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Encyclopedia Britannica - Main :: BEC-BER |
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BENTON, THOMAS HART (1782-1858) , American statesman, was born at Hillsborough, Orange county, North Carolina, on the 14th of March 1782. His father, an Englishman of refinement and scholarship, died in 1790, leaving the boy under the influence of a very superior mother, from whom he received lessons in book learning, piety and temperance quite unusual in the frontier country. His home studies, facilitated by his father's fine library, were supplemented by a brief stay at the university of North Carolina (Chapel Hill) in 1799. The family removed, probably in this year, to a large tract of land which had been acquired by the father on the outskirts of the Indian country (at Benton Town, now Leipers Fork) near Franklin, Tennessee. The following years, during which Benton was at various times school teacher, farmer, lawyer and politician, were the distinctively formative period of his life. His intense democracy and many features of his boldly cast personality were perfectly representative of the border people among whom he lived; al-though his education, social standing
The events of Benton's political life are associated primarily with three things: the second United States Bank, westward expansion and slavery. In the long struggles over the bank, the deposits and the "expunging resolution" (i.e. the resolution to expunge from the records of the Senate the vote of censure of President Jackson for his removal of the government deposits from the bank), Benton led the Jackson Democrats. His opposition to a national bank and insistence on the peculiar virtues of " hard money," whence his sobriquet of " Old Bullion," went back to his Tennessee days. In all that concerned the expansion of the country and the fortunes of the West no public man was more consistent or more influential than Benton, and none so clear of vision. Reared on the border, and representing a state long the farthermost outpost across the Mississippi in the Indian country, he held the ultra-American views of his section as regarded foreign relations generally, and the "manifest destiny" of expansion westward especially. It was quite natural that he should advocate the removal westward of the Indian tribes, should urge the encouragement of trade with Sante Fe (New Mexico ), and should oppose the abandonment in the Spanishtreaty of 1819 of American claims to Texas
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Benton's entire career was eminently creditable, and he is, besides, one of the most picturesque figures in American political history. His political principleswhether as regarded lobbying, congressional jobbing, civil service or great issues of legislation and foreign affairswere of the highest. He was so independent that he had great dislike for caucuses, and despised party platformsalthough he never voted any but the Democratic ticket, even when his son-in-law, J. C. Fremont, was the Republican presidential candidate in 1856; nor would he accept instructions from the Missouri legislature. His career shows no truckling to self- interest
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history and the exploration of the West had few equalsin the latter none. He acted always with uncalculating boldness, and defended his acts with extraordinary courage and persistence. Benton wrote a Thirty Years' View . . . of the American Government (2 vols., 1854-1856), characteristic of the author's personality; it is of great value for the history of his time. He also compiled an Abridgment of the Debates of Congress, 17891850 (16 vols., 18571861), likewise of great usefulness; and published a bitter review of the Dred Scott decision full of extremely valuable historical detailsHistorical and Legal Examination of . . . the Dred Scott Case (1857). All were written in the last eight years of his life and mostly in the last three. The best biography is that by W. M. Meigs, Life of Thomas Hart Benton (Philadelphia and London, 1904). See also Theodore Roosevelt's Thomas IIart Benton (Boston, 1887), in the " American Statesmen " series , which admirably brings out Benton's significance as a western man; and Joseph M. Rogers's Thomas Hart Benton (Philadelphia, 1905) in the " American Crisis " series .End of Article: BENTON, THOMAS HART (1782-1858) If you wish, you can link directly to this article.
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