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Henry Clay

Henry Clay Sr. (April 12, 1777 – June 29, 1852) was an American attorney and statesman who represented Kentucky in both the U.S. Senate and House of Representatives. He was the seventh House speaker as well as the ninth secretary of state, also receiving electoral votes for president in the 1824, 1832, and 1844 presidential elections. He helped found both the National Republican Party and the Whig Party. For his role in defusing sectional crises, he earned the appellation of the "Great Compromiser" and was part of the "Great Triumvirate" of Congressmen, alongside fellow Whig Daniel Webster and John C. Calhoun.

Henry Clay
Clay photographed in 1848
9th United States Secretary of State
In office
March 4, 1825 – March 4, 1829
PresidentJohn Quincy Adams
Preceded byJohn Quincy Adams
Succeeded byMartin Van Buren
United States Senator
from Kentucky
In office
March 4, 1849 – June 29, 1852
Preceded byThomas Metcalfe
Succeeded byDavid Meriwether
In office
November 10, 1831 – March 31, 1842
Preceded byJohn Rowan
Succeeded byJohn J. Crittenden
In office
January 4, 1810 – March 3, 1811
Appointed byCharles Scott
Preceded byBuckner Thruston
Succeeded byGeorge M. Bibb
In office
December 29, 1806 – March 3, 1807
Preceded byJohn Adair
Succeeded byJohn Pope
7th Speaker of the United States House of Representatives
In office
March 4, 1823 – March 3, 1825
Preceded byPhilip P. Barbour
Succeeded byJohn Taylor
In office
March 4, 1815 – October 28, 1820
Preceded byLangdon Cheves
Succeeded byJohn Taylor
In office
March 4, 1811 – January 19, 1814
Preceded byJoseph Varnum
Succeeded byLangdon Cheves
Member of the
U.S. House of Representatives
from Kentucky
In office
March 4, 1823 – March 6, 1825
Preceded byJohn Johnson
Succeeded byJames Clark
Constituency3rd district
In office
March 4, 1815 – March 3, 1821
Preceded byJoseph H. Hawkins
Succeeded bySamuel Woodson
Constituency2nd district
In office
March 4, 1811 – January 19, 1814
Preceded byWilliam T. Barry
Succeeded byJoseph H. Hawkins
Constituency2nd district (1813–1814)
5th district (1811–1813)
Personal details
Born(1777-04-12)April 12, 1777
Hanover County, Virginia, U.S.
DiedJune 29, 1852(1852-06-29) (aged 75)
Washington, D.C., U.S.
Political partyDemocratic-Republican (1797–1825)
National Republican (1825–1833)
Whig (1833–1852)
Spouse
Lucretia Hart
(m. 1799)
Children11, including Thomas, Henry, James, John
EducationCollege of William & Mary
Signature

Clay was born in Hanover County, Virginia, in 1777, beginning his legal career in Lexington, Kentucky, in 1797. As a member of the Democratic-Republican Party, Clay won election to the Kentucky state legislature in 1803 and to the U.S. House of Representatives in 1810. He was chosen as Speaker of the House in early 1811 and, along with President James Madison, led the United States into the War of 1812 against Great Britain. In 1814, he helped negotiate the Treaty of Ghent, which brought an end to the War of 1812, and then after the war, Clay returned to his position as Speaker of the House and developed the American System, which called for federal infrastructure investments, support for the national bank, and high protective tariff rates. In 1820, he helped bring an end to a sectional crisis over slavery by leading the passage of the Missouri Compromise.

Clay finished with the fourth-most electoral votes in the multi-candidate 1824 presidential election, and he helped John Quincy Adams win the contingent election held to select the president. President Adams appointed Clay to the prestigious position of secretary of state; as a result, critics alleged that the two had agreed to a "corrupt bargain". Despite receiving support from Clay and other National Republicans, Adams was defeated by Democrat Andrew Jackson in the 1828 presidential election. Clay won election to the Senate in 1831 and ran as the National Republican nominee in the 1832 presidential election, but he was defeated decisively by President Jackson. After the 1832 election, Clay helped bring an end to the nullification crisis by leading passage of the Tariff of 1833. During Jackson's second term, opponents of the president including Clay, Webster, and William Henry Harrison created the Whig Party, and through the years, Clay became a leading congressional Whig.

Clay sought the presidency in the 1840 election but was passed over at the Whig National Convention by Harrison. When Harrison died and his vice president ascended to office, Clay clashed with Harrison's successor, John Tyler, who broke with Clay and other congressional Whigs after taking office upon Harrison's death in 1841. Clay resigned from the Senate in 1842 and won the 1844 Whig presidential nomination, but he was narrowly defeated in the general election by Democrat James K. Polk, who made the annexation of the Republic of Texas his top issue. Clay strongly criticized the subsequent Mexican–American War and sought the Whig presidential nomination in 1848 but was passed over by General Zachary Taylor who went on to win the election. After returning to the Senate in 1849, Clay played a key role in passing the Compromise of 1850, which postponed a crisis over the status of slavery in the territories. Clay is generally regarded as one of the most important and influential political figures of his era.[1]

Early life

Henry Clay was born on April 12, 1777, at the Clay homestead in Hanover County, Virginia.[2] He was the seventh of nine children born to the Reverend John Clay and Elizabeth (née Hudson) Clay.[3] Almost all of Henry's older siblings died before adulthood.[4] His father, a Baptist minister nicknamed "Sir John", died in 1781, leaving Henry and his brothers two slaves each; he also left his wife 18 slaves and 464 acres (188 ha) of land. [5] Clay was of entirely English descent;[6] his ancestor, John Clay, settled in Virginia in 1613.[7] The Clay family became a well-known political family including three other US Senators, numerous state politicians, and Clay's cousin Cassius Clay, a prominent anti-slavery activist active in the mid-19th century.[8]

The "British" raided Clay's home shortly after the death of his father, leaving the family in a precarious economic position.[9] However, the widow Elizabeth Clay married Captain Henry Watkins, who was an affectionate stepfather and a successful planter.[10] Elizabeth would have seven more children with Watkins, bearing a total of sixteen children.[11] After his mother's remarriage, the young Clay remained in Hanover County, where he learned how to read and write.[10] In 1791, Watkins moved the family to Kentucky, joining his brother in the pursuit of fertile new lands in the West. However, Clay did not follow, as Watkins secured his temporary employment in a Richmond emporium, with the promise that Clay would receive the next available clerkship at the Virginia Court of Chancery.[12]

After Clay had worked at the Richmond emporium for a year, he obtained a clerkship that had become available at the Virginia Court of Chancery. Clay adapted well to his new role, and his handwriting earned him the attention of College of William & Mary professor George Wythe, a signer of the Declaration of Independence, mentor of Thomas Jefferson, and judge on Virginia's High Court of Chancery.[13] Hampered by a crippled hand, Wythe chose Clay as his secretary and amanuensis, a role in which Clay would remain for four years.[14] While Clay studied under Wythe, Wythe had a powerful effect on Clay's worldview, with Clay embracing Wythe's belief that the example of the United States could help spread human freedom around the world.[15] Wythe subsequently arranged a position for Clay with Virginia attorney general Robert Brooke, with the understanding that Brooke would finish Clay's legal studies.[16] After completing his studies under Brooke, Clay was admitted to the Virginia Bar in 1797.[17]

Marriage and family

On April 11, 1799, Clay married Lucretia Hart (1781-1864) at the Hart home in Lexington, Kentucky. Her father, Colonel Thomas Hart, was an early settler of Kentucky and a prominent businessman.[18] Hart proved to be an important business connection for Clay, as he helped Clay gain new clients and grow in professional stature.[19] Hart was the namesake and grand-uncle of Missouri Senator Thomas Hart Benton and was also related to James Brown, a prominent Louisiana politician, and Isaac Shelby, the first governor of Kentucky.[20] Henry and Lucretia would remain married until his death in 1852; she lived until 1864, dying at the age of 83. Both are buried at Lexington Cemetery.[21]

 
Henry Clay and Lucretia (née Hart)

Clay and Lucretia had eleven children (six daughters and five sons):[22] Henrietta (born in 1800), Theodore (1802), Thomas (1803), Susan (1805), Anne (1807), Lucretia (1809), Henry Jr. (1811), Eliza (1813), Laura (1815), James (1817), and John (1821). By 1835, all six daughters had died of varying causes, two when very young, two as children, and the last two as young mothers. Henry Jr. was killed while commanding a regiment at the Battle of Buena Vista during the Mexican–American War. Clay's oldest son, Theodore Wythe Clay, spent the second half of his life confined to a psychiatric hospital. When a young child, Theodore was injured by a blow to his head that fractured his skull. As he grew older his condition devolved into insanity, and from 1831 until his death in 1870 he was confined to an asylum in Lexington.[22][23] Thomas (who had served some jail time in Philadelphia in 1829–1830)[22] became a successful farmer, James established a legal practice (and later served in Congress), and John (who in his mid-20s was also confined to the asylum for a short time) became a successful horse breeder.[24]

Clay was greatly interested in gambling, although he favored numerous restrictions and legal limitations on it. Famously, he once won $40,000 (approximately $970,000 as of 2020).[25] Clay asked for $500 (approximately $12,000 today) and waived the remainder of the debt. Shortly afterword, Clay fell into a debt of $60,000 (approximately $1.5 million today[26]) whilst gambling with the same man, who then asked for the $500 back and waived the rest of the debt.[27]

They initially lived in downtown Lexington, but in 1804 they began building a plantation outside of Lexington known as Ashland. The Ashland estate eventually encompassed over 500 acres (200 ha), with numerous outbuildings such as a smokehouse, a greenhouse, and several barns. Clay owned a maximum of about 50 slaves, and he planted crops such as corn, wheat, and rye, as well as hemp, the chief crop of the Bluegrass region.[28] Clay also took a strong interest in thoroughbred racing and imported livestock such as Arabian horses, Maltese donkeys, and Hereford cattle.[29] Though Clay suffered some financial issues during economic downturns, he never fell deeply into debt and ultimately left his children a large inheritance.[30] After the deaths of Anne and Susan, Clay and Lucretia raised several grandchildren at Ashland.[31]

Early law and political career

Legal career

 
View of Henry Clay's law office (1803–1810), Lexington, Kentucky

In November 1797, Clay relocated to Lexington, Kentucky, near where his parents and siblings resided. The Bluegrass region, with Lexington at its center, had quickly grown in the preceding decades but had only recently stopped being under the threat of Native American raids. Lexington was an established town that hosted Transylvania University, the first university west of the Appalachian Mountains.[32] Having already passed the Virginia Bar, Clay quickly received a Kentucky license to practice law. After apprenticing himself to Kentucky attorneys such as George Nicholas, John Breckinridge, and James Brown, Clay established his own law practice, frequently working on debt collections and land disputes.[33] Clay soon established a reputation for strong legal ability and courtroom oratory. In 1805, he was appointed to the faculty of Transylvania University where he taught, among others, future Kentucky Governor Robert P. Letcher and Robert Todd, the future father-in-law of Abraham Lincoln.[34]

Clay's most notable client was Aaron Burr, who was indicted for treason in the Burr conspiracy. Clay and his law partner John Allen successfully defended Burr without a fee in 1807.[35] Thomas Jefferson later convinced Clay that Burr had been guilty of the charges.[36] Clay's legal practice was light after his election to Congress. In the 1823 case Green v. Biddle, Clay submitted the Supreme Court's first amicus curiae. However, he lost that case.[37]

Early political career

Clay entered politics shortly after arriving in Kentucky. In his first political speech, he attacked the Alien and Sedition Acts, laws passed by Federalists to suppress dissent during the Quasi-War with France.[38] Like most Kentuckians, Clay was a member of the Democratic-Republican Party, but he clashed with state party leaders over a state constitutional convention. Using the pseudonym "Scaevola" (in reference to Gaius Mucius Scaevola), Clay advocated for direct elections for Kentucky elected officials and the gradual emancipation of slavery in Kentucky. The 1799 Kentucky Constitution included the direct election of public officials, but the state did not adopt Clay's plan for gradual emancipation.[39]

In 1803, Clay won election to the Kentucky House of Representatives.[40] His first legislative initiative was the partisan gerrymander of Kentucky's Electoral College districts, which ensured that all of Kentucky's presidential electors voted for President Jefferson in the 1804 presidential election.[41] Clay clashed with legislators who sought to reduce the power of Clay's Bluegrass region, and he unsuccessfully advocated moving the state capitol from Frankfort to Lexington. Clay frequently opposed populist firebrand Felix Grundy, and he helped defeat Grundy's effort to revoke the banking privileges of the state-owned Kentucky Insurance Company. He advocated for the construction of internal improvements, which would become a consistent theme throughout his public career.[41] Clay's influence in Kentucky state politics was such that in 1806 the Kentucky legislature elected him to the United States Senate.[42][a] During his two-month tenure in the Senate, Clay advocated for the construction of various bridges and canals, including a canal connecting the Chesapeake Bay and the Delaware River.[45]

After Clay returned to Kentucky in 1807, he was elected as the speaker of the state house of representatives.[46] That same year, in response to attacks on American shipping by Britain and France during the Napoleonic Wars, President Jefferson arranged passage of the Embargo Act of 1807. In support of Jefferson's policy, which limited trade with foreign powers, Clay introduced a resolution to require legislators to wear homespun suits rather than those made of imported British broadcloth.[47] The vast majority of members of the state house voted for the measure, but Humphrey Marshall, an "aristocratic lawyer who possessed a sarcastic tongue," voted against it.[48] In early 1809, Clay challenged Marshall to a duel, which took place on January 19.[49] While many contemporary duels were called off or fought without the intention of killing one another, both Clay and Marshall fought the duel with the intent of killing their opponent.[50] They each had three turns to shoot; both were hit by bullets, but both survived.[48] Clay quickly recovered from his injury and received only a minor censure from the Kentucky legislature.[51]

In 1810, U.S. Senator Buckner Thruston resigned to accept appointment to a position as a federal judge, and Clay was selected by the legislature to fill Thruston's seat. Clay quickly emerged as a fierce critic of British attacks on American shipping, becoming part of an informal group of "war hawks" who favored expansionist policies.[52] He also advocated the annexation of West Florida, which was controlled by Spain.[53] On the insistence of the Kentucky legislature, Clay helped prevent the re-charter of the First Bank of the United States, arguing that it interfered with state banks and infringed on states' rights.[54] After serving in the Senate for one year, Clay decided that he disliked the rules of the Senate and instead sought election to the United States House of Representatives.[55] He won election unopposed in late 1810.[56]

Speaker of the House

Election and leadership

The 1810-11 elections produced many young, anti-British members of Congress who, like Clay, supported going to war with Great Britain. Buoyed by the support of fellow war hawks, Clay was elected Speaker of the House for the 12th Congress.[57] At 34, he was the youngest person to become speaker, a distinction he held until the election of 30-year-old Robert M. T. Hunter in 1839.[58] He was also the first of only two new members elected speaker to date,[b] the other being William Pennington in 1860.[59]

Between 1810 and 1824, Clay was elected to seven terms in the House.[60] His tenure was interrupted from 1814 to 1815 when he was a commissioner to peace talks with the British in Ghent, United Netherlands to end the War of 1812, and from 1821 to 1823, when he left Congress to rebuild his family's fortune in the aftermath of the Panic of 1819.[61] Elected speaker six times, Clay's cumulative tenure in office of 10 years, 196 days, is the second-longest, surpassed only by Sam Rayburn.[62]

As speaker, Clay wielded considerable power in making committee appointments, and like many of his predecessors he assigned his allies to important committees. Clay was exceptional in his ability to control the legislative agenda through well-placed allies and the establishment of new committees and departed from precedent by frequently taking part in floor debates.[63] Yet he also gained a reputation for personal courteousness and fairness in his rulings and committee appointments.[64] Clay's drive to increase the power of the office of speaker was aided by President James Madison, who deferred to Congress in most matters.[65] John Randolph, a member of the Democratic-Republican Party but also a member of the "tertium quids" group that opposed many federal initiatives, emerged as a prominent opponent of Speaker Clay.[66] While Randolph frequently attempted to obstruct Clay's initiatives, Clay became a master of parliamentary maneuvers that enabled him to advance his agenda even over the attempted obstruction by Randolph and others.[67][c]

Madison administration, 1811–1817

Clay and other war hawks demanded that the British revoke the Orders in Council, a series of decrees that had resulted in a de facto commercial war with the United States.[69] Though Clay recognized the dangers inherent in fighting Britain, one of the most powerful countries in the world, he saw it as the only realistic alternative to a humiliating submission to British attacks on American shipping.[70] Clay led a successful effort in the House to declare war against Britain, complying with a request from President Madison.[71] Madison signed the declaration of war on June 18, 1812, beginning the War of 1812. During the war, Clay frequently communicated with Secretary of State James Monroe and Secretary of War William Eustis, though he advocated for the replacement of the latter.[72] The war started poorly for the Americans, and Clay lost friends and relatives in the fighting.[71] In October 1813, the British asked Madison to begin negotiations in Europe, and Madison asked Clay to join his diplomatic team, as the president hoped that the presence of the leading war hawk would ensure support for a peace treaty. Clay was reluctant to leave Congress but felt duty-bound to accept the offer, and so he resigned from Congress on January 19, 1814.[73]

Clay left the country on February 25, but negotiations with the British did not begin until August 1814. Clay was part of a team of five commissioners that included Treasury Secretary Albert Gallatin, Senator James Bayard, ambassador Jonathan Russell, and ambassador John Quincy Adams, the head of the American team.[74] Clay and Adams maintained an uneasy relationship marked by frequent clashes, and Gallatin emerged as the unofficial leader of the American team. When the British finally presented their initial peace offer, Clay was outraged by its terms, especially the British proposal for an Indian barrier state on the Great Lakes. After a series of American military successes in 1814, the British delegation made several concessions and offered a better peace deal.[75] While Adams and Gallatin were eager to make peace as quickly as possible even if that required sub-optimal terms in the peace treaty, Clay believed that the British, worn down by years of fighting against France, greatly desired peace with the United States. Partly due to Clay's hard-line stance, the Treaty of Ghent included relatively favorable terms for the United States, essentially re-establishing the status quo ante bellum between Britain and the U.S. The treaty was signed on December 24, 1814, bringing a close to the War of 1812.[76] After the signing of the treaty, Clay briefly traveled to London, where he helped Gallatin negotiate a commercial agreement with Britain.[77]

