of all the colonies, South Carolina received the highest number of slaves from Africa, and most of these came ashore on Gadsden's Wharf in Charleston.[3] Gadsden himself held slaves, as did many rice plantation owners in South Carolina who used the labor of enslaved Africans to grow and sell agricultural products. In A Forgotten Founder: The Life and Legacy of Christopher Gadsden, Kelcey Eldridge states that, "at the time of his death, he owned enough slaves to 'divide my Estate real and personal as well as my negroes as otherwise into nineteen equal parts or shares'"; but it is unknown just how many enslaved people he purchased, owned, or used.[4]
Seven Years' War
[edit]Gadsden began his rise to prominence as a merchant and patriot in Charleston. He prospered as a merchant and built the wharf that bears his name. Between its completion in 1767 until 1787 and 1803 to 1808,[5] it is estimated that 40% of all African slaves (about 100,000 enslaved people) were brought to America through his wharf.[5] He was captain of a militia company during a 1759 expedition against the Cherokee. He was first elected to the Commons House of Assembly in 1757 and began a long friction with autocratic royal governors.[6] His re-election to the Commons in 1762 was beset with minor voting irregularities, which resulted in Governor Boone refusing to administer the oath of office for Gadsden and dissolving the entire Commons. This perceived excess of gubernatorial power led to a political culture in South Carolina of legislative dominance over the executive branch.[6]
In 1766, the assembly made him one of their delegates to the Stamp Act Congress in New York City, which was called to protest the Stamp Act. While his fellow delegates Thomas Lynch and John Rutledge served on committees to draft appeals to the House of Lords and Commons respectively, Gadsden refused any such assignment, since in his view the British parliament had no rights in the matter. He was outspoken in his support of the Declaration of Rights and Grievances produced by the Congress. His addresses brought him to the attention of Samuel Adams of Massachusetts, and the two began a long correspondence and friendship. Gadsden was eventually known as "the Sam Adams of the South".[7]
Revolutionary years
[edit]On his return from New York, Gadsden became one of the founders and leaders of the Charleston Sons of Liberty. He had risen to the rank of lieutenant colonel in the militia. He was elected as a delegate to the First Continental Congress in 1774 and the Second Continental Congress the following year. He left Congress early in 1776 to assume command of the 1st South Carolina Regiment of the Continental Army and to serve in the Provincial Congress of South Carolina.
In February 1776, South Carolina President John Rutledge named him a brigadier general in charge of the state's military forces. As the British prepared to attack Charleston, Major General Charles Lee ordered outlying positions abandoned. Rutledge and the local officers disagreed. A compromise was reached and as William Moultrie prepared the defenses on Sullivan's Island, Gadsden paid for, and his regiment built, a bridge that would allow their escape if the position were threatened. The British attack was repulsed.
In 1778, Gadsden was a member of the South Carolina convention that drafted a new state constitution. That same year he was named the lieutenant governor, to replace Henry Laurens who was away at the Continental Congress.[citation needed] He served in that office until 1780.[citation needed] For the first year and a half, his office was called "Vice President of South Carolina," but when the new constitution was adopted, the title was changed to the modern usage.[clarification needed]
When the British laid siege to Charleston in 1780, John Rutledge, as president of the council, fled to North Carolina to ensure a "government in exile" should the city fall. Gadsden remained, along with Governor Rawlins Lowndes. General Benjamin Lincoln surrendered the Continental Army garrison on May 12 to General Henry Clinton. At the same time, Gadsden represented the civil government and surrendered the city. He was sent on parole to his Charleston house.
Prisoner of war
[edit]After Clinton returned to New York, the new British commander in the South, General Charles Cornwallis, changed the rules. On August 27, 1780, he arrested about 20 of the civil officers then on parole. They were marched as prisoners to a ship and taken to St. Augustine, Florida. When they arrived, Governor Patrick Tonyn offered the freedom of the town if they would give their parole. Most accepted, but Gadsden refused claiming that the British had already violated one parole, and he could not give his word to a false system. As a result, he spent the next 42 weeks in solitary confinement in a prison room at the old Spanish fortress of Castillo de San Marcos. When they were released in 1781, they were sent by merchant ship to Philadelphia. Once there, Gadsden learned of the defeat of Cornwallis' subordinate Banastre Tarleton at Cowpens and Cornwallis' subsequent movement to Yorktown. Gadsden hurried home to help the restoration of South Carolina's civil government.
