The Founding Fathers
| Charles Pinckney, South
Carolina |
Charles
Pinckney, the second cousin of fellow-signer Charles
Cotesworth Pinckney, was born at Charleston, SC, in 1757. His
father, Col. Charles Pinckney, was a rich lawyer and planter, who on
his death in 1782 was to bequeath Snee Farm, a country estate outside
the city, to his son Charles. The latter apparently received all his
education in the city of his birth, and he started to practice law
there in 1779.
About that time, well after the War for
Independence had begun, young Pinckney enlisted in the militia, though
his father demonstrated ambivalence about the Revolution. He became a
lieutenant, and served at the siege of Savannah (September-October
1779). When Charleston fell to the
British the next year, the youth was captured and remained a prisoner
until June 1781.
Pinckney had also begun a political career,
serving in the Continental Congress
(1777-78 and 1784-87) and in the state legislature (1779-80, 1786-89,
and 1792-96). A nationalist, he worked hard in Congress to ensure that
the United States would receive navigation rights to the Mississippi
and to strengthen congressional power.
Pinckney's role in the Constitutional
Convention is controversial. Although one of the youngest
delegates, he later claimed to have been the most influential one and
contended he had submitted a draft that was the basis of the final Constitution.
Most historians have rejected this assertion. They do, however,
recognize that he ranked among the leaders. He attended full time,
spoke often and effectively, and contributed immensely to the final
draft and to the resolution of problems that arose during the debates.
He also worked for ratification in South Carolina (1788). That same
year, he married Mary Eleanor Laurens, daughter of a wealthy and
politically powerful South Carolina merchant; she was to bear at least
three children.
Subsequently, Pinckney's career blossomed.
From 1789 to 1792 he held the governorship of South Carolina, and in
1790 chaired the state constitutional convention. During this period,
he became associated with the Federalist Party, in which he and his
cousin Charles Cotesworth Pinckney were leaders. But, with the passage
of time, the former's views began to change. In 1795 he attacked the
Federalist backed Jay's Treaty and
increasingly began to cast his lot with Carolina back-country
Democratic-Republicans against his own eastern aristocracy. In 1796 he
became governor once again, and in 1798 his Democratic-Republican
supporters helped him win a seat in the U.S. Senate. There, he
bitterly opposed his former party, and in the presidential election of
1800 served as Thomas Jefferson's
campaign manager in South Carolina.
The victorious Jefferson appointed Pinckney
as Minister to Spain (1801-5), in which capacity he struggled
valiantly but unsuccessfully to win cession of the Floridas to the
United States and facilitated Spanish acquiescence in the transfer of
Louisiana from France to the United States in 1803.
Upon completion of his diplomatic mission,
his ideas moving ever closer to democracy, Pinckney headed back to
Charleston and to leadership of the state Democratic-Republican Party.
He sat in the legislature in 1805-6 and then was again elected as
governor (1806-8). In this position, he favored legislative
reapportionment, giving better representation to back-country
districts, and advocated universal white manhood suffrage. He served
again in the legislature from 1810 to 1814 and then temporarily
withdrew from politics. In 1818 he won election to the U.S. House of
Representatives, where he fought against the Missouri Compromise.
In 1821, Pinckney's health beginning to fail,
he retired for the last time from politics. He died in 1824, just 3
days after his 67th birthday. He was laid to rest in Charleston at St.
Philip's Episcopal Churchyard.
Image: Courtesy
of National Archives, Records of Exposition, Anniversary, and Memorial
Commissions