Clay returned to the United States in September 1815; despite his absence, he had been elected to another term in the House of Representatives. Upon his return to Congress, Clay won election as Speaker of the House.[78] The War of 1812 strengthened Clay's support for interventionist economic policies such as federally funded internal improvements, which he believed were necessary to improve the country's infrastructure system.[79] He eagerly embraced President Madison's ambitious domestic package, which included infrastructure investment, tariffs to protect domestic manufacturing, and spending increases for the army and navy. With the help of John C. Calhoun and William Lowndes, Clay passed the Tariff of 1816, which served the dual purpose of raising revenue and protecting American manufacturing. To stabilize the currency, Clay and Treasury Secretary Alexander Dallas arranged passage of a bill establishing the Second Bank of the United States (also known as the national bank).[80] Clay also supported the Bonus Bill of 1817, which would have provided a fund for internal improvements, but Madison vetoed the bill on constitutional concerns.[81] Beginning in 1818, Clay advocated for an economic plan known as the "American System," which encompassed many of the economic measures, including protective tariffs and infrastructure investments, that he helped pass in the aftermath of the War of 1812.[82]

Monroe administration, 1817–1825

Like Jefferson and George Washington, President Madison decided to retire after two terms, leaving open the Democratic-Republican nomination for the 1816 presidential election. At the time, the Democratic-Republicans used a congressional nominating caucus to choose their presidential nominees, giving congressmen a powerful role in the presidential selection process. Monroe and Secretary of War William Crawford emerged as the two main candidates for the Democratic-Republican nomination. Clay had a favorable opinion of both individuals, but he supported Monroe, who won the nomination and went on to defeat Federalist candidate Rufus King in the general election.[83] Monroe offered Clay the position of secretary of war, but Clay strongly desired the office of secretary of state and was angered when Monroe instead chose John Quincy Adams for that position.[84] Clay became so bitter that he refused to allow Monroe's inauguration to take place in the House Chamber and subsequently did not attend Monroe's outdoor inauguration.[85]

 
Portrait by Matthew Harris Jouett, 1818

In early 1819, a dispute erupted over the proposed statehood of Missouri after New York Congressman James Tallmadge introduced a legislative amendment that would provide for the gradual emancipation of Missouri's slaves.[86] Though Clay had previously called for gradual emancipation in Kentucky, he sided with the Southerners in voting down Tallmadge's amendment.[87] Clay instead supported Illinois Senator Jesse B. Thomas's compromise proposal in which Missouri would be admitted as a slave state, Maine would be admitted as a free state,[d] and slavery would be forbidden in the territories north of 36° 30' parallel. Clay helped assemble a coalition that passed the Missouri Compromise, as Thomas's proposal became known.[88] Further controversy ensued when Missouri's constitution banned free blacks from entering the state, but Clay was able to engineer another compromise that allowed Missouri to join as a state in August 1821.[89]

In foreign policy, Clay was a leading American supporter of the independence movements and revolutions that broke out in Latin America beginning in 1810.[90] Clay frequently called on the Monroe administration to recognize the fledgling Latin American republics, but Monroe feared that doing so would derail his plans to acquire Spanish Florida.[91] In 1818, General Andrew Jackson crossed into Spanish Florida to suppress raids by Seminole Indians.[92] Though Jackson was following Monroe's implied wishes in entering Florida, he created additional controversy in seizing the Spanish town of Pensacola. Despite protests from Secretary of War Calhoun, Monroe and Adams decided to support Jackson's actions in the hope that they would convince Spain to sell Florida.[92] Clay, however, was outraged, and he publicly condemned Jackson's decision to hang two foreign nationals without a trial. Before the House chamber, he compared Jackson to military dictators of the past, telling his colleagues "that Greece had her Alexander, Rome her Caesar, England her Cromwell, France her Bonaparte, and, that if we would escape the rock on which they split, we must avoid their errors."[93] Jackson saw Clay's protestations as an attack on his character and thus began a long rivalry between Clay and Jackson.[93] The rivalry and the controversy over Jackson's expedition temporarily subsided after the signing of the Adams–Onís Treaty, in which the U.S. purchased Florida and delineated its western boundary with New Spain.[94]

1824 presidential election

 
Clay helped Adams win the 1825 contingent House election after Clay failed to finish among the three electoral vote-winners. States in orange voted for Crawford, states in green for Adams, and states in blue for Jackson.

By 1822, several members of the Democratic-Republican Party had begun exploring presidential bids to succeed Monroe, who planned to retire after two terms like his predecessors.[95] As the Federalist Party was near collapse, the 1824 presidential election would be contested only by members of the Democratic-Republican Party, including Clay. Having led the passage of the Tariff of 1824 and the General Survey Act, Clay campaigned on his American System of high tariffs and federal spending on infrastructure.[96] Three members of Monroe's Cabinet, Secretary of the Treasury William Crawford, Secretary of State John Quincy Adams, and Secretary of War John C. Calhoun, appeared to be Clay's strongest competitors for the presidency.[95] Though many, including Clay, did not take his candidacy seriously at first, General Andrew Jackson emerged as a presidential contender, eroding Clay's base of support in the western states.[97] In February 1824, the sparsely attended Democratic-Republican congressional caucus endorsed Crawford's candidacy, but Crawford's rivals ignored the caucus results, and various state legislatures nominated candidates for president.[98] During the campaign, Crawford suffered a major stroke, while Calhoun withdrew from the race after Jackson won the endorsement of the Pennsylvania legislature.[99]

By 1824, with Crawford still in the race, Clay concluded that no candidate would win a majority of electoral votes; in that scenario, the House of Representatives would hold a contingent election to decide the election. Under the terms of the Twelfth Amendment, the top three electoral vote-getters would be eligible to be elected by the House. Clay was confident that he would prevail in a contingent held in the chamber he presided over, so long as he was eligible for election.[100] Clay won Kentucky, Ohio, and Missouri, but his loss in New York and Louisiana relegated him to a fourth-place finish behind Adams, Jackson, and Crawford.[101] Clay was humiliated that he finished behind the invalid Crawford and Jackson, but supporters of the three remaining presidential candidates immediately began courting his support for the contingent election.[102]

For various reasons, supporters of all three candidates believed they had the best chance of winning Clay's backing, but Clay quickly settled on supporting Adams.[103] Of the three candidates, Adams was the most sympathetic to Clay's American System, and Clay viewed both Jackson and the sickly Crawford as unsuitable for the presidency.[104] On January 9, 1825, Clay privately met with Adams for three hours, after which Clay promised Adams his support; both would later claim that they did not discuss Clay's position in an Adams administration.[105] With the help of Clay, Adams won the House vote on the first ballot.[106] After his election, Adams offered Clay the position of secretary of state, which Clay accepted, despite fears that he would be accused of trading his support for the Cabinet post. Jackson was outraged by the election, and he and his supporters accused Clay and Adams of having reached a "Corrupt Bargain."[107] Pro-Jackson forces immediately began preparing for the 1828 presidential election, with the Corrupt Bargain accusation becoming their central issue.[108]

Secretary of State

 
Portrait of Henry Clay

Clay served as secretary of state from 1825 to 1829. As secretary of state, he was the top foreign policy official in the Adams administration, but he also held several domestic duties, such as oversight of the patent office.[109] Clay came to like Adams, a former rival, and to despise Jackson. They developed a strong working relationship.[110] Adams and Clay were both wary of forming entangling alliances with the emerging states, and they continued to uphold the Monroe Doctrine, which called for European non-intervention in former colonies.[111] Clay was rebuffed in his efforts to reach a commercial treaty and a settlement of the Canada–United States border with Britain, and was also unsuccessful in his attempts to make the French pay for damages arising from attacks on American shipping during the Napoleonic Wars.[111] He had more success in negotiating commercial treaties with Latin American republics, reaching "most favoured nation" trade agreements in an attempt to ensure that no European country had a trading advantage over the United States.[112] Seeking deeper relations with Latin American countries, Clay strongly favored sending American delegates to the Congress of Panama, but his efforts were defeated by opponents in the Senate.[113]

 
Clay supported construction of the National Road, which extended west from Cumberland, Maryland.

Adams proposed an ambitious domestic program based in large part on Clay's American System, but Clay warned the president that many of his proposals held little chance of passage in the 19th Congress.[114] Adams's opponents defeated many of his proposals, including the establishment of a naval academy and a national observatory, but Adams did preside over the construction or initiation of major infrastructure projects like the National Road and the Chesapeake and Ohio Canal.[115] Followers of Adams began to call themselves National Republicans, and Jackson's followers became known as Democrats.[116] Both campaigns spread untrue stories about the opposing candidates.[117] Adams' followers denounced Jackson as a demagogue, and some Adams-aligned papers accused Jackson's wife Rachel of bigamy. Though Clay was not directly involved in these attacks, his failure to denounce them earned him the lifelong enmity of Jackson.[118]

Clay was one of Adams's most important political advisers, but because of his myriad responsibilities as secretary of state, he was often unable to take part in campaigning.[119] As Adams was averse to the use of patronage for political purposes, Jackson's campaign enjoyed a marked advantage in organization, and Adams' allies such as Clay and Daniel Webster were unable to create an equally powerful organization headed by the president.[120] In the 1828 election, Jackson took 56% of the popular vote and won almost every state outside of New England; Clay was especially distressed by Jackson's victory in Kentucky. The election result represented not only the victory of a man Clay viewed as unqualified and unprincipled but also a rejection of Clay's domestic policies.[121]

Later career

Jackson administration, 1829–1837

 
Henry Clay, circa 1832

Return to the Senate

Even with Clay out of office, President Jackson continued to see Clay as one of his major rivals, and Jackson at one point suspected Clay of being behind the Petticoat affair, a controversy involving the wives of his Cabinet members.[122] Clay strongly opposed the 1830 Indian Removal Act, which authorized the administration to relocate Native Americans to land west of the Mississippi River.[123] Another key point of contention between Clay and Jackson was the proposed Maysville Road, which would connect Maysville, Kentucky, to the National Road in Zanesville, Ohio; transportation advocates hoped that later extensions would eventually connect the National Road to New Orleans.[124] In 1830, Jackson vetoed the project both because he felt that the road did not constitute interstate commerce, and also because he generally opposed using the federal government to promote economic modernization.[125] While Jackson's veto garnered support from opponents of infrastructure spending, it damaged his base of support in Clay's home state of Kentucky.[126] Clay returned to federal office in 1831 by winning election to the Senate over Richard Mentor Johnson in a 73 to 64 vote of the Kentucky legislature.[127] His return to the Senate after 20 years, 8 months, 7 days out of office, marks the fourth-longest gap in service to the chamber in history.[128]

Bank War and the 1832 presidential election

 
Andrew Jackson defeated Clay in the 1832 election

With the defeat of Adams, Clay became the de facto leader of the National Republicans, and he began making preparations for a presidential campaign in the 1832 election.[129] In 1831, Jackson made it clear that he was going to run for re-election, ensuring that support or opposition to his presidency would be a central feature of the upcoming race.[130] Jackson's Democrats rallied around his policies towards the national bank, internal improvements, Indian removal, and nullification, but these policies also earned Jackson various enemies, including Vice President John C. Calhoun.[131] However, Clay rejected overtures from the fledgling Anti-Masonic Party,[e] and his attempt to convince Calhoun to serve as his running mate failed, leaving the opposition to Jackson split among different factions.[133] Inspired by the Anti-Masonic Party's national convention, Clay's National Republican followers arranged for a national convention that nominated Clay for president.[134]

As the 1832 election approached, the debate over the re-authorization of the national bank emerged as the most important issue in the campaign.[131] By the early 1830s, the national bank had become the largest corporation in the United States, and banknotes issued by the national bank served as the de facto legal tender of the United States.[135] Jackson disliked the national bank because of a hatred of both banks and paper currency.[136] The bank's charter did not expire until 1836, but bank president Nicholas Biddle asked for renewal in 1831, hoping that election year pressure and support from Secretary of the Treasury Louis McLane would convince Jackson to allow the re-charter.[137] Biddle's application set off the "Bank War"; Congress passed a bill to renew the national bank's charter, but Jackson vetoed it, holding the bank to be unconstitutional.[138] Clay had initially hoped that the national bank re-charter would work to his advantage, but Jackson's allies seized on the issue, redefining the 1832 election as a choice between the president and a "monied oligarchy."[139] Ultimately, Clay was unable to defeat a popular sitting president. Jackson won 219 of the 286 electoral votes and 54.2% of the popular vote, carrying almost every state outside of New England.[140]

Nullification Crisis

The high rates of the Tariff of 1828 and the Tariff of 1832 angered many Southerners because they resulted in higher prices for imported goods.[141] After the 1832 election, South Carolina held a state convention that declared the tariff rates of 1828 and 1832 to be nullified within the state, and further declared that federal collection of import duties would be illegal after January 1833.[142] In response to this Nullification Crisis, Jackson issued his Proclamation to the People of South Carolina, which strongly denied the right of states to nullify federal laws or secede.[143] He asked Congress to pass what became known as the Force Bill, which would authorize the president to send federal soldiers against South Carolina if it sought to nullify federal law.[144]

Though Clay favored high tariff rates, he found Jackson's strong rhetoric against South Carolina distressing and sought to avoid a crisis that could end in civil war.[141] He proposed a compromise tariff bill that would lower tariff rates, but do so gradually, thereby giving manufacturing interests time to adapt to less protective rates. Clay's compromise tariff won the backing of both manufacturers, who believed they would not receive a better deal, and Calhoun, who sought a way out of the crisis but refused to work with President Jackson's supporters on an alternative tariff bill.[145] Though most members of Clay's own National Republican Party opposed it, the Tariff of 1833 passed both houses of Congress. Jackson simultaneously signed the tariff bill and the Force bill, and South Carolina leaders accepted the new tariff, effectively bringing the crisis to an end. Clay's role in resolving the crisis brought him renewed national stature in the wake of a crushing presidential election defeat, and some began referring to him as the "Great Compromiser."[146]

Formation of the Whig Party

Following the end of the Nullification Crisis in March 1833, Jackson renewed his offensive against the national bank, despite some opposition from within his own Cabinet.[147] Jackson and Secretary of the Treasury Roger Taney pursued a policy of removing all federal deposits from the national bank and placing them in state-chartered banks known as "pet banks."[148] Because federal law required the president to deposit federal revenue in the national bank so long as it was financially stable, many regarded Jackson's actions as illegal, and Clay led the passage of a Senate motion censuring Jackson.[149] Nonetheless, the national bank's federal charter expired in 1836, and though the institution continued to function under a Pennsylvania charter, it never regained the influence it had had at the beginning of Jackson's administration.[150]

The removal of deposits helped unite Jackson's opponents into one party for the first time, as National Republicans, Calhounites, former Democrats, and members of the Anti-Masonic Party coalesced into the Whig Party.[151] The term "Whig" originated from a speech Clay delivered in 1834, in which he compared opponents of Jackson to the Whigs, a British political party opposed to absolute monarchy.[152] Neither the Whigs nor the Democrats were unified geographically or ideologically. However, Whigs tended to favor a stronger legislature, a stronger federal government, a higher tariff, greater spending on infrastructure, re-authorization of the Second Bank of the United States, and publicly funded education. Conversely, Democrats tended to favor a stronger president, stronger state governments, lower tariffs, hard money, and expansionism. Neither party took a strong national stand on slavery.[153] The Whig base of support lay in wealthy businessmen, professionals, the professional class, and large planters, while the Democratic base of support lay in immigrant Catholics and yeomen farmers, but each party appealed across class lines.[154]

Partly due to grief over the death of his daughter, Anne, Clay chose not to run in the 1836 presidential election, and the Whigs were too disorganized to nominate a single candidate.[155] Three Whig candidates ran against Van Buren: General William Henry Harrison, Senator Hugh Lawson White, and Senator Daniel Webster. By running multiple candidates, the Whigs hoped to force a contingent election in the House of Representatives. Clay personally preferred Webster, but he threw his backing behind Harrison who had the broadest appeal among voters. Clay's decision not to endorse Webster opened a rift between the two Whig party leaders, and Webster would work against Clay in future presidential elections.[156] Despite the presence of multiple Whig candidates, Van Buren won the 1836 election with 50.8 percent of the popular vote and 170 of the 294 electoral votes.[157]

Van Buren administration, 1837–1841

 
Clay (brown) won the backing of several state delegations on the first ballot of the 1839 Whig National Convention, but William Henry Harrison ultimately won the party's presidential nomination.

Van Buren's presidency was affected badly by the Panic of 1837, a major recession that badly damaged the Democratic Party.[158] Clay and other Whigs argued that Jackson's policies, including the use of pet banks, had encouraged speculation and caused the panic.[159] He promoted the American System as a means for economic recovery, but President Van Buren's response focused on the practice of "strict economy and frugality."[160] As the 1840 presidential election approached, many expected that the Whigs would win control of the presidency due to the ongoing economic crisis.[161] Clay initially viewed Webster as his strongest rival,[162] but Clay, Harrison, and General Winfield Scott emerged as the principal candidates at the 1839 Whig National Convention.[163]

Though he was widely regarded as the most qualified Whig leader to serve as president, many Whigs questioned Clay's electability after two presidential election defeats. He also faced opposition in the North due to his ownership of slaves and lingering association with the Freemasons, and in the South from Whigs who distrusted his moderate stance on slavery.[164] Clay won a plurality on the first ballot of the Whig National Convention, but, with the help of Thurlow Weed and other backers, Harrison consolidated support on subsequent ballots and won the Whig presidential nomination on the fifth ballot of the convention.[165][f] Seeking to placate Clay's supporters and to balance the ticket geographically, the convention chose former Virginia Governor and Senator John Tyler, a personal friend of Clay, whose previous career in the Democratic Party had practically come to an end, as the vice-presidential nominee.[167] Clay was disappointed by the outcome but helped Harrison's ultimately successful campaign by delivering numerous speeches.[168] With Whigs also winning control of Congress in the 1840 elections, Clay saw the upcoming 27th Congress as an opportunity for the Whig Party to establish itself as the dominant political party by leading the country out of recession.[169]

Harrison and Tyler administrations, 1841–1845

President-elect Harrison asked Clay to serve another term as Secretary of State, but Clay chose to remain in Congress. Webster was instead chosen as Secretary of State, while John J. Crittenden, a close ally of Clay, was chosen as Attorney General.[170] As Harrison prepared to take office, Clay and Harrison clashed over the leadership of the Whig Party, with Harrison sensitive to accusations that he would answer to Clay.[171] Just a month into his presidency, Harrison died of an illness and was succeeded by Vice President John Tyler.[172] Tyler retained Harrison's Cabinet, but the former Democrat and avid follower of both Jefferson's and Jackson's philosophy quickly made it known that he had reservations about re-establishing a national bank, a key priority of Clay's.[173] Clay nonetheless initially expected that Tyler would approve the measures passed by the Whig-controlled Congress; his priorities included the re-establishment of the national bank, higher tariff rates, a national bankruptcy law, and an act to distribute the proceeds of land sales to the states for investments in infrastructure and education. Clay and his congressional allies attempted to craft a national bank bill acceptable to Tyler, but Tyler vetoed two separate bills to re-establish the national bank, showing that he in fact had no will to reach a solution for the party's issues. Clay and other Whig leaders were now outraged not only by Tyler's rejection of the Whig party platform but also because they felt that Tyler had purposely misled them into thinking that he would sign the bills.[174]

After the second veto, congressional Whigs voted to expel Tyler from the party, and on Clay's request, every Cabinet member except for Webster, who wanted to continue negotiating the Webster-Ashburton Treaty with Great Britain about the border to Canada, resigned from office.[175] This made Tyler increasingly move closer to his former Democratic Party and, with Webster still serving in the Tyler administration, Clay emerged as the clear leader of the Whig Party.[176] In early 1842, Clay resigned from the Senate after arranging for Crittenden to succeed him.[177] Though he vetoed other Whig bills, Tyler did sign some Whig priorities into law, including the Preemption Act of 1841, which distributed the proceeds of land sales to the states, and the Bankruptcy Act of 1841, which was the first law in U.S. history that allowed for voluntary bankruptcy.[178] Facing a large budget deficit, Tyler also signed the Tariff of 1842, which restored the protective rates of the Tariff of 1832 but ended the distribution policy that had been established with the Preemption Act of 1841.[179]

1844 presidential election

 
James K. Polk defeated Clay in the 1844 election.

