Thomas Rodney | |
Office: | Chief Justice of Mississippi |
Term Start: | August 1, 1803 |
Term End: | January 2, 1811 |
Office2: | Associate Justice Delaware Supreme Court |
Term Start2: | December 17, 1802 |
Term End2: | August 1, 1803 |
Office3: | Continental Congressman from Delaware |
Term Start3: | November 4, 1785 |
Term End3: | February 3, 1787 |
Term Start4: | April 8, 1784 |
Term End4: | October 26, 1784 |
Term Start5: | February 10, 1781 |
Term End5: | February 2, 1782 |
Birth Date: | 4 June 1744 |
Birth Place: | Kent County, Delaware Colony |
Death Place: | Natchez, Mississippi |
Party: | Democratic-Republican |
Residence: | Dover, Delaware |
Thomas Rodney (June 4, 1744 - January 2, 1811) was an American lawyer and politician from Jones Neck in St. Jones Hundred, Kent County, Delaware, and Natchez, Mississippi. He was a Continental Congressman from Delaware, and a member of the Democratic-Republican Party who served in the Delaware General Assembly, as Justice of the Delaware Supreme Court, and as federal judge for the Mississippi Territory. He was the younger brother of Caesar Rodney, Revolutionary President of Delaware.
See also: Rodney family of Delaware. Rodney was born June 4, 1744, at Byfield, his family's farm at Jones Neck, in Dover Hundred, Kent County, Delaware. It is just north of John Dickinson's mansion, Poplar Hall. He was the son of Caesar and Mary Crawford Rodney, and grandson of William Rodney, who came to America in the 1680s and had been Speaker of the Colonial Assembly of the Lower Counties in 1704. His mother was the daughter of the Rev. Thomas Crawford, Anglican priest at Dover. Byfield was an 800acres farm where the work was done by enslaved people, and with the addition of other adjacent properties, the Rodneys were, by the standards of the day, wealthy members of the local gentry. Sufficient income was earned from the sale of wheat and barley to the Philadelphia and West Indies market to provide enough cash and leisure to allow members of the family to participate in the social and political life of Kent County. Rodney's father died in 1745, when he was an infant, and his much older brother, Caesar Rodney, became much involved in his rearing and education.
Rodney was very active in local politics, as well as the broader range of those elements affecting Delaware as whole. As early as 1770 he was a Justice of the Peace for Kent County and through the years he held many other local offices. He was a Colonel in the county's militia, and was involved in a number of actions during the American Revolutionary War.
In 1774 Thomas was a delegate to the state convention that elected his brother Caesar to be their delegate to the Continental Congress. Caesar went on to sign the Declaration of Independence. Meanwhile, Thomas was named to the state's Committee of Safety. Thomas in turn was sent as a delegate to the Congress in 1781 and 1782. He was elected to the Congress annually from 1785 to 1787, but attended sessions only in 1786. Through these same years Thomas was also a member in Delaware's state Assembly, and served as its Speaker of the House in 1787.
On December 17, 1802, Rodney became an associate justice of Delaware's Supreme Court. He would serve only until August 1803. He resigned since President Jefferson appointed him as the chief justice for the Mississippi Territory. He bought land in what was then Jefferson County, Mississippi, and moved to Natchez to assume his new duties as the senior federal judge for the Mississippi Territory from 1803 to 1811.
Thomas Rodney died January 2, 1811, at Natchez, Mississippi. The community of Rodney, in Jefferson County, Mississippi, is named in his honor. His son, Caesar A. Rodney, served as the U.S. representative from Delaware, U.S. senator from Delaware, U.S. attorney general and U.S. minister to Argentina.
At this time Delaware elections were held the first of October. Members of the House of Assembly took office on the twentieth day of October for a term of one year. Seven Assemblymen were elected, at large, from each county. The General Assembly chose the Continental Congressmen for a term of one year.
Office | Type | Location | Elected | Took office | Left office | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Kent County Courts | Judiciary | New Castle | 1770 | Justice of the Peace | ||
State House | Legislature | Dover | October 1, 1781 | October 20, 1781 | October 20, 1782 | |
Continental Congress | Legislature | Philadelphia | February 10, 1781 | February 10, 1781 | February 2, 1782 | |
Continental Congress | Legislature | Annapolis | April 8, 1784 | April 8, 1784 | June 3, 1784 | never attended |
Continental Congress | Legislature | New York | November 4, 1785 | November 7, 1785 | November 3, 1786 | |
State House | Legislature | Dover | October 1, 1786 | October 20, 1786 | October 20, 1787 | |
Continental Congress | Legislature | New York | October 27, 1786 | November 6, 1786 | October 30, 1787 | never attended |
State House | Legislature | Dover | October 1, 1787 | October 20, 1787 | October 20, 1788 | Speaker |
U.S. Judge | Judiciary | Natchez | 1803 | 1811 | Mississippi Territory | |