Peter Bryan Bruin | |
Birth Date: | 1754 |
Death Place: | Bruinsburg, Claiborne County, Mississippi, United States |
Peter Bryan Bruin (1754January 27, 1827) was a landowner and judge in Mississippi Territory, United States. A veteran of the American Revolutionary War who served as an officer with Daniel Morgan and worked as an aide-de-camp to John Sullivan, he settled in the Natchez District shortly after the conclusion of the American revolution. He was later a host to a young Andrew Jackson and Rachel Donelson Robards, on what may have amounted to their honeymoon circa 1790. In 1798 Bruin was signatory to the "Memorial to Congress by Permanent Committee of the Natchez District," which encouraged the U.S. Congress to annex the Natchez District from Spain and to preserve and extend slavery in the region. After the Mississippi Territory was organized, he was appointed to be a judge by John Adams. Bruin was tangentially connected to Aaron Burr's still-mysterious shenanigans in the lower Mississippi River valley in 1806. In 1808, the Mississippi Territorial Legislature passed a resolution condemning Bruin's conduct on the bench, and delegate George Poindexter requested that the U.S. Congress open an impeachment investigation into Bruin. Bruin resigned his judgeship amidst public charges of alcoholism and dereliction of judicial duty.
The now-extinct settlement at Bruinsburg Landing in Claiborne County was named for him, and Lake Bruin State Park also bears his name.
Peter Bryan Bruin was born in 1754. According to Mississippi historian Dunbar Rowland in 1935, "The young man in early life was a merchant. In the Virginia Colony in 1775 he was a lieutenant of Virginia provincials. He shared in the assault on Quebec, December 31, 1775, was badly wounded at the moment General Montgomery was killed, was made prisoner, and for six months suffered the horrors of the prison ships. Being exchanged on July 19, 1776, he was promoted to major and aide-de-camp to General Sullivan, November 9, 1777, and later was a major in the 7th Virginia to the close of the war." Surviving muster rolls show that Bruin was a company captain in the 11th Virginia Regiment during the American Revolutionary War.[1] According to historian Roger G. Kennedy in 2000, "Bruin joined the Eleventh Virginia Regiment and served with [Aaron] Burr in Canada, where both were wounded. Captured during the retreat from Quebec, he contracted smallpox but survived, was released, and reenlisted under General John Sullivan for a campaign against the Iroquois. Bruin served with the French in their Rhode Island campaign and was with the Virginia Continentals in the siege lines around Yorktown to witness the surrender of Cornwallis." According to the Compiled Service Records of Soldiers who Served in the American Army During the Revolutionary War he served as lieutenant in Capt. Morgan's Company.[2] He may have later applied for a military pension or land-bounty warrant.[3]
Bruin was reportedly married in Fauquier County, Virginia in 1781.[4] Bruin's daughter claimed that she and her father had arrived in Mississippi in 1784.[5] According to Rowland, Bruin came to Natchez in 1788 with his family "and several others...having accepted the colonizing propositions of Minister Gardoqui." Bruin served as alcalde after British West Florida became Spanish West Florida. In 1797 he was a signatory, along with Gabriel Benoist, Philander Smith, Daniel Clark, Frederick Kimball, William Ratliff, Roger Dixon, and Isaac Galliard, to a document known as the "Memorial to Congress by Permanent Committee of the Natchez District." The group presented themselves as democratically elected representatives of the white land-owning settlers of Mississippi, and signaled that they would rather be associated with the United States than their current Spanish governors, writing that "...to prevent anarchy, and confusion (when his Catholic Majesty may be pleased to withdraw his troops & cause this Country to be given up to the U.S.) prepare a Constitution or form of Govt for this territory which shall in your wisdom appear the best calculated to ensure to the inhabitants of this settlement in its infant State the blessings of peace safety & good order and that the officers of the new government may have the confidence of the people..." They requested that the U.S. Congress allow the continuation of slavery in the Mississippi lands, writing, "Your memorialists beg leave to represent that great part of the labour in this Country is performed by slaves, as in the Southern States, and without which, in their present situation the farms in this District would be but of little more value to the present occupiers than equal quantity of waste land. From this consideration your Memorialists request that the system of slavery may be continued as heretofore in this territory."
