Sneha Girap (Editor)

William Loughton Smith

Updated on
Edit
Like
Comment
Share on FacebookTweet on TwitterShare on LinkedInShare on Reddit
Preceded by
  
Position established

Name
  
William Smith

Succeeded by
  
Thomas Pinckney

Resigned
  
July 10, 1797


Preceded by
  
Himself

William Loughton Smith httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommonsthu

Preceded by
  
John Quincy Adams (1796)

Succeeded by
  
Thomas Sumter, Jr. (1809)

Role
  
Former U.S. Representative

Died
  
December 19, 1812, Charleston, South Carolina, United States

Previous office
  
Representative (SC 1st District) 1789–1797

Books
  
Journal of William Loughton Smith, 1790-1791

Other political affiliations
  
Federalist Party

Succeeded by
  
Robert Goodloe Harper

Member of congress start date
  
March 4, 1789

Alexander hamiltons letter to william loughton smith march 10 1796


William Loughton Smith (1758 – December 19, 1812) was an American lawyer, politician, and diplomat from Charleston, South Carolina. He represented South Carolina in the United States House of Representatives from 1789 until 1797, during which time he served as chairman of the Committee on Ways and Meanss chairman of the Committee on Ways and Means.

Contents

Smith was born in Charleston, South Carolina in 1758 to Benjamin Smith and Anne Loughton.

In 1774, Smith studied law at the Middle Temple in London, Great Britain and continued his studies in Geneva from 1774 to 1778. Smith remained in Europe for the remainder of the American Revolutionary War.

In 1783, Smith returned to South Carolina. He was admitted to the bar in 1784 and began practicing law in Charleston.

Political career

In 1784, Smith served as a member of the South Carolina privy council. In 1786, Smith was elected warden of the city of Charleston in 1786, equivalent to a city council member today. From 1787 to 1788, Smith served in the South Carolina House of Representatives.

Smith was elected as a Pro-Administration candidate to the First Congress in 1788 to South Carolina's 1st congressional district. Smith was reelected to the Second Congress and Third Congress. Smith later joined the Federalist Party and was reelected to the Fourth and Fifth Congress under that ticket. In the Third Congress, Smith served as chair of the Committee on Elections. In the Fourth and Fifth Congresses, Smith served as chair of the Committee on Ways and Means.

As chair of the Committee on Ways and Means, Smith acted as a Federalist floor leader and was known as a close collaborator and House spokesman for Treasury Secretary Alexander Hamilton.

On July 10, 1797, Smith resigned from Congress to serve as United States Ambassador to Portugal. He held the position until September 9, 1801, when he was recalled and took a leave of absence. Smith returned to Charleston and ran for Congress again in 1804, 1806, and 1808, but lost all of those elections to the Democratic-Republican Party candidate Robert Marion.

In 1808, Smith was commissioned as a lieutenant in the South Carolina Militia. That same year, Smith was elected to the South Carolina House of Representatives.

Later life & death

Following his career in politics, Smith served as president of the Santee Canal Company, vice president of the Charleston Library Society, and vice president of the St. Cecilia Society.

Smith died of an illness in Charleston, S.C., December 19, 1812. He was interred at in St. Philip’s Churchyard.

Political views

In a special session of United States Congress called by John Adams in 1797, Smith introduced ten resolutions calling for increased naval defense and shore fortifications in response to the growing crisis in Franco-American relations.

Smith was opposed to the emancipation of slaves, believing it would benefit neither whites nor blacks. As he explained on the floor of the House of Representatives on March 17, 1790:

""If the blacks did not intermarry with the whites, they would remain black until the end of time; for it was not contended that liberating them would whitewash them; if they did intermarry with the whites, then the white race would be extinct, and the American people would all be of mulatto breed. In whatever light, therefore, the subject was viewed, the folly of emancipation was manifest."

In 1808, his politics shifted away from Alexander Hamilton and toward Thomas Jefferson, with Smith embracing the Embargo Act of 1807 as a way to increase the U.S.'s self-sufficiency.

References

William Loughton Smith Wikipedia