President Tyler's break with the Whig Party, combined with Webster's continuing affiliation with Tyler, positioned Clay as the leading contender for the Whig nomination in the 1844 presidential election.[180] By 1842, most observers believed that Clay would face Van Buren in the 1844 presidential election, as he had still remained as the clear leader of the Democrats and, following the tradition of the founders, wanted a second term.[181] Hoping to win another term, President Tyler forged an alliance with John C. Calhoun and pursued the annexation of the Republic of Texas, which would add another slave state to the union.[182] After President Tyler concluded an annexation treaty with Texas, Clay announced his opposition to annexation.[183] He argued that the country needed "union, peace, and patience," and annexation would bring tensions over slavery and war with Mexico. The same day that Clay published a letter opposing the annexation of Texas, Van Buren also came out against annexation, citing similar reasons as Clay, so that slavery and especially expansionism seemed to play no role in the next election.[184][g] Clay unanimously won the presidential nomination at the 1844 Whig National Convention, but a minority of expansionist Southern Democrats, encouraged by Tyler's alternative outline, blocked Van Buren's nomination at the 1844 Democratic National Convention for countless ballots, until Van Buren withdrew, making place for an unexpected compromise candidate: The party nominated former Speaker of the House James K. Polk of Tennessee, who favored annexation, but in order to calm anti-expansionists, promised to just run for a single term.[186] Following the nomination of a pro-annexation Democrat, Tyler soon ended his incipient independent run for president and endorsed Polk.[187]

Clay was surprised by Van Buren's defeat but remained confident of his chances in the 1844 election.[188] Polk was the first "dark horse" presidential nominee in U.S. history, and Whigs mocked him as a "fourth rate politician." Despite his relative lack of national stature, Polk proved to be a strong candidate capable of uniting the factions of the Democratic Party and winning the support of Southerners who had been reluctant to support Van Buren.[189] Clay's stance on slavery alienated some voters in both the North and the South. Pro-slavery Southerners flocked to Polk, while many Northern abolitionists, who tended to align with the Whig Party, favored James G. Birney of the Liberty Party.[190] Clay's opposition to annexation damaged his campaign in the South, as Democrats argued that he worked in unison with Northerners to stop the extension of slavery.[191] In July, Clay wrote two letters in which he attempted to clarify his position on the annexation of Texas, and Democrats attacked his supposedly inconsistent position.[192]

Polk won the election, taking 49.5% of the popular vote and 170 of the 275 electoral votes.[193][h] Birney won several thousand anti-annexation votes in New York, and his presence in the race may have cost Clay the election.[194] Most of Clay's contemporaries believed that annexation had been the decisive issue in the race, but Polk's savvy campaigning on the tariff may have also been decisive, as he narrowly won pro-tariff Pennsylvania after downplaying his anti-tariff views.[195] After Polk's victory and the final indirect success of Tyler's strategy, Congress approved the annexation of Texas, which was signed by Tyler on his last day in office, and Texas gained statehood in late 1845.[196]

Polk administration, 1845–1849

 
Clay (brown) won the backing of numerous delegates on the first ballot of the 1848 Whig National Convention, but Zachary Taylor ultimately won the party's presidential nomination.
 
Henry Clay Jr., who died serving in the Mexican–American War

After the 1844 election, Clay returned to his career as an attorney.[197] Though he was no longer a member of Congress, he remained closely interested in national politics. In 1846, the Mexican–American War broke out after American and Mexican forces clashed at the disputed border region between Mexico and Texas. Initially, Clay did not publicly oppose the war, but privately he saw it as an immoral war that risked producing "some military chieftain who will conquer us all."[198] He suffered a personal blow in 1847 when his son, Henry Clay Jr., died at the Battle of Buena Vista.[199] In November 1847, Clay re-emerged on the political scene with a speech that was harshly critical of the Mexican–American War and President Polk.[200] He attacked Polk for fomenting the conflict with Mexico and urged the rejection of any treaty that added new slave territory to the United States. Months after the speech, the Senate ratified the Treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo, in which Mexico ceded hundreds of thousands of square miles of territory known as the Mexican Cession.[201]

By 1847, General Zachary Taylor, who commanded the American forces at Buena Vista, had emerged as a contender for the Whig nomination in the 1848 presidential election.[202] Despite Taylor's largely unknown political views, many Whigs believed he was the party's strongest possible candidate due to his martial accomplishments in the Mexican–American War.[203] One of Clay's most trusted allies and advisers, John J. Crittenden, was Taylor's de facto campaign manager.[204] Clay had initially told his allies that he would not run in the 1848 presidential election, but he was unwilling to support Taylor, a "mere military man." On April 10, 1848, he announced his candidacy for the Whig nomination.[205] Although Webster and Winfield Scott each commanded a limited base of support in the party, Taylor and Clay each saw the other as their lone serious rival for the Whig nomination.[206] As Taylor commanded the support of most Southern Whigs, Clay focused his efforts on courting Northern Whigs, emphasizing his opposition to the Mexican–American War and his life-long support for the gradual emancipation of slaves in Kentucky.[207] Clay presented a strong challenge to Taylor at the 1848 Whig National Convention, but Taylor won the presidential nomination on the fourth ballot. Partially in an attempt to please the Clay wing of the party, the convention nominated Millard Fillmore as Taylor's running mate.[208] Clay was embittered by his failure at the convention, and he did not campaign on behalf of Taylor. Nonetheless, Taylor won the election, taking 47.3 percent of the popular vote and 163 of 290 electoral votes.[209]

Taylor and Fillmore administrations, 1849–1852

 
The United States after the ratification of the Treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo, with the Mexican Cession still unorganized
 
The United States after the Compromise of 1850

Increasingly worried about the sectional tensions arising over the issue of slavery in newly acquired territories, Clay accepted election to the Senate in 1849.[210] Having refused to campaign for Taylor, Clay played little role in the formation of Taylor's Cabinet or in determining the new administration's policies.[211] In January 1850, with Congress still deadlocked regarding the status of the Mexican Cession, Clay proposed a compromise designed to organize territory acquired in the Mexican–American War and address other issues contributing to sectional tensions.[212] His legislative package included the admission of California as a free state, the cession by Texas of some of its northern and western territorial claims in return for debt relief, the establishment of New Mexico and Utah territories, a ban on the importation of slaves into the District of Columbia for sale, and a more stringent fugitive slave law.[213] Though it faced opposition from Southern extremists like Calhoun and Northern abolitionists like William Seward, Clay's proposal won the backing of many Southern and Northern leaders.[214]

President Taylor, who favored the immediate admission of California and New Mexico as free states without any attached conditions, opposed the plan, and Clay openly broke with the president in May 1850.[215] Debate over Clay's proposal continued into July when Taylor unexpectedly died of an illness.[216] After Taylor's death, President Fillmore, who supported Clay's compromise bill, consulted with Clay in appointing a new Cabinet.[217] Exhausted by the debate in the Senate, Clay took a leave of absence shortly after Taylor's death, but Fillmore, Webster, and Democratic Senator Stephen A. Douglas took charge of pro-compromise forces. By the end of September 1850, Clay's proposal, which became known as the Compromise of 1850, had been enacted. Though contemporaries credited Fillmore, Douglas, and Webster for their role in passing the Compromise of 1850, Clay was widely regarded as the key figure in ending a major sectional crisis.[218]

Death

 
Henry Clay monument and mausoleum, Lexington Cemetery

In December 1851, with his health declining, Clay announced that he would resign from the Senate the following September.[219] Clay never recovered from his illnesses, and died of tuberculosis at 75 in his room at the National Hotel in Washington, D.C., on June 29, 1852.[220] He was the first person to lie in state in the United States Capitol rotunda.[221][222]

Clay's headstone reads: "I know no North—no South—no East—no West". Hymn writer Fanny Crosby penned this line of lament on Clay's death:

Sleep on, oh, statesman, sleep
Within thy hallowed tomb,
Where pearly streamlets glide,
And summer roses bloom.[223]

Ideology and slavery

American System

Throughout most of his political life, Clay promoted his American System as both an economic program and a means for unifying the country. Clay's American System rejected strict constructionism in favor of an activist government that would help ensure a fairer and more efficient distribution of economic gains. The American System had four key tenets: high tariffs, a stable financial system, federal investment in internal improvements, and a public land sale policy designed to raise revenue and provide for carefully managed expansion into the American frontier.[224] Through high tariffs, Clay hoped to free the United States from dependence on foreign imports, especially from Britain.[225] Clay sought to ensure a stable financial system through support for the national bank, which regulated the country's banking system and helped ensure a consistent supply of credit.[226] Clay's support for federally financed internal improvements stemmed from his belief that only the federal government could construct the transportation system necessary for uniting the country commercially and culturally.[227] His land policy focused on using revenue from land sales to fund money to the states, which could then invest that money in education, infrastructure projects, and other priorities.[228]

Slavery and the Dupuy case

Clay inherited slaves as a young child,[5] and he continued to own slaves throughout his life. However, in the 1790s, he adopted antislavery views under the influence of his mentor George Wythe. [229] Like most of his contemporaries, Clay was not a racial egalitarian and never called for the immediate abolition of slavery, but he viewed slavery as a "grievous wrong to the slave" and spoke in favor of equal treatment for free blacks.[230] Early in his career, Clay favored gradual emancipation in both Kentucky and Missouri, but each state rejected plans that would have provided for gradual emancipation. [231] Clay continued to support gradual emancipation throughout his career and published an open letter in 1849 calling for gradual emancipation in Kentucky, though he qualified this view by stating he would only support emancipation if it included a plan for colonizing free blacks outside of the state.[232] Unlike many other Southern leaders, he consistently favored recognition of Haiti, which had been established through a slave revolt.[233]

In 1816, Clay helped establish the American Colonization Society, a group that wanted to establish a colony for free American blacks in Africa. The group was made up of abolitionists who wanted to end slavery and slaveholders who wanted to deport free blacks.[234] Clay's support for colonization reflected his belief that a multiracial society was ultimately unworkable, both for whites and free blacks.[235] Later in his career, Clay became increasingly concerned about abolitionism, remarking that "the ultraism of the South on the one hand [...] and the ultraism of abolition on the other" represented the greatest threat to the Union. Nonetheless, he consistently defended the right of abolitionists to send materials through the mail and opposed the gag rule, which limited congressional debate on slavery.[236]

Clay's status as a slave owner and his anti-slavery views would occasionally lead to conflicts in his political career. During a visit to Indiana in the 1840s, Clay was confronted at a political meeting by a Quaker abolitionist named Hiram Mendenhall, who presented Clay with a petition calling on him to free his slaves. Clay dismissed Mendenhall out of hand, stating his petition was no different than one demanding he give up his farm.[237]

Many contemporaries, including anti-slavery activist James G. Birney, believed that Clay's home state of Kentucky had the most permissive slave laws of any slave state. Clay considered himself to be a "good" master, and biographer James C. Klotter concludes that Clay took actions, such as keeping families together, to mitigate the harshness of slavery. Klotter also concludes that there is no evidence that Clay ever had an affair with any of his slaves. Yet, as Clay himself wrote, "here in Kentucky slavery is in its most mitigated form, still it is slavery."[238] In 1829, Clay's slave, Charlotte Dupuy, sued for her freedom while visiting relatives in Maryland. Dupuy's attorney gained an order from the court for her to remain in Washington until the case was settled, and she worked for wages for 18 months for Martin Van Buren, Clay's successor as secretary of state.[239] The case embarrassed Clay politically and personally, but he ultimately prevailed in court. After winning the case, Clay sent Dupuy to New Orleans, causing her to be away from her own family, but he later freed Dupuy and two of her children.[240] Clay's will freed all the slaves he held at the time of his death.[219]

Aaron Dupuy, Charlotte’s husband, was ordered whipped by Clay at the behest of his wife, Lucretia. Dupuy's infraction was a late return as Lucretia's carriage driver. The overseer attempted the whipping, but Dupuy managed to wrest the whip away, and Dupuy began beating the overseer.[241] Dupuy was not freed at the time of Clay’s death, but rather after the Civil War.[242]

Lewis Richardson, Clay's self emancipated slave, gave a speech that belies Clay’s self portrayal as a “good” master. Richardson had been enslaved at Ashland for 20 years, and after a beating escaped via the Underground Railroad in January, 1846.[243] By May, 1846, Richardson, now in Amherstburg, Ontario, Canada, at Union Chapel tells not only of the continual sparse food and lack of warm clothing, but of 150 lashes from overseer Ambrose Brice for the offense of being an hour late from a visit to his wife. Brice later refutes this and states it was only 16 lashes.[244] Richardson’s speech was published in an abolitionist newspaper, Signal of Liberty.

Legacy

Historical reputation

Clay's Whig Party collapsed four years after his death, but Clay cast a long shadow over the generation of political leaders that presided over the Civil War. Mississippi Senator Henry S. Foote stated his opinion that "had there been one such man in the Congress of the United States as Henry Clay in 1860-'61 there would, I feel sure, have been no civil war".[245][246] Clay's protege and fellow Kentuckian, John J. Crittenden, attempted to keep the Union together with the formation of the Constitutional Union Party and the proposed Crittenden Compromise. Though Crittenden's efforts were unsuccessful, Kentucky remained in the Union during the Civil War, reflecting in part Clay's continuing influence.[247] Abraham Lincoln was a great admirer of Clay, saying he was "my ideal of a great man." Lincoln wholeheartedly supported Clay's economic programs and, prior to the Civil War, held similar stances about slavery and the Union.[248] Some historians have argued that a Clay victory in the 1844 election would have prevented both the Mexican-American War and the American Civil War.[249]

Clay is generally regarded as one of the important political figures of his era.[250] Most historians and political scientists consider Clay to be one of the most influential speakers of the house in U.S. history.[251] In 1957, a Senate Committee selected Clay as one of the five greatest U.S. senators, along with Daniel Webster, John C. Calhoun, Robert La Follette, and Robert A. Taft.[252] A 1986 survey of historians ranked Clay as the greatest senator in U.S. history, while a 2006 survey of historians ranked Clay as the 31st-most influential American of all time.[253] A 1998 poll of historians ranked Clay as the most qualified unsuccessful major party presidential nominee in U.S. history.[254] In 2015, political scientist Michael G. Miller and historian Ken Owen ranked Clay as one of the four most influential American politicians who never served as president, alongside Alexander Hamilton, William Jennings Bryan, and John C. Calhoun.[255] Noting Clay's influence over the United States in the last three decades of his life, biographer James Klotter writes that "perhaps posterity should no longer call it the Jacksonian Era ... and instead term it the Clay Era."[256]

Monuments and memorials

 
Clay's estate, Ashland, in Lexington, Kentucky

Many monuments, memorials, and even high schools have been erected and named in honor of Clay. Sixteen counties, one each in Alabama, Florida, Georgia, Illinois, Indiana, Kansas, Kentucky, Minnesota, Mississippi, Missouri, Nebraska, North Carolina, South Dakota, Tennessee, Texas, and West Virginia, are named for Clay. Communities named for Clay include Clay, Kentucky, Claysville, Alabama and Claysville, Pennsylvania. The United States Navy named a submarine, the USS Henry Clay, in his honor. Several statues honor Clay, including one of Kentucky's two statues in the National Statuary Hall Collection. Clay's estate of Ashland is a National Historic Landmark. The Decatur House, Clay's home in Washington, D.C. during his tenure as secretary of state, is also a National Historic Landmark. Due to his involvement in the American Colonization Society, a town in the newly formed Liberia in West Africa was named Clay-Ashland after Henry Clay and to where the freed slaves from Kentucky emigrated.

