Philander Smith (January 11, 1765 – June 29, 1824) was a colonial-era settler of the Natchez District of Mississippi in North America. He was involved in the political movement to make the district an American territory rather than a Spanish colony. In 1807 he served as foreperson of the grand jury in the Aaron Burr treason indictment. He served in the Mississippi territorial legislature from 1804 to 1811.
Biography
editHe arrived in the Natchez District of West Florida with his Loyalist parents in 1776.[1] He was the eighth of 12 children.[2]: 68 In 1797 he was a signatory, along with Peter Bryan Bruin, Gabriel Benoist, Daniel Clark, Frederick Kimball, William Ratliff, Roger Dixon, and Isaac Galliard, to a document known as the "Memorial to Congress by Permanent Committee of the Natchez District."[3] The group presented themselves as democratically elected representatives of the white land-owning settlers of Mississippi, and signaled that they would rather be associated with the United States than their current Spanish governors, writing that "...to prevent anarchy, and confusion (when his Catholic Majesty may be pleased to withdraw his troops & cause this Country to be given up to the U.S.) prepare a Constitution or form of Govt for this territory which shall in your wisdom appear the best calculated to ensure to the inhabitants of this settlement in its infant State the blessings of peace safety & good order and that the officers of the new government may have the confidence of the people..."[3] They requested that the U.S. Congress allow the continuation of slavery in the Mississippi lands, writing, "Your memorialists beg leave to represent that great part of the labour in this Country is performed by slaves, as in the Southern States, and without which, in their present situation the farms in this District would be but of little more value to the present occupiers than equal quantity of waste land. From this consideration your Memorialists request that the system of slavery may be continued as heretofore in this territory."[4] In 1798 when the Mississippi Territory was organized he administered the oath of allegiance to the United States to several landed literate white men in his neighborhood, including his brother Calvin Smith.[5] In 1807 he was foreperson of the Mississippi Territory grand jury in the Aaron Burr conspiracy case.[6] He served in the Mississippi Territorial legislature from 1804 to 1811, and as speaker of the territorial house 1804 to 1805.[2]: 71 He was buried in a family graveyard near his since-burned plantation along Second Creek.[2]: 69
References
edit- ^ "In old Natchez / by Catharine Van Court". HathiTrust. hdl:2027/uiug.30112124431062. Retrieved 2024-07-14.
- ^ a b c "Records of the Rev. Henry Smith (Puritan pastor) and his family". HathiTrust. hdl:2027/wu.89066292442. Retrieved 2024-07-14.
- ^ a b Territorial Papers (1937), p. 10.
- ^ Soliman (2018), pp. 42–43.
- ^ "490-A13-1.tif - Oaths of Allegiance to United States of America, 1798-1799". da.mdah.ms.gov. Retrieved 2024-08-29.
- ^ Kennedy, Roger G. (2000-09-28). "Chapter 20". Burr, Hamilton, and Jefferson. Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/acprof:oso/9780195140552.001.0001. ISBN 978-0-19-514055-2.
Sources
edit- Carter, Clarence Edwin, ed. (1937). Territorial Papers of the United States. Records of the U.S. Department of State. Vol. V: The Territory of Mississippi, 1798–1817. Washington, D.C.: U.S. Government Printing Office. Publication No. 1032 (E173 147) – via HathiTrust; digitized by Google Books from a copy held by the University of California Libraries. This article incorporates text from this source, which is in the public domain.
- Soliman, Anthony Albey (June 2018). "For All Such, a Country is Provided": Choctaw Removal, Slave Trading, and Law in Southwestern Mississippi, 1800–1841 (M.A. thesis). San Luis Obispo, California: California Polytechnic State University. doi:10.15368/theses.2018.61.