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William Cabell Rives

William Cabell Rives (May 4, 1793 – April 25, 1868) was an American lawyer, planter, politician and diplomat from Virginia. Initially a Jackson Democrat as well as member of the First Families of Virginia, Rives served in the Virginia House of Delegates representing first Nelson County, then Albemarle County, Virginia, before service in both the U.S. House and Senate (his final term as a Whig). Rives also served two separate terms as U.S. Minister to France. During the Andrew Jackson administration, Rives negotiated a treaty whereby the French agreed to pay the U.S. for spoliation claims from the Napoleonic Wars. During the American Civil War, Rives became a Delegate to the Provisional Confederate Congress and the Confederate House of Representatives.[1]

William Cabell Rives
Member of the Confederate Congress from Virginia's 7th district
In office
May 2, 1864 – March 2, 1865
Preceded byJames Philemon Holcombe
Succeeded byPosition abolished
Delegate from Virginia to the Provisional Confederate Congress
In office
February 4, 1861 – February 17, 1862
Preceded byPosition established
Succeeded byPosition abolished
United States Minister to France
In office
1849–1853
Appointed byZachary Taylor
Preceded byRichard Rush
Succeeded byJohn Y. Mason
In office
1829–1833
Appointed byAndrew Jackson
Preceded byJames Brown
Succeeded byLevett Harris
United States Senator
from Virginia
In office
January 18, 1841 – March 3, 1845
Preceded byHimself
Succeeded byIsaac S. Pennybacker
In office
March 4, 1836 – March 3, 1839
Preceded byJohn Tyler, Jr.
Succeeded byHimself
In office
December 10, 1832 – February 22, 1834
Preceded byLittleton W. Tazewell
Succeeded byBenjamin W. Leigh
Member of the U.S. House of Representatives
from Virginia's 10th district
In office
March 4, 1823 – 1829
Preceded byThomas L. Moore
Succeeded byWilliam F. Gordon
Member of the Virginia House of Delegates from Albemarle County
In office
1822-23
Preceded byCharles Cocke
Succeeded byThomas Mann Randolph
Member of the Virginia House of Delegates from Nelson County
In office
1817–1820
Preceded byJoseph Shelton
Succeeded byJohn P. Cobbs
Personal details
Born(1793-05-04)May 4, 1793
Amherst County, Virginia
DiedApril 25, 1868(1868-04-25) (aged 74)
Charlottesville, Virginia
NationalityAmerican
Political partyDemocratic,
Whig

Early life and education

Rives was born at "Union Hill", the James River plantation estate of his grandfather, Col. William Cabell, in what was then Amherst County, Virginia and is now Nelson County. His parents were Robert Rives (1764–1845) and the former Margaret Cabell (c. 1770–1815). Robert Rives of Sussex County had served in the patriot army during the final Yorktown campaign, then became a commission merchant (first operating as Robert Rives and Company and later as Brown, Rives and Company), with Thomas Jefferson as one of his clients. He built a plantation, Oak Ridge Plantation,[2] in Nelson County in 1802, where he would bury his wife, and later be buried. On his death in 1845, the personal estate of Rives Sr. would be valued at $100,000 and included lands in Albemarle, Buckingham, Campbell and Nelson Counties.[3] Three of their sons, including William C. Rives would serve as legislators. Others included Robert Rives Jr. (1798-1869) and future Virginia Court of Appeals and U.S. District Judge Alexander Rives. His distant nephew Alexander Brown wrote books about the early history of Virginia as well as The Cabells and their Kin.[4]

After private tutoring appropriate to his station, W. C. Rives attended Hampden-Sydney College, followed by the College of William and Mary in Williamsburg. He then studied law with Thomas Jefferson at Monticello in nearer home.

