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Elias Boudinot

Elias Boudinot (/ɪˈləs bˈdɪnɒt/ il-EYE-əs boo-DIN-ot; May 2, 1740 – October 24, 1821), a Founding Father of the United States, was a lawyer, statesman, and early abolitionist and women's rights advocate from Elizabeth, New Jersey. During the Revolutionary War, Boudinot was an intelligence officer and prisoner-of-war commissary under general George Washington, working to improve conditions for prisoners on both the American and British sides. In 1779, he was elected to the Continental Congress and then to its successor, the Congress of the Confederation, serving as President of Congress in 1782—1783, the final years of the war.

Elias Boudinot
Director of the United States Mint
In office
October 1795 – July 1805
PresidentGeorge Washington
John Adams
Thomas Jefferson
Preceded byHenry William de Saussure
Succeeded byRobert Patterson
Member of the U.S. House of Representatives
from New Jersey's At-large district
In office
March 4, 1789 – March 4, 1795
Preceded bynone
Succeeded byThomas Henderson
2nd President of the Confederation Congress
In office
November 4, 1782 – November 2, 1783
Preceded byJohn Hanson
Succeeded byThomas Mifflin
Personal details
Born(1740-05-02)May 2, 1740
Philadelphia, Province of Pennsylvania, British America
DiedOctober 24, 1821(1821-10-24) (aged 81)
Burlington, New Jersey, U.S.
Resting placeSaint Marys Episcopal Churchyard, Burlington, New Jersey, U.S.
Signature

After being elected to the first, second, and third U.S. Congresses, where he served from 1789—1795, Boudinot was appointed director of the United States Mint by president Washington and held the position through 1805 under the presidencies of John Adams and Thomas Jefferson. An advocate for women’s rights, he led a Federalist campaign in New Jersey during the early 1790s to encourage women to become active in politics. Boudinot, a devout Presbyterian, spoke out frequently against slavery, both as a member of Congress and as a private citizen. In 1816, he helped found the American Bible Society and served as its first president for five years. Boudinot was also a member of the board of trustees of Princeton College from 1772-1821, the year of his death.

Early life and education edit

 
James Sharples, Elias Boudinot IV, Princeton University Art Museum

Elias Boudinot was born in Philadelphia in the Province of Pennsylvania on May 2, 1740. His father, Elias Boudinot III, was a merchant and silversmith; he was a neighbor and friend of Benjamin Franklin. His mother, Mary Catherine Williams, was born in the British West Indies; her father was from Wales. Elias' paternal grandfather, Elie (sometimes called Elias) Boudinot, was the son of Jean Boudinot and Marie Suire of Marans, Aunis, France. They were a Huguenot (French Protestant) family who fled to New York about 1687 to avoid the religious persecutions of King Louis XIV.

Mary Catherine Williams and Elias Boudinot Sr. were married on August 8, 1729. Over the next twenty years, they had nine children. The first, John, was born in the British West Indies-Antigua. Of the others, only the younger Elias and his siblings Annis, Mary, and Elisha reached adulthood. Annis became one of the first published women poets in the Thirteen Colonies, and her work appeared in leading newspapers and magazines. Elisha Boudinot became Chief Justice of the Supreme Court of New Jersey.

After studying and being tutored at home, Elias Boudinot went to Princeton, New Jersey to read the law as a legal apprentice to Richard Stockton, an attorney who married Elias' older sister Annis Boudinot. Stockton would also become a Founding Father as a signatory to the Declaration of Independence in 1776.

Career edit

In 1760, Boudinot was admitted to the bar, and began his practice in Elizabeth, New Jersey. He owned land adjacent to the road from Elizabethtown to Woodbridge Township, New Jersey.

Marriage and family edit

 
Coat of Arms of Elias Boudinot
 
Hannah Stockton Boudinot (1736–1808), by Matthew Pratt

After getting established, on April 21, 1762, Boudinot married Hannah Stockton (1736–1808), Richard's younger sister. They had two children, Maria Boudinot, who died at age two, and Susan Vergereau Boudinot.

