Henry Clay

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Henry Clay
Henry Clay-headshot.jpg
United States Senator
from Kentucky
In office
March 4, 1849 – June 29, 1852
Preceded by Thomas Metcalfe
Succeeded by David Meriwether
In office
November 10, 1831 – March 31, 1842
Preceded by John Rowan
Succeeded by John J. Crittenden
In office
January 4, 1810 – March 4, 1811
Preceded by Buckner Thruston
Succeeded by George M. Bibb
In office
December 29, 1806 – March 4, 1807
Preceded by John Adair
Succeeded by John Pope
9th United States Secretary of State
In office
March 4, 1825 – March 4, 1829
President John Quincy Adams
Preceded by John Quincy Adams
Succeeded by Martin Van Buren
7th Speaker of the United States House of Representatives
In office
March 4, 1823 – March 4, 1825
Preceded by Philip Pendleton Barbour
Succeeded by John W. Taylor
In office
March 4, 1815 – October 28, 1820
Preceded by Langdon Cheves
Succeeded by John W. Taylor
In office
March 4, 1811 – January 19, 1814
Preceded by Joseph Bradley Varnum
Succeeded by Langdon Cheves
Member of the U.S. House of Representatives
from Kentucky's 3rd district
In office
March 4, 1823 – March 4, 1825
Preceded by John T. Johnson
Succeeded by James Clark
Member of the U.S. House of Representatives
from Kentucky's 2nd district
In office
March 4, 1815 – March 3, 1821
Preceded by Joseph H. Hawkins
Succeeded by Samuel H. Woodson
In office
March 4, 1813 – January 19, 1814
Preceded by Samuel McKee
Succeeded by Joseph H. Hawkins
Member of the U.S. House of Representatives
from Kentucky's 5th district
In office
March 4, 1811 – March 3, 1813
Preceded by William T. Barry
Succeeded by Samuel Hopkins
Member of the Kentucky House of Representatives
In office
1808-1809
Personal details
Born April 12, 1777 (1777-04-12)
Hanover County, Virginia, U.S.
Died June 29, 1852 (1852-06-30) (aged 75)
Washington, D.C., U.S.
Political party Democratic-Republican (1803–25)
National Republican (1825–33)
Whig (1833–52)
Spouse(s) Lucretia Hart (m. 1799–1852); his death
Children 11 children, including Thomas, Henry, Jr., James Brown Clay and John Morrison Clay
Residence Ashland, Lexington, Kentucky
Alma mater College of William and Mary
Profession Lawyer
Religion Episcopalian
Signature

Henry Clay, Sr. (April 12, 1777 – June 29, 1852) was an American lawyer and planter, politician, and skilled orator who represented Kentucky in both the United States Senate and House of Representatives. He served three non-consecutive terms as Speaker of the House of Representatives and served as Secretary of State under President John Quincy Adams from 1825 to 1829. Clay ran for the presidency in 1824, 1832 and 1844, while also seeking the Whig Party nomination in 1840 and 1848. However, he was unsuccessful.

Clay was a dominant figure in both the First and Second Party systems. As a leading war hawk in 1812, he favored war with Britain and played a significant role in leading the nation into the War of 1812.[1] In 1824 he ran for president and lost, but maneuvered House voting in favor of John Quincy Adams, who appointed him as Secretary of State. Opposing candidate Andrew Jackson denounced the actions of Clay and Adams as part of a "corrupt bargain." Clay ran for president again, and lost the general election in 1832, as the candidate of the National Republican Party, and in 1844 as the candidate of the Whig Party. He was a strong proponent of the American System, fighting for an increase in tariffs to foster industry in the United States, the use of federal funding to build and maintain infrastructure, and a strong national bank. He opposed the annexation of Texas and "Manifest Destiny" policy of Democrats, fearing it would inject the slavery issue into politics. This cost him votes in the close presidential election of 1844. Clay later opposed the Mexican-American War.

Known as "The Great Compromiser", Clay brokered important agreements during the Nullification Crisis and on the slavery issue. As part of the "Great Triumvirate" or "Immortal Trio," along with his colleagues Daniel Webster and John C. Calhoun, he was instrumental in formulating the Missouri Compromise of 1820, the Compromise Tariff of 1833, and the Compromise of 1850 to ease sectional tensions. He was viewed as the primary representative of Western interests in this group, and was given the names "Henry of the West" and "The Western Star."[2] As a plantation owner, Clay held slaves during his lifetime, but freed them in his will.[3]

Abraham Lincoln, the Whig leader in Illinois, was a great admirer of Clay, saying he was "my ideal of a great man." Lincoln wholeheartedly supported Clay's economic programs.[4] In 1957, a Senate Committee selected Clay as one of the five greatest U.S. Senators, along with Daniel Webster, John C. Calhoun, Robert La Follette, and Robert A. Taft.[5]

Early life and education[edit]

Childhood[edit]