Later life
[edit]Gadsden was returned to South Carolina's House of Representatives, then meeting at Jacksonboro. At this session, Governor Randolph and de facto President Rutledge both surrendered their offices. Gadsden was elected as the governor but felt he had to decline. His health was still impaired from his imprisonment, and an active governor was needed since the British had not yet given up Charleston. So in 1782, John Mathews became the new governor. Gadsden was also a member of the state convention in 1788 and voted for ratification of the United States Constitution.
In 1798, he built the imposing house at 329 East Bay Street in the Ansonborough area of Charleston that remained in the family for more than a century;[8] famous ironworker Philip Simmons built the gates that incorporate a snake motif, drawn from the "Don't Tread on Me" flag that Gadsden designed.
Gadsden was married three times and had four children with his second wife. Three of his grandsons, all brothers, were also notable:[9]
- Christopher Edwards Gadsden, who served as the fourth Episcopal Bishop of South Carolina
- James Gadsden, for whom the Gadsden Purchase of Arizona was named
- John Gadsden, who served two terms as the Mayor of Charleston
Gadsden died from an accidental fall on August 28, 1805, in Charleston, and is buried there in St. Philip's Churchyard.
Legacy
[edit]The Gadsden flag has come to symbolize individualism, the American Revolution, and liberty.[10]
Battery Gadsden, an extension of Fort Moultrie on Sullivan's Island, is named after him.[11]
References
[edit]- ^ "Arcadia Plantation, Georgetown County (off U.S. Hwy. 17, Waccamaw Neck)". National Register Properties in South Carolina. South Carolina Department of Archives and History. Retrieved 7 July 2012.
- ^ "Christopher Gadsden (U.S. National Park Service)". www.nps.gov. Retrieved 2022-09-09.
- ^ "Gadsden's Wharf". Preservation Society of Charleston. Retrieved 2023-07-25.
- ^ Eldridge, Kelcey (August 2018). A Forgotten Founder: The Life and Legacy of Christopher Gadsden (MA thesis). Clemson University.
- ^ a b Parker, Adam (22 October 2017). "A brief history of Gadsden's Wharf". Post and Courier. Retrieved 2021-06-28.
- ^ a b Lowell Underwood, James (1986). The Constitution of South Carolina: The Relationship of the Legislative, Executive, and Judicial Branches (1 ed.). pp. 15–18. ISBN 978-0872494435.
- ^ E. Stanly Godbold, "Gadsden, Christopher"; American National Biography Online, February 2000.
- ^ "Gadsden House". Archived from the original on 2018-02-16. Retrieved 2018-08-23.
- ^ "The Political Graveyard: Index to Politicians: Gaa to Gagan". politicalgraveyard.com.
- ^ "Battery Gadsden". SC Picture Project. 2016-05-20. Retrieved 2020-08-02.
- ^ "Battery Gadsden". SC Picture Project. 2016-05-20. Retrieved 2020-08-02.
Further reading
[edit]- Godbold, E. Stanly, Jr., and Robert Woody (1983). Christopher Gadsden and the American Revolution. The University of Tennessee Press. ISBN 0-87049-363-9.
- McDonough, Daniel (2000). Christopher Gadsden and Henry Laurens: The Parallel Lives of Two American Patriots. Susquehanna University Press, ISBN 1-57591-039-X.
- Walsh, Richard, ed. (1996). The Writings of Christopher Gadsden, 1746–1805. University of South Carolina Press.
- Lewis, J.D. "The American Revolution in South Carolina, Christopher Gadsden". Retrieved March 25, 2019.
External links
[edit]- Chisholm, Hugh, ed. (1911). . Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 11 (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press. pp. 383–384.
- United States Congress. "Christopher Gadsden (id: G000002)". Biographical Directory of the United States Congress. Retrieved on 2009-5-16
- 1724 births
- 1805 deaths
- Accidental deaths from falls
- Accidental deaths in South Carolina
- American Revolutionary War prisoners of war held by Great Britain
- American people of English descent
- Continental Congressmen from South Carolina
- 18th-century Anglicans
- 18th-century American politicians
- Continental Army generals
- Continental Army officers from South Carolina
- Flag designers
- Members of the South Carolina General Assembly
- Politicians from Charleston, South Carolina
- People of South Carolina in the American Revolution
- American slave owners
- Signers of the Continental Association
- 18th-century American slave traders