Everything about Rufus King totally explained
» This article is about the signer of the U.S. Constitution and senator from New York. For his grandson, a Union Army General, see Rufus King (general).
Rufus King (
March 24,
1755 –
April 29,
1827) was an
American lawyer, politician, and diplomat. He was a delegate from
Massachusetts to the
Continental Congress and the Constitutional Convention. He represented
New York in the
United States Senate, served as Minister to Britain, and was the
Federalist candidate for both
Vice President (1804, 1808) and
President of the United States (1816).
Career
Rufus King was born in
Scarborough, which was then a part of
Massachusetts but is now in the state of
Maine. King attended Dummer Academy (now
The Governor's Academy) and
Harvard College, graduating in 1777. He began to read law under
Theophilus Parsons, but his studies were interrupted in 1778 when King volunteered for
militia duty in the
American Revolutionary War. Appointed a major, he served as an aide to General
John Glover in the
Battle of Rhode Island. After the campaign, King returned to his apprenticeship under Parsons until he was admitted to the bar in 1780. He began a legal practice in
Newburyport, Massachusetts. King was first elected to the Massachusetts state assembly in 1783, and returned there each year until 1785.
Massachusetts sent him to the
Confederation Congress from 1784 to 1787.
Politics
In 1787, King was sent to the
Constitutional Convention, where he worked closely with
Alexander Hamilton on the
Committee of Style and Arrangement to prepare the final draft. He returned home and went to work to get the Constitution ratified and to position himself to be named to the U.S. Senate. He was only partially successful. Massachusetts ratified the Constitution, but his efforts to be elected to the Senate failed.
At Hamilton's urging he moved to
New York City and was elected to the New York state legislature in 1788. When the
U.S. Constitution took effect, the legislature disagreed on who should serve in the state's second
United States Senate seat. Governor
George Clinton proposed Rufus King as a compromise candidate, and he was elected, representing New York in the Senate from 1789 to 1796 and again from 1813 to 1825.
Diplomat and national candidate
King played a major diplomatic role as the Minister to the Court of St. James (Britain) from 1796 to 1803 and again from 1825 to 1826. Although he was a leading Federalist,
Thomas Jefferson kept him in office until King asked to be relieved. He successfully settled disputes that the
Jay Treaty had opened for negotiation. His term was marked by friendship between the U.S. and Britain; it became hostility after 1805. While in Britain, he was in close personal contact with South American revolutionary
Francisco de Miranda and facilitated Miranda's trip to the United States in search of support for his failed 1806 expedition to
Venezuela.
He was the unsuccessful
Federalist Party candidate for Vice President in
1804 and
1808. In April 1816 he lost the election for
Governor of New York to the incumbent
Daniel D. Tompkins of the
Democratic-Republican Party - Tompkins 45,412 votes, King 38,647. Later that year, King was nominated by the Federalists for President in
1816, again losing. King was the last presidential candidate to be nominated by the Federalists during their period as one of the participants in the
two-party system of the United States.
Anti-Slavery
King had a long history of opposition to the expansion of slavery and the slave trade. This stand was a product of moral conviction which coincided with the political realities of New England federalism. In 1785, King first opposed the extension of slavery into the Northwest Territories, although he was willing "to suffer the continuance of slaves until they can be gradually emancipated in states already overrun with them." He didn't press the issue very hard at this time, however. At the Constitutional Convention he indicated his opposition to slavery was based upon the political and economic advantages it gave to the South, and he was willing to compromise for political reasons.
In 1817, he supported Senate action seeking abolition of the slave trade, and in 1819 spoke strongly for the antislavery amendment in the Missouri statehood bill. In 1819, his arguments were political, economic, and humanitarian; the extension of slavery would adversely affect the security of the principles of freedom and liberty. After the Missouri Compromise he continued to support gradual emancipation in various ways. [Arbena1965]
One of King’s most consequential interventions in Congress was in regards to the 1820
Tallmadge Amendment debate, which sought to limit slavery in
Missouri as it became a state. King appealed to the now fading Revolutionary sense of equality to attack slavery. He declared that "laws or compacts imposing any such condition upon any human being are absolutely void, because contrary to the law of nature, which is the law of God, by which he makes his ways known to man, and is paramount to all human control." Though the amendment failed and Missouri became a slave state. King reflected the gradual ideological evolution of the
Atlantic abolitionist movement. According to
David Brion Davis, this may have been the first time anywhere in the world that a political leader openly attacked slavery’s perceived legality in such a radical manner. In fact, the impact of King’s declaration was such that
Douglass R. Egerton even suggests a possible link of inspiration between King’s declaration in
Congress and the controversial
Denmark Vesey slave uprising of
1822.
Family
Many of King's family were also involved in politics and he'd a number of prominent descendants. His brother
William King was the first governor of Maine and a prominent merchant, and his other brother,
Cyrus King, was a
U. S. Congressman.
In 1786, King married Mary Alsop, the daughter of Congressman
John Alsop, and their sons
John Alsop King and
James Gore King also went on to serve in the Congress. Another son, Charles King, was a president of Columbia College, the father of
Rufus King, and the grandfather of his namesake,
Charles King. Rufus King's son Edward moved to Ohio and founded
Cincinnati Law School, while his youngest son Frederick became a well-respected physician.
King died on
April 29, 1827 at his farm in
Jamaica, Queens. He is buried in the Grace Church Cemetery in Jamaica,
Queens, New York. The home that King purchased in 1805 and expanded thereafter and some of his farm make up King Park in Queens. The home, called
King Manor, is now a museum and is open to the public.
The Rufus King School, also known as P.S. 26, in
Fresh Meadows, New York, was named after King, as was the Rufus King Hall on the
CUNY Queens College campus.
Rufus King High School in
Milwaukee,
Wisconsin is named after his grandson,
Rufus King, who moved to Milwaukee to become the editor of the
Milwaukee Sentinel. The school's teams are known as the Generals, because Rufus King the younger was a
brigadier general in the
Civil War. He was instrumental in forming Wisconsin's renowned Iron Brigade. He and the Iron Brigade participated in the
Second Battle of Bull Run,
Fredericksburg, and
Gainesville. He was also Milwaukee's first superintendent of public schools, and a regent of The University of Wisconsin.
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