Henry Clay was born on April 12, 1777, at the Clay homestead in Hanover County, Virginia, in a story-and-a-half frame house. It was an above-average home for a "common" Virginia planter of that time. At the time of his death, Clay's father owned more than 22 slaves, making him part of the planter class in Virginia (those men who owned 20 or more slaves).[6] Henry Clay was of entirely English descent, his ancestry could be traced back to colonial Virginia.[7]

Henry was the seventh of nine children of the Reverend John Clay and Elizabeth (née Hudson) Clay.[8] His father, a Baptist minister nicknamed "Sir John," died four years after the boy's birth (1781).[6] The father left Henry and his brothers two slaves each, and his wife 18 slaves and 464 acres (188 ha) of land.[9] Henry Clay was a second cousin of Cassius Marcellus Clay, who became a politician and an abolitionist in Kentucky.

The widow Elizabeth Clay married Capt. Henry Watkins, who was an affectionate stepfather. Henry Watkins moved the family to Richmond, Virginia.[10] Elizabeth had seven more children with Watkins, bearing a total of sixteen.[9]

Education[edit]

His stepfather secured Clay employment in the office of the Virginia Court of Chancery, where the youth displayed an aptitude for law. There he became friends with George Wythe. Hampered by a crippled hand, Wythe chose Clay as his secretary.[11] After Clay was employed as Wythe's amanuensis for four years, the chancellor took an active interest in Clay's future; he arranged a position for him with the Virginia attorney general, Robert Brooke. Clay read law by working and studying with Wythe, Chancellor of the Commonwealth of Virginia (also a mentor to Thomas Jefferson and John Marshall, among others), and Brooke. Clay was admitted to the bar to practice law in 1797.[12]

Marriage and family[edit]

Henry Clay and his wife, Lucretia (née Hart)

After beginning his law career, on April 11, 1799, Clay married Lucretia Hart at the Hart home in Lexington, Kentucky. One of her brothers was Nathaniel G. S. Hart, who later served as a captain in the War of 1812 and was killed in the Massacre of the River Raisin.[13]

Clay and his wife had eleven children (six daughters and five sons): Henrietta (1800–1801), Theodore (1802–1870), Thomas (1803–1871), Susan (1805–1825), Anne (1807–1835), Lucretia (1809–1823), Henry, Jr. (1811–1847), Eliza (1813–1825), Laura (1815–1817), James Brown Clay (1817–1864), and John Morrison Clay (1821–1887).

Seven of Clay's children died before him. By 1835 all six daughters had died of varying causes, two when very young, two as children, and the last two as young women: from whooping cough, yellow fever, and complications of childbirth, respectively. Henry Clay, Jr. was killed during the Mexican–American War at the Battle of Buena Vista.

Lucretia Hart Clay survived her husband, dying in 1864 at the age of 83. She is interred with her husband in the vault of his monument at the Lexington Cemetery. Henry and Lucretia Clay were great-grandparents of the suffragette Madeline McDowell Breckinridge.[14]

Early law and political career[edit]

Legal career[edit]

View of Henry Clay's law office (1803-1810), Lexington, Kentucky

In November 1797, Clay relocated to Lexington, Kentucky, the growing town near where his parents and siblings then resided in Woodford County. He soon established a reputation for his legal skills and courtroom oratory.[15] Some of his clients paid him with horses and others with land. Clay came to own town lots and the Kentucky Hotel.

By 1812, Clay owned a productive 600-acre (240 ha) plantation, which he called "Ashland," and numerous slaves to work the land.[3] He held 60 slaves at the peak of operations, and likely produced tobacco and hemp, the two chief commodity crops of the Bluegrass Region.

One of Clay's clients was his father-in-law, Colonel Thomas Hart, an early settler of Kentucky and a prominent businessman.[13] Clay's most notable client was Aaron Burr in 1806, after the US District Attorney Joseph Hamilton Daveiss indicted him for planning an expedition into Spanish Territory west of the Mississippi River. Clay and his law partner John Allen successfully defended Burr.[16] Some years later Thomas Jefferson convinced Clay that Daveiss had been right in his charges. Clay was so upset that many years later, when he met Burr again, Clay refused to shake his hand.[17]

State legislator[edit]

In 1803, although not old enough to be elected, Clay was appointed a representative of Fayette County in the Kentucky General Assembly.[18] As a legislator, Clay advocated a liberal interpretation of the state's constitution and the gradual emancipation of slavery in Kentucky. The political realities of the time forced him to abandon that position, as slaveholders formed the elite in Kentucky.[3] Clay also advocated moving the state capitol from Frankfort to Lexington. He defended the Kentucky Insurance Company, which he saved from an attempt in 1804 by Felix Grundy to repeal its monopolistic charter.[19]

First Senate appointment and eligibility[edit]