Susan married William Bradford, who became Chief Justice of Pennsylvania and Attorney General under George Washington. After her husband's death in 1795, Susan Boudinot Bradford returned to her parents' home to live. The young widow edited her father's papers. Now held by Princeton University, these provide significant insight into the events of the Revolutionary era.

In 1805, Elias, Hannah and Susan moved to a new home in Burlington, New Jersey. Hannah died a few years after their move, and Elias lived there for the remainder of his years.

Later career edit

In his later years, Boudinot invested and speculated in land. He owned large tracts in Ohio including most of Green Township in what is now the western suburbs of Cincinnati, where there is a street bearing his surname. At his death, he willed 13,000 acres (53 km2) to the city of Philadelphia for parks and city needs. He was buried in the churchyard of St. Mary's Church, Burlington, New Jersey.[1]

Political career edit

Boudinot became a prominent lawyer and his practice prospered. As the revolution drew near, he aligned with the Whigs, and was elected to the New Jersey provincial assembly in 1775. In the early stages of the Revolutionary War, he was active in promoting enlistment; several times he loaned money to field commanders to purchase supplies. Boudinot helped support the activities of rebel spies. After the British occupation of New York City, spies were sent to Staten Island and Long Island, New York to observe and report on movements of specific British garrisons and regiments.

On May 5, 1777, General George Washington asked Boudinot to be appointed as commissary general for prisoners. Congress through the board of war concurred. Boudinot was commissioned as a colonel in the Continental Army for this work. He served until July 1778, when competing responsibilities forced him to resign. The commissary managed enemy prisoners, and also was responsible for supplying American prisoners who were held by the British.

In November 1777, the New Jersey legislature named Boudinot as one of their delegates to the Second Continental Congress. His duties as Commissary prevented his attendance, so in May 1778 he resigned. By early July he had been replaced and attended his first meeting of the Congress on July 7, 1778. As a delegate, he still continued his concerns for the welfare of prisoners of war. His first term ended that year.

In 1781, Boudinot returned to the Congress, for a term lasting through 1783. In November 1782, he was elected as President of the Continental Congress for a one-year term. The President of Congress was a mostly ceremonial position with no real authority, but the office did require him to handle a good deal of correspondence and sign official documents.[2] On April 15, 1783 he signed the Preliminary Articles of Peace.[3] When the United States (US) government was formed in 1789, Boudinot was elected from New Jersey to the US House of Representatives. He was elected to the second and third congresses as well, where he generally supported the administration. He refused to join the expansion of affiliated groups that formed formal political parties. He was one of nine representatives to vote against the Eleventh Amendment to the United States Constitution. [4]

In 1794, he declined to serve another term, and left Congress in early 1795. In October 1795, President George Washington appointed him as Director of the United States Mint, a position he held through succeeding administrations until he retired in 1805.

Later public service edit

In addition to serving in political office, Elias supported many civic, religious, and educational causes during his life. Boudinot served as one of the trustees of the College of New Jersey (later Princeton University) for nearly half a century, from 1772 until 1821. When the Continental Congress was forced to leave Philadelphia in 1783 while he was president, he moved the meetings to Princeton, where they met in the College's Nassau Hall.

On September 24, 1789, the House of Representatives voted to recommend the First Amendment of the newly drafted Constitution to the states for ratification. The next day, Congressman Boudinot proposed that the House and Senate jointly request of President Washington to proclaim a day of thanksgiving for "the many signal favors of Almighty God." Boudinot said that he

could not think of letting the session pass over without offering an opportunity to all the citizens of the United States of joining, with one voice, in returning to Almighty God their sincere thanks for the many blessings he had poured down upon them.[5]

Boudinot was elected a member of the American Antiquarian Society in 1814.[6]

A devout Presbyterian, Boudinot supported missions and missionary work. He wrote The Age of Revelation in response to Thomas Paine's The Age of Reason. He was one of the founders of the American Bible Society, and after 1816 served as its President.

