Everything about Richard Bassett totally explained
Richard Bassett (
April 2 1745 –
August 15 1815) was an
American lawyer and
politician from
Dover, in
Kent County Delaware. He was a veteran of the
American Revolution, a delegate to the
U.S. Constitutional Convention of 1787, and a member of the
Federalist Party, who served in the
Delaware General Assembly, as
Governor of Delaware, and as
U.S. Senator from Delaware.
Early life and family
Bassett was born
April 2 1745 at Bohemia Ferry in
Cecil County,
Maryland, son of Arnold and Judith Thompson Bassett. His father was a part time tavern owner and farmer, but deserted the family when Bassett was young. He married Ann Ennals in 1774 and they'd three children, Richard Ennals, Ann (known as Nancy), and Mary. After his first wife’s death he married Betsy Garnett in 1796. They were active members of the
Methodist Church, and gave the church much of their time and attention.
Fortunately, Bassett’s mother was the great granddaughter and an heiress of
Augustine Herrman, the original owner of Bohemia Manor, a massive estate in
Cecil County, and her family raised Bassett. Eventually this heritage provided him with inherited wealth and a plantation, Bohemia Manor, in
Cecil County, and much other property in
New Castle County,
Delaware.
Early political career
Bassett studied the law under Judge Robert Goldsborough of
Dorchester County,
Maryland and in 1770 was admitted to the
Bar. He moved to
Dover,
Delaware, then just the court town of
Kent County, and began a practice there. By concentrating on agricultural pursuits as well as religious and charitable concerns, he quickly established himself amongst the local gentry and “developed a reputation for
hospitality and
philanthropy.”
Bassett was a reluctant revolutionary, more closely in tune with the approach of
George Read than with his neighbors from
Kent County,
Caesar Rodney and
John Haslet. Nevertheless, in 1774 he was elected to the local Boston Relief Committee. When the new government of
Delaware was organized, Bassett served on the 1776
Delaware Council of Safety, and was a member of the convention responsible for drafting the
Delaware Constitution of 1776, which was adopted
September 20 1776. He was then one of the conservatives elected to
Delaware's first
Legislative Council, and served for four sessions, from 1776/77 through 1779/80. Subsequently, he was a member of the
House of Assembly for the 1780/81 and 1781/82 sessions, and returned to the
Legislative Council, for three sessions from 1782/83 through 1784/85. He concluded his state legislative career with a final term in the
House of Assembly during the 1786/87 session. He thereby represented
Kent County in all but one session of the
Delaware General Assembly from independence to the adoption of the
U.S. Constitution of 1787.
American Revolution
However, Bassett’s most notable contributions during the
American Revolution were his efforts to mobilize the state’s military. Some sources credit him with developing the plans for raising and staffing the
1st Delaware Regiment, with his neighbor
John Haslet at its command. Known as the "Delaware Continentals" or "Delaware Blues," they were from the smallest state, but at some 800 men, were the largest battalion in the army. David McCullough in
1776 describes them "turned out in handsome red trimmed blue coats, white waistcoats, buckskin breeches, white woolen stockings, and carrying fine, 'lately imported' English muskets. Raised in early 1776, they went into service in July and August 1776. Bassett also participated in the recruitment of the reserve militia that served in the “
Flying Camp” of 1776, and the Dover Light Infantry, led by another neighbor,
Thomas Rodney.
When the
British Army marched through northern
New Castle County, on the way to the
Battle of Brandywine and the capture of
Philadelphia, Bassett “appears to have joined his friend Rodney in the field as a volunteer.” Once the Delaware militia returned home after the British retired from the area, Bassett continued as a part-time soldier, assuming command of the Dover Light Horse, Kent County's militia cavalry unit.
Federal Constitution and United States Senate
From his wartime experience, Bassett quickly came to realize the shortcoming of the government under the
Articles of Confederation, and was an early supporter of reforms. He was among those representing
Delaware in 1786 at the
Annapolis Convention, and again was part of the same delegation at the
Constitutional Convention of 1787 in
Philadelphia. Although he never spoke, and served on no committees, he was a strong supporter of the
Great Compromise promoted by another neighbor,
John Dickinson. With this agreement incorporated into the resulting document, Bassett made his major contribution to the effort by leading the effort to quickly gain its
ratification in
Delaware. He was so successful that
Delaware formally agreed just five months after the
Philadelphia Convention, and before any other state. Because of this,
Delaware has ever since been known as “the First State.”
With the establishment of the new government the
Delaware General Assembly elected Bassett as one of the first new
U.S. Senators. While there were no parties at the time he served, he was a supporter of a strong central government, and was allied particularly with the positions of
Vice President John Adams. He “supported
President George Washington's right to control the internal workings of the executive branch through the power of dismissing appointed officials, but he opposed some of
Secretary of the Treasury Alexander Hamilton's more extreme proposals for advancing the powers of the presidency.” He was also among the first to advocate removing the federal capital to a new city on the
Potomac River. Recent scholars have therefore classified him among the “Anti-Administration” members of the
1st Congress, but among the “Pro-Administration” members of the
2nd. In all he served in those two sessions, from
March 4 1789, to
March 3 1793, during the administration of
U.S. President George Washington.
Later political career
Meanwhile, the
Delaware Constitution of 1776, was in need of revision, and Bassett once again joined with
John Dickinson, in leading the convention to draft a revision, which became the
Delaware Constitution of 1792. Upon his retirement from the
United States Senate in 1793 he began a six-year term as the first Chief Justice of the
Court of Common Pleas in
Delaware. At the time it was a court of general civil jurisdiction and the predecessor of the present
Delaware Superior Court. By this time Bassett was formally a member of the
Federalist Party, and as such was elected
Governor of Delaware in 1799. It was during his time in office that
Pierre Samuel du Pont de Nemours first came to
Delaware to begin his gunpowder business.
However, it was also during his term that
Thomas Jefferson was elected
President of the United States, causing great concern for the future of the country among the
Federalists. The retiring
President John Adams, rushed the
Judiciary Act of 1801 through the
Federalist Congress, creating a number of new judgeships on the
United States circuit courts. Being a staunch
Federalist and old political ally,
Adams appointed Bassett on his last day in office in 1801 to one of the positions. He was one of the so-called
midnight judges. But the legislation was repealed by the new
Jeffersonian Congress, and his tenure ended quickly in April 1802. He never again held public office.
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