See also

Notes

  1. ^ When elected by the legislature, Clay was below the constitutionally required age of thirty.[43] It is unclear whether the state legislature or Clay himself knew that he did not meet the Senate's age requirement at the time, though he did know of the issue later in his career.[44] Such an age qualification issue has occurred with only three other U.S. Senators: Armistead Thomson Mason, John Jordan Crittenden, and John Eaton.
  2. ^ The speaker during the 1st Congress, Frederick Muhlenberg, was technically also a new member.
  3. ^ The Clay–Randolph rivalry eventually escalated into a duel in 1826, the second of two duels fought by Clay, and ended with both parties unhurt.[68]
  4. ^ Maine was part of Massachusetts prior to gaining statehood.
  5. ^ Though it adopted other policy issues, the Anti-Masonic Party strongly opposed the influence of Freemasonry; Jackson and Clay were both Freemasons. Though he not been active Freemason since 1824, Clay refused to openly condemn the organization.[132]
  6. ^ During the balloting, Clay and Scott played cards with Whig politicians John J. Crittenden and George Evans at the Astor House hotel in New York City. When the group received word of Harrison's victory, Clay blamed his loss on Scott and struck him, with the blow landing on the shoulder which had been wounded during Scott's participation in the Battle of Lundy's Lane. Afterwards Clay had to be physically removed from the hotel room. Scott then sent Crittenden to Clay with Scott's challenge for a duel, but Crittenden reconciled them by convincing Clay to apologize.[166]
  7. ^ Some writers have come to the conclusion that Clay and Van Buren had reached an agreement to jointly oppose annexation, but Klotter writes that "no real evidence" supports this conclusion.[185]
  8. ^ Clay received a significant share of the presidential electoral vote in three separate elections, a feat matched only by John Adams, Thomas Jefferson, Andrew Jackson, Grover Cleveland, Franklin D. Roosevelt, Richard Nixon, and William Jennings Bryan, with only the latter (like Clay) failing to ever win a presidential election.[citation needed]

References

  1. ^ D. A. Smith, Presidents from Adams Through Polk, 1825–1849 (Santa Barbara: Greenwood Press, 2005), p. 12.
  2. ^ Eaton 1957, p. 5.
  3. ^ Van Deusen 1937, p. 4.
  4. ^ Heider, David S. & Jeanne T. Henry Clay: the Essential American. pp. 4–5.
  5. ^ a b Eaton 1957, pp. 6–7.
  6. ^ Remini 1991, pp. xxiv, 4.
  7. ^ Heidler & Heidler 2010, pp. 4–5.
  8. ^ Klotter 2018, p. 309.
  9. ^ Heidler & Heidler 2010, pp. 9–10.
  10. ^ a b Heidler & Heidler 2010, pp. 11–13.
  11. ^ Eaton 1957, p. 6.
  12. ^ Heidler & Heidler 2010, pp. 13–15.
  13. ^ Heidler & Heidler 2010, pp. 19–20.
  14. ^ Eaton 1957, p. 7.
  15. ^ Heidler & Heidler 2010, pp. 20–21.
  16. ^ Heidler & Heidler 2010, p. 23.
  17. ^ Klotter 2018, p. 5.
  18. ^ Eaton 1957, p. 12.
  19. ^ Heidler & Heidler 2010, pp. 41–42.
  20. ^ Klotter 2018, pp. 12–13.
  21. ^ Lexington Cemetery and Henry Clay Monument, National Park Service
  22. ^ a b c Gatton, John Spalding (Fall 1979). ""Mr. Clay & I got stung": Harriet Martineau in Lexington". The Kentucky Review. 1 (1): 55–56. Retrieved May 16, 2019.
  23. ^ Heidler & Heidler 2010, p. 402.
  24. ^ Klotter 2018, pp. 285–286.
  25. ^ Webster, Ian. "$40,000 in 1802–2020". in2013dollars.com.
  26. ^ Webster, Ian. "$60,000 in 1802–2020". in2013dollars.com.
  27. ^ Heidler, David S. & Jeanne T. Henry Clay: the Essential American. Random House. p. 45.
  28. ^ Klotter 2018, pp. 275–277.
  29. ^ Klotter 2018, pp. 277–278.
  30. ^ Klotter 2018, pp. 279–280.
  31. ^ Klotter 2018, p. 288.
  32. ^ Heidler & Heidler 2010, pp. 27–29.
  33. ^ Heidler & Heidler 2010, pp. 30–31.
  34. ^ Heidler & Heidler 2010, p. 43.
  35. ^ Maurice G. Baxter, Henry Clay the lawyer (2000) pp 26–36.
  36. ^ Eaton 1957, p. 15.
  37. ^ Baxter, pp 38–54.
  38. ^ Klotter 2018, pp. 20–21.
  39. ^ Heidler & Heidler 2010, pp. 33–36.
  40. ^ Klotter 2018, pp. 21–23.
  41. ^ a b Heidler & Heidler 2010, pp. 48–51.
  42. ^ Klotter 2018, pp. 25–26.
  43. ^ "Youngest Senator". United States Senate.
  44. ^ Klotter 2018, p. 26.
  45. ^ Heidler & Heidler 2010, pp. 64–67.
  46. ^ Klotter 2018, pp. 10–10.
  47. ^ Heidler & Heidler 2010, pp. 70–71.
  48. ^ a b Eaton 1957, p. 17.
  49. ^ Remini 1991, p. 55.
  50. ^ Heidler & Heidler 2010, pp. 72–73.
  51. ^ Heidler & Heidler 2010, p. 74.
  52. ^ Klotter 2018, pp. 26–30.
  53. ^ Heidler & Heidler 2010, pp. 79–81.
  54. ^ Heidler & Heidler 2010, pp. 81–83.
  55. ^ Heidler & Heidler 2010, pp. 76–78.
  56. ^ Klotter 2018, p. 30.
  57. ^ Heidler & Heidler 2010, p. 85.
  58. ^ Ostermeier, Eric (October 13, 2015). "Paul Ryan Would Be Youngest House Speaker Since 1860s". Smart Politics. Minneapolis, Minnesota: University of Minnesota Libraries. Retrieved February 19, 2019.
  59. ^ Heitshusen, Valerie (February 11, 2011). (PDF). CRS Report for Congress. Washington, D.C.: Congressional Research Service, the Library of Congress. p. 2. Archived from the original (PDF) on April 17, 2018. Retrieved February 18, 2019.
  60. ^ "Clay, Henry: 1777–1852". History, Art & Archives, U.S. House of Representatives. Washington, D.C.: The Office of the Historian and the Clerk of the House's Office of Art and Archives. Retrieved February 19, 2019.
  61. ^ Heidler & Heidler 2010, pp. 148–149.
  62. ^ "List of Speakers of the House". History, Art & Archives, U.S. House of Representatives. Washington, D.C.: The Office of the Historian and the Clerk of the House's Office of Art and Archives. Retrieved February 19, 2019.
  63. ^ Heidler & Heidler 2010, p. 86.
  64. ^ Klotter 2018, pp. 31–32.
  65. ^ Heidler & Heidler 2010, pp. 88–89.
  66. ^ Heidler & Heidler 2010, pp. 87–88.
  67. ^ Heidler & Heidler 2010, p. 96.
  68. ^ Klotter 2018, pp. 65–67.
  69. ^ Heidler & Heidler 2010, pp. 89–90.
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Works cited

  • Bowman, Shearer Davis (2008). "Comparing Henry Clay and Abraham Lincoln". The Register of the Kentucky Historical Society. 106 (3/4): 495–512. JSTOR 23388014.
  • Cole, Donald B. (1993). The Presidency of Andrew Jackson. University Press of Kansas. ISBN 0-7006-0600-9.
  • Eaton, Clement (1957). Henry Clay and the Art of American Politics. Little, Brown. OCLC 351740.
  • Gammon, Samuel Rhea (1922). The Presidential Campaign of 1832. The Johns Hopkins Press. OCLC 1067062411.
  • Goodrich, Carter (1950). "The Revulsion Against Internal Improvements". Journal of Economic History. 10 (2): 145–169. doi:10.1017/s0022050700064111. JSTOR 2113517. S2CID 154953642.
  • Graebner, Norman; Herring, George (2009). "Henry Clay, Realist". The Register of the Kentucky Historical Society. 107 (4): 551–576. JSTOR 23387602.
  • Hargreaves, Mary W. M. (1985). The Presidency of John Quincy Adams. University Press of Kansas. ISBN 9780700602728.
  • Heidler, David S.; Heidler, Jeanne T. (2010). Henry Clay: The Essential American. Random House. ISBN 978-1-58836-995-6.
  • Holt, Michael F. (1999). The Rise and Fall of the American Whig Party: Jacksonian Politics and the Onset of the Civil War. Oxford University Press. ISBN 9780199772032.
  • Howe, Daniel Walker (2007). What Hath God Wrought: the Transformation of America, 1815–1848. Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0195078947.
  • Klotter, James C. (2018). Henry Clay: The Man Who Would Be President. Oxford University Press. ISBN 9780190498047.
  • Klotter, James (Autumn 2012). "Kentucky, The Civil War, and the Spirit of Henry Clay". The Register of the Kentucky Historical Society. 110 (3/4): 243–263. doi:10.1353/khs.2012.0068. JSTOR 23388052. S2CID 161945941.
  • Peterson, Norma Lois (1989). The Presidencies of William Henry Harrison and John Tyler. University Press of Kansas. ISBN 978-0-7006-0400-5.
  • Remini, Robert V. (1991). Henry Clay: Statesmen for the Union. W. W. Norton. ISBN 978-0393030044.
  • Remini, Robert V. (1981). Andrew Jackson and the Course of American Freedom, 1822–1832. Harper & Row Publishers, Inc. ISBN 978-0-8018-5913-7.
  • Smith, Elbert B. (1988). The Presidencies of Zachary Taylor & Millard Fillmore. The American Presidency. University Press of Kansas. ISBN 978-0-7006-0362-6.
  • Strahan, Randall; Moscardelli, Vincent G.; Moshe, Haspel; Wike, Richard S. (2000). "The Clay Speakership Revisited". Polity. 32 (4): 561–593. doi:10.2307/3235293. JSTOR 3235293. S2CID 155152645.
  • Van Deusen, Glyndon G. (1937). The Life of Henry Clay. Little, Brown, and Co. ISBN 9780313207174. OCLC 424654.

Further reading

Secondary sources

  • Apple, Lindsey (2011). The Family Legacy of Henry Clay: In the Shadow of a Kentucky Patriarch. University Press of Kentucky. ISBN 978-0813134109.
  • Baxter, Maurice (1995). Henry Clay and the American System. University Press of Kentucky. ISBN 978-0813119199.
  • Baxter, Maurice (2000). Henry Clay the Lawyer. University Press of Kentucky. ISBN 978-0813121475.
  • Bordewich, Fergus M. (2012). America's Great Debate: Henry Clay, Stephen A. Douglas, and the Compromise That Preserved the Union. Simon & Schuster. ISBN 978-1439124604.
  • Brands, H. W. (2018). Heirs of the Founders: The Epic Rivalry of Henry Clay, John Calhoun and Daniel Webster, the Second Generation of American Giants. Knopf Doubleday Publishing Group. ISBN 978-0385542548.
  • Brown, Thomas (1985). Politics and Statesmanship: Essays on the American Whig Party. Columbia University Press. ISBN 978-0231056021.
  • Greenberg, Amy S. (2012). A Wicked War: Polk, Clay, Lincoln, and the 1846 U.S. Invasion of Mexico. Knopf. ISBN 978-0307592699.
  • King, Quentin Scott (2014). Henry Clay and the War of 1812. McFarland. ISBN 978-1476613901.
  • Klotter, James C. Henry Clay: The Man Who Would Be President (Oxford UP, 2018) online review
  • Knupfer, Peter B. (1991). The Union As It Is: Constitutional Unionism and Sectional Compromise, 1787–1861. University of North Carolina Press. ISBN 978-0807819968.
  • Lévai, Csaba. "Henry Clay and Lajos Kossuth’s Visit in the United States, 1851–1852." Eger Journal of American Studies Vol. 13: 219-241 online.
  • Mayo, Bernard (1937). Henry Clay: Spokesman of the New West. Houghton Mifflin. OCLC 35020339.
  • Meyer, Jeff (2002). "Henry Clay's Legacy to Horse Breeding and Racing". The Register of the Kentucky Historical Society. 100 (4): 473–496. JSTOR 23384634.
  • Morgan, William G. “Henry Clay’s Biographers and the ‘Corrupt Bargain’ Charge.” Register of the Kentucky Historical Society 66#3 (1968), pp. 242–58. online
  • Morgan, William G. “John Quincy Adams Versus Andrew Jackson: Their Biographers And The ‘Corrupt Bargain’ Charge.” Tennessee Historical Quarterly 26#1 (1967), pp. 43–58. online
  • Patrick, Andrew P. "Hemp & Henry Clay: Binding the Bluegrass to the World." Register of the Kentucky Historical Society 117.1 (2019): 39–55. online
  • Paulus, Sarah Bischoff (2014). "America's Long Eulogy for Compromise: Henry Clay and American Politics, 1854–58". Journal of the Civil War Era. 4 (1): 28–52. doi:10.1353/cwe.2014.0014. JSTOR 26062123. S2CID 154139588.
  • Pearson, Joseph W. The Whigs' America: Middle-Class Political Thought in the Age of Jackson and Clay (University Press of Kentucky, 2020).
  • Peterson, Merrill D. (1987). The Great Triumvirate: Webster, Clay, and Calhoun. Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0195038774.
  • Petriello, David. "Consumption and Compromise: Illness and Its Impact on the Political Career of Henry Clay." Journal of the Southern Association for the History of Medicine and Science 2.1 (2020): 43-56 online.
  • Poage, George Rawlings (1936). Henry Clay and the Whig Party. University of North Carolina Press. OCLC 611501.
  • Portteus, Kevin J. "'My Beau Ideal of a Statesman': Abraham Lincoln’s Eulogy on Henry Clay." Journal of the Abraham Lincoln Association 41.2 (2021) online.
  • Ratcliffe, Donald (2015). The One-Party Presidential Contest. University Press of Kansas. ISBN 978-0700621309.
  • Remini, Robert V. (2010). At the Edge of the Precipice: Henry Clay and the Compromise That Saved the Union. Basic Books. ISBN 978-0465012886.
  • Runyon, Randolph Paul. The Mentelles: Mary Todd Lincoln, Henry Clay, and the Immigrant Family Who Educated Antebellum Kentucky (University Press of Kentucky, 2018).
  •   Schurz, Carl. Life of Henry Clay, 2 vols., 1899.
  • Schurz, Carl (1911). "Clay, Henry" . In Chisholm, Hugh (ed.). Encyclopædia Britannica (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press.
  • Smith, Laura Ellyn. "Through the Eyes of the Enemy: Why Henry Clay Lost the Presidential Election of 1844 through the Lens of The Daily Argus of Portland, Maine." Maine History 50.1 (2016): 58-78 online.
  • Strahan, Randall (2007). Leading Representatives: The Agency of Leaders in the Politics of the U.S. House. Johns Hopkins University Press. ISBN 978-0801886904.
  • Swift, Elaine K. "The start of something new: Clay, Stevenson, Polk, and the development of the speakership, 1789-1869." in Masters of the House (Routledge, 2018) pp. 9–32.
  • Unger, Harlow Giles (2015). Henry Clay: America's Greatest Statesman. Da Capo Press. ISBN 978-0306823923.
  • Watson, Harry L. (1998). Watson, Harry L. (ed.). Andrew Jackson vs. Henry Clay: Democracy and Development in Antebellum America. Bedford/St. Martin's. ISBN 978-0312112134.
  • Wood, Gordon S. (2009). Empire of Liberty: A History of the Early Republic, 1789–1815. Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0199741090.
  • Zarefsky, David (2003). "Henry Clay and the Election of 1844: the Limits of a Rhetoric of Compromise". Rhetoric & Public Affairs. 6 (1): 79–96. doi:10.1353/rap.2003.0040. JSTOR 41939810. S2CID 143245070.

Primary sources

  • Clay, Henry. The Papers of Henry Clay, 1797–1852. Edited by James Hopkins, Mary Hargreaves, Robert Seager II, Melba Porter Hay et al. 11 vols. University Press of Kentucky, 1959–1992.
  • Clay, Henry. Works of Henry Clay, 7 vols. (1897) online free

External links

  • Clay's Ashland Home web site, (HenryClay.org)
  • Henry Clay: A Resource Guide from the Library of Congress
  • Works by Henry Clay at Project Gutenberg
  • Works by or about Henry Clay at Internet Archive
  • Works by Henry Clay at LibriVox (public domain audiobooks)  
  • Henry Clay - Biographical Directory of the United States Congress
  • For Henry Clay's election results.
  • Henry Clay Letters, 1825–1851 at the Newberry Library
  • Letters of Henry Clay
  • at Teaching American History.Org
  • Appearances on C-SPAN
  • Guide to the Henry Clay Letters, 1801–1843 housed at the University of Kentucky Libraries Special Collections Research Center
  • Guide to the Henry Clay Memorial Foundation papers housed at the University of Kentucky Libraries Special Collections Research Center
  • Guide to the Henry Clay account book, housed at the University of Kentucky Libraries Special Collections Research Center
  •   Texts on Wikisource:
  • George Pope Morris and Henry Russell wrote A Song for the Man in 1844 as a campaign song for Clay.