He argued for the rights of black and American Indian citizens, and sponsored students to the Board School for Indians in Connecticut. One of these, a young Cherokee named Gallegina Uwatie, also known as Buck Watie, stayed with him in Burlington on his way to the school. The two so impressed each other that Gallegina asked for and was given permission to adopt the statesman's name. Later known as Elias Boudinot, he was an editor of the Cherokee Phoenix, the nation's first newspaper, which was published in Cherokee and English.

Legacy and honors edit

Quotes edit

  • "Be religiously careful in our choice of all public officers...and judge of the tree by its fruits."
  • "Good government generally begins in the family, and if the moral character of a people once degenerate, their political character must soon follow."
  • "For nearly half a century have I anxiously and critically studied that invaluable treasure [the Bible]; and I still scarcely ever take it up that I do not find something new – that I do not receive some valuable addition to my stock of knowledge or perceive some instructive fact never observed before. In short, were you to ask me to recommend the most valuable book in the world, I should fix on the Bible as the most instructive both to the wise and ignorant. Were you to ask me for one affording the most rational and pleasing entertainment to the inquiring mind, I should repeat, it is the Bible; and should you renew the inquiry for the best philosophy or the most interesting history, I should still urge you to look into your Bible. I would make it, in short, the Alpha and Omega of knowledge; and be assured, that it is for want of understanding the scriptures, both of the Old and New Testament, that so little value is set upon them by the world at large."[7]

Archival collections edit

The Presbyterian Historical Society in Philadelphia has a collection of incoming correspondence and several legal agreements pertaining to land ownership related to Boudinot from 1777–1821 in its holdings. The correspondence dating from 1777–1778 almost exclusively deals with the trading and releasing of prisoners.

References edit

  1. ^ Elias Boudinot, Biographical Directory of the United States Congress. Accessed August 21, 2007.
  2. ^ Jillson, Calvin C.; Wilson, Rick K. (1994). Congressional Dynamics: Structure, Coordination, and Choice in the First American Congress, 1774–1789. Stanford: Stanford University Press. pp. 76–80. ISBN 0-8047-2293-5.
  3. ^ "Treaty of Paris: Primary Documents of American History (Virtual Programs & Services, Library of Congress)". www.loc.gov. Retrieved August 2, 2018.
  4. ^ "Voteview | Plot Vote: 3rd Congress > House > 9". voteview.com. Retrieved August 21, 2023.
  5. ^ The Annals of the Congress, The Debates and Proceedings in the Congress of the United States, Compiled From Authentic Materials, compiled by Joseph Gales, Senior (Washington, DC: Gales and Seaton, 1834), 1:949–950
  6. ^ "MemberListB". Retrieved August 2, 2018.
  7. ^ Boudinot, Elias (1801). The Age of Revelation, or The Age of Reason Shewn to be An Age of Infidelity. Asbury Dickins. pp. xv.

Further reading edit

  • Boudinot, J. J. (1896). The Life, Public Services, Addresses and Letters of Elias Boudinot. New York.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  • Boyd, George (1969). Elias Boudinot: Patriot and Statesman, 1740–1821. Westwood, Connecticut: Greenwood Publishing. ISBN 0-8371-1345-8.
  • Boyle, Joseph Lee (2002). Their Distress is Almost Intolerable: The Elias Boudinot Letterbook, 1777-1778. Heritage Books. ISBN 0-7884-2210-3.

Elias Boudinot, "Age of Revelation"—A Refutation of Thomas Paine's deistic "Age of Reason"

External links edit

Political offices
Preceded by President of the Continental Congress
November 4, 1782 – November 2, 1783
Succeeded by
U.S. House of Representatives
Preceded by
District created
Member of the U.S. House of Representatives
from New Jersey's at-large congressional district

