Thomas Bennett Jr. Explained

Thomas Bennett Jr.
Order:48th
Office:Governor of South Carolina
Term Start:December 1, 1820
Term End:December 1, 1822
Lieutenant:William Pinckney
Predecessor:John Geddes
Successor:John Lyde Wilson
Office1:Member of the South Carolina Senate from St. Philip's and St. Michael's Parish
Term1:November 28, 1837  - November 23, 1840
Alongside Daniel Elliott Huger
Predecessor1:Joel Poinsett
Successor1:Ker Boyce
Term2:November 27, 1820  - December 7, 1820
Alongside Philip Moser
Predecessor2:James Reid Pringle
Successor2:William Crafts Jr.
Office3:17th Speaker of the South Carolina House of Representatives
Term3:November 28, 1814  - November 23, 1818
Governor3:David Rogerson Williams
Andrew Pickens
Predecessor3:John Geddes
Successor3:Robert Y. Hayne
Office4:Member of the South Carolina House of Representatives from St. Philip's and St. Michael's Parish
Term4:September 15, 1813  - November 23, 1818
Term5:November 23, 1812  - December 19, 1812
Term6:November 28, 1808  - November 26, 1810
Term7:November 26, 1804  - November 24, 1806
Office8:20th Intendant of Charleston, South Carolina
Term8:1812–1813
Predecessor8:Thomas McCalla
Successor8:Thomas Rhett Smith
Birth Date:14 August 1781
Birth Place:Charleston, South Carolina, US
Death Place:South Carolina, C.S.A.
Spouse:Mary Lightbourn Stone
Jane (Burgess) Gordon
Party:Democratic-Republican

Thomas Bennett Jr. (August 14, 1781January 30, 1865) was an American businessman, banker and politician, the 48th Governor of South Carolina from 1820 to 1822. A respected politician, he had served several terms in the state legislature since 1804, including four years as Speaker of the House, and a term in the state Senate.

Early life and career

Born in Charleston to an upper-class family, Bennett was educated at the College of Charleston. In a partnership with his father, Bennett ran a lumber and rice milling operation near the city. He also worked as an architect and as a banker, managing the Planters and Merchant Bank of South Carolina and the Bank of the State of South Carolina. Bennett's brother-in-law was Justice William Johnson, an associate justice on the Supreme Court of the United States from 1804 to 1834.

Political career

Bennett was elected to a number of local positions for the city of Charleston, including Intendant (mayor). The prosperous city was a center of trade, including that for slaves. Beginning in 1804, Bennett was elected to the South Carolina House of Representatives for three non-consecutive terms. In 1818, he was elected to the South Carolina Senate.

In 1820, the General Assembly elected him as the Governor of South Carolina for the customary two-year term (the state wanted to limit executive power). As governor, Bennett denounced the interstate domestic slave trade. In 1818 the legislature repealed a law that prohibited it. (In 1808 the US prohibition of the African slave trade had been implemented. More than one million African-American slaves would be forcibly relocated to the Deep South in the domestic trade before the Civil War.)

Denmark Vesey rebellion and trial

In mid-June 1822, Charleston white residents were alarmed by reports that a conspiracy had been discovered for a slave rebellion led by free black man Denmark Vesey. The city organized a militia and rapidly arrested a growing circle of suspected conspirators. A Court of Magistrates and Freeholders operated in secret to hear testimony and judge who was guilty. Four household slaves of Bennett were charged as conspirators; three were found guilty and were among five slaves hanged with Vesey on July 2.[1]

Bennett was concerned about the way the court was conducting its work and consulted with the state attorney general, Robert Y. Hayne, who advised him that the right of habeas corpus was available only to freemen. In August after the proceedings had ended, Bennett published an article suggesting the insurrection had been exaggerated. He lost the public argument to Intendant James Hamilton, who stressed that white residents had been saved by the city government's quick action. Bennett also submitted a report to the legislature critical of the secret proceedings of the court.[2]

Later life and career

After leaving the governorship in 1822, Bennett returned to Charleston. In about 1825, he constructed a house and lived there; today it is known as the Gov. Thomas Bennett House and listed on the National Register of Historic Places. Later, he was elected to the legislature a final time as a state senator, serving from 1837 to 1840, when he became well known as a Unionist. He died on January 30, 1865, in the last year of the Civil War and was buried at Magnolia Cemetery in Charleston.

Bennett is the namesake to the city of Bennettsville, South Carolina.[3]

References

External links

Notes and References

  1. Denmark Vesey and His Co-Conspirators Author(s): Michael P. Johnson Source: The William and Mary Quarterly, Vol. 58, No. 4 (Oct., 2001), pp. 915-976 Published by: Omohundro Institute of Early American History and Culture Stable URL: Accessed: 15-04-2020 00:45 UTC
  2. https://www.jstor.org/stable/2205070?seq=4 Richard C. Wade, "The Vesey Plot: A Reconsideration"
  3. Book: Federal Writers' Project. Federal Writers' Project. Palmetto Place Names. 1941. Sloane Printing Co.. 25.