henry, clay, other, people, named, disambiguation, april, 1777, june, 1852, american, attorney, statesman, represented, kentucky, both, senate, house, representatives, seventh, house, speaker, well, ninth, secretary, state, also, receiving, electoral, votes, p. For other people named Henry Clay see Henry Clay disambiguation Henry Clay Sr April 12 1777 June 29 1852 was an American attorney and statesman who represented Kentucky in both the U S Senate and House of Representatives He was the seventh House speaker as well as the ninth secretary of state also receiving electoral votes for president in the 1824 1832 and 1844 presidential elections He helped found both the National Republican Party and the Whig Party For his role in defusing sectional crises he earned the appellation of the Great Compromiser and was part of the Great Triumvirate of Congressmen alongside fellow Whig Daniel Webster and John C Calhoun Henry ClayClay photographed in 18489th United States Secretary of StateIn office March 4 1825 March 4 1829PresidentJohn Quincy AdamsPreceded byJohn Quincy AdamsSucceeded byMartin Van BurenUnited States Senatorfrom KentuckyIn office March 4 1849 June 29 1852Preceded byThomas MetcalfeSucceeded byDavid MeriwetherIn office November 10 1831 March 31 1842Preceded byJohn RowanSucceeded byJohn J CrittendenIn office January 4 1810 March 3 1811Appointed byCharles ScottPreceded byBuckner ThrustonSucceeded byGeorge M BibbIn office December 29 1806 March 3 1807Preceded byJohn AdairSucceeded byJohn Pope7th Speaker of the United States House of RepresentativesIn office March 4 1823 March 3 1825Preceded byPhilip P BarbourSucceeded byJohn TaylorIn office March 4 1815 October 28 1820Preceded byLangdon ChevesSucceeded byJohn TaylorIn office March 4 1811 January 19 1814Preceded byJoseph VarnumSucceeded byLangdon ChevesMember of theU S House of Representativesfrom KentuckyIn office March 4 1823 March 6 1825Preceded byJohn JohnsonSucceeded byJames ClarkConstituency3rd districtIn office March 4 1815 March 3 1821Preceded byJoseph H HawkinsSucceeded bySamuel WoodsonConstituency2nd districtIn office March 4 1811 January 19 1814Preceded byWilliam T BarrySucceeded byJoseph H HawkinsConstituency2nd district 1813 1814 5th district 1811 1813 Personal detailsBorn 1777 04 12 April 12 1777Hanover County Virginia U S DiedJune 29 1852 1852 06 29 aged 75 Washington D C U S Political partyDemocratic Republican 1797 1825 National Republican 1825 1833 Whig 1833 1852 SpouseLucretia Hart m 1799 wbr Children11 including Thomas Henry James JohnEducationCollege of William amp MarySignatureClay was born in Hanover County Virginia in 1777 beginning his legal career in Lexington Kentucky in 1797 As a member of the Democratic Republican Party Clay won election to the Kentucky state legislature in 1803 and to the U S House of Representatives in 1810 He was chosen as Speaker of the House in early 1811 and along with President James Madison led the United States into the War of 1812 against Great Britain In 1814 he helped negotiate the Treaty of Ghent which brought an end to the War of 1812 and then after the war Clay returned to his position as Speaker of the House and developed the American System which called for federal infrastructure investments support for the national bank and high protective tariff rates In 1820 he helped bring an end to a sectional crisis over slavery by leading the passage of the Missouri Compromise Clay finished with the fourth most electoral votes in the multi candidate 1824 presidential election and he helped John Quincy Adams win the contingent election held to select the president President Adams appointed Clay to the prestigious position of secretary of state as a result critics alleged that the two had agreed to a corrupt bargain Despite receiving support from Clay and other National Republicans Adams was defeated by Democrat Andrew Jackson in the 1828 presidential election Clay won election to the Senate in 1831 and ran as the National Republican nominee in the 1832 presidential election but he was defeated decisively by President Jackson After the 1832 election Clay helped bring an end to the nullification crisis by leading passage of the Tariff of 1833 During Jackson s second term opponents of the president including Clay Webster and William Henry Harrison created the Whig Party and through the years Clay became a leading congressional Whig Clay sought the presidency in the 1840 election but was passed over at the Whig National Convention by Harrison When Harrison died and his vice president ascended to office Clay clashed with Harrison s successor John Tyler who broke with Clay and other congressional Whigs after taking office upon Harrison s death in 1841 Clay resigned from the Senate in 1842 and won the 1844 Whig presidential nomination but he was narrowly defeated in the general election by Democrat James K Polk who made the annexation of the Republic of Texas his top issue Clay strongly criticized the subsequent Mexican American War and sought the Whig presidential nomination in 1848 but was passed over by General Zachary Taylor who went on to win the election After returning to the Senate in 1849 Clay played a key role in passing the Compromise of 1850 which postponed a crisis over the status of slavery in the territories Clay is generally regarded as one of the most important and influential political figures of his era 1 Contents 1 Early life 2 Marriage and family 3 Early law and political career 3 1 Legal career 3 2 Early political career 4 Speaker of the House 4 1 Election and leadership 4 2 Madison administration 1811 1817 4 3 Monroe administration 1817 1825 4 3 1 1824 presidential election 5 Secretary of State 6 Later career 6 1 Jackson administration 1829 1837 6 1 1 Return to the Senate 6 1 2 Bank War and the 1832 presidential election 6 1 3 Nullification Crisis 6 1 4 Formation of the Whig Party 6 2 Van Buren administration 1837 1841 6 3 Harrison and Tyler administrations 1841 1845 6 3 1 1844 presidential election 6 4 Polk administration 1845 1849 6 5 Taylor and Fillmore administrations 1849 1852 7 Death 8 Ideology and slavery 8 1 American System 8 2 Slavery and the Dupuy case 9 Legacy 9 1 Historical reputation 9 2 Monuments and memorials 10 See also 11 Notes 12 References 12 1 Works cited 13 Further reading 13 1 Secondary sources 13 2 Primary sources 14 External linksEarly life EditHenry Clay was born on April 12 1777 at the Clay homestead in Hanover County Virginia 2 He was the seventh of nine children born to the Reverend John Clay and Elizabeth nee Hudson Clay 3 Almost all of Henry s older siblings died before adulthood 4 His father a Baptist minister nicknamed Sir John died in 1781 leaving Henry and his brothers two slaves each he also left his wife 18 slaves and 464 acres 188 ha of land 5 Clay was of entirely English descent 6 his ancestor John Clay settled in Virginia in 1613 7 The Clay family became a well known political family including three other US Senators numerous state politicians and Clay s cousin Cassius Clay a prominent anti slavery activist active in the mid 19th century 8 The British raided Clay s home shortly after the death of his father leaving the family in a precarious economic position 9 However the widow Elizabeth Clay married Captain Henry Watkins who was an affectionate stepfather and a successful planter 10 Elizabeth would have seven more children with Watkins bearing a total of sixteen children 11 After his mother s remarriage the young Clay remained in Hanover County where he learned how to read and write 10 In 1791 Watkins moved the family to Kentucky joining his brother in the pursuit of fertile new lands in the West However Clay did not follow as Watkins secured his temporary employment in a Richmond emporium with the promise that Clay would receive the next available clerkship at the Virginia Court of Chancery 12 After Clay had worked at the Richmond emporium for a year he obtained a clerkship that had become available at the Virginia Court of Chancery Clay adapted well to his new role and his handwriting earned him the attention of College of William amp Mary professor George Wythe a signer of the Declaration of Independence mentor of Thomas Jefferson and judge on Virginia s High Court of Chancery 13 Hampered by a crippled hand Wythe chose Clay as his secretary and amanuensis a role in which Clay would remain for four years 14 While Clay studied under Wythe Wythe had a powerful effect on Clay s worldview with Clay embracing Wythe s belief that the example of the United States could help spread human freedom around the world 15 Wythe subsequently arranged a position for Clay with Virginia attorney general Robert Brooke with the understanding that Brooke would finish Clay s legal studies 16 After completing his studies under Brooke Clay was admitted to the Virginia Bar in 1797 17 Marriage and family EditSee also Clay family On April 11 1799 Clay married Lucretia Hart 1781 1864 at the Hart home in Lexington Kentucky Her father Colonel Thomas Hart was an early settler of Kentucky and a prominent businessman 18 Hart proved to be an important business connection for Clay as he helped Clay gain new clients and grow in professional stature 19 Hart was the namesake and grand uncle of Missouri Senator Thomas Hart Benton and was also related to James Brown a prominent Louisiana politician and Isaac Shelby the first governor of Kentucky 20 Henry and Lucretia would remain married until his death in 1852 she lived until 1864 dying at the age of 83 Both are buried at Lexington Cemetery 21 Henry Clay and Lucretia nee Hart Clay and Lucretia had eleven children six daughters and five sons 22 Henrietta born in 1800 Theodore 1802 Thomas 1803 Susan 1805 Anne 1807 Lucretia 1809 Henry Jr 1811 Eliza 1813 Laura 1815 James 1817 and John 1821 By 1835 all six daughters had died of varying causes two when very young two as children and the last two as young mothers Henry Jr was killed while commanding a regiment at the Battle of Buena Vista during the Mexican American War Clay s oldest son Theodore Wythe Clay spent the second half of his life confined to a psychiatric hospital When a young child Theodore was injured by a blow to his head that fractured his skull As he grew older his condition devolved into insanity and from 1831 until his death in 1870 he was confined to an asylum in Lexington 22 23 Thomas who had served some jail time in Philadelphia in 1829 1830 22 became a successful farmer James established a legal practice and later served in Congress and John who in his mid 20s was also confined to the asylum for a short time became a successful horse breeder 24 Clay was greatly interested in gambling although he favored numerous restrictions and legal limitations on it Famously he once won 40 000 approximately 970 000 as of 2020 25 Clay asked for 500 approximately 12 000 today and waived the remainder of the debt Shortly afterword Clay fell into a debt of 60 000 approximately 1 5 million today 26 whilst gambling with the same man who then asked for the 500 back and waived the rest of the debt 27 They initially lived in downtown Lexington but in 1804 they began building a plantation outside of Lexington known as Ashland The Ashland estate eventually encompassed over 500 acres 200 ha with numerous outbuildings such as a smokehouse a greenhouse and several barns Clay owned a maximum of about 50 slaves and he planted crops such as corn wheat and rye as well as hemp the chief crop of the Bluegrass region 28 Clay also took a strong interest in thoroughbred racing and imported livestock such as Arabian horses Maltese donkeys and Hereford cattle 29 Though Clay suffered some financial issues during economic downturns he never fell deeply into debt and ultimately left his children a large inheritance 30 After the deaths of Anne and Susan Clay and Lucretia raised several grandchildren at Ashland 31 Early law and political career EditLegal career Edit View of Henry Clay s law office 1803 1810 Lexington Kentucky In November 1797 Clay relocated to Lexington Kentucky near where his parents and siblings resided The Bluegrass region with Lexington at its center had quickly grown in the preceding decades but had only recently stopped being under the threat of Native American raids Lexington was an established town that hosted Transylvania University the first university west of the Appalachian Mountains 32 Having already passed the Virginia Bar Clay quickly received a Kentucky license to practice law After apprenticing himself to Kentucky attorneys such as George Nicholas John Breckinridge and James Brown Clay established his own law practice frequently working on debt collections and land disputes 33 Clay soon established a reputation for strong legal ability and courtroom oratory In 1805 he was appointed to the faculty of Transylvania University where he taught among others future Kentucky Governor Robert P Letcher and Robert Todd the future father in law of Abraham Lincoln 34 Clay s most notable client was Aaron Burr who was indicted for treason in the Burr conspiracy Clay and his law partner John Allen successfully defended Burr without a fee in 1807 35 Thomas Jefferson later convinced Clay that Burr had been guilty of the charges 36 Clay s legal practice was light after his election to Congress In the 1823 case Green v Biddle Clay submitted the Supreme Court s first amicus curiae However he lost that case 37 Early political career Edit Further information 9th United States Congress and 11th United States Congress Clay entered politics shortly after arriving in Kentucky In his first political speech he attacked the Alien and Sedition Acts laws passed by Federalists to suppress dissent during the Quasi War with France 38 Like most Kentuckians Clay was a member of the Democratic Republican Party but he clashed with state party leaders over a state constitutional convention Using the pseudonym Scaevola in reference to Gaius Mucius Scaevola Clay advocated for direct elections for Kentucky elected officials and the gradual emancipation of slavery in Kentucky The 1799 Kentucky Constitution included the direct election of public officials but the state did not adopt Clay s plan for gradual emancipation 39 In 1803 Clay won election to the Kentucky House of Representatives 40 His first legislative initiative was the partisan gerrymander of Kentucky s Electoral College districts which ensured that all of Kentucky s presidential electors voted for President Jefferson in the 1804 presidential election 41 Clay clashed with legislators who sought to reduce the power of Clay s Bluegrass region and he unsuccessfully advocated moving the state capitol from Frankfort to Lexington Clay frequently opposed populist firebrand Felix Grundy and he helped defeat Grundy s effort to revoke the banking privileges of the state owned Kentucky Insurance Company He advocated for the construction of internal improvements which would become a consistent theme throughout his public career 41 Clay s influence in Kentucky state politics was such that in 1806 the Kentucky legislature elected him to the United States Senate 42 a During his two month tenure in the Senate Clay advocated for the construction of various bridges and canals including a canal connecting the Chesapeake Bay and the Delaware River 45 After Clay returned to Kentucky in 1807 he was elected as the speaker of the state house of representatives 46 That same year in response to attacks on American shipping by Britain and France during the Napoleonic Wars President Jefferson arranged passage of the Embargo Act of 1807 In support of Jefferson s policy which limited trade with foreign powers Clay introduced a resolution to require legislators to wear homespun suits rather than those made of imported British broadcloth 47 The vast majority of members of the state house voted for the measure but Humphrey Marshall an aristocratic lawyer who possessed a sarcastic tongue voted against it 48 In early 1809 Clay challenged Marshall to a duel which took place on January 19 49 While many contemporary duels were called off or fought without the intention of killing one another both Clay and Marshall fought the duel with the intent of killing their opponent 50 They each had three turns to shoot both were hit by bullets but both survived 48 Clay quickly recovered from his injury and received only a minor censure from the Kentucky legislature 51 In 1810 U S Senator Buckner Thruston resigned to accept appointment to a position as a federal judge and Clay was selected by the legislature to fill Thruston s seat Clay quickly emerged as a fierce critic of British attacks on American shipping becoming part of an informal group of war hawks who favored expansionist policies 52 He also advocated the annexation of West Florida which was controlled by Spain 53 On the insistence of the Kentucky legislature Clay helped prevent the re charter of the First Bank of the United States arguing that it interfered with state banks and infringed on states rights 54 After serving in the Senate for one year Clay decided that he disliked the rules of the Senate and instead sought election to the United States House of Representatives 55 He won election unopposed in late 1810 56 Speaker of the House EditElection and leadership Edit The 1810 11 elections produced many young anti British members of Congress who like Clay supported going to war with Great Britain Buoyed by the support of fellow war hawks Clay was elected Speaker of the House for the 12th Congress 57 At 34 he was the youngest person to become speaker a distinction he held until the election of 30 year old Robert M T Hunter in 1839 58 He was also the first of only two new members elected speaker to date b the other being William Pennington in 1860 59 Between 1810 and 1824 Clay was elected to seven terms in the House 60 His tenure was interrupted from 1814 to 1815 when he was a commissioner to peace talks with the British in Ghent United Netherlands to end the War of 1812 and from 1821 to 1823 when he left Congress to rebuild his family s fortune in the aftermath of the Panic of 1819 61 Elected speaker six times Clay s cumulative tenure in office of 10 years 196 days is the second longest surpassed only by Sam Rayburn 62 As speaker Clay wielded considerable power in making committee appointments and like many of his predecessors he assigned his allies to important committees Clay was exceptional in his ability to control the legislative agenda through well placed allies and the establishment of new committees and departed from precedent by frequently taking part in floor debates 63 Yet he also gained a reputation for personal courteousness and fairness in his rulings and committee appointments 64 Clay s drive to increase the power of the office of speaker was aided by President James Madison who deferred to Congress in most matters 65 John Randolph a member of the Democratic Republican Party but also a member of the tertium quids group that opposed many federal initiatives emerged as a prominent opponent of Speaker Clay 66 While Randolph frequently attempted to obstruct Clay s initiatives Clay became a master of parliamentary maneuvers that enabled him to advance his agenda even over the attempted obstruction by Randolph and others 67 c Madison administration 1811 1817 Edit Further information Presidency of James Madison 12th United States Congress 13th United States Congress and 14th United States Congress Clay and other war hawks demanded that the British revoke the Orders in Council a series of decrees that had resulted in a de facto commercial war with the United States 69 Though Clay recognized the dangers inherent in fighting Britain one of the most powerful countries in the world he saw it as the only realistic alternative to a humiliating submission to British attacks on American shipping 70 Clay led a successful effort in the House to declare war against Britain complying with a request from President Madison 71 Madison signed the declaration of war on June 18 1812 beginning the War of 1812 During the war Clay frequently communicated with Secretary of State James Monroe and Secretary of War William Eustis though he advocated for the replacement of the latter 72 The war started poorly for the Americans and Clay lost friends and relatives in the fighting 71 In October 1813 the British asked Madison to begin negotiations in Europe and Madison asked Clay to join his diplomatic team as the president hoped that the presence of the leading war hawk would ensure support for a peace treaty Clay was reluctant to leave Congress but felt duty bound to accept the offer and so he resigned from Congress on January 19 1814 73 Clay left the country on February 25 but negotiations with the British did not begin until August 1814 Clay was part of a team of five commissioners that included Treasury Secretary Albert Gallatin Senator James Bayard ambassador Jonathan Russell and ambassador John Quincy Adams the head of the American team 74 Clay and Adams maintained an uneasy relationship marked by frequent clashes and Gallatin emerged as the unofficial leader of the American team When the British finally presented their initial peace offer Clay was outraged by its terms especially the British proposal for an Indian barrier state on the Great Lakes After a series of American military successes in 1814 the British delegation made several concessions and offered a better peace deal 75 While Adams and Gallatin were eager to make peace as quickly as possible even if that required sub optimal terms in the peace treaty Clay believed that the British worn down by years of fighting against France greatly desired peace with the United States Partly due to Clay s hard line stance the Treaty of Ghent included relatively favorable terms for the United States essentially re establishing