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William Samuel Johnson

William Samuel Johnson (October 7, 1727 – November 14, 1819) was an American Founding Father and statesman. He was the only man to attend all of the four founding American Congresses: the Stamp Act Congress in 1765, the Continental Congress in 1785–1787, the United States Constitutional Convention in 1787 where he was chairman of the Committee of Style that drafted the final version of the United States Constitution, and as a senator from Connecticut in the first United States Congress in 1789-1791. He also served as the third president of Columbia University (then known as Columbia College).

William Samuel Johnson
Portrait by John Wesley Jarvis, between 1809 and 1819
United States Senator
from Connecticut
In office
March 4, 1789 – March 3, 1791
Preceded byOffice created
Succeeded byRoger Sherman
3rd President of Columbia University
In office
1787–1800
Preceded byGeorge Clinton (acting)
Succeeded byCharles Henry Wharton
Personal details
BornOctober 7, 1727
Stratford, Connecticut Colony
DiedNovember 14, 1819(1819-11-14) (aged 92)
Stratford, Connecticut, U.S.
Resting placeChrist Episcopal Church Cemetery, Stratford
NationalityAmerican
Political partyPro-Administration
SpouseAnne Beach[1]
ChildrenElizabeth Johnson
Parent(s)Samuel Johnson
Charity Floyd Nicoll
RelativesDaniel Verplanck (son-in-law)
Gulian C. Verplanck (grandson)
Alma materYale College
ProfessionPolitician, clergyman
Military service
Branch/serviceConnecticut Colonial Militia
RankColonel

Early life edit

 
Coat of Arms of William Samuel Johnson

William Samuel Johnson was born in Stratford, Connecticut, on October 7, 1727, to Samuel Johnson, a well-known Anglican clergyman, educator, and later president of King's College, and Johnson's first wife, Charity Floyd Nicoll. Johnson received his primary education from his father who ran a small Stratford Academy boarding students. He then graduated from Yale College in 1744, winning the George Berkely Scholarship. He went on to receive a master's degree from Yale in 1747 and an honorary degree from Harvard the same year. He would later receive an honorary Doctorate of Law from Oxford in 1766.[2]

Career edit

Although his father urged him to enter the clergy, Johnson decided instead to pursue a legal career. Self-educated in the law, he quickly developed an important clientele and established business connections extending beyond the boundaries of his native colony and was frequently consulted on inter-colony legal issues. He also held a commission in the Connecticut colonial militia for over 20 years, rising from ensign to the rank of colonel. He served in the lower house (1761 and 1765) and the upper house (1766 and 1771–1775) of the Connecticut Legislature.

Johnson was first attracted to the Patriot cause by what he and his associates considered Parliament's unwarranted interference in the government of the colonies. At this time he was somewhat of a radical, speaking about “chains and shackles,” “stamps and slavery,” and the “late fatal acts” that would reduce America to “Roman provinces in the time of the Caesar.”[3] He started forming alliances with the Connecticut's Son's of Liberty and working against the re-election of Loyalist Governor Thomas Fitch.

He was elected one of three delegates from Connecticut to the Stamp Act Congress, where in 1765 he served on the committee defining the rights of British Colonists arguing the right of the colonies to decide tax policies for themselves.[4] According to his biographer Beardsley, Johnson "was a guiding and controlling spirit in the Assembly."[5] He authored the seminal Report of Committee at Congress on Colonia Rights,[6] that evolved into the Stamp Act Declaration of Rights and Grievances, the final version of which is in his hand.[7] He was also on the committee that authored the Petition to the King.[8]

The declaration, petitions, and pressure from London merchants forced Parliament to repeal the Stamp Act in 1766. But that year, Connecticut faced a new problem with a seventy year old unsettled legal case involving Mohegan Indians lands. The British wanted to use the case as a pretext to cancel Connecticut's Royal Charter of 1662. Johnson agreed to become a special Colonial Agent to fight the case.