March 4, 1789 – March 3, 1797
Succeeded by
Government offices
Preceded by 3rd Director of the United States Mint
1795–1805
Succeeded by

elias, boudinot, other, people, named, disambiguation, 1740, october, 1821, founding, father, united, states, lawyer, statesman, early, abolitionist, women, rights, advocate, from, elizabeth, jersey, during, revolutionary, boudinot, intelligence, officer, pris. For other people named Elias Boudinot see Elias Boudinot disambiguation Elias Boudinot ɪ ˈ l aɪ e s b uː ˈ d ɪ n ɒ t il EYE es boo DIN ot May 2 1740 October 24 1821 a Founding Father of the United States was a lawyer statesman and early abolitionist and women s rights advocate from Elizabeth New Jersey During the Revolutionary War Boudinot was an intelligence officer and prisoner of war commissary under general George Washington working to improve conditions for prisoners on both the American and British sides In 1779 he was elected to the Continental Congress and then to its successor the Congress of the Confederation serving as President of Congress in 1782 1783 the final years of the war Elias BoudinotDirector of the United States MintIn office October 1795 July 1805PresidentGeorge WashingtonJohn AdamsThomas JeffersonPreceded byHenry William de SaussureSucceeded byRobert PattersonMember of the U S House of Representativesfrom New Jersey s At large districtIn office March 4 1789 March 4 1795Preceded bynoneSucceeded byThomas Henderson2nd President of the Confederation CongressIn office November 4 1782 November 2 1783Preceded byJohn HansonSucceeded byThomas MifflinPersonal detailsBorn 1740 05 02 May 2 1740Philadelphia Province of Pennsylvania British AmericaDiedOctober 24 1821 1821 10 24 aged 81 Burlington New Jersey U S Resting placeSaint Marys Episcopal Churchyard Burlington New Jersey U S SignatureAfter being elected to the first second and third U S Congresses where he served from 1789 1795 Boudinot was appointed director of the United States Mint by president Washington and held the position through 1805 under the presidencies of John Adams and Thomas Jefferson An advocate for women s rights he led a Federalist campaign in New Jersey during the early 1790s to encourage women to become active in politics Boudinot a devout Presbyterian spoke out frequently against slavery both as a member of Congress and as a private citizen In 1816 he helped found the American Bible Society and served as its first president for five years Boudinot was also a member of the board of trustees of Princeton College from 1772 1821 the year of his death Contents 1 Early life and education 2 Career 3 Marriage and family 4 Later career 5 Political career 6 Later public service 7 Legacy and honors 8 Quotes 9 Archival collections 10 References 11 Further reading 12 External linksEarly life and education edit nbsp James Sharples Elias Boudinot IV Princeton University Art MuseumElias Boudinot was born in Philadelphia in the Province of Pennsylvania on May 2 1740 His father Elias Boudinot III was a merchant and silversmith he was a neighbor and friend of Benjamin Franklin His mother Mary Catherine Williams was born in the British West Indies her father was from Wales Elias paternal grandfather Elie sometimes called Elias Boudinot was the son of Jean Boudinot and Marie Suire of Marans Aunis France They were a Huguenot French Protestant family who fled to New York about 1687 to avoid the religious persecutions of King Louis XIV Mary Catherine Williams and Elias Boudinot Sr were married on August 8 1729 Over the next twenty years they had nine children The first John was born in the British West Indies Antigua Of the others only the younger Elias and his siblings Annis Mary and Elisha reached adulthood Annis became one of the first published women poets in the Thirteen Colonies and her work appeared in leading newspapers and magazines Elisha Boudinot became Chief Justice of the Supreme Court of New Jersey After studying and being tutored at home Elias Boudinot went to Princeton New Jersey to read the law as a legal apprentice to Richard Stockton an attorney who married Elias older sister Annis Boudinot Stockton would also become a Founding Father as a signatory to the Declaration of Independence in 1776 Career editIn 1760 Boudinot was admitted to the bar and began his practice in Elizabeth New Jersey He owned land adjacent to the road from Elizabethtown to Woodbridge Township New Jersey Marriage and family edit nbsp Coat of Arms of Elias Boudinot nbsp Hannah Stockton Boudinot 1736 1808 by Matthew PrattAfter getting established on April 21 1762 Boudinot married Hannah Stockton 1736 1808 Richard s younger sister They had two children Maria Boudinot who died at age two and Susan Vergereau Boudinot Susan married William Bradford who became Chief Justice of Pennsylvania and Attorney General under George Washington After her husband s death in 