Benjamin Parke Explained

Benjamin Parke
Office:Judge of the United States District Court for the District of Indiana
Appointer:James Monroe
Term Start:March 6, 1817
Term End:July 12, 1835
Predecessor:Seat established
Successor:Jesse Lynch Holman
Office1:Delegate to the
U.S. House of Representatives
from the Indiana Territory's
at-large district
Term Start1:December 12, 1805
Term End1:March 1, 1808
Predecessor1:Constituency established
Successor1:Jesse B. Thomas
Office2:1st Attorney General of the Indiana Territory
Governor2:William Henry Harrison
Term Start2:1804
Term End2:1808
Predecessor2:Position established
Successor2:John Rice Jones
Birth Date:2 September 1777
Birth Place:New Jersey, British America
Death Place:Salem, Indiana, U.S.
Party:Federalist

Benjamin Parke (September 2, 1777 – July 12, 1835) was an American lawyer, politician, militia officer, businessman, treaty negotiator in the Indiana Territory who also served as a United States federal judge in Indiana after it attained statehood in 1816. Parke was the Indiana Territory's attorney general (1804–1808); a representative to the territory's first general assembly (1805); its first territorial delegate to the United States House of Representatives (1805–1808); one of the five Knox County delegates to the Indiana constitutional convention of 1816; and a territorial court judge (1808–1816). After Indiana attained statehood, Parke served as the first United States District Judge of the United States District Court for the District of Indiana (1817–1835).

In addition to his service in Indiana's territorial and state government, Parke participated in the local militia, attaining the rank of colonel under the command of William Henry Harrison, and participated in the Battle of Tippecanoe during the War of 1812. Parke was also active in civic and educational affairs. He was a founder of the public library at Vincennes, Indiana, and a founder and member of the board of trustees of Vincennes University. In 1816, he helped select the township in what became Monroe County, Indiana, for the use of a state seminary, which later became Indiana University in Bloomington. Parke also served as the first President of the Indiana Historical Society (1830–1835).

Early life and education

Parke, the son of a farmer, was born in New Jersey on September 2, 1777.[1] [2] He received a limited education and left home at the age of twenty. In 1797 he moved to Lexington, Kentucky, where he read law in the office of James Brown and was admitted to the bar in 1799.[2] [3]

Marriage and family

Parke married Elizabeth "Eliza" Barton in Lexington. The couple had two children, a son, Barton, and a daughter, Sarah.[3] [4] Sarah married Abram (or Abraham) Hite of Louisville, Kentucky, and had one son. After Sarah died, Parke and his wife raised their grandson. Parke's son and grandson died during a cholera epidemic in 1833, leaving Parke with no heirs.[5]

Career

Early years

Around 1800–1801, Parke and his wife moved to Vincennes, the capital of the Indiana Territory, where he engaged in private law practice 1804.[3] [4] After Parke befriended William Henry Harrison, the governor of the Indiana Territory, he served in several positions in the territorial government.[3]

Governor Harrison appointed Parke as Attorney General of the Indiana Territory. He served in that capacity from 1804 to 1808.[1] [2] In 1805, Parke was elected as one of the two Knox County representatives to the lower house of Indiana's first territorial legislature, which met at Vincennes on July 20, 1805.[3] [6] Parke, a federalist and Governor Harrison's political ally, was a supporter of slavery and indenturing laws in the territory that were being debated at the time.[7]

Congressional delegate

In 1805, the Indiana territorial legislature elected Parke as its first territorial representative to the United States House of Representatives. Parke was reelected to the post in 1807 and served in the 9th and 10th United States Congresses from December 12, 1805, until March 1, 1808.[1] [2] [8] Parke resigned prior to his appointment as a territorial judge and accepting a position on Governor Harrison's staff.[3]

While serving in Congress and in response to requests from his constituents, Parke asked that body to amend the Northwest Ordinance to pass legislation permitting slavery in Indiana, but the effort was unsuccessful.

Territorial judge and militia leader

President Thomas Jefferson appointed Parke as a Judge for the Indiana Territory in 1808. He served in that post until 1816, when Indiana became a state.[2] [3]

During Tecumseh's War and the War of 1812, Parke joined the Indiana Territory's militia and rose through the ranks as a captain and major, before attaining the rank of colonel and serving on the staff of General Harrison, who was also the territorial governor.[4] Parke initially served as a captain of a company of Indiana Light Dragoons and fought at the Battle of Tippecanoe in 1811. He was promoted to major and took command of the cavalry after Major Joseph Hamilton Daveiss was killed on November 7, 1811.[9] [10]

After the war, Parke returned to his position as a territorial judge. In 1816, he was named presiding judge of the Indiana Circuit Court, First Judicial Circuit, and served in that role until 1817, when President James Madison appointed him as a United States federal judge.[1] [11]

Treaty negotiator

In 1816, Parke and Thomas Posey negotiated a treaty with the Wea and Kickapoo people.[12] Two years later, President Madison appointed Parke, Lewis Cass, and Indiana governor Jonathan Jennings as commissioners to negotiate the Treaty of Saint Mary's (also called the New Purchase treaty) with the Lenape, the Miami, and other tribes. Under the terms of this treaty, the Delaware gave up their right to occupy land in Indiana, while the Miami agreed to relinquish more than seven million acres of their tribal lands in Ohio and Indiana.[4] [13]