the status quo ante bellum between Britain and the U S The treaty was signed on December 24 1814 bringing a close to the War of 1812 76 After the signing of the treaty Clay briefly traveled to London where he helped Gallatin negotiate a commercial agreement with Britain 77 Clay returned to the United States in September 1815 despite his absence he had been elected to another term in the House of Representatives Upon his return to Congress Clay won election as Speaker of the House 78 The War of 1812 strengthened Clay s support for interventionist economic policies such as federally funded internal improvements which he believed were necessary to improve the country s infrastructure system 79 He eagerly embraced President Madison s ambitious domestic package which included infrastructure investment tariffs to protect domestic manufacturing and spending increases for the army and navy With the help of John C Calhoun and William Lowndes Clay passed the Tariff of 1816 which served the dual purpose of raising revenue and protecting American manufacturing To stabilize the currency Clay and Treasury Secretary Alexander Dallas arranged passage of a bill establishing the Second Bank of the United States also known as the national bank 80 Clay also supported the Bonus Bill of 1817 which would have provided a fund for internal improvements but Madison vetoed the bill on constitutional concerns 81 Beginning in 1818 Clay advocated for an economic plan known as the American System which encompassed many of the economic measures including protective tariffs and infrastructure investments that he helped pass in the aftermath of the War of 1812 82 Monroe administration 1817 1825 Edit Further information Presidency of James Monroe 15th United States Congress 16th United States Congress 17th United States Congress and 18th United States CongressLike Jefferson and George Washington President Madison decided to retire after two terms leaving open the Democratic Republican nomination for the 1816 presidential election At the time the Democratic Republicans used a congressional nominating caucus to choose their presidential nominees giving congressmen a powerful role in the presidential selection process Monroe and Secretary of War William Crawford emerged as the two main candidates for the Democratic Republican nomination Clay had a favorable opinion of both individuals but he supported Monroe who won the nomination and went on to defeat Federalist candidate Rufus King in the general election 83 Monroe offered Clay the position of secretary of war but Clay strongly desired the office of secretary of state and was angered when Monroe instead chose John Quincy Adams for that position 84 Clay became so bitter that he refused to allow Monroe s inauguration to take place in the House Chamber and subsequently did not attend Monroe s outdoor inauguration 85 Portrait by Matthew Harris Jouett 1818 In early 1819 a dispute erupted over the proposed statehood of Missouri after New York Congressman James Tallmadge introduced a legislative amendment that would provide for the gradual emancipation of Missouri s slaves 86 Though Clay had previously called for gradual emancipation in Kentucky he sided with the Southerners in voting down Tallmadge s amendment 87 Clay instead supported Illinois Senator Jesse B Thomas s compromise proposal in which Missouri would be admitted as a slave state Maine would be admitted as a free state d and slavery would be forbidden in the territories north of 36 30 parallel Clay helped assemble a coalition that passed the Missouri Compromise as Thomas s proposal became known 88 Further controversy ensued when Missouri s constitution banned free blacks from entering the state but Clay was able to engineer another compromise that allowed Missouri to join as a state in August 1821 89 In foreign policy Clay was a leading American supporter of the independence movements and revolutions that broke out in Latin America beginning in 1810 90 Clay frequently called on the Monroe administration to recognize the fledgling Latin American republics but Monroe feared that doing so would derail his plans to acquire Spanish Florida 91 In 1818 General Andrew Jackson crossed into Spanish Florida to suppress raids by Seminole Indians 92 Though Jackson was following Monroe s implied wishes in entering Florida he created additional controversy in seizing the Spanish town of Pensacola Despite protests from Secretary of War Calhoun Monroe and Adams decided to support Jackson s actions in the hope that they would convince Spain to sell Florida 92 Clay however was outraged and he publicly condemned Jackson s decision to hang two foreign nationals without a trial Before the House chamber he compared Jackson to military dictators of the past telling his colleagues that Greece had her Alexander Rome her Caesar England her Cromwell France her Bonaparte and that if we would escape the rock on which they split we must avoid their errors 93 Jackson saw Clay s protestations as an attack on his character and thus began a long rivalry between Clay and Jackson 93 The rivalry and the controversy over Jackson s expedition temporarily subsided after the signing of the Adams Onis Treaty in which the U S purchased Florida and delineated its western boundary with New Spain 94 1824 presidential election Edit Main article 1824 United States presidential election Clay helped Adams win the 1825 contingent House election after Clay failed to finish among the three electoral vote winners States in orange voted for Crawford states in green for Adams and states in blue for Jackson By 1822 several members of the Democratic Republican Party had begun exploring presidential bids to succeed Monroe who planned to retire after two terms like his predecessors 95 As the Federalist Party was near collapse the 1824 presidential election would be contested only by members of the Democratic Republican Party including Clay Having led the passage of the Tariff of 1824 and the General Survey Act Clay campaigned on his American System of high tariffs and federal spending on infrastructure 96 Three members of Monroe s Cabinet Secretary of the Treasury William Crawford Secretary of State John Quincy Adams and Secretary of War John C Calhoun appeared to be Clay s strongest competitors for the presidency 95 Though many including Clay did not take his candidacy seriously at first General Andrew Jackson emerged as a presidential contender eroding Clay s base of support in the western states 97 In February 1824 the sparsely attended Democratic Republican congressional caucus endorsed Crawford s candidacy but Crawford s rivals ignored the caucus results and various state legislatures nominated candidates for president 98 During the campaign Crawford suffered a major stroke while Calhoun withdrew from the race after Jackson won the endorsement of the Pennsylvania legislature 99 By 1824 with Crawford still in the race Clay concluded that no candidate would win a majority of electoral votes in that scenario the House of Representatives would hold a contingent election to decide the election Under the terms of the Twelfth Amendment the top three electoral vote getters would be eligible to be elected by the House Clay was confident that he would prevail in a contingent held in the chamber he presided over so long as he was eligible for election 100 Clay won Kentucky Ohio and Missouri but his loss in New York and Louisiana relegated him to a fourth place finish behind Adams Jackson and Crawford 101 Clay was humiliated that he finished behind the invalid Crawford and Jackson but supporters of the three remaining presidential candidates immediately began courting his support for the contingent election 102 For various reasons supporters of all three candidates believed they had the best chance of winning Clay s backing but Clay quickly settled on supporting Adams 103 Of the three candidates Adams was the most sympathetic to Clay s American System and Clay viewed both Jackson and the sickly Crawford as unsuitable for the presidency 104 On January 9 1825 Clay privately met with Adams for three hours after which Clay promised Adams his support both would later claim that they did not discuss Clay s position in an Adams administration 105 With the help of Clay Adams won the House vote on the first ballot 106 After his election Adams offered Clay the position of secretary of state which Clay accepted despite fears that he would be accused of trading his support for the Cabinet post Jackson was outraged by the election and he and his supporters accused Clay and Adams of having reached a Corrupt Bargain 107 Pro Jackson forces immediately began preparing for the 1828 presidential election with the Corrupt Bargain accusation becoming their central issue 108 Secretary of State Edit Portrait of Henry Clay Further information Presidency of John Quincy Adams Clay served as secretary of state from 1825 to 1829 As secretary of state he was the top foreign policy official in the Adams administration but he also held several domestic duties such as oversight of the patent office 109 Clay came to like Adams a former rival and to despise Jackson They developed a strong working relationship 110 Adams and Clay were both wary of forming entangling alliances with the emerging states and they continued to uphold the Monroe Doctrine which called for European non intervention in former colonies 111 Clay was rebuffed in his efforts to reach a commercial treaty and a settlement of the Canada United States border with Britain and was also unsuccessful in his attempts to make the French pay for damages arising from attacks on American shipping during the Napoleonic Wars 111 He had more success in negotiating commercial treaties with Latin American republics reaching most favoured nation trade agreements in an attempt to ensure that no European country had a trading advantage over the United States 112 Seeking deeper relations with Latin American countries Clay strongly favored sending American delegates to the Congress of Panama but his efforts were defeated by opponents in the Senate 113 Clay supported construction of the National Road which extended west from Cumberland Maryland Adams proposed an ambitious domestic program based in large part on Clay s American System but Clay warned the president that many of his proposals held little chance of passage in the 19th Congress 114 Adams s opponents defeated many of his proposals including the establishment of a naval academy and a national observatory but Adams did preside over the construction or initiation of major infrastructure projects like the National Road and the Chesapeake and Ohio Canal 115 Followers of Adams began to call themselves National Republicans and Jackson s followers became known as Democrats 116 Both campaigns spread untrue stories about the opposing candidates 117 Adams followers denounced Jackson as a demagogue and some Adams aligned papers accused Jackson s wife Rachel of bigamy Though Clay was not directly involved in these attacks his failure to denounce them earned him the lifelong enmity of Jackson 118 Clay was one of Adams s most important political advisers but because of his myriad responsibilities as secretary of state he was often unable to take part in campaigning 119 As Adams was averse to the use of patronage for political purposes Jackson s campaign enjoyed a marked advantage in organization and Adams allies such as Clay and Daniel Webster were unable to create an equally powerful organization headed by the president 120 In the 1828 election Jackson took 56 of the popular vote and won almost every state outside of New England Clay was especially distressed by Jackson s victory in Kentucky The election result represented not only the victory of a man Clay viewed as unqualified and unprincipled but also a rejection of Clay s domestic policies 121 Later career EditSee also Second Party System and Jacksonian democracy Jackson administration 1829 1837 Edit See also Presidency of Andrew Jackson 22nd United States Congress 23rd United States Congress and 24th United States Congress Henry Clay circa 1832 Return to the Senate Edit Even with Clay out of office President Jackson continued to see Clay as one of his major rivals and Jackson at one point suspected Clay of being behind the Petticoat affair a controversy involving the wives of his Cabinet members 122 Clay strongly opposed the 1830 Indian Removal Act which authorized the administration to relocate Native Americans to land west of the Mississippi River 123 Another key point of contention between Clay and Jackson was the proposed Maysville Road which would connect Maysville Kentucky to the National Road in Zanesville Ohio transportation advocates hoped that later extensions would eventually connect the National Road to New Orleans 124 In 1830 Jackson vetoed the project both because he felt that the road did not constitute interstate commerce and also because he generally opposed using the federal government to promote economic modernization 125 While Jackson s veto garnered support from opponents of infrastructure spending it damaged his base of support in Clay s home state of Kentucky 126 Clay returned to federal office in 1831 by winning election to the Senate over Richard Mentor Johnson in a 73 to 64 vote of the Kentucky legislature 127 His return to the Senate after 20 years 8 months 7 days out of office marks the fourth longest gap in service to the chamber in history 128 Bank War and the 1832 presidential election Edit Main articles Bank War 1831 National Republican National Convention and 1832 United States presidential election Andrew Jackson defeated Clay in the 1832 election With the defeat of Adams Clay became the de facto leader of the National Republicans and he began making preparations for a presidential campaign in the 1832 election 129 In 1831 Jackson made it clear that he was going to run for re election ensuring that support or opposition to his presidency would be a central feature of the upcoming race 130 Jackson s Democrats rallied around his policies towards the national bank internal improvements Indian removal and nullification but these policies also earned Jackson various enemies including Vice President John C Calhoun 131 However Clay rejected overtures from the fledgling Anti Masonic Party e and his attempt to convince Calhoun to serve as his running mate failed leaving the opposition to Jackson split among different factions 133 Inspired by the Anti Masonic Party s national convention Clay s National Republican followers arranged for a national convention that nominated Clay for president 134 As the 1832 election approached the debate over the re authorization of the national bank emerged as the most important issue in the campaign 131 By the early 1830s the national bank had become the largest corporation in the United States and banknotes issued by the national bank served as the de facto legal tender of the United States 135 Jackson disliked the national bank because of a hatred of both banks and paper currency 136 The bank s charter did not expire until 1836 but bank president Nicholas Biddle asked for renewal in 1831 hoping that election year pressure and support from Secretary of the Treasury Louis McLane would convince Jackson to allow the re charter 137 Biddle s application set off the Bank War Congress passed a bill to renew the national bank s charter but Jackson vetoed it holding the bank to be unconstitutional 138 Clay had initially hoped that the national bank re charter would work to his advantage but Jackson s allies seized on the issue redefining the 1832 election as a choice between the president and a monied oligarchy 139 Ultimately Clay was unable to defeat a popular sitting president Jackson won 219 of the 286 electoral votes and 54 2 of the popular vote carrying almost every state outside of New England 140 Nullification Crisis Edit Main article Nullification crisis The high rates of the Tariff of 1828 and the Tariff of 1832 angered many Southerners because they resulted in higher prices for imported goods 141 After the 1832 election South Carolina held a state convention that declared the tariff rates of 1828 and 1832 to be nullified within the state and further declared that federal collection of import duties would be illegal after January 1833 142 In response to this Nullification Crisis Jackson issued his Proclamation to the People of South Carolina which strongly denied the right of states to nullify federal laws or secede 143 He asked Congress to pass what became known as the Force Bill which would authorize the president to send federal soldiers against South Carolina if it sought to nullify federal law 144 Though Clay favored high tariff rates he found Jackson s strong rhetoric against South Carolina distressing and sought to avoid a crisis that could end in civil war 141 He proposed a compromise tariff bill that would lower tariff rates but do so gradually thereby giving manufacturing interests time to adapt to less protective rates Clay s compromise tariff won the backing of both manufacturers who believed they would not receive a better deal and Calhoun who sought a way out of the crisis but refused to work with President Jackson s supporters on an alternative tariff bill 145 Though most members of Clay s own National Republican Party opposed it the Tariff of 1833 passed both houses of Congress Jackson simultaneously signed the tariff bill and the Force bill and South Carolina leaders accepted the new tariff effectively bringing the crisis to an end Clay s role in resolving the crisis brought him renewed national stature in the wake of a crushing presidential election defeat and some began referring to him as the Great Compromiser 146 Formation of the Whig Party Edit Main articles National Republican Party and Whig Party United States Following the end of the Nullification Crisis in March 1833 Jackson renewed his offensive against the national bank despite some opposition from within his own Cabinet 147 Jackson and Secretary of the Treasury Roger Taney pursued a policy of removing all federal deposits from the national bank and placing them in state chartered banks known as pet banks 148 Because federal law required the president to deposit federal revenue in the national bank so long as it was financially stable many regarded Jackson s actions as illegal and Clay led the passage of a Senate motion censuring Jackson 149 Nonetheless the national bank s federal charter expired in 1836 and though the institution continued to function under a Pennsylvania charter it never regained the influence it had had at the beginning of Jackson s administration 150 The removal of deposits helped unite Jackson s opponents into one party for the first time as National Republicans Calhounites former Democrats and members of the Anti Masonic Party coalesced into the Whig Party 151 The term Whig originated from a speech Clay delivered in 1834 in which he compared opponents of Jackson to the Whigs a British political party opposed to absolute monarchy 152 Neither the Whigs nor the Democrats were unified geographically or ideologically However Whigs tended to favor a stronger legislature a stronger federal government a higher tariff greater spending on infrastructure re authorization of the Second Bank of the United States and publicly funded education Conversely Democrats tended to favor a stronger president stronger state governments lower tariffs hard money and expansionism Neither party took a strong national stand on slavery 153 The Whig base of support lay in wealthy businessmen professionals the professional class and large planters while the Democratic base of support lay in immigrant Catholics and yeomen farmers but each party appealed across class lines 154 Partly due to grief over the death of his daughter Anne Clay chose not to run in the 1836 presidential election and the Whigs were too disorganized to nominate a single candidate 155 Three Whig candidates ran against Van Buren General William Henry Harrison Senator Hugh Lawson White and Senator Daniel Webster By running multiple candidates the Whigs hoped to force a contingent election in the House of Representatives Clay personally preferred Webster but he threw his backing behind Harrison who had the broadest appeal among voters Clay s decision not to endorse Webster opened a rift between the two Whig party leaders and Webster would work against Clay in future presidential elections 156 Despite the presence of multiple Whig candidates Van Buren won the 1836 election with 50 8 percent of the popular vote and 170 of the 294 electoral votes 157 Van Buren administration 1837 1841 Edit See also Presidency of Martin Van Buren 25th United States Congress and 26th United States Congress Clay brown won the backing of several state delegations on the first ballot of the 1839 Whig National Convention but William Henry Harrison ultimately won the party s presidential nomination Van Buren s presidency was affected badly by the Panic of 1837 a major recession that badly damaged the Democratic Party 158 Clay and other Whigs argued that Jackson s policies including the use of pet banks had encouraged speculation and caused the panic 159 He promoted the American System as a means for economic recovery but President Van Buren s response focused on the practice of strict economy and frugality 160 As the 1840 presidential election approached many expected that the Whigs would win control of the presidency due to the ongoing economic crisis 161 Clay initially viewed Webster as his strongest rival 162 but Clay Harrison and General Winfield Scott emerged as the principal candidates at the 1839 Whig National Convention 163 Though he was widely regarded as the most qualified Whig leader to serve as president many Whigs