David Meriwether (Georgia politician) explained

David Meriwether
State:Georgia
District:at-large
Term Start:December 6, 1802
Term End:March 3, 1807
Predecessor:Benjamin Taliaferro
Successor:George M. Troup
Office2:Speaker
Georgia House of Representatives
Term Start2:1797
Term End2:1800
Predecessor2:Thomas Stevens
Successor2:Abraham Jackson
Office3:Presidential Elector - Georgia
Term Start3:1817
Term End3:1821
Allegiance: United States
Rank:LieutenantBrigadier General
Battles:MonmouthTrentonBrandywineSiege of Savannah
Serviceyears:1776 - 1779 Continental Army1797 - 1802 Georgia Militia
Commands:3rd Georgia Division
Birth Date:10 April 1755
Birth Place:Charlottesville, Virginia Colony, British America
Death Place:Athens, Georgia, U.S.
Party:Jeffersonian Democratic-Republican
Children:James Meriwether

David Meriwether (April 10, 1755  - November 16, 1822) was a United States (U.S.) Congressional Representative from the state of Georgia. U.S. congressman James Meriwether was his son.

Early years

David Meriwether was born at "Clover Fields" (home of the Meriwether family), near Charlottesville in the Virginia Colony, on April 10, 1755.[1] During his early years in Virginia, Meriwether developed a personal friendship with Thomas Jefferson who was a plantation neighbor of the family.[2] Some time later, Jefferson hired one of Meriwether's cousins, Meriwether Lewis as his personal secretary, before eventually commissioning the young Captain to undertake the exploration of the newly acquired Louisiana Purchase along with William Clark.

Military service

David Meriwether joined the Continental Army in 1776 during the Revolutionary War. He fought in the Battle of Trenton (1776), Battle of Brandywine (1777), and the Battle of Monmouth (1778). Upon joining troops from his native state of Virginia, he was commissioned a lieutenant in New Jersey on May 15, 1779. Shortly thereafter, the Virginia troops marched south, to participate in the Siege of Savannah. During the march from Virginia to the outskirts of Savannah, Meriwether's column passed through Wilkes County. In his diary, he remarked that the countryside in that area of Georgia was particularly pleasing. In the subsequent Siege of Savannah, Meriwether was captured by the British and was paroled shortly thereafter. Following his parole, Meriwether returned to Wilkes County, where he married Frances Wingfield. They eventually had seven sons and one daughter. Meriwether continued to serve in the Army through the end of the war in 1783. In 1785, the couple settled in Wilkes County, where Meriwether had been granted land for his service in the Continental Army.[3] During this period, his occupation was that of "planter". On September 21, 1797, Meriwether was commissioned a brigadier general in the Georgia militia by Governor Jared Irwin. In 1804, the family moved to Clarke County, near the city of Athens, where the General resided for the rest of his life.

Political office

Meriwether was the Wilkes County Tax Collector in the year 1794, before being elected to the Georgia House of Representatives where he served as speaker from 1797 until 1800.[4] He was then elected as a Jeffersonian to the 7th United States Congress to fill the vacancy caused by the resignation of Benjamin Taliaferro and was reelected to the 8th and 9th Congresses. His time in federal office spanned from December 6, 1802, to March 3, 1807. He did not run for reelection in 1806 to the 10th Congress and retired to his plantation near Athens, Georgia. After his congressional service, Meriwether was appointed a commissioner to the Creek Indians in 1804 and repeatedly reappointed to treat with other tribes. Meriwether served as a Presidential Elector from Georgia in the election cycles of 1816 and 1820, voting for James Monroe.

Death and legacy

David Meriwether died near Athens, Georgia on November 16, 1822, and was buried in the private burial ground on his plantation.

He is the namesake of Meriwether County, Georgia.[5] [6]

See also

External links

Notes and References

  1. Book: William J. Northen. John Temple Graves. Men of Mark in Georgia: A Complete and Elaborate History of the State from Its Settlement to the Present Time, Chiefly Told in Biographies and Autobiographies of the Most Eminent Men of Each Period of Georgia's Progress and Development. 1910. A. B. Caldwell. 57–62.
  2. Coulter. E. Merton. David Meriwether of Virginia and Georgia. The Georgia Historical Quarterly. 54. 3. 1970. The Georgia Historical Quarterly - Volume 54. 320–338. 40579086.
  3. Book: Howard H. McCall. Ettie Tidwell McCall. Roster of Revolutionary Soldiers in Georgia. July 2010. Genealogical Publishing Com. 978-0-8063-0219-5. 125.
  4. Book: Georgia. Robert Watkins. George Watkins. Robert Aitken. A Digest of the Laws of the State of Georgia: From Its First Establishment as a British Province Down to the Year 1798, Inclusive, and the Principal Acts of 1799. 1800. R. Aitken. 673–.
  5. Book: Gannett, Henry. The Origin of Certain Place Names in the United States. 1905. U.S. Government Printing Office. 206.
  6. Web site: Meriwether County. New Georgia Encyclopedia - University System of Georgia. Elizabeth B. Cooksey. July 18, 2018. November 29, 2018.