American Revolution edit

 
Portrait by Gilbert Stuart

Johnson left his family, his political career, and his legal practice to argue in London for Connecticut's charter, where he lived from 1767 to 1771, He sharply criticized British policy toward the colonies. His experience in Britain convinced him that Britain's policy was shaped more by ignorance of American conditions, not through the sinister designs of a wicked government, as many Patriots alleged. As the Patriots became more radical in their demands, Johnson found it difficult to commit himself wholeheartedly to the cause. Although he believed British policy unwise, he found it difficult to break his own connections with the mother country. A scholar of international renown, he had many friends in Britain and among the American Loyalists. As the English author Samuel Johnson said of him, "Of all those whom the various accidents of life have brought within my notice, there is scarce anyone whose acquaintance I have more desired to cultivate than yours."[9] He was also bound to Britain by religious and professional ties. He enjoyed close associations with the Anglican Church in England and with the scholarly community at Oxford, which awarded him an honorary degree in 1766.

Fearing the consequences of independence for both the colonies and the mother country, Johnson sought to avoid extremism and to reach a compromise on the outstanding political differences between the protagonists. However, his court case against British government that was supposed to take a few months was dragged out for five years, during which time he was away from his family, lost of his law firm's clients, and received little thanks, little reward, and endured criticism for his association with the British. He returned home late in 1771, just in time to spend three months with his father before he died. He was appointed a member of the colony's Supreme Court (1772–1774).

He was elected as a delegate in 1774 to the Continental Congress but turned down the honor in favor of his protégée Roger Sherman. The Connecticut assembly, after the Battles of Lexington and Concord, over his strong personal objections, sent him on a dangerous visit through both Patriot Massachusetts militia and British lines to the British commander General Thomas Gage in Boston to negotiate an end to the fighting by making a separate peace with the British. He succeeded, but on returning back across the lines again to Connecticut, he found the Assembly had changed their mind, voted for war, then adjourned, leaving no instructions for Johnson.[10] After the Declaration of Independence, was persuaded that the American Revolution was not necessary and that independence would be bad for everyone concerned.[11] He retired from the Assembly, and from his law practice. In July, 1779, after Tryon's raid on the Connecticut shoreline burnt down the towns of Fairfield and Norwalk, the panicking citizens of Stratford begged him to intercede with General Tyron and save their town.[12] He declined to undertake another dangerous mission he opposed, but a town meeting was called and resolutions were passed insisting he should vist Tyron. A committee was appointed to accompany him, and a subscription paper implying Johnson supported the peace effort was printed without Johnson's approval. The paper was seized on by his political enemies, which led to his arrest for communicating with the enemy, but the charges were soon dropped.

New nation edit

Once independence was achieved, Johnson felt free to participate in the government of the new nation. He resumed the practice of his profession, and some time subsequent to the declaration of peace was reinstated in his old office as a member of the Upper House of the General Assembly,[13] where he also served as a legal counsel for Connecticut in its dispute with Pennsylvania over western lands (1779-80). He was appointed as a delegate to the Congress of the Confederation (1785–1787). His influence there was recognized by his contemporaries. Jeremiah Wadsworth wrote of him to a friend, "Dr. Johnson has, I believe, much more influence than either you or myself. The Southern Delegates are vastly fond of him."[14] In 1785, the Vermont Republic granted Johnson a town in the former King's College Tract in thanks for representing the interests of Vermont before the Continental Congress.[15] The town of Johnson, Vermont; the former Johnson State College; and Johnson Street [1] in Madison, Wisconsin, bear his name.

Constitutional Convention 2016-03-03 at the Wayback Machine edit

In 1787, Johnson played a major role as one of the Philadelphia Convention's delegates. His eloquent speeches on the subject of representation carried great weight during the debate. He looked to a strong federal government to protect the rights of Connecticut and the other small states from encroachment by their more powerful neighbors. He supported the New Jersey Plan, which called for equal representation of the states in the national legislature.

In general, he favored extension of federal authority. He argued that the judicial power "ought to extend to equity as well as law" (the words "in law and equity" were adopted at his motion). He denied that there could be treason against a separate state since sovereignty was "in the Union." He opposed prohibition of any ex post facto law, which made an act a criminal offense retroactively, because he considered that such a prohibition implied "an improper suspicion of the National Legislature."