Clay's influence in Kentucky state politics was such that in 1806 the Kentucky legislature elected him to the Senate seat of John Breckinridge, who had resigned when appointed as US Attorney General. The legislature first chose John Adair to complete Breckinridge's term, but he had to resign over his alleged role in the Burr Conspiracy.[20] On December 29, 1806, Clay was sworn in as senator, serving for slightly more than two months that first time.[21]

When elected by the legislature, Clay was below the constitutionally required age of thirty. His age did not appear to have been noticed by any other Senator, and perhaps not by Clay.[21] His term ended before his thirtieth birthday.[22] Such an age qualification issue has occurred with only two other U.S. Senators, Armistead Thomson Mason (aged 28 in 1816), and John Eaton (aged 28 in 1818). Such an occurrence, however, has not been repeated since.[23] In 1934, Rush D. Holt, Sr. was elected to the Senate at the age of 29; he waited until he turned 30 (on the following June 19) to take the oath of office. In November 1972, Joe Biden was elected to the Senate at the age of 29, but he reached his 30th birthday before the swearing-in ceremony for incoming senators in January 1973.[24]

Speaker of the State House and duel with Humphrey Marshall[edit]

When Clay returned to Kentucky in 1807, he was elected as the Speaker of the state House of Representatives.[25] On January 3, 1809, Clay introduced a resolution to require members to wear homespun suits rather than those made of imported British broadcloth. Two members voted against the measure. One was Humphrey Marshall, an "aristocratic lawyer who possessed a sarcastic tongue," who had been hostile toward Clay in 1806 during the trial of Aaron Burr.[26]

On January 4, 1809 Clay and Marshall nearly came to blows on the Assembly floor, and Clay challenged Marshall to a duel. It was still used as a method of settling disputes of honor. It took place on January 19. Apparently to keep any blood from being spilled in their home state of Kentucky,[27] they had chosen a dueling ground in Indiana, directly across the Ohio River from what was then Shippingport, Kentucky and near the mouth of Silver Creek.[28][29][30]

They each had three turns to shoot. Clay grazed Marshall once, just below the chest. Marshall hit Clay once in the thigh. Both survived.[26]

Second Senate appointment[edit]

In 1810, United States Senator Buckner Thruston resigned to serve as a judge on the United States Circuit Court, and Clay was again selected by the legislature to fill his seat.

Speaker of the House[edit]

Portrait by Matthew Harris Jouett, 1818

Early years[edit]

In the summer of 1811, Clay was elected to the United States House of Representatives. He was chosen Speaker of the House on the first day of his first session, something never done before or since (except for the first ever session of Congress back in 1789). During the fourteen years following his first election, Clay was re-elected five times to the House and to the speakership.[31] Like other Southern Congressmen, Clay took domestic slaves to Washington, DC to support his household. They included Aaron and Charlotte Dupuy, their son Charles, and daughter Mary Ann.[32]

Changes as Speaker[edit]

Before Clay's election as Speaker of the House, the position had been that of a rule enforcer and mediator. Clay made the position one of political power second only to the President of the United States. He immediately appointed members of the War Hawk faction (of which he was the "guiding spirit")[1] to all the important committees, effectively giving him control of the House. This was a singular achievement for a 34-year-old House freshman. During his early House service, Clay strongly opposed the creation of a National Bank, in part because of his personal ownership in several small banks in his hometown of Lexington. Later he changed his position. When he was seeking the presidency, Clay gave strong support for the Second Bank of the United States.

War Hawks[edit]

The War Hawks, mostly from the South and the West, strongly supported war against Great Britain due to British violations of United States maritime rights and impressment of U.S. sailors, while also fearing British designs on U.S. territory in the Old Northwest and wishing to expand. [33] As the Congressional leader of the Democratic-Republican Party, Clay took charge of the agenda, especially as a "War Hawk." Later, as one of the peace commissioners, Clay helped negotiate the Treaty of Ghent and signed it on December 24, 1814.[3] In 1815, while still in Europe, he helped negotiate a commerce treaty with Great Britain.

Work in Liberia[edit]

Henry Clay helped establish and became president in 1816 of the American Colonization Society, a group that wanted to establish a colony for free American blacks in Africa; it founded Monrovia, in what became Liberia, for that purpose. The group was made up of both abolitionists from the North, who wanted to end slavery, and slaveholders, who wanted to deport free blacks to reduce what they considered a threat to the stability of slave society. On the "amalgamation" of the black and white races, Clay said that "The God of Nature, by the differences of color and physical constitution, has decreed against it."[34] Clay presided at the founding meeting of the ACS on December 21, 1816, at the Davis Hotel in Washington, D.C. Attendees included Robert Finley, James Monroe, Bushrod Washington, Andrew Jackson, Francis Scott Key, and Daniel Webster.

The "American System"[edit]

Henry Clay and John C. Calhoun helped to pass the Tariff of 1816 as part of the national economic plan Clay called "The American System," which is rooted in Alexander Hamilton's American School. Described later by Friedrich List, it was designed to allow the fledgling American manufacturing sector, largely centered on the eastern seaboard, to compete with British manufacturing through the creation of tariffs.

