Robert Barnwell Rhett Explained

Robert Barnwell Rhett
Order1:Deputy to the Provisional C.S. Congress
from South Carolina
Term Start1:February 4, 1861
Term End1:February 18, 1862
Predecessor1:Position established
Successor1:Position abolished
Order2:United States Senator
from South Carolina
Term Start2:December 18, 1850
Term End2:May 7, 1852
Predecessor2:Robert Barnwell
Successor2:William de Saussure
Office3:Member of the
U.S. House of Representatives
from South Carolina
Constituency3: (1837–43)
(1843–49)
Term Start3:March 4, 1837
Term End3:March 3, 1849
Predecessor3:William Grayson
Successor3:William Colcock
Order5:8th Attorney General of South Carolina
Governor5:Robert Hayne
George McDuffie
Pierce Butler
Term Start5:November 29, 1832
Term End5:March 4, 1837
Predecessor5:Hugh S. Legaré
Successor5:Henry Bailey
Order6:Member of the South Carolina House of Representatives from St. Bartholomew's Parish
Term Start6:November 27, 1826
Term End6:November 29, 1832
Birth Name:Robert Barnwell Smith
Birth Date:21 December 1800
Birth Place:Beaufort, South Carolina
Death Place:St. James Parish, Louisiana
Resting Place:Magnolia Cemetery,
Charleston, South Carolina
Nationality:American
Party:Democrat
Otherparty:Southern National Party
Occupation:Politician, lawyer, planter, and newspaper publisher
Relations:R. Barnwell Rhett Jr. (son), Alfred M. Rhett (son), Alicia Rhett (great-granddaughter)

Robert Barnwell Rhett (born Robert Barnwell Smith; December 21, 1800September 14, 1876) was an American politician who served as a deputy from South Carolina to the Provisional Confederate States Congress from 1861 to 1862, a member of the US House of Representatives from South Carolina from 1837 to 1849, and US Senator from South Carolina from 1850 to 1852. As a staunch supporter of slavery and an early advocate of secession, he was a "Fire-Eater", nicknamed the "father of secession".

Rhett published his views through his newspaper, the Charleston Mercury.[1]

His son Alfred M. Rhett commanded a battery at Fort Moultrie at the time of the bombardment of Fort Sumter.[2]

Early life

Rhett was born Robert Barnwell Smith in Beaufort, South Carolina, United States. He later studied law.

Rhett was of English ancestry. On his mother's side, he was related to U.S. Representative Robert Barnwell (his great-uncle) and Senator Robert Woodward Barnwell (son of Robert). A cousin of the Barnwells was the wife of Alexander Garden.[3]

Early career

Rhett was a member of the South Carolina legislature from 1826 until 1832, and was extremely pro-slavery in his views. At the end of the Nullification Crisis in 1833, he told the South Carolina Nullification Convention:

In 1832, Rhett became South Carolina's Attorney General, serving until 1837. He was then elected a US Representative and served until 1849. In 1838, he changed his last name from Smith to that of a prominent colonial ancestor, Colonel William Rhett.

Rhett objected vehemently to the protectionist Tariff of 1842.

Support for secession

On July 31, 1844, Rhett launched the Bluffton Movement, which called for South Carolina to return to nullification or else declare secession. It was soon repudiated by more moderate South Carolina Democrats, including even Senator John C. Calhoun, who feared it would endanger the presidential candidacy of James K. Polk.

Rhett opposed the Compromise of 1850 as against the interests of the slave-holding South. He joined fellow Fire-Eaters at the Nashville Convention of 1850, which failed to endorse his aim of secession for the whole South. After the Nashville Convention, Rhett, William Lowndes Yancey, and a few others met in Macon, Georgia on August 21, 1850, and formed the short-lived Southern National Party. In December 1850, he was appointed to be a U.S. Senator to complete the term left by the death of Calhoun. He continued to advocate secession in response to the Compromise, but in 1852, South Carolina refrained from declaring secession and merely passed an ordinance declaring a state's right to secede. Disappointed, he resigned his Senate seat.

