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John Williams (Tennessee politician)

John Williams (January 29, 1778 – August 10, 1837) was an American lawyer, soldier, and statesman, operating primarily out of Knoxville, Tennessee, in the first part of the 19th century. He represented Tennessee in the United States Senate from 1815 to 1823, when he lost reelection to Andrew Jackson.[3]: 36  Williams also served as colonel of the 39th U.S. Infantry Regiment during the Creek Wars, and played a key role in Jackson's victory at the Battle of Horseshoe Bend in 1814.[3]: 23 

John Williams
United States Senator
from Tennessee
In office
October 10, 1815 – March 3, 1823
Preceded byJesse Wharton
Succeeded byAndrew Jackson
Personal details
Born(1778-01-29)January 29, 1778
Surry County, North Carolina, U.S.
DiedAugust 10, 1837(1837-08-10) (aged 59)
Knoxville, Tennessee, U.S.
Resting placeFirst Presbyterian Church Cemetery
Knoxville, Tennessee, U.S.
Political partyDemocratic-Republican
SpouseMelinda White[1]
RelationsLewis Williams (brother)[2]
Robert Williams (brother)[2]
James White (father-in-law)[1]
Hugh Lawson White (brother-in-law)
ChildrenJoseph, John, Mary, Cynthia, Susan[3]: 45–6 
ResidenceColonel John Williams House
ProfessionAttorney
Military service
Branch/serviceU.S. Army
Years of service1799–1800, 1813–1815[3]: 18, 28 
Rank Colonel[3]: 18, 28 
Battles/warsBattle of Horseshoe Bend[4]

Williams later distanced himself from Jackson, and aligned himself with John Quincy Adams and Henry Clay.[1] Adams appointed him chargé d'affaires to the Central American Federation in 1825.[1]

Early life

Williams was born in what is now Forsyth County, North Carolina (then part of Surry County), the third of twelve children of Joseph and Rebekah Lanier Williams.[3]: 7  His father was of Welsh descent, and his mother was descended from French Huguenots.[3]: 7  Two of Williams' brothers, Lewis Williams and Robert Williams, served as U.S. congressmen in the 19th century.[2] Another brother, Thomas Lanier Williams, was a prominent Tennessee judge.[1] Williams was also the cousin of Congressman Marmaduke Williams .[2]

Williams studied law in Salisbury, North Carolina, in the late 1790s, and served as a captain in the 6th U.S. Infantry, from 1799 to 1800.[4] Shortly afterward, he relocated to Knoxville, Tennessee, where he was admitted to the bar in 1803.[1] Around 1805, he married Melinda White, daughter of Knoxville's founder, James White.[1]

In 1807, Williams was appointed Tennessee's attorney general, and served in this capacity until the following year.[1] In 1811, he led a mass meeting of Knox County citizens that condemned Archibald Roane for resigning from the state legislature to run for circuit court judge.[3]: 12  In a letter published in a local newspaper, Williams blasted Roane as too selfish and too much of a drunkard to be a faithful judge.[3]: 12 

Military activities (1812–1815)

In late 1812, at the outbreak of the War of 1812, Williams raised a small company of some 200 to 250 volunteers, primarily from Tennessee and Georgia, with the intention of invading Florida and attacking the Seminole tribe.[3]: 14 [5] Williams and other leaders on the frontier suspected that Spain would eventually join the British side in the war, and would encourage the Seminoles to attack frontier settlements in southern Georgia. Williams and his volunteers invaded Florida in early February 1813, and destroyed several Seminole villages, burning over 300 houses, and stealing a large number of horses and other livestock.[3]: 16  After reporting that the Seminole country was "completely in waste,"[3]: 16  Williams returned to East Tennessee, and his volunteers were mustered out shortly afterward.[3]: 17 

In June 1813, Williams was commissioned in the U.S. Army as a colonel, and ordered to recruit and organize the 39th U.S. Infantry for the purpose of engaging the hostile Red Stick Creeks.[3]: 18  Within a few weeks, Williams had managed to recruit and partially equip 600 troops. In early 1814, Williams and the 39th were placed under the command of Andrew Jackson, who was preparing an expedition against the Red Sticks in Alabama.[3]: 21–2 

