Winthrop Sargent Explained

Winthrop Sargent should not be confused with Winthrop Sargeant.

Winthrop Sargent
Office:Governor of Mississippi Territory
Term:May 7, 1798 – May 25, 1801
Predecessor:Position established
Successor:William C. C. Claiborne
Office1:Secretary of Northwest Territory
Term1:July 9, 1788 – May 31, 1798
Predecessor1:Position established
Successor1:William Henry Harrison
Office2:Adjutant General of the U. S. Army
(Acting)
Term2:September 4, 1791 – November 4, 1791
Predecessor2:John Pratt (Acting)
Successor2:Ebenezer Denny (Acting)
Birth Date:May 1, 1753
Birth Place:Gloucester, Massachusetts
Death Place:New Orleans, Louisiana
Party:Federalist
Alma Mater:Harvard College
Parents:Winthrop Sargent
Judith Saunders
Spouse:
Mary McIntosh Williams
Relations:Judith Sargent Murray (sister)
Benjamin Tupper (father-in-law)
Paul Dudley Sargent (uncle)

Winthrop Sargent (May 1, 1753 – June 3, 1820) was a United States patriot, politician, and writer; and a member of the Federalist party.

Early life

Sargent was born in Gloucester, Massachusetts, on May 1, 1753. He was one of eight children born to Winthrop Sargent (1727–1793) and Judith Saunders. His elder sister was Judith Sargent Murray (1751–1820), an essayist, playwright, and poet.[1]

He was the grandson of Colonel Epes Sargent, one of the largest landholders in Gloucester.[2] Sargent was also the nephew of Daniel Sargent Sr. (1730–1806), a prominent merchant, Paul Dudley Sargent (1745–1828), who also served in the Continental Army, and John Sargent (1750–1824), a Loyalist during the Revolution.[3]

He graduated from Harvard College Class of 1771[4] before the Revolution. He spent some time at sea, as captain of a merchantman owned by his father.[5]

Career

Shortly after the outbreak of the American Revolution, Sargent was commissioned in Gridley's Regiment of Massachusetts Artillery on July 7, 1775, as a lieutenant, and later that year was promoted to captain lieutenant of Knox's Regiment, Continental Artillery, on December 10. He was with his guns at the siege of Boston, and later served in the battles of Long Island, White Plains, Trenton, Brandywine, Germantown, and Monmouth. He was promoted to captain in the 3rd Continental Artillery on January 1, 1777, and brevetted major on August 25, 1783, and was discharged from the Continental Army later that year. In 1783 he became an Original Member of the Massachusetts Society of the Cincinnati.

In 1786, he helped to survey the Seven Ranges, the first lands laid out under the Land Ordinance of 1785. With inside knowledge of the area, he went on to form the Ohio Company of Associates, was an important shareholder in the Scioto Company, and as of 1787, secretary of the Ohio Company.[6]

Sargent was appointed by the Congress of the Confederation as the first Secretary of the Northwest Territory, a post second in importance only to the governor, Arthur St. Clair. He took up his post in 1788. Like St. Clair, Sargent would function in both civil and military capacities; he served as acting Adjutant General of U.S. Army from September 1791 until he was wounded twice at the Battle of the Wabash, on November 4, 1791. On August 15, 1796, he would, as Acting Governor, proclaim the establishment of Wayne County, the first American government in what is now Michigan.

President John Adams then appointed Sargent the first Governor of the Mississippi Territory, effective from May 7, 1798, to May 25, 1801.[7] His last entry as Northwest Territory's secretary was on May 31, 1798; he arrived at Natchez on August 6, but due to illness was unable to assume his post until August 16.[8]

The subject was a cotton planter, marketing his crop in New York by Gilbert and John Aspinwall, merchants.[9]

Later life

In 1788, Sargent was elected a Fellow of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences.[10] He was also a member of the American Philosophical Society elected in 1789[11] and an original member of the Society of the Cincinnati as a delegate from Massachusetts, and published, with Benjamin B. Smith, Papers Relative to Certain American Antiquities (Philadelphia, 1796), and "Boston," a poem (Boston, 1803).[12]

Being a Federalist, Sargent was dismissed from his position as territorial governor of Mississippi in 1801 by incoming president Thomas Jefferson. Sargent took up life in the private sector, developing his plantation Gloucester,[13] the earliest such establishment in Natchez. Sargent was elected a member of the American Antiquarian Society in 1813.[14]

During the last decades of Winthrop's life he became major plantation owner in [Natchez, Mississippi]. He acquired extensive plantations due to his marriage to wealthy widow Mary (McIntosh) Williams.[15] In Natchez alone Winthrop owned over 300 slaves and 11,000 acres.[16]

Personal life

In 1789, he married Roewena Tupper (1766–1790), a daughter of Gen. Benjamin Tupper, at the settlement of Marietta in the first marriage ceremony held under the laws of the Northwest Territory.[17] After her death, he married Hannah Ober of Massachusetts on 13 Feb 1791. They had a daughter, Hannah born 25 August 1791 in Massachusetts, and Hannah Ober died the next day.[18] [19] Then he married Mary McIntosh Williams (1760–1823) shortly after moving to Natchez. They were the parents of:

