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First Name: Thomas

Last Name: Pinckney

Birthplace: Charleston, SC, USA

Gender: Male

Branch: Army (1784 - present)







Date of Birth: 23 October 1750

Date of Death: 02 November 1828

Rank: Major General

Years Served:
Thomas Pinckney

   
Engagements:
•  Revolutionary War (1775 - 1783)
•  War of 1812

Biography:

Thomas Pinckney
Major General, U.S. Army

Thomas Pinckney was born on 23 October 1750 in Charleston, SC. His father, Charles Pinckney, was Chief Justice of South Carolina and his mother, Eliza Lucas, was prominent for introducing the cultivation of Indigo to the colonies. When Pinckney was 3, his father brought the family to Great Britain on colonial business, and after his father's death in 1758, Pinckney continued his education in Great Britain (at Westminster School and Christ Church, Oxford) and France.

Pinckney returned to South Carolina in 1774 and became an ardent Patriot in the American Revolution. In 1775, he was commissioned as Captain in the 1st South Carolina Regiment of the Continental Army. After seeing much action, he became an Aide-de-Camp to General Horatio Gates, and was captured by the British at the disastrous Battle of Camden in 1780. After recovering from his wounds, he was released in a prisoner exchange. In 1781, he fought under Lafayette in Virginia.

Post-War Period and Politics

After the war, Pinckney spent some years running his plantations before he returned to politics. Pinckney was the 36th Governor of South Carolina from 1787-89, most notably presiding over the state convention that ratified the new U.S. Constitution, and then served in the South Carolina House of Representatives in 1791. He was appointed by President George Washington to be the U.S. Minister (Ambassador) to Great Britain in 1792. While there, he was unable to get British concessions on issues such as impressment or the Northwest frontier forts, so that Washington sent John Jay as a special envoy to negotiate the controversial Jay Treaty. For part of his tenure (1794-95) as Ambassador in Britain, Pinckney also served as Envoy Extraordinary to Spain. He arranged the Treaty of San Lorenzo, also known as Pinckney's Treaty, with Spain in 1795.

Pinckney's diplomatic success with Spain made him popular at home, and on his return the Federalist Party made him a candidate in the 1796 presidential election (as the intended running-mate of John Adams). While Adams won the presidential election, complicated scheming to ensure that Pinckney would have more presidential votes than Adams, ended up making their opponent Thomas Jefferson vice-president and Pinckney finish in third place in the presidential race. (At the time, there were no distinct electoral votes for President and Vice-President.)

Pinckney was elected to the U.S. House of Representatives from South Carolina to fill the vacancy caused by the resignation of William L. Smith, and he served from November 1797 to March 1801. While in Congress, Pinckney served as one of the managers appointed by the House in 1798 to conduct the impeachment proceedings against William Blount.

Pinckney served as a Major General in the U.S. Army during the War of 1812. His last public role before his death in Charleston was as President-General of the Society of the Cincinnati (1825-1828).

Honors

Pinckneyville, GA, was named after Thomas Pinckney after he traveled through the area. That town no longer exists, as its residents left to found the nearby Norcross. Pinckneyville is the name of a Middle School in Norcross.

Family

His brother, Charles Cotesworth Pinckney; and his cousin, Charles Pinckney, were signers of the United States Constitution.

He was married twice; first to Elizabeth Motte and second to her sister, Frances; the widow of John Middleton, a cousin of Arthur Middleton. Both Elizabeth and Frances were daughters of Rebecca Brewton Motte.

His elder son, Thomas, Jr., was married to Elizabeth Izard, a cousin twice removed of South Carolina Congressman Ralph Izard.

His younger son, Charles Cotesworth Pinckney, married Phoebe Elliott, a daughter of a South Carolina State Representative, William Elliott and Phoebe Waight.

Death and Burial

Major General Thomas Pinckney died on 2 November 1828 in Charleston, SC. He is buried at St. Philips Episcopal Church Cemetery in Charleston.



Honoree ID: 2963   Created by: MHOH

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