On March 27, Jackson attacked the Red Stick camp on the Tallapoosa River, initiating the Battle of Horseshoe Bend. At the height of this battle, Williams and the 39th, which comprised Jackson's main line, charged and captured the log barricade with which the Creeks had fortified the riverbend, forcing the Creeks to flee.[3]: 23  In his report on the battle, Jackson commended the actions of Williams and several other officers of the 39th.[3] Soldiers who fought under Williams at this battle included future Missouri senator Thomas Hart Benton and future Tennessee and Texas governor, Sam Houston.[4]

Following the Battle of Horseshoe Bend, Williams went to Washington, D.C., to raise money for the 39th, and gradually acquired a sizable cache of weapons.[3]: 25  Throughout 1814, Williams and Jackson bickered over these weapons, with Jackson demanding that Williams give them to a militia company in Tennessee, and Williams arguing that federal arms could not be distributed to militia companies. Jackson questioned Williams' loyalty, and Williams questioned Jackson's authority.[3]: 28 

United States Senate

In 1815, Williams was chosen to fill the Senate seat left vacant by the resignation of Jesse Wharton (who had been appointed to the seat a few months earlier following the resignation of George W. Campbell).[1] In 1817, Williams was reelected to a full six-year term. Williams voted in favor of the Second Bank of the United States in 1816,[3]: 29  opposed the Bonus Bill of 1817,[6] and voted for the Missouri Compromise of 1820.[3]: 29  He was also chairman of the Committee on Military Affairs, and oversaw a reduction of the armed forces.[3]: 29 

In 1819, following Jackson's invasion of Florida (then part of Spain), another dispute erupted between Williams and Jackson. Jackson accused Williams of spreading a rumor that Jackson had launched the invasion to protect personal land investments in the Pensacola area, and argued that Williams was assailing his character in private conversations in Washington.[3]: 31  In 1821, Williams was one of just four senators to vote against the Adams–Onís Treaty, in which Spain ceded Florida to the United States.[3]: 33 

In 1823, Williams made it clear that he was going to support William H. Crawford (another enemy of Jackson) for the presidency, leading Jackson's allies in Tennessee to seek Williams' removal from the Senate.[3]: 35–6  When they were unable to find a candidate with enough support to defeat Williams, Jackson agreed to become a candidate for Williams' seat.[3]: 36  Though Williams had the support of the influential Knoxville Register[6] and rising politician Davy Crockett,[7] he lost to Jackson by a margin of 35 votes to 25 at a contentious meeting of the state legislature on October 1, 1823.[3]: 36 

Later life

After losing his U.S. Senate seat, Williams ran for Knox County's state senate seat in 1825, but lost to James Anderson by a vote of 982 to 931.[3]: 37  President John Quincy Adams pondered appointing Williams Secretary of War, but was dissuaded by Henry Clay, who thought the appointment should go to someone from New York.[4] Adams eventually appointed Williams chargé d'affaires to the Central American Federation, and Williams thus spent most of 1826 at this post in Guatemala.[3]: 38 

In 1827, Williams again ran for Knox County's state senate seat. In spite of staunch opposition from Jackson's allies (including Williams' brother-in-law, Hugh Lawson White, who referred to Williams as a "mean politician who can get no man to lye upon him"),[3]: 40  Williams won the election, 1,585 to 1,216.[3] During his term, he introduced a bill calling for the construction of a turnpike connecting Anderson County and Kentucky, a bill providing relief for female debtors, and legislation seeking greater oversight of the Bank of Tennessee.[3]: 41  He retired from the state senate in 1829.[1]

Williams spent his later years practicing law and advocating railroad construction.[1] He rejected several invitations to run for Congress, stating he had no desire to go to Washington and serve at the "bow of the emperor," in reference to then-President Jackson.[3]: 42  Williams died on August 10, 1837, and was interred in the First Presbyterian Church Cemetery in Knoxville.[2]

Family and legacy

 
Map of "Williamsburg"

In 1816, Williams made plans to develop a subdivision, "Williamsburg," on what was then the outskirts of Knoxville (now part of the Downtown area). This subdivision was bounded by what is now Henley Street (which at the time was the city's western boundary), Main Street, the riverfront, and Second Creek.[4] The area is now occupied by Maplehurst Park and the Church Street Methodist Church.

In 1826, while Williams was in Guatemala, his wife oversaw the construction of a new family home in East Knoxville, now known as the Colonel John Williams House.[3]: 39–40  The house is still standing, and is listed on the National Register of Historic Places.

