Clement Comer Clay Explained

Clement Comer Clay
Jr/Sr1:United States
State1:Alabama
Term Start1:June 19, 1837
Term End1:November 15, 1841
Predecessor1:John McKinley
Successor1:Arthur P. Bagby
Order2:8th
Office2:Governor of Alabama
Term Start2:November 21, 1835
Term End2:July 17, 1837
Predecessor2:John Gayle
Successor2:Hugh McVay
State3:Alabama
District3:1st
Term Start3:March 4, 1829
Term End3:March 3, 1835
Preceded3:Gabriel Moore
Succeeded3:Reuben Chapman
Office4:Member of the Alabama House of Representatives
Term4:1827-1828
Birth Date:December 17, 1789
Birth Place:Halifax County, Virginia, US
Death Place:Huntsville, Alabama, US
Resting Place:Maple Hill Cemetery
Party:Democrat
Spouse:Susanna Claiborne Withers (1798–1866; her death)
Alma Mater:East Tennessee University
Profession:Politician, Governor of Alabama

Clement Comer Clay (December 17, 1789 – September 6, 1866)[1] was the eighth Governor of the U.S. state of Alabama from 1835 to 1837. An attorney, judge, and politician, he was elected to the state legislature as well as the U.S. House of Representatives and the United States Senate.

He and his son, who also served as a U.S. senator, were among the Alabama’s most prominent enslavers, according to the Washington Post. Together the two men enslaved 87 people on four Alabama plantations as recorded in the 1860 census.[2]

Early years

Clay was born in Halifax County, Virginia, the son of Rebecca (Comer) and William Clay,[3] an officer in the American Revolutionary War, who moved to Grainger County, Tennessee. Clay attended the local schools and graduated from East Tennessee College in 1807. He was admitted to the bar in 1809 and moved to Huntsville, Alabama, where he began a law practice in 1811.

Marriage and family

Clay married Susannah Claiborne Withers on April 4, 1815.[4] They had three sons: Clement Claiborne Clay, John Withers Clay, and Hugh Lawson Clay.

Alabama House of Representatives

Clay served in the Alabama Territorial Legislature from 1817 to 1818. He was a state court judge and served in the Alabama House of Representatives.

In 1828, he was elected to the U.S. House of Representatives, serving from March 4, 1829, and through re-elections until March 3, 1835, when he started as governor of Alabama.[5]

Governor of Alabama

In 1835 Clay was elected governor. Clay's term as governor ended early when the state legislature appointed him to the United States Senate in 1837 (this was before the popular election of senators).[6]

Spring Hill College

In 1836, Governor Clay signed a legislative act that chartered Spring Hill College in Mobile, Alabama, the third oldest Jesuit college in the United States. The charter gave it "full power to grant or confer such degree or degrees in the arts and sciences, or in any art or science as are usually granted or conferred by other seminaries of learning in the United States." The college resulted from the strong French Catholic traditions in the city, founded as a French colony.

Creek War of 1836

Clay's term in office was dominated by the Creek War of 1836 arising from resistance to Indian Removal, which had taken place in the Southeast since 1830. During Clay's administration, the United States Army removed the Creek Indians from Southeastern Alabama under the terms of the 1832 Treaty of Cusseta. The Creek were relocated to the Indian Territory (now Oklahoma) west of the Mississippi. Confrontations between Indians and white settlers occurred.[7]

Panic of 1837

During the Panic of 1837, the United States suffered a financial crisis brought on by speculative fever. This crisis caused a run on the Bank of the State of Alabama. Clay ordered the bank to provide a detailed financial report, but it could not do so.[7] [6]

Slave holder

Clay arrived in 1811 to Huntsville owning very little money and one slave.[8] By 1830 he enslaved 52 people and in 1834, 71. From 1840 – 1850, he sold many of those people in order to meet his debts. But by 1860 he claimed ownership of 84 enslaved people.[6]

United States Senate

After the election by the state legislature, Clay served in the United States Senate from June 19, 1837, until his resignation on November 15, 1841.

In the year after the end of the Civil War, Clement died of natural causes in September 1866, aged 76. His wife Susanna had died earlier the same year. They were buried at Maple Hill Cemetery in Huntsville.

References

External links

Notes and References

  1. https://www.nga.org/cms/home/governors/past-governors-bios/page_alabama/col2-content/main-content-list/title_clay_clement.default.html National Governors Association
  2. News: Weil . Julie Zauzmer . A slaveholding senator, an 1879 wedding and a Black family’s mystery . 27 April 2024 . . 22 October 2022.
  3. Book: The Clays of Alabama: A Planter-Lawyer-Politician Family. 9780813164090. Nuermberger. Ruth Ketring. 15 July 2014. University Press of Kentucky .
  4. Alabama Marriage Collection, 1800-1969 Record
  5. The Historical Atlas of Political Parties in the United States Congress, pp. 89-92
  6. Web site: Thornton . J. Mills . Clement Comer Clay . Encyclopedia of Alabama . 27 April 2024.
  7. Web site: Clement Comer Clay . Alabama Department of Archives and History. 2012-06-23.
  8. Reeves . Jacquelyn Procter . Clement Comer Clay . Huntsville Historical Review . 1 January 2007 . 32 . 1 . 30-32 . 27 April 2024.