During the War of 1812, he joined the local militia, which defended the Commonwealth.[5]

Personal life

In 1819, Rives married Judith Page Walker (1802–1882), the daughter of Francis Walker, and likewise of the First Families of Virginia. Their eldest son, Francis Robert Rives (1821-1891) followed his father's path into the law and diplomacy, but after returning from his foreign service in 1845, married banker's daughter Matilda Antonia Barclay and lived in Manhattan as well as Dutchess County, New York, with his firstborn son George Lockhart Rives (1849-1917) following family tradition by becoming a lawyer and diplomat (but not owning slaves). This Rives' second son, William C. Rives Jr. (1826-1890), likewise began a legal career and also operated Virginia plantations using enslaved labor. The junior Rives owned the still-standing Cobham Park Estate near Charlottesville,[6] and his son, also William Cabell Rives (1850–1938) donated the Peace Cross and supported building the Washington National Cathedral.[7] The youngest son, Alfred Landon Rives, became a prominent engineer (working on the U.S. Capitol and later for railroads), and his granddaughter Amélie Rives became a novelist, best known for The Quick or the Dead? (1888).[8] The Rives also had daughters Grace Rives (1822- ), Amelia Rives Sigourney (1832-1873) and Emma Rives (1835-1892).[9]

Early career

In 1814, Rives was admitted to the bar at Richmond. He began his law practice in Nelson County, but after his marriage moved to her estate Castle Hill, near Cobham in Albemarle County. This remained his primary residence for the rest of his life.

Like his father and other family members, Rives operated his plantations using enslaved labor. In the 1830 federal census, he owned 26 enslaved men and 26 enslaved women in Albemarle County.[10] In the 1850 federal census, he owned 54 slaves in Albemarle County.[11] A decade later, Rives owned 68 slaves and his son William C. Rives Jr. owned 24 slaves in Albemarle County.[12] His brother or nephew Robert Rives Jr. owned 43 slaves in Albemarle County in 1850,.[13] and 70 slaves a decade later.[14]

Political career

 
William Cabell Rives

Rives's political career began by as one of Nelson County's delegates in the state constitutional convention of 1816.[5] Rives then won election and re-election as one of Nelson County's delegates (part time) in the Virginia House of Delegates (serving 1817–19), then won election as one of Albemarle County's delegates in 1822.[15] During that session, his younger brother Robert Rives Jr., also served, as one of the Nelson County delegates.

Rives did not seek re-election to the Virginia legislature because in November 1822, voters in Virginia's 10th congressional district (which included both counties) elected him to represent them in the United States House of Representatives. He also won re-election and served from 1823 to 1829. In 1829 President Andrew Jackson nominated Rives to become Minister to France.

When Rives took office, compensation demands for captured American ships and sailors, dating from the Napoleonic era, caused strained relations between the American and French governments. The French Navy had captured and sent American ships to Spanish ports while holding their crews captive, thus forcing them to labor without any charges or judicial rules. Secretary of State Martin Van Buren, considered relations between the U.S. and France "hopeless."[16] Yet, Rives was able to convince the French government to sign a reparations treaty on July 4, 1831, that would award the U.S. ₣ 25,000,000 ($5,000,000) in damages.[17] However, the French government fell behind in its payments due to internal financial and political difficulties, but after firm insistence from the United States, payments were finally made in February 1836.[16]

Rives was presented as a candidate for the Democratic vice presidential nomination in 1835, but the nomination went to Richard M. Johnson, in spite of having been presidential nominee Martin Van Buren's preferred candidate.

After Rives returned from France, Virginia legislators elected (and twice re-elected) him to the United States Senate. He replaced conservative Littleton Tazewell. In 1834, Rives resigned because he disagreed the proposed senatorial censure of President Jackson's removal of government deposits from the Bank of the United States. However, the next legislature again elected Rives as Senator, this time to replace John Tyler (thus he did not succeed himself). During his third term, Rives had become a member of the Whig Party and voted to expunge record of the censure from Senate records.[5]

Rives also served on the Board of Visitors for the University of Virginia from 1834 to 1849, and for many years as president of the Virginia Historical Society.

In 1849, Rives once again accepted an appointment (and the Senate confirmed him) as Minister to France. He served until 1853, when he returned to his Virginia plantations. In 1831, Rives was elected as a member of the American Philosophical Society.[18]

Later life and American Civil War

Rives published several books and pamphlets, including the Life and Character of John Hampden (1845), Ethics of Christianity (1855) and Life and Times of James Madison (4 vols., Boston, 1859–68). His wife also published several volumes: The Canary Bird (1835), Epitome of the Holy Bible (1846), Tales and Souvenirs of a Residence in Europe (1842), Home and the World (1857),[5]

In 1860, Rives endorsed the call for a Constitutional Union Party Convention. He received most of Virginia's first ballot votes for President. Rives then became one of Virginia's unofficial delegates to the February 1861 Peace Conference in Washington, which sought to prevent the American Civil War by preserving slavery. Although Rives spoke out against secession, he was loyal to Virginia when it seceded.[8] He served in the Provisional Confederate Congress from 1861 to 1862 and the Second Confederate Congress from 1864 to 1865.