Andrew Jackson traded slaves at Bruinsburg in the 1790s, and Bruin was said to have hosted Jackson and Rachel Donelson Robards on what was effectively their honeymoon.[6] Bruin was appointed to be a territorial judge by U.S. president John Adams, effective May 7, 1798. Thomas Pickering wrote Winthrop Sargent that Bruin had "been settled at the Natchez for many years. He was an aid-de-camp to General Sullivan in the American War." For his part, territorial governor Winthrop Sargent wrote a letter decrying the state of the territorial judiciary, commenting, "My great source of uneasiness is the want of judges. I pray God Mr. McGuire may soon arrive, or some law character. In a court from which is no appeal, most certainly there should be a law knowledge. Judge Bruin, a worthy and sensible man, is beyond doubt deficient, and Judge Tilton cannot have had more reading and experience [than Bruin]." Judge Bruin generally covered the "Jefferson District" where he was resident, which name carried on after statehood as Jefferson County, Mississippi. Sargent's replacement, William C. C. Claiborne, wrote in 1801, "Judges Tilton and Bruin are amiable gentlemen, not qualified for the position." In August 1805 a man called Williams wrote Thomas Jefferson, "I am happy to know there is a probability of our having a Judge, for I do assure you the Territory Suffers very much in its Judicial CharecterJudge Bruin is Seldom able to attend the Courts." The following year Thomas Rodney wrote Jefferson that "we have had but Two Judges in this part of the Territory, and One of them Judge Bruin, is very Seldom able to Attend the Courts, so that the Judicial business has required much more of my attention than it could have done."
In February 1807, at Jefferson College, judges Bruin and Rodney presided over a grand jury in the Burr conspiracy case. Bruin's already problematic drinking may have worsened after his wife Elizabeth died on September 17, 1807. In March 1808 the Mississippi Territorial Legislature passed a resolution condemning Bruin for having "been much addicted to drunkeness especially during the terms of the Courts, and has frequently appeared on the Bench in such an extreme state of Intoxication as to disqualify him entirely from performing the Solemn and important duties of his Office" resulting in a "manifest injury to the people of this Territory..." The message was passed up the U.S. president who handed it off to the Congress.[7] Territorial delegate George Poindexter asked Congress to investigate and ultimately impeach Bruin, and shared that he had personally seen Bruin asleep on the bench, be awakened by a clerk, and then drowse back into unconsciousness five minutes later. Congress postponed any action on Poindexter's proposal until the next session. Bruin resigned "after thirty-six years of public life" in a letter to U.S. Secretary of State James Madison in October 1808, effective date March 1, 1809. Bruin died at Bruinsburg on January 27, 1827.
See main article: Bruinsburg, Mississippi. The Spanish governor granted Bruin 1,350 acres along Coles Creek. Bruin owned two plantations along the Mississippi River, one in what is now Tensas Parish, Louisiana and one in what is now Claiborne County, Mississippi. He founded Bruinsburg, Mississippi, and Lake Bruin is also named for him. Bayou Pierre ("Peter's River") may also be named for him.[8] Bruinsburg Landing was a notable site in the drama surrounding Aaron Burr's actions in the lower Mississippi River valley in 1807. According to Mississippi historian J. F. H. Claiborne, "Early in January, of the coldest winter ever known here, Colonel Burr, with nine boats, arrived at the mouth of Bayou Pierre, and tied up on the western or Louisiana shore. He crossed over to the residence of Judge Bruin, (whom he had known in the revolutionary war) and there learned, for the first time, that the Territorial authorities would oppose his descent, though his landing on the Louisiana side would seem to indicate that he apprehended some opposition. He immediately wrote to Governor Mead, disavowing hostile intentions towards the Territory or the country; that he was en route to the Ouachitta to colonize his lands, and that any attempt to obstruct him would be illegal and might provoke civil war."
The Bruinsburg plantation on the Mississippi side was later owned by the Evans family.[9] One local historian surmises that the Tensas land later became Albert Bondurant's Pleasant View plantation.[10]
According to abstracts of colonial-era Natchez District court records, Bruin claimed a Spanish land grant but this claim was rejected by the territorial government: "No. 1540. Claimant: Peter B. Bruin, 29 Mar. 1804. Rejected 13 June 1807. Miss. Ter. Claiborne Co. Peter Bryan Bruin claims 800 arpents in sd county on Miss. River by virtue of his having inhabited and cultivated the same ever since 1789. He was at that time 21 years of age and claims sd tract from a certificate of survey from the Spanish Government."