After the conclusion of the War of 1812, British factories were overwhelming American ports with inexpensive goods. To persuade voters in the western states to support the tariff, Clay advocated federal government support for internal improvements to infrastructure, principally roads and canals. These internal improvements would be financed by the tariff and by sale of the public lands, prices for which would be kept high to generate revenue. Finally, a national bank would stabilize the currency and serve as the nexus of a truly national financial system.

Foreign policy[edit]

In foreign policy, Clay was the leading American supporter of independence movements and revolutions in Latin America after 1817. Between 1821 and 1826, the U.S. recognized all the new countries, except Uruguay (whose independence was debated and recognized only later). When in 1826 the U.S. was invited to attend the Columbia Conference of new nations, opposition emerged, and the American delegation never arrived. Clay supported the Greek independence revolutionaries in 1824 who wished to separate from the Ottoman Empire, an early move into European affairs.

Clay also strongly desired the office of Secretary of State in the administration of James Monroe, who was elected president in 1816. When Monroe, largely in an effort to placate New England Federalists, gave the office to John Quincy Adams instead, Clay became so bitter that he declined Monroe's offer for him to become Secretary of War, refused to allow Monroe's inauguration to take place in the House Chamber, and subsequently did not attend Monroe's outdoor inauguration.[35]

The Missouri Compromise and 1820s[edit]

In 1820 a dispute erupted over the extension of slavery in Missouri Territory. Clay helped settle this dispute by gaining Congressional approval for a plan called the "Missouri Compromise". It brought in Maine as a free state and Missouri as a slave state (thus maintaining the balance in the Senate, which had included 11 free and 11 slave states), and it forbade slavery north of 36° 30' (the northern boundary of Arkansas and the latitude line) except in Missouri.

Presidential Election of 1824 and Secretary of State[edit]

Main article: Election of 1824
Portrait of Henry Clay

By 1824, the unparalleled success of the Democratic-Republican Party had driven all other parties from the field. Four major candidates-Adams, Andrew Jackson, William H. Crawford, and Clay-sought the office of president. Because of the unusually large number of candidates receiving electoral votes, no candidate secured a majority of votes in the electoral college. According to the terms of the Twelfth Amendment to the United States Constitution, the top three electoral vote-getters advanced to the runoff in the House of Representatives. Having finished fourth, Clay was eliminated from contention; the top three were Jackson, Adams, and Crawford. Clay, who was Speaker of the House, supported Adams, and his endorsement ultimately secured Adams' win in the House.

Clay used his political clout to secure the victory for Adams, who he felt would be both more sympathetic to Clay's political views and more likely to appoint Clay to a cabinet position. When Clay was appointed Secretary of State, his maneuver was called a "corrupt bargain" by many of Jackson's supporters and tarnished Clay's reputation.[36] It also marked the beginning of an intense personal rivalry between Clay and Jackson.

Slave freedom suit[edit]

Main article: Charlotte Dupuy

As Secretary of State, Clay lived with his family and slaves in Decatur House on Lafayette Square. As he was preparing to return to Lexington in 1829, his slave Charlotte Dupuy sued Clay for her freedom and that of her two children, based on a promise by an earlier owner. Her legal challenge to slavery preceded the more famous Dred Scott case by 27 years. The "freedom suit" received a fair amount of attention in the press at the time. Dupuy's attorney gained an order from the court for her to remain in DC until the case was settled, and she worked for wages for 18 months for Martin Van Buren, Clay's successor as Secretary of State and the Decatur House. Clay returned to Ashland with Aaron, Charles and Mary Ann Dupuy.[37][38]

The jury ruled against Dupuy, deciding that any agreement with her previous master Condon did not bear on Clay. Because Dupuy refused to return voluntarily to Kentucky, Clay had his agent arrest her. She was imprisoned in Alexandria, Virginia, before Clay arranged for her transport to New Orleans, where he placed her with his daughter and son-in-law Martin Duralde. Mary Ann Dupuy was sent to join her mother, and they worked as domestic slaves for the Duraldes for another decade.[37]

In 1840 Henry Clay finally gave Charlotte and her daughter Mary Ann Dupuy their freedom. He kept her son Charles Dupuy as a personal servant, frequently citing him as an example of how well he treated his slaves. Clay granted Charles Dupuy his freedom in 1844.[37] While no deed of emancipation has been found for Aaron Dupuy, in 1860 he and Charlotte were living together as free black residents in Fayette County, Kentucky. He may have been freed or "given his time" by one of Clay's sons, as Dupuy continued to work at Ashland, for pay.[32]

Today, Decatur House, in Washington, DC, is a National Historic Landmark and museum on Lafayette Square near the White House and has exhibits on urban slavery and Charlotte Dupuy's freedom suit against Henry Clay.[37]

Senate career[edit]

The Nullification Crisis[edit]

Main article: Nullification Crisis

After the passage of the Tariff of 1828, dubbed the "tariff of abominations" which raised tariffs considerably in an attempt to protect fledgling factories built under previous tariff legislation, South Carolina declared its right to nullify federal tariff legislation and stopped assessing the tariff on imports. It threatened to secede from the Union if the Federal government tried to enforce the tariff laws. Furious, President Jackson threatened to lead an army to South Carolina and hang any man who refused to obey the law.