Death and legacy

Rives died at Castle Hill in 1868 and was buried in the family cemetery. In addition to re surviving historic estate homes, Rives is the namesake of the town of Rivesville, West Virginia.[19]

See also

  • Rives, Barclay (2014). William Cabell Rives : a country to serve. New York, New York: Atelerix. ISBN 978-0-9899263-2-4. OCLC 878972025.
  • Latner, Richard B. (2002). "Andrew Jackson". In Graff, Henry (ed.). The Presidents: A Reference History (7th ed.).
  • McCoy, Drew R. The Last of the Fathers: James Madison and the Republican Legacy. Cambridge, MA: Cambridge University Press, 1989, pp. 323–369.

References

  1. ^ Appleton's Cyclopedia vol. V p. 267
  2. ^ "Historical Marker Detailing Oak Ridge Plantation".
  3. ^ "Founders Online: Robert Rives to Thomas Jefferson, 3 July 1811".
  4. ^ Brown, Alexander (1939). The Cabells and Their Kin. Richmond: Garrett and Massie.
  5. ^ a b c d Appleton's
  6. ^ Virginia Historic Landmarks Commission Staff (December 1973). "National Register of Historic Places Inventory/Nomination: Cobham Park" (PDF).
  7. ^ inscription to the right of the Great Choir.
  8. ^ a b Chisholm, Hugh, ed. (1911). "Rives, William Cabell" . Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 23 (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press. pp. 386–387.
  9. ^ 1850 U.S. Federal Census for Albemarle County, Virginia family no. 63, p. 8 of 261
  10. ^ 1830 U.S. Federal Census for Albemarle County, Virginia pp.111-112 of 150.
  11. ^ 1850 U.S. Federal Census Slave Schedule for Fredericksville, Albemarle County, Virginia pp. 33 of 149.
  12. ^ 1860 U.S. Federal Census Slave Schedule for Fredericksville, for Albemarle County, Virginia pp. 25, 26 of 86.
  13. ^ 1850 U.S. Federal Census Slave Schedule for Fredericksville, Albemarle County, Virginia p. 149 of 149.
  14. ^ 1860 U.S. Federal Census Slave Schedule for St. Anne's, Albemarle County, Virginia pp. 25, 26, 27, 89 of 89.
  15. ^ Cynthia Miller Leonard, Virginia General Assembly 1619-1978 (Virginia State Library 1978) pp. 290, 295, 300, 313
  16. ^ a b Latner 2002, pp. 119–20.
  17. ^ Cunningham, Hugo S. (1999). "Gold and Silver Standards France". from the original on August 18, 2014. Retrieved August 28, 2014.
  18. ^ "APS Member History". search.amphilsoc.org. Retrieved 2021-04-08.
  19. ^ Kenny, Hamill (1945). West Virginia Place Names: Their Origin and Meaning, Including the Nomenclature of the Streams and Mountains. Piedmont, WV: The Place Name Press. p. 533.

External links

U.S. House of Representatives
Preceded by Member of the U.S. House of Representatives
from Virginia's 10th congressional district

1823–1829
Succeeded by
U.S. Senate
Preceded by U.S. senator (Class 2) from Virginia
1832–1834
Served alongside: John Tyler, Jr.
Succeeded by
Preceded by U.S. senator (Class 1) from Virginia
1836–1839
Served alongside: Richard E. Parker, William H. Roane
Succeeded by
Himself
Preceded by
Himself
U.S. senator (Class 1) from Virginia
1841–1845
Served alongside: William S. Archer
Succeeded by
Political offices
Preceded by
New creation
Delegate to the Provisional Confederate Congress from Virginia
April 29, 1861 – February 16, 1862
Succeeded by
Office abolished
Confederate States House of Representatives
Preceded by Member of the C.S. House of Representatives
from Virginia's 7th congressional district