questioned Clay s electability after two presidential election defeats He also faced opposition in the North due to his ownership of slaves and lingering association with the Freemasons and in the South from Whigs who distrusted his moderate stance on slavery 164 Clay won a plurality on the first ballot of the Whig National Convention but with the help of Thurlow Weed and other backers Harrison consolidated support on subsequent ballots and won the Whig presidential nomination on the fifth ballot of the convention 165 f Seeking to placate Clay s supporters and to balance the ticket geographically the convention chose former Virginia Governor and Senator John Tyler a personal friend of Clay whose previous career in the Democratic Party had practically come to an end as the vice presidential nominee 167 Clay was disappointed by the outcome but helped Harrison s ultimately successful campaign by delivering numerous speeches 168 With Whigs also winning control of Congress in the 1840 elections Clay saw the upcoming 27th Congress as an opportunity for the Whig Party to establish itself as the dominant political party by leading the country out of recession 169 Harrison and Tyler administrations 1841 1845 Edit See also Presidency of William Henry Harrison Presidency of John Tyler and 27th United States Congress President elect Harrison asked Clay to serve another term as Secretary of State but Clay chose to remain in Congress Webster was instead chosen as Secretary of State while John J Crittenden a close ally of Clay was chosen as Attorney General 170 As Harrison prepared to take office Clay and Harrison clashed over the leadership of the Whig Party with Harrison sensitive to accusations that he would answer to Clay 171 Just a month into his presidency Harrison died of an illness and was succeeded by Vice President John Tyler 172 Tyler retained Harrison s Cabinet but the former Democrat and avid follower of both Jefferson s and Jackson s philosophy quickly made it known that he had reservations about re establishing a national bank a key priority of Clay s 173 Clay nonetheless initially expected that Tyler would approve the measures passed by the Whig controlled Congress his priorities included the re establishment of the national bank higher tariff rates a national bankruptcy law and an act to distribute the proceeds of land sales to the states for investments in infrastructure and education Clay and his congressional allies attempted to craft a national bank bill acceptable to Tyler but Tyler vetoed two separate bills to re establish the national bank showing that he in fact had no will to reach a solution for the party s issues Clay and other Whig leaders were now outraged not only by Tyler s rejection of the Whig party platform but also because they felt that Tyler had purposely misled them into thinking that he would sign the bills 174 After the second veto congressional Whigs voted to expel Tyler from the party and on Clay s request every Cabinet member except for Webster who wanted to continue negotiating the Webster Ashburton Treaty with Great Britain about the border to Canada resigned from office 175 This made Tyler increasingly move closer to his former Democratic Party and with Webster still serving in the Tyler administration Clay emerged as the clear leader of the Whig Party 176 In early 1842 Clay resigned from the Senate after arranging for Crittenden to succeed him 177 Though he vetoed other Whig bills Tyler did sign some Whig priorities into law including the Preemption Act of 1841 which distributed the proceeds of land sales to the states and the Bankruptcy Act of 1841 which was the first law in U S history that allowed for voluntary bankruptcy 178 Facing a large budget deficit Tyler also signed the Tariff of 1842 which restored the protective rates of the Tariff of 1832 but ended the distribution policy that had been established with the Preemption Act of 1841 179 1844 presidential election Edit Main articles 1844 United States presidential election and 1844 Whig National Convention James K Polk defeated Clay in the 1844 election President Tyler s break with the Whig Party combined with Webster s continuing affiliation with Tyler positioned Clay as the leading contender for the Whig nomination in the 1844 presidential election 180 By 1842 most observers believed that Clay would face Van Buren in the 1844 presidential election as he had still remained as the clear leader of the Democrats and following the tradition of the founders wanted a second term 181 Hoping to win another term President Tyler forged an alliance with John C Calhoun and pursued the annexation of the Republic of Texas which would add another slave state to the union 182 After President Tyler concluded an annexation treaty with Texas Clay announced his opposition to annexation 183 He argued that the country needed union peace and patience and annexation would bring tensions over slavery and war with Mexico The same day that Clay published a letter opposing the annexation of Texas Van Buren also came out against annexation citing similar reasons as Clay so that slavery and especially expansionism seemed to play no role in the next election 184 g Clay unanimously won the presidential nomination at the 1844 Whig National Convention but a minority of expansionist Southern Democrats encouraged by Tyler s alternative outline blocked Van Buren s nomination at the 1844 Democratic National Convention for countless ballots until Van Buren withdrew making place for an unexpected compromise candidate The party nominated former Speaker of the House James K Polk of Tennessee who favored annexation but in order to calm anti expansionists promised to just run for a single term 186 Following the nomination of a pro annexation Democrat Tyler soon ended his incipient independent run for president and endorsed Polk 187 Clay was surprised by Van Buren s defeat but remained confident of his chances in the 1844 election 188 Polk was the first dark horse presidential nominee in U S history and Whigs mocked him as a fourth rate politician Despite his relative lack of national stature Polk proved to be a strong candidate capable of uniting the factions of the Democratic Party and winning the support of Southerners who had been reluctant to support Van Buren 189 Clay s stance on slavery alienated some voters in both the North and the South Pro slavery Southerners flocked to Polk while many Northern abolitionists who tended to align with the Whig Party favored James G Birney of the Liberty Party 190 Clay s opposition to annexation damaged his campaign in the South as Democrats argued that he worked in unison with Northerners to stop the extension of slavery 191 In July Clay wrote two letters in which he attempted to clarify his position on the annexation of Texas and Democrats attacked his supposedly inconsistent position 192 Polk won the election taking 49 5 of the popular vote and 170 of the 275 electoral votes 193 h Birney won several thousand anti annexation votes in New York and his presence in the race may have cost Clay the election 194 Most of Clay s contemporaries believed that annexation had been the decisive issue in the race but Polk s savvy campaigning on the tariff may have also been decisive as he narrowly won pro tariff Pennsylvania after downplaying his anti tariff views 195 After Polk s victory and the final indirect success of Tyler s strategy Congress approved the annexation of Texas which was signed by Tyler on his last day in office and Texas gained statehood in late 1845 196 Polk administration 1845 1849 Edit See also Presidency of James K Polk 1848 United States presidential election and 1848 Whig National Convention Clay brown won the backing of numerous delegates on the first ballot of the 1848 Whig National Convention but Zachary Taylor ultimately won the party s presidential nomination Henry Clay Jr who died serving in the Mexican American War After the 1844 election Clay returned to his career as an attorney 197 Though he was no longer a member of Congress he remained closely interested in national politics In 1846 the Mexican American War broke out after American and Mexican forces clashed at the disputed border region between Mexico and Texas Initially Clay did not publicly oppose the war but privately he saw it as an immoral war that risked producing some military chieftain who will conquer us all 198 He suffered a personal blow in 1847 when his son Henry Clay Jr died at the Battle of Buena Vista 199 In November 1847 Clay re emerged on the political scene with a speech that was harshly critical of the Mexican American War and President Polk 200 He attacked Polk for fomenting the conflict with Mexico and urged the rejection of any treaty that added new slave territory to the United States Months after the speech the Senate ratified the Treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo in which Mexico ceded hundreds of thousands of square miles of territory known as the Mexican Cession 201 By 1847 General Zachary Taylor who commanded the American forces at Buena Vista had emerged as a contender for the Whig nomination in the 1848 presidential election 202 Despite Taylor s largely unknown political views many Whigs believed he was the party s strongest possible candidate due to his martial accomplishments in the Mexican American War 203 One of Clay s most trusted allies and advisers John J Crittenden was Taylor s de facto campaign manager 204 Clay had initially told his allies that he would not run in the 1848 presidential election but he was unwilling to support Taylor a mere military man On April 10 1848 he announced his candidacy for the Whig nomination 205 Although Webster and Winfield Scott each commanded a limited base of support in the party Taylor and Clay each saw the other as their lone serious rival for the Whig nomination 206 As Taylor commanded the support of most Southern Whigs Clay focused his efforts on courting Northern Whigs emphasizing his opposition to the Mexican American War and his life long support for the gradual emancipation of slaves in Kentucky 207 Clay presented a strong challenge to Taylor at the 1848 Whig National Convention but Taylor won the presidential nomination on the fourth ballot Partially in an attempt to please the Clay wing of the party the convention nominated Millard Fillmore as Taylor s running mate 208 Clay was embittered by his failure at the convention and he did not campaign on behalf of Taylor Nonetheless Taylor won the election taking 47 3 percent of the popular vote and 163 of 290 electoral votes 209 Taylor and Fillmore administrations 1849 1852 Edit See also Presidency of Zachary Taylor Presidency of Millard Fillmore 31st United States Congress and 32nd United States Congress The United States after the ratification of the Treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo with the Mexican Cession still unorganized The United States after the Compromise of 1850 Increasingly worried about the sectional tensions arising over the issue of slavery in newly acquired territories Clay accepted election to the Senate in 1849 210 Having refused to campaign for Taylor Clay played little role in the formation of Taylor s Cabinet or in determining the new administration s policies 211 In January 1850 with Congress still deadlocked regarding the status of the Mexican Cession Clay proposed a compromise designed to organize territory acquired in the Mexican American War and address other issues contributing to sectional tensions 212 His legislative package included the admission of California as a free state the cession by Texas of some of its northern and western territorial claims in return for debt relief the establishment of New Mexico and Utah territories a ban on the importation of slaves into the District of Columbia for sale and a more stringent fugitive slave law 213 Though it faced opposition from Southern extremists like Calhoun and Northern abolitionists like William Seward Clay s proposal won the backing of many Southern and Northern leaders 214 President Taylor who favored the immediate admission of California and New Mexico as free states without any attached conditions opposed the plan and Clay openly broke with the president in May 1850 215 Debate over Clay s proposal continued into July when Taylor unexpectedly died of an illness 216 After Taylor s death President Fillmore who supported Clay s compromise bill consulted with Clay in appointing a new Cabinet 217 Exhausted by the debate in the Senate Clay took a leave of absence shortly after Taylor s death but Fillmore Webster and Democratic Senator Stephen A Douglas took charge of pro compromise forces By the end of September 1850 Clay s proposal which became known as the Compromise of 1850 had been enacted Though contemporaries credited Fillmore Douglas and Webster for their role in passing the Compromise of 1850 Clay was widely regarded as the key figure in ending a major sectional crisis 218 Death Edit Henry Clay monument and mausoleum Lexington Cemetery In December 1851 with his health declining Clay announced that he would resign from the Senate the following September 219 Clay never recovered from his illnesses and died of tuberculosis at 75 in his room at the National Hotel in Washington D C on June 29 1852 220 He was the first person to lie in state in the United States Capitol rotunda 221 222 Clay s headstone reads I know no North no South no East no West Hymn writer Fanny Crosby penned this line of lament on Clay s death Sleep on oh statesman sleep Within thy hallowed tomb Where pearly streamlets glide And summer roses bloom 223 Ideology and slavery EditAmerican System Edit Main article American System economic plan Throughout most of his political life Clay promoted his American System as both an economic program and a means for unifying the country Clay s American System rejected strict constructionism in favor of an activist government that would help ensure a fairer and more efficient distribution of economic gains The American System had four key tenets high tariffs a stable financial system federal investment in internal improvements and a public land sale policy designed to raise revenue and provide for carefully managed expansion into the American frontier 224 Through high tariffs Clay hoped to free the United States from dependence on foreign imports especially from Britain 225 Clay sought to ensure a stable financial system through support for the national bank which regulated the country s banking system and helped ensure a consistent supply of credit 226 Clay s support for federally financed internal improvements stemmed from his belief that only the federal government could construct the transportation system necessary for uniting the country commercially and culturally 227 His land policy focused on using revenue from land sales to fund money to the states which could then invest that money in education infrastructure projects and other priorities 228 Slavery and the Dupuy case Edit Clay inherited slaves as a young child 5 and he continued to own slaves throughout his life However in the 1790s he adopted antislavery views under the influence of his mentor George Wythe 229 Like most of his contemporaries Clay was not a racial egalitarian and never called for the immediate abolition of slavery but he viewed slavery as a grievous wrong to the slave and spoke in favor of equal treatment for free blacks 230 Early in his career Clay favored gradual emancipation in both Kentucky and Missouri but each state rejected plans that would have provided for gradual emancipation 231 Clay continued to support gradual emancipation throughout his career and published an open letter in 1849 calling for gradual emancipation in Kentucky though he qualified this view by stating he would only support emancipation if it included a plan for colonizing free blacks outside of the state 232 Unlike many other Southern leaders he consistently favored recognition of Haiti which had been established through a slave revolt 233 In 1816 Clay helped establish the American Colonization Society a group that wanted to establish a colony for free American blacks in Africa The group was made up of abolitionists who wanted to end slavery and slaveholders who wanted to deport free blacks 234 Clay s support for colonization reflected his belief that a multiracial society was ultimately unworkable both for whites and free blacks 235 Later in his career Clay became increasingly concerned about abolitionism remarking that the ultraism of the South on the one hand and the ultraism of abolition on the other represented the greatest threat to the Union Nonetheless he consistently defended the right of abolitionists to send materials through the mail and opposed the gag rule which limited congressional debate on slavery 236 Clay s status as a slave owner and his anti slavery views would occasionally lead to conflicts in his political career During a visit to Indiana in the 1840s Clay was confronted at a political meeting by a Quaker abolitionist named Hiram Mendenhall who presented Clay with a petition calling on him to free his slaves Clay dismissed Mendenhall out of hand stating his petition was no different than one demanding he give up his farm 237 Many contemporaries including anti slavery activist James G Birney believed that Clay s home state of Kentucky had the most permissive slave laws of any slave state Clay considered himself to be a good master and biographer James C Klotter concludes that Clay took actions such as keeping families together to mitigate the harshness of slavery Klotter also concludes that there is no evidence that Clay ever had an affair with any of his slaves Yet as Clay himself wrote here in Kentucky slavery is in its most mitigated form still it is slavery 238 In 1829 Clay s slave Charlotte Dupuy sued for her freedom while visiting relatives in Maryland Dupuy s attorney gained an order from the court for her to remain in Washington until the case was settled and she worked for wages for 18 months for Martin Van Buren Clay s successor as secretary of state 239 The case embarrassed Clay politically and personally but he ultimately prevailed in court After winning the case Clay sent Dupuy to New Orleans causing her to be away from her own family but he later freed Dupuy and two of her children 240 Clay s will freed all the slaves he held at the time of his death 219 Aaron Dupuy Charlotte s husband was ordered whipped by Clay at the behest of his wife Lucretia Dupuy s infraction was a late return as Lucretia s carriage driver The overseer attempted the whipping but Dupuy managed to wrest the whip away and Dupuy began beating the overseer 241 Dupuy was not freed at the time of Clay s death but rather after the Civil War 242 Lewis Richardson Clay s self emancipated slave gave a speech that belies Clay s self portrayal as a good master Richardson had been enslaved at Ashland for 20 years and after a beating escaped via the Underground Railroad in January 1846 243 By May 1846 Richardson now in Amherstburg Ontario Canada at Union Chapel tells not only of the continual sparse food and lack of warm clothing but of 150 lashes from overseer Ambrose Brice for the offense of being an hour late from a visit to his wife Brice later refutes this and states it was only 16 lashes 244 Richardson s speech was published in an abolitionist newspaper Signal of Liberty Legacy EditHistorical reputation Edit Clay s Whig Party collapsed four years after his death but Clay cast a long shadow over the generation of political leaders that presided over the Civil War Mississippi Senator Henry S Foote stated his opinion that had there been one such man in the Congress of the United States as Henry Clay in 1860 61 there would I feel sure have been no civil war 245 246 Clay s protege and fellow Kentuckian John J Crittenden attempted to keep the Union together with the formation of the Constitutional Union Party and the proposed Crittenden Compromise Though Crittenden s efforts were unsuccessful Kentucky remained in the Union during the Civil War reflecting in part Clay s continuing influence 247 Abraham Lincoln was a great admirer of Clay saying he was my ideal of a great man Lincoln wholeheartedly supported Clay s economic programs and prior to the Civil War held similar stances about slavery and the Union 248 Some historians have argued that a Clay victory in the 1844 election would have prevented both the Mexican American War and the American Civil War 249 Clay is generally regarded as one of the important political figures of his era 250 Most historians and political scientists consider Clay to be one of the most influential speakers of the house in U S history 251 In 1957 a Senate Committee selected Clay as one of the five greatest U S senators along with Daniel Webster John C Calhoun Robert La Follette and Robert A Taft 252 A 1986 survey of historians ranked Clay as the greatest senator in U S history while a 2006 survey of historians ranked Clay as the 31st most influential American of all time 253 A 1998 poll of historians ranked Clay as the most qualified unsuccessful major party presidential nominee in U S history 254 In 2015 political scientist Michael G Miller and historian Ken Owen ranked Clay as one of the four most influential American politicians who never served as president alongside Alexander Hamilton William Jennings Bryan and John C Calhoun 255 Noting Clay s influence over the United States in the last three decades of his life biographer James Klotter writes that perhaps posterity should no longer call it the Jacksonian Era and instead term it the Clay Era 256 Monuments and memorials Edit Main article List of things named for Henry Clay Clay s estate Ashland in Lexington Kentucky Many monuments memorials and even high