1795 Susan Boudinot Bradford returned to her parents home to live The young widow edited her father s papers Now held by Princeton University these provide significant insight into the events of the Revolutionary era In 1805 Elias Hannah and Susan moved to a new home in Burlington New Jersey Hannah died a few years after their move and Elias lived there for the remainder of his years Later career editIn his later years Boudinot invested and speculated in land He owned large tracts in Ohio including most of Green Township in what is now the western suburbs of Cincinnati where there is a street bearing his surname At his death he willed 13 000 acres 53 km2 to the city of Philadelphia for parks and city needs He was buried in the churchyard of St Mary s Church Burlington New Jersey 1 Political career editBoudinot became a prominent lawyer and his practice prospered As the revolution drew near he aligned with the Whigs and was elected to the New Jersey provincial assembly in 1775 In the early stages of the Revolutionary War he was active in promoting enlistment several times he loaned money to field commanders to purchase supplies Boudinot helped support the activities of rebel spies After the British occupation of New York City spies were sent to Staten Island and Long Island New York to observe and report on movements of specific British garrisons and regiments On May 5 1777 General George Washington asked Boudinot to be appointed as commissary general for prisoners Congress through the board of war concurred Boudinot was commissioned as a colonel in the Continental Army for this work He served until July 1778 when competing responsibilities forced him to resign The commissary managed enemy prisoners and also was responsible for supplying American prisoners who were held by the British In November 1777 the New Jersey legislature named Boudinot as one of their delegates to the Second Continental Congress His duties as Commissary prevented his attendance so in May 1778 he resigned By early July he had been replaced and attended his first meeting of the Congress on July 7 1778 As a delegate he still continued his concerns for the welfare of prisoners of war His first term ended that year In 1781 Boudinot returned to the Congress for a term lasting through 1783 In November 1782 he was elected as President of the Continental Congress for a one year term The President of Congress was a mostly ceremonial position with no real authority but the office did require him to handle a good deal of correspondence and sign official documents 2 On April 15 1783 he signed the Preliminary Articles of Peace 3 When the United States US government was formed in 1789 Boudinot was elected from New Jersey to the US House of Representatives He was elected to the second and third congresses as well where he generally supported the administration He refused to join the expansion of affiliated groups that formed formal political parties He was one of nine representatives to vote against the Eleventh Amendment to the United States Constitution 4 In 1794 he declined to serve another term and left Congress in early 1795 In October 1795 President George Washington appointed him as Director of the United States Mint a position he held through succeeding administrations until he retired in 1805 Later public service editIn addition to serving in political office Elias supported many civic religious and educational causes during his life Boudinot served as one of the trustees of the College of New Jersey later Princeton University for nearly half a century from 1772 until 1821 When the Continental Congress was forced to leave Philadelphia in 1783 while he was president he moved the meetings to Princeton where they met in the College s Nassau Hall On September 24 1789 the House of Representatives voted to recommend the First Amendment of the newly drafted Constitution to the states for ratification The next day Congressman Boudinot proposed that the House and Senate jointly request of President Washington to proclaim a day of thanksgiving for the many signal favors of Almighty God Boudinot said that he could not think of letting the session pass over without offering an opportunity to all the citizens of the United States of joining with one voice in returning to Almighty God their sincere thanks for the many blessings he had poured down upon them 5 Boudinot was elected a member of the American Antiquarian Society in 1814 6 A devout Presbyterian Boudinot supported missions and missionary work He wrote The Age of Revelation in response to Thomas Paine s The Age of Reason He was one of the founders of the American Bible Society and after 1816 served as its President He argued for the rights of black and American Indian citizens and sponsored students to the Board School for Indians in Connecticut One of these a young Cherokee named Gallegina