Willie Blount
Template:Short description Template:Use mdy dates Template:Infobox Governor Willie Blount (April 18, 1768Template:SpndSeptember 10, 1835)<ref>Some sources list Blount's year of birth as 1767; his tombstone gives his date of birth as April 18, 1768.</ref> was an American politician who served as the third Governor of Tennessee from 1809 to 1815. Blount's efforts to raise funds and soldiers during the War of 1812 earned Tennessee the nickname, "Volunteer State."<ref name=owens /> He was the younger half-brother of Southwest Territory governor, William Blount. He was a member of the Democratic-Republican Party.
Early life
Willie (pronounced "Wiley") was born at Blount Hall in Bertie County in the Province of North Carolina, to Jacob Blount and his second wife, Hannah Salter Blount.<ref name=crawford /> He studied at the College of New Jersey (modern Princeton) and King's College (modern Columbia). He read law with Judge John Sitgreaves in New Bern, North Carolina, in the 1780s, and was admitted to the North Carolina bar.<ref name=owens>Anne-Leslie Owens, "Willie Blount," Tennessee Encyclopedia of History and Culture, 2009. Retrieved: July 10, 2012.</ref><ref name=crawford>Mary B. Clark, "Willie Blount," Governors of Tennessee, Vol. 3 (Memphis State University Press, 1979), pp. 79–95.</ref>
In 1790, Willie's brother, William, was appointed governor of the newly created Southwest Territory, and Willie accompanied him to the new territory to serve as his private secretary. When Tennessee was admitted as a state in 1796, the state legislature appointed Willie Blount to the Superior Court of Law and Equity (the state's highest court at the time), though he either declined the appointment or resigned before issuing any opinions.<ref name=tsla /><ref name=owens />
Following William Blount's death in 1800, Willie Blount took charge of the family finances, and quickly discovered that his brother's risky land investments had left the family deeply in debt.<ref name=crawford /> In 1802, he moved to Montgomery County, Tennessee, where he established a large plantation, and gradually began restoring the family's financial affairs. He represented Montgomery County in the Tennessee House of Representatives from 1807 to 1809.<ref name=crawford />
Governor
In 1809, Blount ran for governor against former U.S. senator and frontiersman, William Cocke (the incumbent, John Sevier, was term-limited). Population shifts had begun to favor Middle and West Tennessee over Cocke's home of East Tennessee,<ref name=crawford /> and Blount won the election, 13,686 votes to 8,435.<ref name=ourcampaigns>Our Campaigns – Willie Blount. Retrieved: January 19, 2013.</ref> He was reelected without opposition in 1811 and 1813.<ref name=ourcampaigns />
Like his predecessors, Sevier and Archibald Roane, much of Blount's governorship was spent dealing with conflicts between Indians and white settlers.<ref name=crawford /> He persistently sought to acquire land from the Cherokee and Chickasaw, and attempted to suppress the activities of hostile Choctaws and Creeks. Early in his term, he suggested in a letter to Secretary of War William Eustis that the Cherokee be relocated to lands west of the Mississippi River, an act carried out two decades later by President Andrew Jackson.<ref name=crawford /> He also blamed northern tribes for encouraging the Creeks to harass white settlers, and at one point requested Eustis send troops to sever communications between northern and southern tribes.<ref name=crawford />
During Blount's tenure, Tennessee was divided into five judicial districts. He signed anti-counterfeiting measures, and enacted legislation to settle conflicting land claims from Tennessee's pre-statehood period.<ref name=crawford /> Blount also sought navigational improvements, overseeing the completion of the Cumberland Turnpike (connecting Nashville and Knoxville), and calling for a navigable waterway from Tennessee to Mobile, Alabama.<ref name=crawford />
During his second and third terms, Blount was occupied with the War of 1812. During the first few months of the war, he struggled with a lack of communication with the War Department as he awaited permission to order the militia (led by an increasingly impatient Andrew Jackson) south to New Orleans. Following the Fort Mims massacre in 1813, a call to arms issued by Blount was met by 3,500 volunteers. These were divided into two divisions led by Jackson and John Cocke, and ordered south to suppress the hostile Creek tribes. Blount managed to raise over $300,000 for the expedition, an astonishing sum of money for the time.<ref name=crawford /> The surprising number of volunteers earned Tennessee the nickname, "Volunteer State."<ref name=owens /><ref name=crawford />
At the end of the War of 1812, Blount was at the height of his popularity. Historian J. G. M. Ramsey wrote, "Willie's popularity with the masses has rarely been equalled."<ref name=crawford /> In 1815, constitutional term limits prevented him from seeking a fourth consecutive term.
Later life
In 1827, Blount ran for governor against Congressman Sam Houston and ex-Congressman Newton Cannon (the incumbent, William Carroll, was term-limited), but placed a distant third, winning just 1,784 votes to 44,243 for Houston and 32,929 for Cannon.<ref name=ourcampaigns /> In 1834, Blount represented Montgomery County at the state constitutional convention, which drafted a new document to replace the one in effect since the state had been admitted in 1796, and which has many similarities to the 1870 constitution which is still in effect.<ref name=owens /> One of the chief differences between the 1834 constitution and its predecessor was considerably greater powers being granted to the executive branch than in the earlier document.
Blount died in Nashville on September 10, 1835, and is interred at Greenwood Cemetery in Clarksville.<ref name=owens /> In 1878, the state placed a large monument on his grave.<ref name=crawford />
Family and legacy
Blount married Lucinda Baker in 1802. They had two daughters, Eliza Ann Blount and Lucinda Blount.<ref name=crawford />
Blount was the younger half-brother of William Blount, a signer of the United States Constitution and governor of the Southwest Territory. Another half-brother, Thomas Blount, was a congressman from North Carolina, and a nephew, William Grainger Blount, represented Tennessee's 2nd district in Congress from 1815 to 1819. Willie Blount was the great-great grandfather of Harry Hill McAlister, who served as Governor of Tennessee in the 1930s.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>
In 1803, Blount published a school textbook, A Catechetical Exposition of the Constitution of the State of Tennessee, which was printed by early Knoxville newspaper editor George Roulstone. Blount later made plans to write a comprehensive history of the state, but this work was never completed.<ref name=crawford />
Blount County, Alabama, is named in Willie Blount's honor for his assistance during the Creek War.<ref>Alabama Department of Archives and History, Blount County. Retrieved: July 10, 2012.</ref><ref>Template:Cite web</ref>
References
External links
- Finding Aid for Governor Willie Blount Papers – Tennessee State Library and Archives
Template:S-start Template:S-off Template:S-bef Template:S-ttl Template:S-aft Template:S-end
- 1768 births
- 1835 deaths
- People from Bertie County, North Carolina
- People from Montgomery County, Tennessee
- Tennessee Democratic-Republicans
- American people of English descent
- Governors of Tennessee
- Members of the Tennessee House of Representatives
- Princeton University alumni
- Columbia College, Columbia University alumni
- Blount County, Alabama
- Democratic-Republican Party state governors of the United States
- 19th-century members of the Tennessee General Assembly