February 17, 1864 – March 7, 1865
Succeeded by
Office abolished
Diplomatic posts
Preceded by Minister to France
Mid-1829–1832
Succeeded by
Preceded by Minister to France
1849–1853
Succeeded by

william, cabell, rives, 1793, april, 1868, american, lawyer, planter, politician, diplomat, from, virginia, initially, jackson, democrat, well, member, first, families, virginia, rives, served, virginia, house, delegates, representing, first, nelson, county, t. William Cabell Rives May 4 1793 April 25 1868 was an American lawyer planter politician and diplomat from Virginia Initially a Jackson Democrat as well as member of the First Families of Virginia Rives served in the Virginia House of Delegates representing first Nelson County then Albemarle County Virginia before service in both the U S House and Senate his final term as a Whig Rives also served two separate terms as U S Minister to France During the Andrew Jackson administration Rives negotiated a treaty whereby the French agreed to pay the U S for spoliation claims from the Napoleonic Wars During the American Civil War Rives became a Delegate to the Provisional Confederate Congress and the Confederate House of Representatives 1 William Cabell RivesMember of the Confederate Congress from Virginia s 7th districtIn office May 2 1864 March 2 1865Preceded byJames Philemon HolcombeSucceeded byPosition abolishedDelegate from Virginia to the Provisional Confederate CongressIn office February 4 1861 February 17 1862Preceded byPosition establishedSucceeded byPosition abolishedUnited States Minister to FranceIn office 1849 1853Appointed byZachary TaylorPreceded byRichard RushSucceeded byJohn Y MasonIn office 1829 1833Appointed byAndrew JacksonPreceded byJames BrownSucceeded byLevett HarrisUnited States Senatorfrom VirginiaIn office January 18 1841 March 3 1845Preceded byHimselfSucceeded byIsaac S PennybackerIn office March 4 1836 March 3 1839Preceded byJohn Tyler Jr Succeeded byHimselfIn office December 10 1832 February 22 1834Preceded byLittleton W TazewellSucceeded byBenjamin W LeighMember of the U S House of Representatives from Virginia s 10th districtIn office March 4 1823 1829Preceded byThomas L MooreSucceeded byWilliam F GordonMember of the Virginia House of Delegates from Albemarle CountyIn office 1822 23Preceded byCharles CockeSucceeded byThomas Mann RandolphMember of the Virginia House of Delegates from Nelson CountyIn office 1817 1820Preceded byJoseph SheltonSucceeded byJohn P CobbsPersonal detailsBorn 1793 05 04 May 4 1793Amherst County VirginiaDiedApril 25 1868 1868 04 25 aged 74 Charlottesville VirginiaNationalityAmericanPolitical partyDemocratic Whig Contents 1 Early life and education 2 Personal life 3 Early career 4 Political career 5 Later life and American Civil War 6 Death and legacy 7 See also 8 References 9 External linksEarly life and education EditRives was born at Union Hill the James River plantation estate of his grandfather Col William Cabell in what was then Amherst County Virginia and is now Nelson County His parents were Robert Rives 1764 1845 and the former Margaret Cabell c 1770 1815 Robert Rives of Sussex County had served in the patriot army during the final Yorktown campaign then became a commission merchant first operating as Robert Rives and Company and later as Brown Rives and Company with Thomas Jefferson as one of his clients He built a plantation Oak Ridge Plantation 2 in Nelson County in 1802 where he would bury his wife and later be buried On his death in 1845 the personal estate of Rives Sr would be valued at 100 000 and included lands in Albemarle Buckingham Campbell and Nelson Counties 3 Three of their sons including William C Rives would serve as legislators Others included Robert Rives Jr 1798 1869 and future Virginia Court of Appeals and U S District Judge Alexander Rives His distant nephew Alexander Brown wrote books about the early history of Virginia as well as The Cabells and their Kin 4 After private tutoring appropriate to his station W C Rives attended Hampden Sydney College followed by the College of William and Mary in Williamsburg He then studied law with Thomas Jefferson at Monticello in nearer home During the War of 1812 he joined the local militia which defended the Commonwealth 5 Personal life EditIn 1819 Rives married Judith Page Walker 1802 1882 the daughter of Francis Walker and likewise of the First Families of Virginia Their eldest son Francis Robert Rives 1821 1891 followed his father s path into the law and diplomacy but after returning from his foreign service in 1845 