Johnson was influential even in the final stages of framing the Constitution. He gave his fullest support to the Connecticut Compromise, which foreshadowed the final Great Compromise, with a national legislature with a Senate that provided equal representation for all states and a House of Representatives based on population. He also served on and chaired the five-member Committee of Style, which framed the final form of the document.

In her 1966 book, Miracle at Philadelphia, Catherine Drinker Bowen calls Johnson "the perfect man to preside over these four masters of argument and political strategy [i.e. fellow committee members Alexander Hamilton, Gouverneur Morris, James Madison, and Rufus King].... His presence on the committee must have been reassuring; the doctor's quiet manner disarmed."[16]

References edit

  1. ^ A Biography of William Samuel Johnson (1727–1819)
  2. ^ Beardsley, Eben Edwards (1876). Life and Times of William Samuel Johnson, LL.D.: First Senator in Congress from Connecticut, and President of Columbia College, New York. United States: Hurd and Houghton. p. 36.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: date and year (link)
  3. ^ Groce, George. William Samuel Johnson; A Maker of the Constitution, Columbia University Press, New York, 1937, p. 55
  4. ^ "William Samuel Johnson". Miltarty History.
  5. ^ Beardsley, Life and Times of William Samuel Johnson, LL.D., p. 32
  6. ^ Pitkin, Timothy (1828). A political and civil history of the United States of America,. United States, New Haven, Connecticut: (H. Howe and Durrie & Peck, 1828), 1: 186, “Appendix no. 9,” 1:448-455. pp. “Appendix no. 9, ” 1:448-455.
  7. ^ William Samuel Johnson (1727–1819). “Declaration of Rights and Grievances,” October 19, 1765. Page 2. William Samuel Johnson Papers, Manuscript Division, Library of Congress (025), //www.loc.gov/exhibits/magna-carta-muse-and-mentor/no-taxation-without-representation.html#obj025
  8. ^ Weslager, C.A. (1976). The Stamp Act Congress, with an Exact Copy of the Complete Journal. United States, Newark, NJ: University of Delaware Press. pp. 204–207, 260.
  9. ^ Beardsley, Life and Times of William Samuel Johnson, LL.D., 99-100
  10. ^ Beardsley, Life and Times of William Samuel Johnson, LL.D., p. 109-112.
  11. ^ Elizabeth P. McCaughey, "William Samuel Johnson, The Loyal Whig" in William M. Fowler Jr. and Wallace Coyle, eds. American Revolution: Changing Perspectives (1979), pp. 69–102
  12. ^ Beardsley, Life and Times of William Samuel Johnson, LL.D., p. 112-117.
  13. ^ Beardsley, Life and Times of William Samuel Johnson, LL.D., p. 117.
  14. ^ Warren, Charles. The Making of the Constitution. United States: Little, Brown, 1928, p. 254 n1
  15. ^ Swift, Esther M. (1977). Vermont Place-Names, Footprints in History. The Stephen Greene Press. pp. 282–283. ISBN 0828902917.
  16. ^ Bowen, p.235 of the 1986 edition

Sources edit

  •   This article incorporates public domain material from "William Samuel Johnson" in Soldiers and Statesman by Robert K. Wright Jr. and Morris J. MacGregor Jr. United States Army Center of Military History.
  • United States Congress. "William Samuel Johnson (id: J000182)". Biographical Directory of the United States Congress.
  • Graff, Nancy Price. Visible Layers of Time: A Perspective on the History and Architecture of Johnson Vermont. The University of Vermont, Historic Preservation Program: 1990.
  • McCaughey, Elizabeth P. "William Samuel Johnson, The Loyal Whig" in William M. Fowler Jr. and Wallace Coyle, eds. American Revolution: Changing Perspectives (1979), pp. 69–102
  • Beardsley, E. Edwards. Life and Times of William Samuel Johnson, LL.D. (1876)