He died on June 3, 1820, in New Orleans.[21] His grandson was the writer Winthrop Sargent (1825–1870). A 1848 Louisiana Supreme Court case decided that the Louisiana portion of Winthrop's estate which included real estate, timber, agricultural properties in Louisiana, Mississippi, Ohio, Virginia and Massachusetts would be divided between his son George Washington Sargent as well as his stepchildren through his marriage to Mary Williams. These step children included Mary (Williams) Urquhart and Mary Sargents grandchildren through her deceased son James C Williams, namely David Percy Williams.[22] Some of the properties of Winthrop Sargent were passed through the Natchez David Williams family who arrived in the 1700s according to Supreme Court case.[23] The Winthrop Sargent estate was worth several million dollars in 1700s currency and valued at nearly 10 million dollars in the mid-1800s when his heirs divided his estate.[24] One of the heirs of Winthrops estate was Archie P Williams a mixed race slave owner who became a millionaire in 1800s dollars due to his 1/4th share of Sargents estate through his grandfather James C Williams.[25] [26] The majority of the Winthrop Sargent estate today is owned by one of the Williams heirs, Anton R Williams.[27] Anton R. Williams Holding Company of Grand Rapids, Michigan and its funding arm continues legacy business operations[28]

Legacy

Although there are at least two Sargent Townships (in Illinois and Nebraska) and one Sargent County, it is not known if these are named after Winthrop Sargent. However, a former township of the Northwest Territory's Wayne County was designated as Sargent Township or the District of Sargent; this apparently encompassed the settlements downriver from Detroit and at the River Raisin in what is now Monroe County, Michigan. This township apparently ceased to function after the organization of Michigan Territory, being replaced by the District of Erie.A student dormitory at Ohio University (founded in 1804) in Athens, Ohio, is named Sargent Hall in his honor. This is the first university in the Northwest Territory and the first in Ohio.

References

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External links

Notes and References

  1. Book: Sargent. Emma Worcester. Epes Sargent of Gloucester and His Descendants. 1923. Houghton Mifflin. 23 August 2017. en.
  2. Web site: Copley. John Singleton. Epes Sargent. nga.gov. 24 August 2017. 1760.
  3. Book: Sargent. Winthrop. Colonel Paul Dudley Sargent. 1920. Printed for Private Collection. Philadelphia. 23 August 2017. en.
  4. Book: Thayer, W.R. . The Harvard Graduates' Magazine . Harvard Graduates' Magazine Association . v. 28 . 1920 . 2024-08-04 . 253.
  5. Book: Farrell. Betty. Elite Families: Class and Power in Nineteenth-Century Boston. 1993. SUNY Press. 9780791415931. 23 August 2017. en.
  6. Web site: Biography of Winthrop Sargent on Ohio History Central . ohiohistorycentral.org . 2023-12-31 . 2024-08-04.
  7. Web site: Sword of Winthrop Sargent (1753-1820), First Governor of Northwest. www.artic.edu. The Art Institute of Chicago. 24 August 2017. en.
  8. Book: Mississippi Dept of Archives and History. The Mississippi Territorial Archives, 1798-18 .... 1905. Press of Brandon Print. Company. 24 August 2017. en.
  9. Papers of Winthorp Sargent.(1965). Boston: Massachusetts Historical Society. Mississippi Department of Archives and History. Roll 3465, p. 58, p. 135, p. 179, and p. 212.
  10. Book of Members, 1780–2010: Chapter S . . July 28, 2014 . https://web.archive.org/web/20181103091900/https://www.amacad.org/publications/BookofMembers/ChapterS.pdf . 3 November 2018 . 475.
  11. Web site: Winthrop Sargent. 15 December 2020. American Philosophical Society Member History. American Philosophical Society.
  12. Sargent, Paul Dudley. 1900.
  13. Web site: "Gloucester," Natchez . 2009 . Miss Preservation . 14 June 2020.
  14. Web site: Members Directory . . 14 June 2020.
  15. Book: Yankee Colonies across America: Cities upon the Hills . 9781498519847 . Rosenberg . Chaim M. . 24 December 2015 . Lexington Books .
  16. Book: Agrarian Elites: American Slaveholders and Southern Italian Landowners, 1815--1861 . 9780807130872 . Lago . Enrico Dal . November 2005 . LSU Press .
  17. Zimmer, L: True Stories from Pioneer Valley, Broughton Foods Co., Marietta, Ohio (1987) p. 20.
  18. https://search.findmypast.com/record?id=https%3a%2f%2ffamilysearch.org%2fpal%3a%2fmm9.3.1%2fth-267-12116-82460-65&parentid=us%2ffs%2fm%2f071639427%2f2.
  19. Web site: FamilySearch: Sign In. .
  20. Web site: Winthrop Sargent Papers, 1771-1948. www.masshist.org. Massachusetts Historical Society. 24 August 2017. en.
  21. Book: Skates, John Ray. 1979. Mississippi: A Bicentennial History. W.W. Norton & Co.. New York City. 0-393-05678-3. registration.
  22. Web site: Louisiana Reports. Cases Argued and Decided in the Supreme Court of Louisiana. 1848.
  23. Web site: Reports of cases argued and determined in the Supreme Court of Louisiana and in the Superior Court of the Territory of Louisiana: Annotated edition, unabridged, with notes and references by the editorial corps of the National reporter system . Court . Louisiana (State) Superior . 1848 .
  24. Web site: Founders Online: To Alexander Hamilton from William Playfair, 30 March 1791 .
  25. Web site: Louisiana Reports: Cases Argued and Determined in the Supreme Court of Louisiana . Supreme Court . Louisiana . Thorpe . Thomas H. . Gill . Charles G. . 1848 .
  26. News: Archie P. Williams - Natchez MS Bi-Racial Millionaire Heir in the 1800s, Planter and Executive . The Weekly Democrat . 24 October 1888 . 4 .
  27. Web site: ARWHC - Legacy- Each of 9 generations. www.arwhc.com.
  28. Web site: ARWF - Historical Precedence .