married banker s daughter Matilda Antonia Barclay and lived in Manhattan as well as Dutchess County New York with his firstborn son George Lockhart Rives 1849 1917 following family tradition by becoming a lawyer and diplomat but not owning slaves This Rives second son William C Rives Jr 1826 1890 likewise began a legal career and also operated Virginia plantations using enslaved labor The junior Rives owned the still standing Cobham Park Estate near Charlottesville 6 and his son also William Cabell Rives 1850 1938 donated the Peace Cross and supported building the Washington National Cathedral 7 The youngest son Alfred Landon Rives became a prominent engineer working on the U S Capitol and later for railroads and his granddaughter Amelie Rives became a novelist best known for The Quick or the Dead 1888 8 The Rives also had daughters Grace Rives 1822 Amelia Rives Sigourney 1832 1873 and Emma Rives 1835 1892 9 Early career EditIn 1814 Rives was admitted to the bar at Richmond He began his law practice in Nelson County but after his marriage moved to her estate Castle Hill near Cobham in Albemarle County This remained his primary residence for the rest of his life Like his father and other family members Rives operated his plantations using enslaved labor In the 1830 federal census he owned 26 enslaved men and 26 enslaved women in Albemarle County 10 In the 1850 federal census he owned 54 slaves in Albemarle County 11 A decade later Rives owned 68 slaves and his son William C Rives Jr owned 24 slaves in Albemarle County 12 His brother or nephew Robert Rives Jr owned 43 slaves in Albemarle County in 1850 13 and 70 slaves a decade later 14 Political career Edit William Cabell RivesRives s political career began by as one of Nelson County s delegates in the state constitutional convention of 1816 5 Rives then won election and re election as one of Nelson County s delegates part time in the Virginia House of Delegates serving 1817 19 then won election as one of Albemarle County s delegates in 1822 15 During that session his younger brother Robert Rives Jr also served as one of the Nelson County delegates Rives did not seek re election to the Virginia legislature because in November 1822 voters in Virginia s 10th congressional district which included both counties elected him to represent them in the United States House of Representatives He also won re election and served from 1823 to 1829 In 1829 President Andrew Jackson nominated Rives to become Minister to France When Rives took office compensation demands for captured American ships and sailors dating from the Napoleonic era caused strained relations between the American and French governments The French Navy had captured and sent American ships to Spanish ports while holding their crews captive thus forcing them to labor without any charges or judicial rules Secretary of State Martin Van Buren considered relations between the U S and France hopeless 16 Yet Rives was able to convince the French government to sign a reparations treaty on July 4 1831 that would award the U S 25 000 000 5 000 000 in damages 17 However the French government fell behind in its payments due to internal financial and political difficulties but after firm insistence from the United States payments were finally made in February 1836 16 Rives was presented as a candidate for the Democratic vice presidential nomination in 1835 but the nomination went to Richard M Johnson in spite of having been presidential nominee Martin Van Buren s preferred candidate After Rives returned from France Virginia legislators elected and twice re elected him to the United States Senate He replaced conservative Littleton Tazewell In 1834 Rives resigned because he disagreed the proposed senatorial censure of President Jackson s removal of government deposits from the Bank of the United States However the next legislature again elected Rives as Senator this time to replace John Tyler thus he did not succeed himself During his third term Rives had become a member of the Whig Party and voted to expunge record of the censure from Senate records 5 Rives also served on the Board of Visitors for the University of Virginia from 1834 to 1849 and for many years as president of the Virginia Historical Society In 1849 Rives once again accepted an appointment and the Senate confirmed him as Minister to France He served until 1853 when he returned to his Virginia plantations In 1831 Rives was elected as a member of the American Philosophical Society 18 Later life and American Civil War EditRives