On June 29, 1852, Henry Clay asked his son Thomas to
come and sit by his
bedside. Just before the hour of noon, "The Great Compromiser" drew his last
breath. At that point his life became a completed major chapter in the political history
of the United States. Henry Clay had lived through and served in some political position
for a half a century. No single statement would adequately cover his active public life.
Clay claimed to have been cradled in the American
Revolution, a claim which had some substantial fact behind it. He was born the seventh son
of nine children to Reverend John and Elizabeth Hudson Clay on April 12, 1777. As a
three-year-old he had seen the British troops under the notorious raider Banastre Tarleton
ransack his family home.
As a youth Clay had grown up in a rural slaveholding
environment in Hanover County, Virginia, a county which had spawned Patrick Henry and
other Virginia political leaders. In his political life Clay was to make some stout claim
to having been a mill boy of the Slashes. More importantly his widowed mother had married
Captain Henry Watkins who was able to get the adolescent Clay into Peter Tinsleys
chancery office as a clerk. Clay entered this public service in a lowly position with only
a limited amount of formal education. In Tinsleys office, and then as an amanuensis
in Chancellor George Wythes office the young Clay developed a clear and precise
angular style handwriting which remained clear until almost the moment of his death.
During more than half a century Henry Clay was to produce literally thousands of
handwritten letters, legal briefs, and public documents.
Little could that youth of twenty years of age, and a newly
licensed attorney to practice his profession in Virginia, have imagined on that November
morning, 1797, when he set forth to find clients and fortune in Kentucky, that the
expanding West would become so vital a part of his life. In Lexington, Clay presented his
Virginia license to the court and was given one to practice in Kentucky. Almost
immediately the young Virginian entered into the public and social life of rapidly
expanding central Kentucky. Within a decade he established a reputation as a highly
successful trial lawyer.
He made a successful marriage with Lucretia Hart, the daughter of one
of Kentuckys major pioneering land families. Almost by force of environmental and
family circumstances, Henry Clay was to become a major land owner, livestock breeder, and
farmer. For half a century Ashland was to become not only a family home to the Clays, but
also a focal agricultural center in Kentucky, and a national one in politics.
Henry Clay began his political career in 1803 when he was
elected to the Kentucky General Assembly. In that body his
Jeffersonian views were pitted against the conservative federalist one of Humphrey
Marshall, a fact which resulted in a somewhat comic opera duel. In 1806 Clay was employed
to defend Aaron Burr, a ticklish task which he abandoned when he was appointed to the
United States Senate that year at the very young age of twenty-nine years. On January 11,
1808, he was chosen Speaker of the House of Representatives, and in January 1810 he was
returned to the U.S. Senate. However,
in August of that year he was elected once again to the House of Representatives and
served as speaker in the Twelfth, Thirteenth, Fourteenth, Fifteenth, and Sixteenth
Congresses. Clays was to be a major voice in the troubled years in American-British
relations from 1808-1814. He served as commissioner to the joint American-British peace
negotiations in Ghent, Belgium in 1814.
Back home after 1815, Henry Clay became involved in nearly
every national issue. He opposed the Adams-DOnis Treaty, and supported the
independence of the Latin American republics. The issues, however, which thrust him into the political
limelight were the Missouri Compromise, the banking issues, opposition to Andrew Jackson,
and promotion of his American System. No doubt the most important of these was the
negotiation of the Missouri Compromise which was fundamental in maintaining American
unity, providing some kind of workable sectional policy regarding slavery expansion, and
some kind of western policy. At heart Henry Clay favored the gradual abolition of slavery
as demonstrated in his strong support of the American Colonization Society attempt.
There burned deeply in the Clay psyche a yearning to be
President of the United States. He made his first gamble for this office in 1824 with only a
remote chance of winning. In 1832 he once again attempted to be elected president. He
suffered his most disappointing loss for the office in 1844.
At the moment Henry Clay lay dying in Washington, he must
have looked back upon his career as lawyer, state representative, United States Senator,
Congressman, Speaker of the House, a peace commissioner, Secretary of State, on the
Missouri Compromise, the compromise tariff bill revision in 1833, his American System, the
Texas question, and the Compromise of 1850, his greatest victory.
Through the bitter raw political years in American history,
Henry Clay prevailed. Even in the face of great family tragedy, he prevailed.
Contemporaries branded him with numerous political epithets, but these he survived. Few
American politicians could claim so many victories, or engage in so many gambles, and
still claim an exalted place in political history. Perhaps Henry Clays greatest
honor was the post mortem one he received when a great majority of American historians
honored him as having been one of the greatest United States Senators. The name of Henry
Clay was stamped deeply on the American political scene during his lifetime. But perhaps
his true greatness has emerged since in the overflowing stream of impressive monographs
and biographies of his life and achievements. In his image is reflected that of a young
republic undergoing the trials and tribulations of becoming a mature, powerful nation.
by Dr. Thomas D. Clark
HENRY CLAY CHRONOLOGY
1777 - Born: Hanover County, Virginia (April 12)
1781 - Father dies
1791 - Mother moves to Kentucky
1792 - Goes to work for George Wythe
1796 - Studies law under Robert Brooke
1797 - Admitted to bar; moves to Kentucky
1799 - Marries Lucretia Hart
1803 - Elected to state legislature
1805 - Law professor at Transylvania University
1806 - Sent to U.S. Senate at age 29
1807 - Elected to state legislature and Speaker of the
House
1809 - Elected to U.S. Senate
1811 - Elected to U.S. House of Representatives and Speaker of the House
1814 - Peace Commissioner at Ghent
1816 - Presides at formation of American Colonization
Society
1821 - Authors the second Missouri Compromise
1824 - Appointed Secretary of State under John Quincy Adams
1828 - Rejects offer of appointment to Supreme Court
1829 - Returns to Lexington to farm and practice law
1831 - Elected U.S. Senate; nominated for Presidency
1832 - Authors Compromise Tariff Act
1836 - Elected President of American Colonization Society
1842 - Resigns as U.S. Senator
1844 - Nominated for Presidency
1849 - Returns to U.S. Senate
1850 - Authors Compromise of 1850
1851 - Resigns from U.S. Senate
1852 - Dies in Washington D.C. (June 29)
More Information on Henry Clay
Henry Clay and the Supreme
Court
Henry Clay and Horse Racing
The Henry Clay Monument
Henry Clay's Will
Lincoln's Eulogy for Henry Clay
Henry Clay's 1847 Market Speech on Mexican War

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