schools have been erected and named in honor of Clay Sixteen counties one each in Alabama Florida Georgia Illinois Indiana Kansas Kentucky Minnesota Mississippi Missouri Nebraska North Carolina South Dakota Tennessee Texas and West Virginia are named for Clay Communities named for Clay include Clay Kentucky Claysville Alabama and Claysville Pennsylvania The United States Navy named a submarine the USS Henry Clay in his honor Several statues honor Clay including one of Kentucky s two statues in the National Statuary Hall Collection Clay s estate of Ashland is a National Historic Landmark The Decatur House Clay s home in Washington D C during his tenure as secretary of state is also a National Historic Landmark Due to his involvement in the American Colonization Society a town in the newly formed Liberia in West Africa was named Clay Ashland after Henry Clay and to where the freed slaves from Kentucky emigrated See also EditAn Act for the Admission of the State of California List of slave owners List of United States Congress members who died in office 1790 1899 Notes Edit When elected by the legislature Clay was below the constitutionally required age of thirty 43 It is unclear whether the state legislature or Clay himself knew that he did not meet the Senate s age requirement at the time though he did know of the issue later in his career 44 Such an age qualification issue has occurred with only three other U S Senators Armistead Thomson Mason John Jordan Crittenden and John Eaton The speaker during the 1st Congress Frederick Muhlenberg was technically also a new member The Clay Randolph rivalry eventually escalated into a duel in 1826 the second of two duels fought by Clay and ended with both parties unhurt 68 Maine was part of Massachusetts prior to gaining statehood Though it adopted other policy issues the Anti Masonic Party strongly opposed the influence of Freemasonry Jackson and Clay were both Freemasons Though he not been active Freemason since 1824 Clay refused to openly condemn the organization 132 During the balloting Clay and Scott played cards with Whig politicians John J Crittenden and George Evans at the Astor House hotel in New York City When the group received word of Harrison s victory Clay blamed his loss on Scott and struck him with the blow landing on the shoulder which had been wounded during Scott s participation in the Battle of Lundy s Lane Afterwards Clay had to be physically removed from the hotel room Scott then sent Crittenden to Clay with Scott s challenge for a duel but Crittenden reconciled them by convincing Clay to apologize 166 Some writers have come to the conclusion that Clay and Van Buren had reached an agreement to jointly oppose annexation but Klotter writes that no real evidence supports this conclusion 185 Clay received a significant share of the presidential electoral vote in three separate elections a feat matched only by John Adams Thomas Jefferson Andrew Jackson Grover Cleveland Franklin D Roosevelt Richard Nixon and William Jennings Bryan with only the latter like Clay failing to ever win a presidential election citation needed References Edit D A Smith Presidents from Adams Through Polk 1825 1849 Santa Barbara Greenwood Press 2005 p 12 Eaton 1957 p 5 Van Deusen 1937 p 4 Heider David S amp Jeanne T Henry Clay the Essential American pp 4 5 a b Eaton 1957 pp 6 7 Remini 1991 pp xxiv 4 Heidler amp Heidler 2010 pp 4 5 Klotter 2018 p 309 Heidler amp Heidler 2010 pp 9 10 a b Heidler amp Heidler 2010 pp 11 13 Eaton 1957 p 6 Heidler amp Heidler 2010 pp 13 15 Heidler amp Heidler 2010 pp 19 20 Eaton 1957 p 7 Heidler amp Heidler 2010 pp 20 21 Heidler amp Heidler 2010 p 23 Klotter 2018 p 5 Eaton 1957 p 12 Heidler amp Heidler 2010 pp 41 42 Klotter 2018 pp 12 13 Lexington Cemetery and Henry Clay Monument National Park Service a b c Gatton John Spalding Fall 1979 Mr Clay amp I got stung Harriet Martineau in Lexington The Kentucky Review 1 1 55 56 Retrieved May 16 2019 Heidler amp Heidler 2010 p 402 Klotter 2018 pp 285 286 Webster Ian 40 000 in 1802 2020 in2013dollars com Webster Ian 60 000 in 1802 2020 in2013dollars com Heidler David S amp Jeanne T Henry Clay the Essential American Random House p 45 Klotter 2018 pp 275 277 Klotter 2018 pp 277 278 Klotter 2018 pp 279 280 Klotter 2018 p 288 Heidler amp Heidler 2010 pp 27 29 Heidler amp Heidler 2010 pp 30 31 Heidler amp Heidler 2010 p 43 Maurice G Baxter Henry Clay the lawyer 2000 pp 26 36 Eaton 1957 p 15 Baxter pp 38 54 Klotter 2018 pp 20 21 Heidler amp Heidler 2010 pp 33 36 Klotter 2018 pp 21 23 a b Heidler amp Heidler 2010 pp 48 51 Klotter 2018 pp 25 26 Youngest Senator United States Senate Klotter 2018 p 26 Heidler amp Heidler 2010 pp 64 67 Klotter 2018 pp 10 10 Heidler amp Heidler 2010 pp 70 71 a b Eaton 1957 p 17 Remini 1991 p 55 Heidler amp Heidler 2010 pp 72 73 Heidler amp Heidler 2010 p 74 Klotter 2018 pp 26 30 Heidler amp Heidler 2010 pp 79 81 Heidler amp Heidler 2010 pp 81 83 Heidler amp Heidler 2010 pp 76 78 Klotter 2018 p 30 Heidler amp Heidler 2010 p 85 Ostermeier Eric October 13 2015 Paul Ryan Would Be Youngest House Speaker Since 1860s Smart Politics Minneapolis Minnesota University of Minnesota Libraries Retrieved February 19 2019 Heitshusen Valerie February 11 2011 The Speaker of the House House Officer Party Leader and Representative PDF CRS Report for Congress Washington D C Congressional Research Service the Library of Congress p 2 Archived from the original PDF on April 17 2018 Retrieved February 18 2019 Clay Henry 1777 1852 History Art amp Archives U S House of Representatives Washington D C The Office of the Historian and the Clerk of the House s Office of Art and Archives Retrieved February 19 2019 Heidler amp Heidler 2010 pp 148 149 List of Speakers of the House History Art amp Archives U S House of Representatives Washington D C The Office of the Historian and the Clerk of the House s Office of Art and Archives Retrieved February 19 2019 Heidler amp Heidler 2010 p 86 Klotter 2018 pp 31 32 Heidler amp Heidler 2010 pp 88 89 Heidler amp Heidler 2010 pp 87 88 Heidler amp Heidler 2010 p 96 Klotter 2018 pp 65 67 Heidler amp Heidler 2010 pp 89 90 Klotter 2018 p 33 a b Heidler amp Heidler 2010 pp 97 98 Heidler amp Heidler 2010 pp 99 101 Heidler amp Heidler 2010 pp 107 108 Richard Archer Dissent and peace negotiations at Ghent American Studies 18 2 1977 5 16 online Heidler amp Heidler 2010 pp 110 117 Klotter 2018 pp 35 36 Heidler amp Heidler 2010 p 117 Heidler amp Heidler 2010 pp 119 122 Klotter 2018 pp 39 40 Heidler amp Heidler 2010 pp 123 131 Heidler amp Heidler 2010 pp 132 133 Klotter 2018 pp 81 82 Heidler amp Heidler 2010 pp 126 130 Klotter 2018 pp 40 41 Remini 1991 pp 150 151 Klotter 2018 pp 44 45 Heidler amp Heidler 2010 pp 143 144 Klotter 2018 pp 45 46 Heidler amp Heidler 2010 pp 150 152 Klotter 2018 pp 74 75 Heidler amp Heidler 2010 pp 136 137 a b Heidler amp Heidler 2010 pp 137 138 a b Klotter 2018 pp 104 105 Heidler amp Heidler 2010 p 143 a b Heidler amp Heidler 2010 pp 155 157 Heidler amp Heidler 2010 pp 166 168 Klotter 2018 pp 99 101 Klotter 2018 pp 96 97 Heidler amp Heidler 2010 pp 162 164 Klotter 2018 pp 110 112 Heidler amp Heidler 2010 pp 174 175 Heidler amp Heidler 2010 p 176 Klotter 2018 pp 122 124 Hargreaves 1985 pp 33 34 36 38 Heidler amp Heidler 2010 pp 179 180 Heidler amp Heidler 2010 pp 183 184 Heidler amp Heidler 2010 pp 184 185 Klotter 2018 pp 134 136 Klotter 2018 pp 142 143 Heidler amp Heidler 2010 pp 187 191 192 a b Heidler amp Heidler 2010 pp 192 193 Graebner amp Herring 2009 pp 555 556 Klotter 2018 pp 145 147 Hargreaves 1985 pp 165 166 Hargreaves 1985 pp 166 177 Heidler amp Heidler 2010 p 2207 Remini 1981 p 134 Heidler amp Heidler 2010 pp 205 207 Klotter 2018 pp 143 148 Klotter 2018 pp 154 155 Heidler amp Heidler 2010 pp 212 213 Howe 2007 p 340 Klotter 2018 pp 222 223 Klotter 2018 pp 161 162 Goodrich 1950 pp 145 169 Klotter 2018 pp 162 163 Heidler amp Heidler 2010 p 236 Ostermeier Eric December 4 2013 Bob Smith and the 12 Year Itch Smart Politics Gammon 1922 pp 53 54 Heidler amp Heidler 2010 p 231 a b Gammon 1922 pp 135 136 Klotter 2018 pp 168 170 Cole 1993 pp 140 141 Gammon 1922 pp 60 61 Klotter 2018 pp 171 173 Howe 2007 pp 375 376 Heidler amp Heidler 2010 pp 242 244 Klotter 2018 pp 174 179 180 Klotter 2018 pp 175 181 182 Klotter 2018 pp 184 187 a b Heidler amp Heidler 2010 p 251 Cole 1993 pp 157 158 Cole 1993 pp 160 161 Klotter 2018 pp 212 213 Klotter 2018 pp 217 218 Klotter 2018 pp 219 221 Cole 1993 pp 187 188 Howe 2007 pp 387 388 Klotter 2018 pp 225 227 Cole 1993 pp 209 211 Klotter 2018 pp 227 228 Heidler amp Heidler 2010 p 266 Heidler amp Heidler 2010 pp 313 315 Klotter 2018 pp 229 231 Heidler amp Heidler 2010 pp 272 273 Klotter 2018 pp 239 241 Heidler amp Heidler 2010 p 274 Heidler amp Heidler 2010 pp 279 280 Klotter 2018 pp 242 243 Howe 2007 pp 505 506 Heidler amp Heidler 2010 p 84 Heidler amp Heidler 2010 pp 284 287 Heidler amp Heidler 2010 pp 296 297 300 Klotter 2018 pp 249 254 Klotter 2018 pp 257 258 Eisenhower John S D 1999 Agent of Destiny The Life and Times of General Winfield Scott University of Oklahoma Press pp 205 206 ISBN 978 0 8061 3128 3 Heidler amp Heidler 2010 pp 309 310 Heidler amp Heidler 2010 pp 311 312 Klotter 2018 pp 261 263 Heidler amp Heidler 2010 p 328 Heidler amp Heidler 2010 pp 334 335 Klotter 2018 pp 263 264 Heidler amp Heidler 2010 pp 342 343 Klotter 2018 pp 265 269 Heidler amp Heidler 2010 pp 351 353 Klotter 2018 pp 270 271 Heidler amp Heidler 2010 pp 362 363 Howe 2007 pp 592 593 Peterson 1989 pp 103 108 Heidler amp Heidler 2010 pp 358 359 Klotter 2018 pp 290 291 Klotter 2018 pp 293 294 Heidler amp Heidler 2010 pp 383 385 386 Klotter 2018 pp 296 298 Klotter 2018 p 298 Heidler amp Heidler 2010 pp 387 388 Peterson 1989 pp 239 241 Heidler amp Heidler 2010 pp 388 389 Klotter 2018 pp 302 303 Klotter 2018 pp 307 309 Klotter 2018 pp 311 312 Heidler amp Heidler 2010 p 390 Heidler amp Heidler 2010 p 392 Howe 2007 p 688 Klotter 2018 pp 322 324 Peterson 1989 pp 257 258 Heidler amp Heidler 2010 pp 395 398 Klotter 2018 pp 329 331 Klotter 2018 pp 332 334 Heidler amp Heidler 2010 p 427 Klotter 2018 pp 335 336 Klotter 2018 pp 337 338 Heidler amp Heidler 2010 pp 420 421 Klotter 2018 pp 340 342 Klotter 2018 pp 342 345 Klotter 2018 pp 345 346 Holt 1999 p 279 Heidler amp Heidler 2010 pp 441 442 Heidler amp Heidler 2010 pp 443 444 Heidler amp Heidler 2010 pp 444 454 Heidler amp Heidler 2010 p 460 Heidler amp Heidler 2010 pp 461 462 Smith 1988 pp 111 112 Smith 1988 pp 112 119 Klotter 2018 pp 359 364 365 Klotter 2018 pp 365 366 Heidler amp Heidler 2010 p 465 Klotter 2018 pp 365 367 a b Heidler amp Heidler 2010 p 484 John DeFerrari The National Hotel Streets of Washington Stories and images of historic Washington D C website November 24 2009 Retrieved October 20 2018 Individuals Who Have Lain in State or in Honor United States House of Representatives Retrieved August 28 2018 Lying in State or in Honor US Architect of the Capitol AOC Retrieved September 1 2018 Fanny J Crosby An Autobiography Peabody Massachusetts Hendrickson Publishers Marketing 2013 printing p 87 ISBN 978 1 59856 281 1 Klotter 2018 pp 80 82 Klotter 2018 pp 85 87 Klotter 2018 pp 87 89 Klotter 2018 pp 89 91 Klotter 2018 pp 220 221 Heidler amp Heidler 2010 pp 19 21 Klotter 2018 pp 189 191 Heidler amp Heidler 2010 pp 33 36 143 144 Klotter 2018 pp 354 356 Klotter 2018 pp 191 192 Eaton 1957 p 133 Klotter 2018 pp 198 199 Klotter 2018 pp 204 205 247 American Lives Reconsidering Henry Clay NPR org Klotter 2018 pp 192 193 196 Heidler amp Heidler 2010 pp 217 218 Klotter 2018 pp 195 196 Still Peter 1970 The kidnapped and the ransomed the narrative of Peter and Vina Still after forty years of slavery Jewish Publication Society OCLC 641424126 Passing the word on Henry Clay and the slave labor camp known as Ashland North of Center December 8 2021 Retrieved August 26 2022 Lewis Richardson Henry Clay Ashland the Henry Clay Estate Retrieved August 26 2022 Richardson Lewis Notable Kentucky African Americans Database nkaa uky edu Retrieved August 26 2022 Remini 1991 pp 761 762 King Gilbert December 6 2012 The Day Henry Clay Refused to Compromise Smithsonian Retrieved October 25 2016 Klotter 2012 pp 243 263 Bowman 2008 pp 495 512 Klotter 2018 p 379 Singletary Otis April 2 2013 Henry Clay Statesman for the Union by Robert V Remini Washington Post Retrieved December 28 2018 Strahan et al 2000 pp 563 586 587 Klotter 2018 p 389 The 100 Most Influential Figures in American History The Atlantic Monthly December 2006 Retrieved December 28 2018 The Presidency The Ones Who Got Away The New York Times July 19 1998 Retrieved December 29 2018 Masket Seth November 19 2015 A bracket to determine the most influential American who never became president Vox Retrieved August 1 2018 Klotter 2018 p 387 Works cited Edit Bowman Shearer Davis 2008 Comparing Henry Clay and Abraham Lincoln The Register of the Kentucky Historical Society 106 3 4 495 512 JSTOR 23388014 Cole Donald B 1993 The Presidency of Andrew Jackson University Press of Kansas ISBN 0 7006 0600 9 Eaton Clement 1957 Henry Clay and the Art of American Politics Little Brown OCLC 351740 Gammon Samuel Rhea 1922 The Presidential Campaign of 1832 The Johns Hopkins Press OCLC 1067062411 Goodrich Carter 1950 The Revulsion Against Internal Improvements Journal of Economic History 10 2 145 169 doi 10 1017 s0022050700064111 JSTOR 2113517 S2CID 154953642 Graebner Norman Herring George 2009 Henry Clay Realist The Register of the Kentucky Historical Society 107 4 551 576 JSTOR 23387602 Hargreaves Mary W M 1985 The Presidency of John Quincy Adams University Press of Kansas ISBN 9780700602728 Heidler David S Heidler Jeanne T 2010 Henry Clay The Essential American Random House ISBN 978 1 58836 995 6 Holt Michael F 1999 The Rise and Fall of the American Whig Party Jacksonian Politics and the Onset of the Civil War Oxford University Press ISBN 9780199772032 Howe Daniel Walker 2007 What Hath God Wrought the Transformation of America 1815 1848 Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0195078947 Klotter James C 2018 Henry Clay The Man Who Would Be President Oxford University Press ISBN 9780190498047 Klotter James Autumn 2012 Kentucky The Civil War and the Spirit of Henry Clay The Register of the Kentucky Historical Society 110 3 4 243 263 doi 10 1353 khs 2012 0068 JSTOR 23388052 S2CID 161945941 Peterson Norma Lois 1989 The Presidencies of William Henry Harrison and John Tyler University Press of Kansas ISBN 978 0 7006 0400 5 Remini Robert V 1991 Henry Clay Statesmen for the Union W W Norton ISBN 978 0393030044 Remini Robert V 1981 Andrew Jackson and the Course of American Freedom 1822 1832 Harper amp Row Publishers Inc ISBN 978 0 8018 5913 7 Smith Elbert B 1988 The Presidencies of Zachary Taylor amp Millard Fillmore The American Presidency University Press of Kansas ISBN 978 0 7006 0362 6 Strahan Randall Moscardelli Vincent G Moshe Haspel Wike Richard S 2000 The Clay Speakership Revisited Polity 32 4 561 593 doi 10 2307 3235293 JSTOR 3235293 S2CID 155152645 Van Deusen Glyndon G 1937 The Life of Henry Clay Little Brown and Co ISBN 9780313207174 OCLC 424654 Further reading EditSecondary sources Edit Apple Lindsey 2011 The Family Legacy of Henry Clay In the Shadow of a Kentucky Patriarch University Press of Kentucky ISBN 978 0813134109 Baxter Maurice 1995 Henry Clay and the American System University Press of Kentucky ISBN 978 0813119199 Baxter Maurice 2000 Henry Clay the Lawyer University Press of Kentucky ISBN 978 0813121475 Bordewich Fergus M 2012 America s Great Debate Henry Clay Stephen A Douglas and the Compromise That Preserved the Union Simon amp Schuster ISBN 978 1439124604 Brands H W 2018 Heirs of the Founders The Epic Rivalry of Henry Clay John Calhoun and Daniel Webster the Second Generation of American Giants Knopf Doubleday Publishing Group ISBN 978 0385542548 Brown Thomas 1985 Politics and Statesmanship Essays on the American Whig Party Columbia University Press ISBN 978 0231056021 Greenberg Amy S 2012 A Wicked War Polk Clay Lincoln and the 1846 U S Invasion of Mexico Knopf ISBN 978 0307592699 King Quentin Scott 2014 Henry Clay and the War of 1812 McFarland ISBN 978 1476613901 Klotter James C Henry Clay The Man Who Would Be President Oxford UP 2018 online review Knupfer Peter B 1991 The Union As It Is Constitutional Unionism and Sectional Compromise 1787 1861 University of North Carolina Press ISBN 978 0807819968 Levai Csaba Henry Clay and Lajos Kossuth s Visit in the United States 1851 1852 Eger Journal of American Studies Vol 13 219 241 online Mayo Bernard 1937 Henry Clay Spokesman of the New West Houghton Mifflin OCLC 35020339 Meyer Jeff 2002 Henry Clay s Legacy to Horse Breeding and Racing The Register of the Kentucky Historical Society 100 4 473 496 JSTOR 23384634 Morgan William G Henry Clay s Biographers and the Corrupt Bargain Charge Register of the Kentucky Historical Society 66 3 1968 pp 242 58 online Morgan William G John Quincy Adams Versus Andrew Jackson Their Biographers And The Corrupt Bargain Charge Tennessee Historical Quarterly 26 1 1967 pp 43 58 onlinePatrick Andrew P Hemp amp Henry Clay Binding the Bluegrass to the World Register of the Kentucky Historical Society 117 1 2019 39 55 online Paulus Sarah Bischoff 2014 America s Long Eulogy for Compromise Henry Clay and American Politics 1854 58 Journal of the Civil War Era 4 1 28 52 doi 10 1353 cwe 2014 0014 JSTOR 26062123 S2CID 154139588 Pearson Joseph W The Whigs America Middle Class Political Thought in the Age of Jackson and Clay University Press of Kentucky 2020 Peterson Merrill D 1987 The Great Triumvirate Webster Clay and Calhoun Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0195038774 Petriello David Consumption and Compromise Illness and Its Impact on the Political Career of Henry Clay Journal of the Southern Association for the History of Medicine and Science 2 1 2020 43 56 online Poage George Rawlings 1936 Henry Clay and the Whig Party University of North Carolina Press OCLC 611501 Portteus Kevin J My Beau Ideal of a Statesman Abraham Lincoln s Eulogy on Henry Clay Journal of the Abraham Lincoln Association 41 2 2021 online Ratcliffe Donald 2015 The One Party Presidential Contest University Press of Kansas ISBN 978 0700621309 Remini Robert V 2010 At the Edge of the Precipice Henry Clay and the Compromise That Saved the Union Basic Books ISBN 978 0465012886 Runyon Randolph Paul The Mentelles Mary Todd Lincoln Henry Clay and the Immigrant Family Who Educated Antebellum Kentucky University Press of Kentucky 2018 Schurz Carl Life of Henry Clay 2 vols 1899 Schurz Carl 1911 Clay Henry In Chisholm Hugh ed Encyclopaedia Britannica 11th ed Cambridge University Press Smith Laura Ellyn Through the Eyes of the Enemy Why Henry Clay Lost the Presidential Election of 1844 through the Lens of The Daily Argus of Portland Maine Maine History 50 1 2016 58 78 online Strahan Randall 2007 Leading Representatives The Agency of Leaders in the Politics of the U S House Johns Hopkins University Press ISBN 978 0801886904 Swift Elaine K The start of something new Clay Stevenson Polk and the development of the speakership 1789 1869 in Masters of the House Routledge 2018 pp 9 32 Unger Harlow Giles 2015 Henry Clay America s Greatest Statesman Da Capo Press ISBN 978 0306823923 Watson Harry L 1998 Watson Harry L ed Andrew Jackson vs Henry Clay Democracy and Development in Antebellum America Bedford St Martin s ISBN 978 0312112134 Wood Gordon S 2009 Empire of Liberty A History of the Early Republic 1789 1815 Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0199741090 Zarefsky David 2003 Henry Clay and the Election of 1844 the Limits of a Rhetoric of Compromise Rhetoric amp Public Affairs 6 1 79 96 doi 10 1353 rap 2003 0040 JSTOR 41939810 S2CID 143245070 Primary sources Edit Clay Henry The Papers of Henry Clay 1797 1852 Edited by James Hopkins Mary Hargreaves Robert Seager II Melba Porter Hay et al 11 vols University Press of Kentucky 1959 1992 vol 1 online 1797 1814 Clay Henry Works of Henry Clay 7 vols 1897 online freeExternal links Edit Wikiquote has quotations related to Henry Clay Wikisource has original text related to this article Portal Henry Clay Wikimedia Commons has media related to Henry Clay Henry Clay Center for Statesmanship HenryClayCS org Clay s Ashland Home web site HenryClay org Henry Clay A Resource Guide from the Library of Congress Works by Henry Clay at Project Gutenberg Works by or about Henry Clay at Internet Archive Works by Henry Clay at LibriVox public domain audiobooks Henry Clay Biographical Directory of the United States Congress A New Nation Votes American Election Returns 1787 1825 For Henry Clay s election results Henry Clay Letters 1825 1851 at the Newberry Library Letters of Henry Clay Abraham Lincoln s Eulogy of Henry Clay at Teaching American History Org Appearances on C SPAN Henry Clay Presidential Contender from C SPAN s The Contenders Guide to the Henry Clay Letters 1801 1843 housed at the University of Kentucky Libraries Special Collections Research Center Guide to the Henry Clay Memorial Foundation papers housed at the University of Kentucky Libraries Special Collections Research Center Guide to the Henry Clay account book housed at the University of Kentucky Libraries Special Collections Research Center Texts on Wikisource Clay Henry The New Student s Reference Work 1914 Schurz Carl 1900 Clay Henry Appletons Cyclopaedia of American Biography Carl Schurz Life of Henry Clay 2 vols 1899 Clay Henry Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol 5 9th ed 1878 Clay Henry Encyclopaedia Britannica 11th ed 1911 George Pope Morris and Henry Russell wrote A Song for the Man in 1844 as a campaign song for Clay Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Henry Clay amp oldid 1131036802, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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