External links edit

  • William Samuel Johnson at Find a Grave
  • William Samuel Johnson: A Maker of the Constitution, 1937 biography in PDF format
Academic offices
Preceded by President of Columbia College
1787–1800
Succeeded by
U.S. Senate
Preceded by
None
U.S. senator (Class 3) from Connecticut
1789–1791
Served alongside: Oliver Ellsworth
Succeeded by
Honorary titles
Preceded by
None
Oldest living U.S. senator
March 4, 1789 – June 13, 1791
Succeeded by
Preceded by Oldest living U.S. senator
July 23, 1793 – November 14, 1819
Succeeded by

william, samuel, johnson, october, 1727, november, 1819, american, founding, father, statesman, only, attend, four, founding, american, congresses, stamp, congress, 1765, continental, congress, 1785, 1787, united, states, constitutional, convention, 1787, wher. William Samuel Johnson October 7 1727 November 14 1819 was an American Founding Father and statesman He was the only man to attend all of the four founding American Congresses the Stamp Act Congress in 1765 the Continental Congress in 1785 1787 the United States Constitutional Convention in 1787 where he was chairman of the Committee of Style that drafted the final version of the United States Constitution and as a senator from Connecticut in the first United States Congress in 1789 1791 He also served as the third president of Columbia University then known as Columbia College William Samuel JohnsonPortrait by John Wesley Jarvis between 1809 and 1819United States Senatorfrom ConnecticutIn office March 4 1789 March 3 1791Preceded byOffice createdSucceeded byRoger Sherman3rd President of Columbia UniversityIn office 1787 1800Preceded byGeorge Clinton acting Succeeded byCharles Henry WhartonPersonal detailsBornOctober 7 1727Stratford Connecticut ColonyDiedNovember 14 1819 1819 11 14 aged 92 Stratford Connecticut U S Resting placeChrist Episcopal Church Cemetery StratfordNationalityAmericanPolitical partyPro AdministrationSpouseAnne Beach 1 ChildrenElizabeth JohnsonParent s Samuel JohnsonCharity Floyd NicollRelativesDaniel Verplanck son in law Gulian C Verplanck grandson Alma materYale CollegeProfessionPolitician clergymanMilitary serviceBranch serviceConnecticut Colonial MilitiaRankColonel Contents 1 Early life 2 Career 2 1 American Revolution 2 2 New nation 2 3 Constitutional ConventionArchived 2016 03 03 at the Wayback Machine 3 References 4 Sources 5 External linksEarly life edit nbsp Coat of Arms of William Samuel JohnsonWilliam Samuel Johnson was born in Stratford Connecticut on October 7 1727 to Samuel Johnson a well known Anglican clergyman educator and later president of King s College and Johnson s first wife Charity Floyd Nicoll Johnson received his primary education from his father who ran a small Stratford Academy boarding students He then graduated from Yale College in 1744 winning the George Berkely Scholarship He went on to receive a master s degree from Yale in 1747 and an honorary degree from Harvard the same year He would later receive an honorary Doctorate of Law from Oxford in 1766 2 Career editAlthough his father urged him to enter the clergy Johnson decided instead to pursue a legal career Self educated in the law he quickly developed an important clientele and established business connections extending beyond the boundaries of his native colony and was frequently consulted on inter colony legal issues He also held a commission in the Connecticut colonial militia for over 20 years rising from ensign to the rank of colonel He served in the lower house 1761 and 1765 and the upper house 1766 and 1771 1775 of the Connecticut Legislature Johnson was first attracted to the Patriot cause by what he and his associates considered Parliament s unwarranted interference in the government of the colonies At this time he was somewhat of a radical speaking about chains and shackles stamps and slavery and the late fatal acts that would reduce America to Roman provinces in the time of the Caesar 3 He started forming alliances with the Connecticut s Son s of Liberty and working against the re election of Loyalist Governor Thomas Fitch He was elected one of three delegates from Connecticut to the Stamp Act Congress where in 1765 he served on the committee defining the rights of British Colonists arguing the right of the colonies to decide tax policies for themselves 4 According to his biographer Beardsley Johnson was a guiding and controlling spirit in the Assembly 5 He authored the seminal Report of Committee at Congress on Colonia Rights 6 that evolved into the Stamp Act Declaration of Rights and Grievances the final version of which is in his hand 7 He was also on the committee that authored the Petition to the King 8 The declaration petitions and pressure from London merchants forced Parliament to repeal the Stamp Act in 1766 But that year Connecticut faced a new problem with a seventy year old