Williams' son, Joseph Lanier Williams, served three terms in the U.S. House of Representatives (1837 to 1843).[3]: 45  Another son, John Williams II, was a prominent pro-Union leader during the Civil War, and served as vice president of the East Tennessee Convention, which sought to create a separate, Union-aligned state in East Tennessee.[8] John Williams was the great-grandfather of Admiral Richmond P. Hobson,[3]: 46  and the great-great-grandfather of noted playwright, Tennessee Williams.[9]

Fort Williams, a supply depot built prior to the Battle of Horseshoe Bend, was named for Williams.[10]

References

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k Mary Rothrock, The French Broad-Holston Country: A History of Knox County, Tennessee (Knoxville, Tenn.: East Tennessee Historical Society, 1972), p. 506.
  2. ^ a b c d e William's Congressional Biography. Retrieved: September 13, 2011.
  3. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab ac ad ae af ag ah ai aj Leota Driver Maiden, "Colonel John Williams," East Tennessee Historical Society Publications, Vol. 30 (1958), pp. 7–46.
  4. ^ a b c d e Samuel G. Heiskell, Andrew Jackson and Early Tennessee History (Nashville: Ambrose Printing Company, 1918), pp. 62, 355–368.
  5. ^ Tom Kanon, Regimental Histories of Tennessee Units During the War of 1812, Tennessee State Library and Archives website, November 20, 2007
  6. ^ a b Stanley Folmsbee, Sectionalism and Internal Improvements in Tennessee, 1796–1845 (Knoxville, Tenn.: East Tennessee Historical Society, 1939), pp. 41–2, 57n.
  7. ^ John Finger, Tennessee Frontiers: Three Regions in Transition (Bloomington, Ind.: Indiana University Press, 2001), p. 270.
  8. ^ Robert McKenzie, Lincolnites and Rebels: A Divided Town in the American Civil War (New York: Oxford University Press, 2006), p. 191.
  9. ^ "Ask Doc Knox," , Metro Pulse, April 12, 2010. Accessed at the Internet Archive, 2 October 2015.
  10. ^ Harris, W. Stuart (1977). Dead Towns of Alabama. Tuscaloosa, Alabama: University of Alabama Press. p. 56. ISBN 0-8173-1125-4.
U.S. Senate
Preceded by U.S. senator (Class 2) from Tennessee
1815–1823
Served alongside: George W. Campbell, John Eaton,
Succeeded by
Diplomatic posts
Preceded by
None
United States Chargé d'Affaires, Guatemala
May 3, 1826 – December 1, 1826
Succeeded by