Uwatie also known as Buck Watie stayed with him in Burlington on his way to the school The two so impressed each other that Gallegina asked for and was given permission to adopt the statesman s name Later known as Elias Boudinot he was an editor of the Cherokee Phoenix the nation s first newspaper which was published in Cherokee and English Legacy and honors editPrinceton University Library holds the Boudinot Stockton papers as well as many family possessions and portraits Elias Boudinot Elementary School in Burlington New Jersey is named after him as are the following Boudinot Street in Philadelphia located between C and D Streets Boudinot Avenue in Western Hills Cincinnati Ohio home of the original LaRosa s pizzeria Boudinot Place in Elizabeth New Jersey Boudinot Street in Princeton New Jersey Boudinot Lane in Franklin Township New Jersey Boudinot Southard Farmstead in Bernards Township New JerseyQuotes editThis section is a candidate for copying over to Wikiquote using the Transwiki process Be religiously careful in our choice of all public officers and judge of the tree by its fruits Good government generally begins in the family and if the moral character of a people once degenerate their political character must soon follow For nearly half a century have I anxiously and critically studied that invaluable treasure the Bible and I still scarcely ever take it up that I do not find something new that I do not receive some valuable addition to my stock of knowledge or perceive some instructive fact never observed before In short were you to ask me to recommend the most valuable book in the world I should fix on the Bible as the most instructive both to the wise and ignorant Were you to ask me for one affording the most rational and pleasing entertainment to the inquiring mind I should repeat it is the Bible and should you renew the inquiry for the best philosophy or the most interesting history I should still urge you to look into your Bible I would make it in short the Alpha and Omega of knowledge and be assured that it is for want of understanding the scriptures both of the Old and New Testament that so little value is set upon them by the world at large 7 Archival collections editThe Presbyterian Historical Society in Philadelphia has a collection of incoming correspondence and several legal agreements pertaining to land ownership related to Boudinot from 1777 1821 in its holdings The correspondence dating from 1777 1778 almost exclusively deals with the trading and releasing of prisoners References edit Elias Boudinot Biographical Directory of the United States Congress Accessed August 21 2007 Jillson Calvin C Wilson Rick K 1994 Congressional Dynamics Structure Coordination and Choice in the First American Congress 1774 1789 Stanford Stanford University Press pp 76 80 ISBN 0 8047 2293 5 Treaty of Paris Primary Documents of American History Virtual Programs amp Services Library of Congress www loc gov Retrieved August 2 2018 Voteview Plot Vote 3rd Congress gt House gt 9 voteview com Retrieved August 21 2023 The Annals of the Congress The Debates and Proceedings in the Congress of the United States Compiled From Authentic Materials compiled by Joseph Gales Senior Washington DC Gales and Seaton 1834 1 949 950 MemberListB Retrieved August 2 2018 Boudinot Elias 1801 The Age of Revelation or The Age of Reason Shewn to be An Age of Infidelity Asbury Dickins pp xv Further reading edit nbsp Wikisource has the text of the 1911 Encyclopaedia Britannica article Boudinot Elias Boudinot J J 1896 The Life Public Services Addresses and Letters of Elias Boudinot New York a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Boyd George 1969 Elias Boudinot Patriot and Statesman 1740 1821 Westwood Connecticut Greenwood Publishing ISBN 0 8371 1345 8 Boyle Joseph Lee 2002 Their Distress is Almost Intolerable The Elias Boudinot Letterbook 1777 1778 Heritage Books ISBN 0 7884 2210 3 Elias Boudinot Age of Revelation A Refutation of Thomas Paine s deistic Age of Reason External links edit nbsp Biography portalUnited States Congress Elias Boudinot id B000661 Biographical Directory of the United States Congress Retrieved on 2009 05 18 Elias Boudinot at The Political GraveyardPolitical officesPreceded byJohn Hanson President of the Continental CongressNovember 4 1782 November 2 1783 Succeeded byThomas MifflinU S House of RepresentativesPreceded byDistrict created Member of the U S House of Representatives from New Jersey s at large congressional districtMarch 4 1789 March 3 1797 Succeeded byThomas HendersonGovernment officesPreceded byHenry William de Saussure 3rd Director of the United States Mint1795 1805 Succeeded byRobert Patterson Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Elias Boudinot amp oldid 1192708708, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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