The crisis worsened until 1833. Clay was by that time a U.S. Senator again, having been re-elected by Kentucky in 1831. His return to the U.S. Senate, after 20 years, 8 months, 7 days out of office, marks the fourth longest gap in service to the chamber in history.[39]

In 1833, Clay helped to broker a deal in Congress to lower the tariff gradually, known as the Compromise Tariff of 1833.[40] This measure helped to preserve the supremacy of the Federal government over the states, but the crisis was indicative of the developing conflict between the northern and southern United States over economics and slavery.

Opposition to Jackson and creation of Whig Party[edit]

Portrait of Henry Clay

After the election of Andrew Jackson, Clay led the opposition to Jackson's policies. His supporters included the National Republicans, who were beginning to identify as "Whigs" in honor of ancestors during the Revolutionary War. They opposed the "tyranny" of Jackson, as their ancestors had opposed the tyranny of King George III. Clay strongly opposed Jackson's refusal to renew the charter of the Second Bank of the United States, and advocated passage of a resolution to censure Jackson for his actions.

Clay's American System ran into strong opposition from President Jackson's administration. A key point of contention between the two men was over the Maysville Road. It would authorize federal funding for a project to construct a road linking Lexington and the Ohio River; however all of the road would be inside Kentucky. Jackson vetoed it because he felt that it did not constitute interstate commerce, and he feared it would fund corruption. Jackson opposed using the federal government to promote economic modernization, thereby appealing to his agrarian base that wanted rural expansion but distrusted cities.[41]

Presidential campaigns[edit]

In 1832 the National Republicans unanimously nominated Clay for the presidency, while the Democrats nominated the sitting President Jackson. The main issue was the policy of continuing the Second Bank of the United States. Clay lost by a wide margin to the highly popular Jackson (55% to 37%).[42]

In 1840, Clay was a candidate for the Whig nomination, but he was defeated at the party convention by supporters of war hero William Henry Harrison. Harrison was chosen because his war record was attractive, and he was seen as more likely to win than Clay.

In 1844, Clay was nominated by the Whigs against James K. Polk, the Democratic candidate. Polk won by 170 to 105 electoral votes, carrying 15 of the 26 states. Polk's populist stances on territorial expansion figured prominently—particularly his opinion on US control over the entire Oregon Country and his support for the annexation of Texas. Clay opposed annexing Texas on the grounds that it would once again bring the issue of slavery to the forefront of the nation's political dialog and would draw the ire of Mexico, from which Texas had declared its independence in 1836. Despite Polk's populism, the election was close; New York's 36 electoral votes proved the difference, and went to Polk by a slim 5,000 vote margin. Liberty Party candidate James G. Birney won slightly more than 15,000 votes in New York and likely attracted votes that might have gone to Clay. Clay's warnings about Texas proved prescient. The US annexation of Texas led to the Mexican–American War (1846–1848) (in which his namesake son died). The North and South came to increased tensions during Polk's Presidency over the extension of slavery into Texas and beyond.[43]

Return to the Senate[edit]

After losing the Whig Party presidential nomination to General Zachary Taylor in 1848, Clay decided to retire to his Ashland estate in Kentucky. Retired for less than a year, he was in 1849 again elected to the U.S. Senate from Kentucky. During his term, the controversy over the expansion of slavery in new lands had reemerged with the addition of the lands ceded to the United States by Mexico in the Treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo at the conclusion of the Mexican–American War. In 1846, David Wilmot, a Pennsylvania congressman, had proposed preventing the extension of slavery into any of the new territory in a failed proposal referred to as the "Wilmot Proviso."[44]

The Compromise of 1850[edit]

Main article: Compromise of 1850

Clay played a central role in designing a compromise in 1850 between North and South to resolve the increasingly dangerous slavery question. He acquired the help of Illinois Senator Stephen Arnold Douglas, a Democrat, to help guide the measures through Congress and thus prevent civil war.[45]

On January 29, 1850, Clay proposed a series of resolutions, which he considered to reconcile Northern and Southern interests, what would widely be called the Compromise of 1850. Clay originally intended the resolutions to be voted on separately, but at the urging of southerners he agreed to the creation of a Committee of Thirteen to consider the measures. The committee was formed on April 17. On May 8, as chair of the committee, Clay presented an omnibus bill linking all of the resolutions.[46][47] The resolutions included:

  • Admission of California as a free state, ending the balance of free and slave states in the senate.
  • Organization of the Utah and New Mexico territories without any slavery provisions, giving the right to determine whether to allow slavery to the territorial populations.[44]
  • Prohibition of the slave trade, not the ownership of slaves, in the District of Columbia.[44]
  • A more stringent Fugitive Slave Act.[44]
  • Establishment of boundaries for the state of Texas in exchange for federal payment of Texas's ten million dollar debt.[44]
  • A declaration by Congress that it did not have the authority to interfere with the interstate slave trade.[48]

The bill was opposed for different reasons by hardliners on both sides. Senator John C. Calhoun, Clay's former ally, composed a speech arguing against the compromise and warning of the possibility of disunion. Calhoun was too ill to read the speech, and Virginia Senator James Murray Mason did so for him on March 4. Many of the more anti-slavery northerners, such as New York Senator William H. Seward, opposed the compromise as well.[49] However, on March 7, Daniel Webster gave a speech in which he argued in favor of the compromise.[50]

The omnibus bill, despite Clay's efforts, failed in a crucial vote on July 31 with the majority of his Whig Party and many Southern Democrats opposed. He announced on the Senate floor the next day that he intended to persevere and pass each individual part of the bill. Clay was physically exhausted; the tuberculosis that would eventually kill him began to take its toll. Clay left the Senate to recuperate in Newport, Rhode Island. Douglas separated the bills and guided them through the Senate.[51] President Millard Fillmore, a Whig who took office following the death of Taylor, who had not supported the compromise, signed the bills into law.[52]

Clay was given much of the credit for the Compromise's success. It quieted the controversy between Northerners and Southerners over the expansion of slavery, and delayed secession and civil war for another decade. Senator Henry S. Foote of Mississippi, who had suggested the creation of the Committee of Thirteen, later said, "Had there been one such man in the Congress of the United States as Henry Clay in 1860–'61 there would, I feel sure, have been no civil war."[53]

Death and estate[edit]

Clay's estate, Ashland, in Lexington, Kentucky

Clay continued to serve both the Union and his home state of Kentucky. On June 29, 1852, he died of tuberculosis in Washington, D.C., at the age of 75.

He was buried in Lexington Cemetery, and Theodore Frelinghuysen, Clay's vice-presidential candidate in the election of 1844, gave the eulogy.[54] Clay's headstone reads: "I know no North—no South—no East—no West." Even though the 1852 pro-slavery[55] novel Life at the South; or, "Uncle Tom's Cabin" As It Is, by W.L.G. Smith, is dedicated to his memory,[56] Clay's Will freed all the slaves he held.[3][dead link]

Ashland, named for the many ash trees on the property, was Clay's plantation and mansion for many years. He held as many as 60 slaves at the peak of the plantation operations. It was there he introduced the Hereford livestock breed to the United States.

By the time of his death, his only surviving children were sons Theodore, Thomas, James Brown Clay and John Morrison Clay, who inherited the estate and took portions for use. For several years (1866–1878), James Clay allowed the mansion to be used as a residence for the regent of Kentucky University, forerunner of the University of Kentucky and present-day Transylvania University. The mansion and estate were later rebuilt and remodeled by Clay's descendants. John Clay designated his portion of the estate as Ashland Stud, which he devoted to breeding thoroughbred horses.

Maintained and operated as a museum, today Ashland includes 17 acres (6.9 ha) of the original estate grounds. It is located on Richmond Road (US 25) in Lexington. It is open to the public (admission charged).

Henry Clay is credited with introducing the mint julep drink to Washington, D.C., at the Willard Hotel during his residence as a senator in the city.[57]

Monuments and memorials[edit]

Tomb in Lexington, KY
Henry Clay Monument in New Orleans ca.1890

Memberships and other honors[edit]

Elected a member of the American Antiquarian Society in 1820.[60]

See also[edit]

Notes[edit]