john, williams, tennessee, politician, john, williams, january, 1778, august, 1837, american, lawyer, soldier, statesman, operating, primarily, knoxville, tennessee, first, part, 19th, century, represented, tennessee, united, states, senate, from, 1815, 1823, . John Williams January 29 1778 August 10 1837 was an American lawyer soldier and statesman operating primarily out of Knoxville Tennessee in the first part of the 19th century He represented Tennessee in the United States Senate from 1815 to 1823 when he lost reelection to Andrew Jackson 3 36 Williams also served as colonel of the 39th U S Infantry Regiment during the Creek Wars and played a key role in Jackson s victory at the Battle of Horseshoe Bend in 1814 3 23 John WilliamsUnited States Senatorfrom TennesseeIn office October 10 1815 March 3 1823Preceded byJesse WhartonSucceeded byAndrew JacksonPersonal detailsBorn 1778 01 29 January 29 1778Surry County North Carolina U S DiedAugust 10 1837 1837 08 10 aged 59 Knoxville Tennessee U S Resting placeFirst Presbyterian Church CemeteryKnoxville Tennessee U S Political partyDemocratic RepublicanSpouseMelinda White 1 RelationsLewis Williams brother 2 Robert Williams brother 2 James White father in law 1 Hugh Lawson White brother in law ChildrenJoseph John Mary Cynthia Susan 3 45 6 ResidenceColonel John Williams HouseProfessionAttorneyMilitary serviceBranch serviceU S ArmyYears of service1799 1800 1813 1815 3 18 28 RankColonel 3 18 28 Battles warsBattle of Horseshoe Bend 4 Williams later distanced himself from Jackson and aligned himself with John Quincy Adams and Henry Clay 1 Adams appointed him charge d affaires to the Central American Federation in 1825 1 Contents 1 Early life 2 Military activities 1812 1815 3 United States Senate 4 Later life 5 Family and legacy 6 ReferencesEarly life EditWilliams was born in what is now Forsyth County North Carolina then part of Surry County the third of twelve children of Joseph and Rebekah Lanier Williams 3 7 His father was of Welsh descent and his mother was descended from French Huguenots 3 7 Two of Williams brothers Lewis Williams and Robert Williams served as U S congressmen in the 19th century 2 Another brother Thomas Lanier Williams was a prominent Tennessee judge 1 Williams was also the cousin of Congressman Marmaduke Williams 2 Williams studied law in Salisbury North Carolina in the late 1790s and served as a captain in the 6th U S Infantry from 1799 to 1800 4 Shortly afterward he relocated to Knoxville Tennessee where he was admitted to the bar in 1803 1 Around 1805 he married Melinda White daughter of Knoxville s founder James White 1 In 1807 Williams was appointed Tennessee s attorney general and served in this capacity until the following year 1 In 1811 he led a mass meeting of Knox County citizens that condemned Archibald Roane for resigning from the state legislature to run for circuit court judge 3 12 In a letter published in a local newspaper Williams blasted Roane as too selfish and too much of a drunkard to be a faithful judge 3 12 Military activities 1812 1815 EditIn late 1812 at the outbreak of the War of 1812 Williams raised a small company of some 200 to 250 volunteers primarily from Tennessee and Georgia with the intention of invading Florida and attacking the Seminole tribe 3 14 5 Williams and other leaders on the frontier suspected that Spain would eventually join the British side in the war and would encourage the Seminoles to attack frontier settlements in southern Georgia Williams and his volunteers invaded Florida in early February 1813 and destroyed several Seminole villages burning over 300 houses and stealing a large number of horses and other livestock 3 16 After reporting that the Seminole country was completely in waste 3 16 Williams returned to East Tennessee and his volunteers were mustered out shortly afterward 3 17 In June 1813 Williams was commissioned in the U S Army as a colonel and ordered to recruit and organize the 39th U S Infantry for the purpose of engaging the hostile Red Stick Creeks 3 18 Within a few weeks Williams had managed to recruit and partially equip 600 troops In early 1814 Williams and the 39th were placed under the command of Andrew Jackson who was preparing an expedition against the Red Sticks in Alabama 3 21 2 On March 27 Jackson attacked the Red Stick camp on the Tallapoosa River initiating the Battle of Horseshoe Bend At the height of this battle Williams and the 39th which comprised Jackson s main line charged and captured the log barricade with which the Creeks had fortified the riverbend forcing the Creeks to flee 3 23 In his report on the battle Jackson commended the actions of Williams and several other officers of the 39th 3 Soldiers who fought under Williams at this battle included future Missouri senator Thomas Hart Benton and future Tennessee and Texas governor Sam Houston 4 Following the Battle of Horseshoe Bend Williams went to Washington D C to raise money for the 39th and gradually acquired a sizable cache of weapons 3 25 Throughout 1814 Williams and Jackson bickered over these weapons with Jackson demanding that Williams give them to a militia company in Tennessee and Williams arguing that federal arms could not be distributed to militia companies Jackson questioned Williams loyalty and Williams questioned Jackson s authority 3 28 United States Senate EditIn 1815 Williams was chosen to fill the Senate seat left vacant by the resignation of Jesse Wharton who had been appointed to the seat a few months earlier following the resignation of George W Campbell 1 In 1817 Williams was reelected to a full six year term Williams voted in favor of the Second Bank of the United States in 1816 3 29 opposed the Bonus Bill of 1817 6 and voted for the Missouri Compromise of 1820 