published several books and pamphlets including the Life and Character of John Hampden 1845 Ethics of Christianity 1855 and Life and Times of James Madison 4 vols Boston 1859 68 His wife also published several volumes The Canary Bird 1835 Epitome of the Holy Bible 1846 Tales and Souvenirs of a Residence in Europe 1842 Home and the World 1857 5 In 1860 Rives endorsed the call for a Constitutional Union Party Convention He received most of Virginia s first ballot votes for President Rives then became one of Virginia s unofficial delegates to the February 1861 Peace Conference in Washington which sought to prevent the American Civil War by preserving slavery Although Rives spoke out against secession he was loyal to Virginia when it seceded 8 He served in the Provisional Confederate Congress from 1861 to 1862 and the Second Confederate Congress from 1864 to 1865 Death and legacy EditRives died at Castle Hill in 1868 and was buried in the family cemetery In addition to re surviving historic estate homes Rives is the namesake of the town of Rivesville West Virginia 19 See also EditRives Barclay 2014 William Cabell Rives a country to serve New York New York Atelerix ISBN 978 0 9899263 2 4 OCLC 878972025 Latner Richard B 2002 Andrew Jackson In Graff Henry ed The Presidents A Reference History 7th ed McCoy Drew R The Last of the Fathers James Madison and the Republican Legacy Cambridge MA Cambridge University Press 1989 pp 323 369 References Edit Appleton s Cyclopedia vol V p 267 Historical Marker Detailing Oak Ridge Plantation Founders Online Robert Rives to Thomas Jefferson 3 July 1811 Brown Alexander 1939 The Cabells and Their Kin Richmond Garrett and Massie a b c d Appleton s Virginia Historic Landmarks Commission Staff December 1973 National Register of Historic Places Inventory Nomination Cobham Park PDF inscription to the right of the Great Choir a b Chisholm Hugh ed 1911 Rives William Cabell Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol 23 11th ed Cambridge University Press pp 386 387 1850 U S Federal Census for Albemarle County Virginia family no 63 p 8 of 261 1830 U S Federal Census for Albemarle County Virginia pp 111 112 of 150 1850 U S Federal Census Slave Schedule for Fredericksville Albemarle County Virginia pp 33 of 149 1860 U S Federal Census Slave Schedule for Fredericksville for Albemarle County Virginia pp 25 26 of 86 1850 U S Federal Census Slave Schedule for Fredericksville Albemarle County Virginia p 149 of 149 1860 U S Federal Census Slave Schedule for St Anne s Albemarle County Virginia pp 25 26 27 89 of 89 Cynthia Miller Leonard Virginia General Assembly 1619 1978 Virginia State Library 1978 pp 290 295 300 313 a b Latner 2002 pp 119 20 Cunningham Hugo S 1999 Gold and Silver Standards France Archived from the original on August 18 2014 Retrieved August 28 2014 APS Member History search amphilsoc org Retrieved 2021 04 08 Kenny Hamill 1945 West Virginia Place Names Their Origin and Meaning Including the Nomenclature of the Streams and Mountains Piedmont WV The Place Name Press p 533 External links EditUnited States Congress William Cabell Rives id R000285 Biographical Directory of the United States Congress William Cabell Rives at Find a GraveU S House of RepresentativesPreceded byThomas L Moore Member of the U S House of Representatives from Virginia s 10th congressional district1823 1829 Succeeded byWilliam F GordonU S SenatePreceded byLittleton W Tazewell U S senator Class 2 from Virginia1832 1834 Served alongside John Tyler Jr Succeeded byBenjamin W LeighPreceded byJohn Tyler Jr U S senator Class 1 from Virginia1836 1839 Served alongside Richard E Parker William H Roane Succeeded byHimselfPreceded byHimself U S senator Class 1 from Virginia1841 1845 Served alongside William S Archer Succeeded byIsaac S PennybackerPolitical officesPreceded byNew creation Delegate to the Provisional Confederate Congress from VirginiaApril 29 1861 February 16 1862 Succeeded byOffice abolishedConfederate States House of RepresentativesPreceded byJames P Holcombe Member of the C S House of Representativesfrom Virginia s 7th congressional districtFebruary 17 1864 March 7 1865 Succeeded byOffice abolishedDiplomatic postsPreceded byJames Brown Minister to FranceMid 1829 1832 Succeeded byEdward LivingstonPreceded byRichard Rush Minister to France1849 1853 Succeeded byJohn Y Mason Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title William Cabell Rives amp oldid 1150451699, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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