Patrick Calhoun (immigrant)
Patrick Calhoun (11 June 1727– 15 January 1796),[1]:32 was born in County Donegal, Ireland, but emigrated to Virginia with his parents in 1733, and from there the family made their way to South Carolina. According to A Compendium of Irish Biography (1878):[2]
He and his family suffered severely during the war with the French and the Indians. Shortly after the peace of 1763 he was elected a member of the provincial legislature, and continued a member of that and afterwards of the state legislature (with the intermission of a single term) till his death in 1796. In the war of the Revolution he took an early, decided, and active part against the British. His son John Caldwell Calhoun (born in South Carolina in 1782, died in Washington on March 31, 1850) was Vice-President of the United States from 1825 to 1832, and held other important offices, and was undoubtedly the ablest and most uncompromising champion of slavery and the slave power in his day.
His great-grandson and namesake was the entrepreneur Patrick Calhoun.
References
- Meigs, William Montgomery (1917). The Life of John Caldwell Calhoun. G. E. Stechert. New York. p. 488., "elaborate and painstaking" says U.B. Phillips.
- "Patrick Calhoun", A Compendium of Irish Biography, 1878, retrieved 30 April 2016
- Dictionary of National Biography. London: Smith, Elder & Co. 1885–1900. .
- Reynolds, Jr., William R. (2012). Andrew Pickens: South Carolina Patriot in the Revolutionary War. Jefferson NC: McFarland & Company, Inc. ISBN 978-0-7864-6694-8.