Ralph Izard

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Ralph Izard (January 23, 1741/1742Template:Spaced ndashMay 30, 1804) was an American politician who served as president pro tempore of the United States Senate in 1794.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>

Early life

File:Coat of Arms of Ralph Izard.svg
Coat of Arms of Ralph Izard

Izard was born at "The Elms" near Charleston, South Carolina. He was the son of Henry Izard and Margaret Johnson. His great-grandfather was Ralph Izard<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> (1660–1710), who was born in Dorchester, England and settled in South Carolina. His maternal grandfather was Province of South Carolina Governor Robert Johnson. Izard's parents died when he was a small child, and only one of his siblings survived to adulthood.

He spent most of his childhood and youth studying in England: he attended a school in Hackney, London, and matriculated as a fellow-commoner at Trinity Hall, Cambridge.<ref>Template:Acad</ref> Izard returned to America in 1764, but did not remain in South Carolina for long.<ref name="bioguideretro"/> He was elected the American Society (later the American Philosophical Society) in 1768.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>

Career

He resided in London in 1771 and moved to Paris in 1776. He was appointed commissioner to the Court of Tuscany by the Continental Congress in 1776, but was recalled in 1779. He returned to America in 1780 and pledged his large estate in South Carolina for the payment of war ships to be used in the American Revolutionary War. He was a member of the Continental Congress in 1782 and 1783. In 1788, he was elected to the United States Senate and served from March 4, 1789, to March 4, 1795, serving as President pro tempore of the Senate during the Third Congress.<ref name="bioguideretro"/> In August 1789, after the Senate rejected Benjamin Fishbourn for collector of Savannah, Georgia, President George Washington entered the Senate chamber and demanded to know why his nominee was rejected in unusual display of emotion. "The president showed [a] great want of temper... when one of his nominations was rejected," Izard wrote.

Later life

Izard was one of the founders of the College of Charleston. Izard retired from public life to the care of his estates in 1795. Within two years of his retirement, he was stricken with an untreatable illness that paralyzed him on one side of his body.

Death and legacy

File:Mrs. Ralph Izard (Alice De Lancey, 1746-47–1832) MET DP162167.jpg
Alice De Lancey Izard, portrait by Thomas Gainsborough

In 1767, Izard married Alice De Lancey, who was a niece of James DeLancey and a descendant of Stephanus Van Cortlandt and Gertrude Schuyler. After Izard moved to America in 1780 to focus on his work towards the American Revolution, his family stayed in France until 1783 when they joined him in South Carolina. Izard and his wife had fourteen children together, but only seven survived past early childhood, including:<ref>http://articles.westga.edu:2609/servlet/Sabin?dd=0&locID=carr52158&d1=SABCA04589100&srchtp=a&c=1&an=SABCA04589100&df=f&d2=14&docNum=CY3803265979&h2=1&vrsn=1.0&af=RN&d6=14&d3=14&ste=10&stp=Author&d4=0.5&d5=d6&ae=CY103265966Template:Dead link</ref>

Izard died near Charleston on May 30, 1804, at the age of sixty-two. He is interred in the churchyard of St. James Goose Creek Episcopal Church, near Charleston.<ref name="bioguideretro">Template:Cite web</ref>

Izard was a slaveholder.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref><ref>Template:Citation</ref>

Descendants

A great-grandson of Ralph Izard was Charles Manigault Morris who was also a great-grandson of Lewis Morris. A cousin of Charles Manigault Morris was General Arthur Middleton Manigault who was descended from Mary Izard-cousin of Ralph Izard.

A cousin Sarah Izard married South Carolina Loyalist Governor Lord William Campbell. A cousin twice removed was Elizabeth {Eliza} Izard who was a daughter-in-law of Congressman of South Carolina Thomas Pinckney. One niece Elizabeth Izard married Alexander Wright (1751–?), a son of Loyalist Governor of Georgia James Wright (governor).

References

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