Henry Middleton

Henry Middleton (1717 – June 13, 1784) was a planter and public official from South Carolina. A member of the colonial legislature, during the American Revolution he attended the Continental Congress and served as that body's presiding officer for a few days in 1774. He left Congress before it declared independence. Back in South Carolina, he served as president of the provincial congress and senator in the newly created state government. After his capture by the British in 1780, he accepted defeat and returned to the status of a British subject until the end of the war.

Henry Middleton
Possible portrait by Benjamin West, circa 1771[1]
2nd President of the Continental Congress
In office
October 22, 1774  October 26, 1774
Preceded byPeyton Randolph
Succeeded byPeyton Randolph
Personal details
Born1717
near Charles Town, Province of South Carolina
DiedJune 13, 1784 (aged 6667)
Charleston, South Carolina
Spouse(s)
    Mary Baker Williams
    (m. 1741; died 1761)
      Mary Henrietta Bull
      (m. 1762; died 1772)
        Lady Mary McKenzie
        (m. 1776)
        RelationsHenry Middleton (grandson)
        Children12, including Arthur
        ParentsSusan Amory Middleton
        Arthur Middleton
        ResidenceMiddleton Place
        OccupationPlanter, public official

        Early life

        Henry Middleton was born in 1717 on the family plantation, "The Oaks", near Charleston, Province of South Carolina. He was the second son of Susan (née Amory) Middleton (1690-1722) and Arthur Middleton (1681–1737), a wealthy planter who had served as an acting governor of South Carolina.[2] His grandfather, Edward Middleton, emigrated from England via Barbados.[3]

        Henry was educated in England before returning to South Carolina to inherit his father's plantation. He became one of the largest landowners in the colony, owning 50,000 acres (200 km2) and about 800 slaves.[2]

        Public career

        Middleton served in a variety of public offices in South Carolina. He was a justice of the peace and a member of the Commons House of Assembly, where he was elected speaker in 1747, 1754, and 1755.[2] He was a member of provincial council,[4] but resigned in 1770 in opposition to British policy.[2]

        In 1774, at the outset of the American Revolution, Middleton was selected as a delegate to the Continental Congress.[5] He served as that body's president during the last few days of the First Continental Congress, following the departure of Peyton Randolph.[6] Middleton opposed declaring independence from Great Britain, and resigned from the Second Continental Congress in February 1776 when more radical delegates began pushing for independence.[2] He was succeeded in Congress by his son, Arthur Middleton (1742–1787), who was more radical than his father and became a signer of the Declaration of Independence.[2]

        After Middleton's return to South Carolina, he was elected president of the provincial congress and, beginning on November 16, 1775, served on the council of safety.[2] In 1776, he and his son Arthur helped frame a temporary state constitution.[2] In 1779, he became a state senator in the new government.[2]

        When Charleston was captured by the British in 1780, Middleton accepted defeat and status as a British subject.[7] This reversal apparently did not damage his reputation in the long run, due to his previous support of the Revolution, and he did not suffer the fate of having his estates confiscated, as many Loyalists did after the war.[2]

        Personal life

        In 1741, Middleton was married to Mary Baker Williams (1721–1761), the daughter of John Williams, an early South Carolina planter who began building what is today known as Middleton Place around 1730.[8] Together, Henry and Mary were the parents of five sons and seven daughters, only seven of whom survived to adulthood, including:[2]

        • Arthur Middleton (1742–1787), a signer of the Declaration of Independence who married Mary Izard (1747–1814).
        • Henrietta Middleton (1750–1792), who married Governor Edward Rutledge (1749–1800).
        • Thomas Middleton (1753–1797), who married Anne Manigault (1762–1811).
        • Hester Middleton (1754–1789), who married Charles Drayton (1743–1820)
        • Sarah Middleton (1756–1784), who was the first wife of Charles Cotesworth Pinckney (1746–1825).
        • Mary Middleton (1757-1825), who married Peter Smith.
        • Susannah Middleton (1760–1834), who married Continental Congressman John Parker (1759–1832).

        After Mary's death in 1761, Middleton would go on to marry twice more. His second marriage was to Maria Henrietta Bull (1722–1772), daughter of William Bull Sr., the Lieutenant governor of South Carolina, in 1762.[7] His second wife's sister, Charlotta (née Bull) Drayton, was the mother of Continental Congressman William Henry Drayton, and her brother, William Bull II, served as Governor of South Carolina before leaving the colony in 1782 when British troops were evacuated at the end of the War.[7]

        After his second wife's death in 1772, he married for the third time, although it was her fourth marriage, to Lady Mary McKenzie,[2] the daughter of George Mackenzie, 3rd Earl of Cromartie, in 1776.[7] Among Lady Mary's brothers were John Mackenzie, Lord MacLeod and George Mackenzie. Her father was a Scottish nobleman who followed Charles Edward Stuart, the Jacobite Pretender. The Earl of Cromartie was tried and sentenced to death, but he obtained a conditional pardon although his peerage was forfeited.[9]

        Middleton died on June 13, 1784 in Charleston.[2] He was buried at Goosecreek Churchyard, St. James Parish, Berkeley County, South Carolina.[10]

        Descendants

        His grandson, also named Henry (1770–1846), had a long career in politics. He was Governor of South Carolina (1810–1812), U.S. Representative (1815–1819), and the minister to Russia (1820–1830). Henry had fourteen children, including Williams Middleton and Edward Middleton.[2]

        References

        1. "Portrait of a Gentleman, thought to be Henry Middleton (1717–1784) c. 1771". philipmould.com. Retrieved August 16, 2010.
        2. Van Deusen, John G. (1961). "Middleton, Henry". Dictionary of American Biography. 6 (revised ed.). New York: Scribner's. p. 600.
        3. "Middleton Place And Middleton Family Stories, Enslaved Charleston History, Plantation Life". www.middletonplace.org. Middleton Place. Retrieved 4 June 2019.
        4. Edgar, Walter; Bailey, N. Louise (1977). Biographical Directory of the South Car- olina House of Representatives. Vol. 2, The Commons House of Assembly, 1692–1775. Columbia: University of South Carolina Press.
        5. McCrady, Edward (1901). The History of South Carolina in the Revolution, 1775–1780. New York: Macmillan Publishers.
        6. Calvin C. Jillson and Rick K. Wilson, Congressional Dynamics: Structure, Coordination, and Choice in the First American Congress, 1774–1789 (Stanford University Press, 1994), 51.
        7. "Middleton, Henry (1717-1784)". www.scencyclopedia.org. South Carolina Encyclopedia. Retrieved 4 June 2019.
        8. Cheves, Langdon (July 1900). Middleton of South Carolina. South Carolina Historical and Genealogical Magazine. pp. 228–62.
        9. Fraser, William. (1876). The Earls of Cromartie, Their Kindred, Country and Correspondence. Vol. 1. p. cclvi. Edinburgh.
        10. "MIDDLETON, Henry - Biographical Information". bioguide.congress.gov. Biographical Directory of the United States Congress. Retrieved 4 June 2019.
        Political offices
        Preceded by
        Peyton Randolph
        President of the First Continental Congress
        October 22, 1774 – October 26, 1774
        Succeeded by
        Peyton Randolph
        (as President of the Second Continental Congress)
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