Indiana constitutional convention delegate, 1816

During the move towards statehood, Parke served as one of the forty-three delegates, and one of the five from Knox County, who attended the constitutional convention at Corydon in June 1816.[14] During the convention Parke was one of the leaders of the federalist minority that initially opposed statehood; however, when the majority voted in favor of statehood, Parke took active part in the convention proceedings and helped draft Indiana's first state constitution.[11] [15]

Parke was among the nine-member committee that drafted Article V of the constitution, which outlined the judicial branch of state government. Parke also served as chair of a select committee to redraft the article's initial version, which defined the state's Supreme Court, circuit courts, and other courts that the Indiana General Assembly might choose to establish.[16] Parke was also among the signers of the new constitution, which the delegates adopted on June 29, 1816, during the final day of the convention.[17]

State and Federal judicial service

The Indiana General Assembly designated Parke as one of the three presiding judges of the first (western) district for Indiana.[18]

Following the admission of Indiana to the Union on December 11, 1816, Parke was nominated by President James Monroe on March 5, 1817, to the United States District Court for the District of Indiana, to a new seat authorized by . He was confirmed by the United States Senate on March 5, 1817, and received his commission on March 6, 1817. His service terminated on July 12, 1835, due to his death.[1] [19]

Other interests

During his early years in Vincennes, Parke was a founder of the town's public library and Vincennes University. He was also a member of the university's first board of trustees.[20]

Parke was appointed as the Monroe County sales agent and became a land speculator in Bloomington, although he never lived there.[21]

Later years

In the 1820s, Parke suffered severe financial losses as a result of his involvement with the Vincennes Steam Mill Company. Parke was named an agent of the company in 1821; however, the mill burned the following year under mysterious circumstances, destroying the company's paper assets in the Vincennes State Bank, which Parke also organized with other investors. The bank failed and Parke was the only one of the mill company's and bank's officers to accept financial responsibility for the debts. He sold his property in Vincennes and used the proceeds to pay creditors. Parked retired to a modest home in Salem, Indiana, and spent the remainder of his life repaying the debts while he continued to serve as a United States District Court judge.[9] [22]

In December 1830, Parke was elected as the first president of the Indiana Historical Society. He served in that capacity until his death in 1835. Parker's successor was Samuel Merrill. Parke also helped establish a law library at Indianapolis, Indiana.[23] [20]

Parke's health failed during his later years. He suffered from tubercular consumption (tuberculosis) and paralysis of his right side.[22]

Death and legacy

Parke died at Salem, Washington County, Indiana, on July 12, 1835. He is buried at Crown Hill Cemetery in Salem.

Parke was known among his peers for his honesty and integrity and as an example to others for his devotion to civic duty and useful public service.[20]

Honors and tributes

Parke County, Indiana, is named in Parke's honor.[24]

Sources

External links

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Notes and References

  1. Web site: Parke, Benjamin . Federal Judicial Center . November 27, 2017.
  2. Web site: Parke, Benjamin, (1777 – 1835) . Biographical Directory of Congress . United States Congress . November 28, 2017.
  3. Book: William Wesley Woollen . Biographical and Historical Sketches of Early Indiana . Arno Press . Mid-American Frontier . reprint of 1883 . 1975 . New York . 384 . 1218324.
  4. "Biographical Sketch" in Web site: Benjamin Parke Papers, 1816 - 1818 Collection Guide . Indiana Historical Society . December 2, 2004 . November 28, 2017.
  5. Woollen, p. 389.
  6. Book: John D. Barnhart and Dorothy L. Riker. Indiana to 1816: The Colonial Period . Indiana Historical Bureau and the Indiana Historical Society . The History of Indiana . I . 1971 . Indianapolis . 345, note 2 . 154955.
  7. Howard F. McMains. The Indiana Seminary Charter of 1820 . Indiana Magazine of History . 106 . 4 . 366–67 . Indiana University . Bloomington . December 2010. November 28, 2017.
  8. Barnhart and Riker, pp. 347, 351.
  9. Book: Lana Ruegamer . A History of the Indiana Historical Society, 1830-1980 . Indiana Historical Society . 1980 . Indianapolis . 21 . 8112123.
  10. Web site: Chapter XI: Roll of Companies . https://web.archive.org/web/20051029201723/http://www.rootsweb.com/~usgenweb/ky/tippecanoe/chapter11.html. dead. October 29, 2005. November 28, 2017.
  11. Woollen, p. 385.
  12. Barnhart and Riker, p. 411, note 73.
  13. Book: Linda C. Gugin and James E. St. Clair . The Governors of Indiana . Indiana Historical Society Press and the Indiana Historical Bureau . 2006 . Indianapolis . 46 . 0-87195-196-7 .
  14. Barnhart and Riker, pp. 441–42.
  15. Barnhart and Riker, p. 445.
  16. Barnhart and Riker, pp. 453–54.
  17. Book: William P. McLauchlan . The Indiana State Constitution: A Reference Guide. Greenwood Press. Reference Guides to the State Constitutions of the United States . 26 . 1996 . Westport, CT . 4. 978-0-313-29208-8.
  18. Book: Donald F. Carmony . Indiana, 1816–1850: The Pioneer Era . Indiana Historical Bureau and the Indiana Historical Society . The History of Indiana . II . 1997 . Indianapolis . 9 . 37731656 .
  19. Web site: Parke, Benjamin . Index to Politicians . The Political Graveyard . November 27, 2017.
  20. Woollen, pp. 389–90.
  21. McMains, pp. 366–67, 369.
  22. Woollen, p. 388.
  23. Ruegamer, pp. 32, 42–43, 333.
  24. http://www.in.gov/history/5197.htm List of Indiana County Namesakes