  1. ^ a b Eaton, Clement (1957). Henry Clay and the Art of American Politics. Boston, MA: Little, Brown and Company. p. 25. 
  2. ^ Eaton, Clement (1957). Henry Clay and the Art of American Politics. Boston, MA: Little, Brown and Company. pp. 22, 26. 
  3. ^ a b c d e Henry Clay Biography: The Great Compromiser, Biography.com.
  4. ^ Shearer Davis Bowman, "Comparing Henry Clay and Abraham Lincoln," Register of the Kentucky Historical Society. 106 (Summer–Autumn 2008), 495–512.
  5. ^ "The "Famous Five"". Retrieved 2007-01-29. 
  6. ^ a b Eaton, Clement (1957). Henry Clay and the Art of American Politics. Boston, MA: Little, Brown and Company. p. 5. 
  7. ^ Henry Clay: The Great Compromiser By Howard Walter Caldwell, Graeme Mercer Adam, Charles Keyser Edmunds pg. 5
  8. ^ Van Deusen, 4.
  9. ^ a b Eaton, Clement (1957). Henry Clay and the Art of American Politics. Boston, MA: Little, Brown and Company. p. 6. 
  10. ^ "Henry Clay", Encyclopedia of World Biography.
  11. ^ Eaton, Clement (1957). Henry Clay and the Art of American Politics. Boston, MA: Little, Brown and Company. p. 7. 
  12. ^ Schurz, Carl (1915). Henry Clay, Volume 1. Houghton Mifflin. pp. 8–9. 
  13. ^ a b Eaton, Clement (1957). Henry Clay and the Art of American Politics. Boston, MA: Little, Brown and Company. p. 12. 
  14. ^ "Madeline McDowell Breckenridge (Women in Kentucky – Reform)". Kentucky Commission on Women. Retrieved 2011-01-19. 
  15. ^ "Death of Henry Clay: Sketch of His Life and Public Career", New York Times. June 30, 1852, p. 1.
  16. ^ Kinkead, Elizabeth Shelby (1896). A history of Kentucky. American book company. p. 111. Retrieved September 4, 2011. 
  17. ^ Eaton, Clement (1957). Henry Clay and the Art of American Politics. Boston, MA: Little, Brown and Company. p. 15. 
  18. ^ Jerry Hensley, Henry Clay: Compromise and Ambition, Outskirts Press, 2013, page 79
  19. ^ David S. Heidler and Jeanne T. Heidler, Henry Clay: The Essential American. (2010), pp 48–51.
  20. ^ Smucker, Isaac. "Kentucky – Early History", National Magazine: A Monthly Journal of American History, Volume 12, page 462.
  21. ^ a b Schurz, Carl. Life of Henry Clay, pages 38–39.
  22. ^ See Finlay, Luke. "THE CASE OF HENRY CLAY.; Records of the Senate Show No Question Raised as to His Age", Letter to Editor, New York Times (1935-07-20): "How can we make a precedent of their unconscious failure to pass upon the matter?".
  23. ^ 1801–1850, November 16, 1818: Youngest Senator. United States Senate. Retrieved November 17, 2007
  24. ^ "Rand Paul & Joe Biden in Senate Chambers". January 10, 2011. Retrieved January 13, 2011. 
  25. ^ Henry Clay – Famous American Biographies.
  26. ^ a b Eaton, Clement (1957). Henry Clay and the Art of American Politics. Boston, MA: Little, Brown and Company. p. 17. 
  27. ^ Remini (1991), page 55
  28. ^ Scott, Samuel Scott (New Albany Rotary Club) (c. 1950s). "New Albany Suburb Famous Field of Honor in Early Days" (PDF). New Albany Floyd County Public Library. Retrieved April 4, 2015. 
  29. ^ "The Duels at Silver Creek (Historical Series of New Albany)" (PDF). Historical Series of New Albany (Volume III, No. 8). New Albany Floyd County Public Library (originally broadcast on Radio Station WLRP/WOW/WHEL). Retrieved April 4, 2015. 
  30. ^ James F. Hopkins, ed. (1959). The Papers of Henry Clay, Volume 1 (1797–1814). University Press of Kentucky. p. 613. 
  31. ^ Eaton, Clement (1957). Henry Clay and the Art of American Politics. Boston, MA: Little, Brown and Company. p. 23. 
  32. ^ a b "Aaron and Charlotte Dupuy", Isaac Scott Hathaway Museum of Lexington, Kentucky.
  33. ^ Eaton, Clement (1957). Henry Clay and the Art of American Politics. Boston, MA: Little, Brown and Company. p. 24. 
  34. ^ Eaton (1957) p. 133.
  35. ^ Remini (1991), 150-151
  36. ^ Hogan, Margaret. John Quincy Adams: Campaigns and Elections: The Campaign and Election of 1824 Miller Center. Retrieved 30 December 2015.
  37. ^ a b c d "Charlotte Dupuy", 'Half Had Not Been Told Me': African American History of Lafayette Square (1795–1965), National Trust for Historic Preservation, Retrieved 21 April 2009.
  38. ^ David S. Heidler and Jeanne T. Heidler, Henry Clay: The Essential American, New York: Random House: 2010, pp. 217–218, accessed 12 May 2011.
  39. ^ Ostermeier, Eric (December 4, 2013). "Bob Smith and the 12-Year Itch". Smart Politics. 
  40. ^ Nullification Proclamation Library of Congress. Retrieved May 21, 2016.
  41. ^ Carter Goodrich, "The Revulsion Against Internal Improvements," Journal of Economic History 10#2 (1950) pp. 145-169 in JSTOR
  42. ^ Samuel Rhea Gammon, The presidential campaign of 1832 (1922) online free
  43. ^ David Zarefsky, "Henry Clay and the Election of 1844: the Limits of a Rhetoric of Compromise." Rhetoric & Public Affairs 6#.1 (2003): 79-96. online
  44. ^ a b c d e Infoplease: Compromise of 1850.
  45. ^ Remini (2010)
  46. ^ Eaton (1957) pp. 188–192. Remini (1991) pp. 732–750.
  47. ^ Robert R. Russel, "What was the Compromise of 1850?." Journal of Southern History 22.3 (1956): 292-309.
  48. ^ William Y. Thompson, Robert Toombs of Georgia (Baton Rouge: Louisiana State University Press, 1966), p. 61.
  49. ^ William H. Seward Civil War Trust. Retrieved March 28, 2016.
  50. ^ Today in History: March 18 (John C. Calhoun) Library of Congress. Web. Retrieved March 27, 2016.
  51. ^ Eaton (1957) p. 192–193. Remini (1991) pp. 756–759.
  52. ^ Millard Fillmore: Life in Brief The Miller Center. Web. Retrieved March 27, 2016.
  53. ^ Remini (1991) pp. 761–762.
  54. ^ "Henry Clay. Eulogy Delivered by Hon. Theodore Frelinghuysen, at Newark, on July 13.". New York Times. July 15, 1852. 
  55. ^ Plot description (Life at the South).
  56. ^ Book dedication (Life at the South), University of Virginia.
  57. ^ "Round Robin Bar", Willard InterContinental Washington.
  58. ^ Historical Society of Schuylkill County :: The Henry Clay Monument in Pottsville.
  59. ^ Henry Clay High School Home Page.
  60. ^ "MemberListC". American Antiquarian Society. 