unsettled legal case involving Mohegan Indians lands The British wanted to use the case as a pretext to cancel Connecticut s Royal Charter of 1662 Johnson agreed to become a special Colonial Agent to fight the case American Revolution edit nbsp Portrait by Gilbert StuartJohnson left his family his political career and his legal practice to argue in London for Connecticut s charter where he lived from 1767 to 1771 He sharply criticized British policy toward the colonies His experience in Britain convinced him that Britain s policy was shaped more by ignorance of American conditions not through the sinister designs of a wicked government as many Patriots alleged As the Patriots became more radical in their demands Johnson found it difficult to commit himself wholeheartedly to the cause Although he believed British policy unwise he found it difficult to break his own connections with the mother country A scholar of international renown he had many friends in Britain and among the American Loyalists As the English author Samuel Johnson said of him Of all those whom the various accidents of life have brought within my notice there is scarce anyone whose acquaintance I have more desired to cultivate than yours 9 He was also bound to Britain by religious and professional ties He enjoyed close associations with the Anglican Church in England and with the scholarly community at Oxford which awarded him an honorary degree in 1766 Fearing the consequences of independence for both the colonies and the mother country Johnson sought to avoid extremism and to reach a compromise on the outstanding political differences between the protagonists However his court case against British government that was supposed to take a few months was dragged out for five years during which time he was away from his family lost of his law firm s clients and received little thanks little reward and endured criticism for his association with the British He returned home late in 1771 just in time to spend three months with his father before he died He was appointed a member of the colony s Supreme Court 1772 1774 He was elected as a delegate in 1774 to the Continental Congress but turned down the honor in favor of his protegee Roger Sherman The Connecticut assembly after the Battles of Lexington and Concord over his strong personal objections sent him on a dangerous visit through both Patriot Massachusetts militia and British lines to the British commander General Thomas Gage in Boston to negotiate an end to the fighting by making a separate peace with the British He succeeded but on returning back across the lines again to Connecticut he found the Assembly had changed their mind voted for war then adjourned leaving no instructions for Johnson 10 After the Declaration of Independence was persuaded that the American Revolution was not necessary and that independence would be bad for everyone concerned 11 He retired from the Assembly and from his law practice In July 1779 after Tryon s raid on the Connecticut shoreline burnt down the towns of Fairfield and Norwalk the panicking citizens of Stratford begged him to intercede with General Tyron and save their town 12 He declined to undertake another dangerous mission he opposed but a town meeting was called and resolutions were passed insisting he should vist Tyron A committee was appointed to accompany him and a subscription paper implying Johnson supported the peace effort was printed without Johnson s approval The paper was seized on by his political enemies which led to his arrest for communicating with the enemy but the charges were soon dropped New nation edit Once independence was achieved Johnson felt free to participate in the government of the new nation He resumed the practice of his profession and some time subsequent to the declaration of peace was reinstated in his old office as a member of the Upper House of the General Assembly 13 where he also served as a legal counsel for Connecticut in its dispute with Pennsylvania over western lands 1779 80 He was appointed as a delegate to the Congress of the Confederation 1785 1787 His influence there was recognized by his contemporaries Jeremiah Wadsworth wrote of him to a friend Dr Johnson has I believe much more influence than either you or myself The Southern Delegates are vastly fond of him 14 In 1785 the Vermont Republic granted Johnson a town in the former King s College Tract in thanks for representing the interests of Vermont before the Continental Congress 15 The town of Johnson Vermont the former Johnson State College and Johnson Street 1 in Madison Wisconsin bear his name Constitutional ConventionArchived 2016 03 03 at the Wayback Machine edit In 1787 Johnson played a major role as one of the Philadelphia Convention s delegates His eloquent speeches on the subject of representation carried great weight during the debate He