He continued to express his fiery secessionist sentiments through the Charleston Mercury, now edited by his son, Robert Barnwell Rhett Jr.

The 1860 Democratic National Convention met in Charleston, South Carolina and a large bloc of Southern delegates walked out when the platform was insufficiently pro-slavery. That led to the division of the party and separate Northern and Southern nominees for president, which practically guaranteed the election of an anti-slavery Republican, which in turn triggered declarations of secession in seven states. During the 1860 presidential campaign, a widely credited report in the Nashville Patriot said that the outcome was the intended result of a conspiracy by Rhett, Yancey, and William Porcher Miles hatched at the Southern Convention in Montgomery, Alabama in May 1858.[4] One 20th-century historian called the scheme the work of "Rhett–Yancey–Keitt extremists."[5]

Confederate States

After the election of the Republican Party's candidate, Abraham Lincoln, Rhett was elected to the South Carolina Secession Convention, which declared secession in December. He was chosen as deputy from South Carolina to the Provisional Confederate States Congress in Montgomery. He was one of the most active deputies and was the chairman of the committee that reported the Confederate States Constitution. He was then elected to the Confederate House of Representatives. He received no higher office in the Confederate government and returned to South Carolina. During the rest of the Civil War, he sharply criticized the policies of Confederate President Jefferson Davis.

In October 1865, Confederate military officer P.G.T. Beauregard wrote to Rhett encouraging him to resume publication of the Charleston Mercury "to help in re-establishing the truths of History. It will be difficult, even for many of our own people, to believe that so glorious a cause as the one we fought for should have been sacrificed by the prejudices & want of judgment & foresight of one man [Jefferson Davis]! Yet such was the fact, according to my most deliberate opinion."[6]

Death

Rhett struggled with skin cancer for many years, including a "cancerous growth on his nose which terribly disfigured him and also affected his general health in the years after the war." After the war, Rhett settled in Louisiana. He died in St. James Parish, Louisiana, and is interred at Magnolia Cemetery in Charleston, South Carolina.

Legacy

The Robert Barnwell Rhett House in Charleston was declared a National Historic Landmark in 1973.[7] [8]

See also

References

Notes

Further reading

External links

Notes and References

  1. https://news.google.com/newspapers?id=ZZdJAAAAIBAJ&sjid=dQwNAAAAIBAJ&pg=3798,3556997&dq=charleston+mercury&hl=en The Secession
  2. Web site: Island . Mailing Address: 1214 Middle Street Sullivan's . Us . SC 29482 Phone:577-0242 Contact . Alfred M. Rhett - Fort Sumter and Fort Moultrie National Historical Park (U.S. National Park Service) . 2023-08-07 . www.nps.gov . en.
  3. Book: Davis, William C. . William C. Davis (historian) . 2001 . Rhett: The Turbulent Life and Times of a Fire-Eater . Columbia, S.C. . . 1 . 978-1-57003-439-8.
  4. [Allan Nevins]
  5. Roseboom . Eugene H. . Crenshaw. . Ollinger . September 1947 . The Slave States in the Presidential Election of 1860 . The Mississippi Valley Historical Review . 34 . 2 . 307 . 10.2307/1896188. 1896188 .
  6. 2010-04-01 . Caroliniana Society Annual Gifts Report - April 2010 . University South Caroliniana Society . University of South Carolina Libraries.
  7. Web site: Robert Barnwell Rhett House. 2008-03-16. National Historic Landmark summary listing. National Park Service. dead. https://web.archive.org/web/20110606141704/http://tps.cr.nps.gov/nhl/detail.cfm?ResourceId=1381&ResourceType=Building. June 6, 2011. mdy-all.
  8. [{{NHLS url|id=73001691}} National Register of Historic Places Inventory-Nomination ]. pdf. January 29, 1973 . Benjamin . Levy . National Park Service. and  (32 KB)