References[edit]

  • Baxter, Maurice G. Henry Clay and the American System (1995)
  • Baxter, Maurice G. Henry Clay the Lawyer (2000).
  • Bordewich, Fergus M. America's Great Debate: Henry Clay, Stephen A. Douglas, and the Compromise That Preserved the Union (2012) excerpt and text search, on Compromise of 1850
  • Bowman, Shearer Davis. "Comparing Henry Clay and Abraham Lincoln," Register of the Kentucky Historical Society, 106 (Summer–Autumn 2008), 495–512
  • Brown, Thomas. Politics and Statesmanship: Essays on the American Whig Party (1985) ch 5
  • Eaton, Clement. Henry Clay and the Art of American Politics (1957)
  • Gammon, Samuel R. The Presidential Campaign of 1832 (1922) online free
  • Heidler, David S., and Jeanne T. Heidler. Henry Clay: The Essential American (2010), major scholarly biography; 624pp
  • Holt, Michael F. The Rise and Fall of the American Whig Party: Jacksonian Politics and the Onset of the Civil War (1999)
  • King, Quentin S. Henry Clay and the War of 1812 (2014), scholarly biography
  • Knupfer, Peter B. "Compromise and Statesmanship: Henry Clay's Union." in Knupfer, The Union As It Is: Constitutional Unionism and Sectional Compromise, 1787–1861 (1991), pp. 119–57.
  • Mayo, Bernard. Henry Clay, Spokesman of the West (1937)
  • Peterson, Merrill D. The Great Triumvirate: Webster, Clay, and Calhoun (1987)
  • Poage, George Rawlings. Henry Clay and the Whig Party (1936)
  • Remini, Robert. Henry Clay: Statesman for the Union (1991), a standard scholarly biography
  • Remini, Robert. At the Edge of the Precipice: Henry Clay and the Compromise That Saved the Union (2010) 184 pages; the Compromise of 1850
  • Wikisource-logo.svg Schurz, Carl. Life of Henry Clay, 2 vols., 1899. Outdated biography.
  • Wikisource-logo.svg Schurz, Carl (1911). "Clay, Henry". In Chisholm, Hugh. Encyclopædia Britannica (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press. 
  • Strahan, Randall. Leading Representatives: The Agency of Leaders in the Politics of the U.S. House. Johns Hopkins University Press, 2007
  • Strahan, Randall; Moscardelli, Vincent G.; Haspel, Moshe; and Wike, Richard S. "The Clay Speakership Revisited" Polity 2000 32(4): 561–593. ISSN 0032-3497
  • Unger, Harlow Giles. Henry Clay: America's Greatest Statesman (Da Capo, 2015). xviii, 318 pp.
  • Van Deusen, Glyndon G. The Life of Henry Clay (1937), scholarly biography
  • Watson, Harry L. ed. Andrew Jackson vs. Henry Clay: Democracy and Development in Antebellum America (1998)
  • Zarefsky, David. "Henry Clay and the Election of 1844: the Limits of a Rhetoric of Compromise" Rhetoric & Public Affairs 2003 6(1): 79–96. ISSN 1094-8392

Primary sources[edit]

  • Clay, Henry. The Papers of Henry Clay, 1797–1852. Edited by James Hopkins, Mary Hargreaves, Robert Seager II, Melba Porter Hay et al. 11 vols. University Press of Kentucky, 1959–1992. vol 1 online, 1797–1814
  • Clay, Henry. Works of Henry Clay, 7 vols. (1897)

Further reading[edit]

  • Sargent, Epes. The Life and Public Services of Henry Clay, Down to 1848 (1852).

External links[edit]

Media related to Henry Clay at Wikimedia Commons