looked to a strong federal government to protect the rights of Connecticut and the other small states from encroachment by their more powerful neighbors He supported the New Jersey Plan which called for equal representation of the states in the national legislature In general he favored extension of federal authority He argued that the judicial power ought to extend to equity as well as law the words in law and equity were adopted at his motion He denied that there could be treason against a separate state since sovereignty was in the Union He opposed prohibition of any ex post facto law which made an act a criminal offense retroactively because he considered that such a prohibition implied an improper suspicion of the National Legislature Johnson was influential even in the final stages of framing the Constitution He gave his fullest support to the Connecticut Compromise which foreshadowed the final Great Compromise with a national legislature with a Senate that provided equal representation for all states and a House of Representatives based on population He also served on and chaired the five member Committee of Style which framed the final form of the document In her 1966 book Miracle at Philadelphia Catherine Drinker Bowen calls Johnson the perfect man to preside over these four masters of argument and political strategy i e fellow committee members Alexander Hamilton Gouverneur Morris James Madison and Rufus King His presence on the committee must have been reassuring the doctor s quiet manner disarmed 16 References edit A Biography of William Samuel Johnson 1727 1819 Beardsley Eben Edwards 1876 Life and Times of William Samuel Johnson LL D First Senator in Congress from Connecticut and President of Columbia College New York United States Hurd and Houghton p 36 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint date and year link Groce George William Samuel Johnson A Maker of the Constitution Columbia University Press New York 1937 p 55 William Samuel Johnson Miltarty History Beardsley Life and Times of William Samuel Johnson LL D p 32 Pitkin Timothy 1828 A political and civil history of the United States of America United States New Haven Connecticut H Howe and Durrie amp Peck 1828 1 186 Appendix no 9 1 448 455 pp Appendix no 9 1 448 455 William Samuel Johnson 1727 1819 Declaration of Rights and Grievances October 19 1765 Page 2 William Samuel Johnson Papers Manuscript Division Library of Congress 025 www loc gov exhibits magna carta muse and mentor no taxation without representation html obj025 Weslager C A 1976 The Stamp Act Congress with an Exact Copy of the Complete Journal United States Newark NJ University of Delaware Press pp 204 207 260 Beardsley Life and Times of William Samuel Johnson LL D 99 100 Beardsley Life and Times of William Samuel Johnson LL D p 109 112 Elizabeth P McCaughey William Samuel Johnson The Loyal Whig in William M Fowler Jr and Wallace Coyle eds American Revolution Changing Perspectives 1979 pp 69 102 Beardsley Life and Times of William Samuel Johnson LL D p 112 117 Beardsley Life and Times of William Samuel Johnson LL D p 117 Warren Charles The Making of the Constitution United States Little Brown 1928 p 254 n1 Swift Esther M 1977 Vermont Place Names Footprints in History The Stephen Greene Press pp 282 283 ISBN 0828902917 Bowen p 235 of the 1986 editionSources edit nbsp This article incorporates public domain material from William Samuel Johnson in Soldiers and Statesman by Robert K Wright Jr and Morris J MacGregor Jr United States Army Center of Military History United States Congress William Samuel Johnson id J000182 Biographical Directory of the United States Congress Graff Nancy Price Visible Layers of Time A Perspective on the History and Architecture of Johnson Vermont The University of Vermont Historic Preservation Program 1990 McCaughey Elizabeth P William Samuel Johnson The Loyal Whig in William M Fowler Jr and Wallace Coyle eds American Revolution Changing Perspectives 1979 pp 69 102 Beardsley E Edwards Life and Times of William Samuel Johnson LL D 1876 External links editWilliam Samuel Johnson at Find a Grave William Samuel Johnson A Maker of the Constitution 1937 biography in PDF formatAcademic officesPreceded byGeorge Clinton Acting President of Columbia College1787 1800 Succeeded byCharles Henry WhartonU S SenatePreceded byNone U S senator Class 3 from Connecticut1789 1791 Served alongside Oliver Ellsworth Succeeded byRoger ShermanHonorary titlesPreceded byNone Oldest living U S senatorMarch 4 1789 June 13 1791 Succeeded byRoger ShermanPreceded byRoger Sherman Oldest living U S senatorJuly 23 1793 November 14 1819 Succeeded byThomas Sumter Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title William Samuel Johnson amp oldid 1207842795, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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