3 29 He was also chairman of the Committee on Military Affairs and oversaw a reduction of the armed forces 3 29 In 1819 following Jackson s invasion of Florida then part of Spain another dispute erupted between Williams and Jackson Jackson accused Williams of spreading a rumor that Jackson had launched the invasion to protect personal land investments in the Pensacola area and argued that Williams was assailing his character in private conversations in Washington 3 31 In 1821 Williams was one of just four senators to vote against the Adams Onis Treaty in which Spain ceded Florida to the United States 3 33 In 1823 Williams made it clear that he was going to support William H Crawford another enemy of Jackson for the presidency leading Jackson s allies in Tennessee to seek Williams removal from the Senate 3 35 6 When they were unable to find a candidate with enough support to defeat Williams Jackson agreed to become a candidate for Williams seat 3 36 Though Williams had the support of the influential Knoxville Register 6 and rising politician Davy Crockett 7 he lost to Jackson by a margin of 35 votes to 25 at a contentious meeting of the state legislature on October 1 1823 3 36 Later life EditAfter losing his U S Senate seat Williams ran for Knox County s state senate seat in 1825 but lost to James Anderson by a vote of 982 to 931 3 37 President John Quincy Adams pondered appointing Williams Secretary of War but was dissuaded by Henry Clay who thought the appointment should go to someone from New York 4 Adams eventually appointed Williams charge d affaires to the Central American Federation and Williams thus spent most of 1826 at this post in Guatemala 3 38 In 1827 Williams again ran for Knox County s state senate seat In spite of staunch opposition from Jackson s allies including Williams brother in law Hugh Lawson White who referred to Williams as a mean politician who can get no man to lye upon him 3 40 Williams won the election 1 585 to 1 216 3 During his term he introduced a bill calling for the construction of a turnpike connecting Anderson County and Kentucky a bill providing relief for female debtors and legislation seeking greater oversight of the Bank of Tennessee 3 41 He retired from the state senate in 1829 1 Williams spent his later years practicing law and advocating railroad construction 1 He rejected several invitations to run for Congress stating he had no desire to go to Washington and serve at the bow of the emperor in reference to then President Jackson 3 42 Williams died on August 10 1837 and was interred in the First Presbyterian Church Cemetery in Knoxville 2 Family and legacy Edit Map of Williamsburg In 1816 Williams made plans to develop a subdivision Williamsburg on what was then the outskirts of Knoxville now part of the Downtown area This subdivision was bounded by what is now Henley Street which at the time was the city s western boundary Main Street the riverfront and Second Creek 4 The area is now occupied by Maplehurst Park and the Church Street Methodist Church In 1826 while Williams was in Guatemala his wife oversaw the construction of a new family home in East Knoxville now known as the Colonel John Williams House 3 39 40 The house is still standing and is listed on the National Register of Historic Places Williams son Joseph Lanier Williams served three terms in the U S House of Representatives 1837 to 1843 3 45 Another son John Williams II was a prominent pro Union leader during the Civil War and served as vice president of the East Tennessee Convention which sought to create a separate Union aligned state in East Tennessee 8 John Williams was the great grandfather of Admiral Richmond P Hobson 3 46 and the great great grandfather of noted playwright Tennessee Williams 9 Fort Williams a supply depot built prior to the Battle of Horseshoe Bend was named for Williams 10 References Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to John Williams politician born 1778 a b c d e f g h i j k Mary Rothrock The French Broad Holston Country A History of Knox County Tennessee Knoxville Tenn East Tennessee Historical Society 1972 p 506 a b c d e William s Congressional Biography Retrieved September 13 2011 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab ac ad ae af ag ah ai aj Leota Driver Maiden Colonel John Williams East Tennessee Historical Society Publications Vol 30 1958 pp 7 46 a b c d e Samuel G Heiskell Andrew Jackson and Early Tennessee History Nashville Ambrose Printing Company 1918 pp 62 355 368 Tom Kanon Regimental Histories of Tennessee Units During the War of 1812 Tennessee State Library and Archives website November 20 2007 a b Stanley Folmsbee Sectionalism and Internal Improvements in Tennessee 1796 1845 Knoxville Tenn East Tennessee Historical Society 1939 pp 41 2 57n John Finger Tennessee Frontiers Three Regions in Transition Bloomington Ind Indiana University Press 2001 p 270 Robert McKenzie Lincolnites and Rebels A Divided Town in the American Civil War New York Oxford University Press 2006 p 191 Ask Doc Knox A Rare Antebellum Manse on Riverside Drive Metro Pulse April 12 2010 Accessed at the Internet Archive 2 October 2015 Harris W Stuart 1977 Dead Towns of Alabama Tuscaloosa Alabama University of Alabama Press p 56 ISBN 0 8173 1125 4 U S SenatePreceded byJesse Wharton U S senator Class 2 from Tennessee1815 1823 Served alongside George W Campbell John Eaton Succeeded byAndrew JacksonDiplomatic postsPreceded byNone United States Charge d Affaires GuatemalaMay 3 1826 December 1 1826 Succeeded byCharles G DeWitt Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title John Williams Tennessee politician amp oldid 1073332242, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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