Tripti Joshi (Editor)

Jesse B Thomas

Updated on
Edit
Like
Comment
Share on FacebookTweet on TwitterShare on LinkedInShare on Reddit
Preceded by
  
none

Succeeded by
  
John McLean


Name
  
Jesse Thomas

Preceded by
  
Benjamin Parke

Resigned
  
March 4, 1829

Jesse B. Thomas httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommons33

Role
  
Former United States Senator

Died
  
May 2, 1853, Mount Vernon, Ohio, United States

Political party
  
National Republican Party, Democratic-Republican Party

Previous office
  
Senator (IL) 1818–1829

Jesse Burgess Thomas (1777 – May 2, 1853) was born in Shepherdstown, Virginia (now West Virginia). He served as a delegate from the Indiana Territory to the tenth Congress and later served as one of Illinois's first two Senators.

Biography

Thomas studied law in Mason County, Kentucky and served as the county clerk until 1803. He then moved north of the Ohio River to Lawrenceburg in Indiana Territory, where he continued to practice law and became the territorial deputy attorney general in 1805. In the same year, he began serving as a delegate to the Territorial House of Representatives, and was the body's speaker from 1805 to 1808.

When Benjamin Parke resigned as the territorial delegate to Congress, Thomas was appointed to fill the vacancy from October 22, 1808 until he moved to Kaskaskia, Illinois on March 3, 1809. Thomas was succeeded as territorial delegate by Jonathan Jennings, the future Governor of the state of Indiana.

When Illinois became a territory in 1809, Thomas was appointed judge of the United States court for the northwestern judicial district, a position he held from 1809 until 1818. In 1818, he presided over the Illinois State Constitutional Convention and upon admittance to the Union, he served as Democratic-Republican Senator for two terms (1818–1829).

In 1820, Thomas proposed the Missouri Compromise to limit slavery above the southern border of Missouri. In 1823 he switched parties and became a Crawford Republican. He served as chairman on the Committee on Public Lands in the 16th and 18th Congresses. He refused the nomination for a third term and moved to Mount Vernon, Ohio in 1829, where he lived until he committed suicide on May 2, 1853. He is buried in Mound View Cemetery.

Thomas's nephew, Jesse B. Thomas, Jr. served as Illinois Attorney General and on the Illinois Supreme Court.

References

Jesse B. Thomas Wikipedia