- Henry William de Saussure
Infobox United State Mint official
name=Henry William De Saussure
image_width=200px
order=3rd
title=United States Director of the Mint
term_start=July 1795
term_end=October 1795
predecessor=David Rittenhouse
successor=Elias Boudinot
birth_date=birth date|1763|8|16|mf=y
birth_place=Beaufort, South Carolina , U.S.
death_date=death date and age|1839|3|26|1763|8|16|mf=y
death_place=Columbia, South Carolina , U.S.
party=Federalist
spouse=Elizabeth (Eliza) Ford
profession=Politician ,Lawyer ,Jurist ,College Trustee
religion=Presbyterian (Huguenot)Henry William De Saussure (
August 16 ,1763 –March 26 ,1839 ) was an American lawyer, state legislator and jurist fromSouth Carolina who became a political leader as a member of theFederalist Party following the Revolutionary War. He was appointed by PresidentGeorge Washington as the 2nd Director of theUnited States Mint , was a co-sponsor of the legislation that established theSouth Carolina College which was to become theUniversity of South Carolina and was given the title ofChancellor as a justice of the SC Equity Court, also known aschancery court . In this capacity he wrote and codified much of the state'sequity law still in use today. He served as Intendant (Mayor) of both Charleston and Columbia, SC.He was a principal investor in founding what was originally intended to be the city's Federalist leaning newspaper, the "
Charleston Courier " in 1803. The newspaper still exists today as it was eventually merged with others to become "The Post and Courier ". As a sitting appellate court judge, his opinions on a variety of issues were widely published under a pseudonym, which was the custom then for public officials who wished to express their view away from the bench. His opinions were highly critical of the summary abridgement of rights of the accused during theDenmark Vessey trials, purportedly in the name of public safety. He and others like him suspected there was less substance to the charges of a conspiracy to organize aslave revolt than the public in Charleston was being led to believe.He openly opposed
Nullification along with other leading South Carolina. After the Federalist Party faded in the early 1820s, he was a voice forUnionist moderation before a rising tideStates Rights supporters swept the stage of all others in South Carolina a generation later. Though deep political differences would eventually separate them,John C. Calhoun , studied law in the offices of DeSaussure and his partnerTimothy Ford .DeSaussure College , one of the original buildings located on theHorseshoe at the center of theUniversity of South Carolina campus in Columbia was named in his honor.Early life
At the age of 16, together with his father
Daniel de Saussure , he participated in the defense of the city during the 1780Siege of Charleston . When the city surrendered to British forces, both were captured. Henry was detained on board aprison ship inCharleston Harbor but was later released to his mother's custody. His father was deemed to be more of a prize and sent to the British prisons atSt. Augustine, Florida along with other leaders of the American rebellion captured inSouth Carolina . As a prominent merchant in the city, Daniel's properties in Charleston were also confiscated. His wife and children were then exiled toPhiladelphia for the remainder of theAmerican Revolution . The family was reunited at Philadelphia after Henry's father was released as part of a prisoner exchange following the surrender of British forces atYorktown . Still occupied,Charleston andNew York would remain in British hands for some time longer. Refugees and exiles were unable to return until after the withdrawal of British troops from those areas.Education and marriage
While in Philadelphia young De Saussure attended
Princeton College and studied law underJared Ingersoll , a noted Philadelphia attorney who would later be an active participant in the Constitutional Convention and a leading proponent of the Federalist Party. Before returning to Charleston, De Saussure married Elizabeth Ford, the daughter ofJacob Ford of Morristown,New Jersey .Henry & Eliza De Saussure had 12 children. Their second son,
William F. De Saussure , was appointed to fill an unexpired term in theUnited States Senate in 1852. It was the same seat held byJohn C. Calhoun .Additional reading
*cite book |title=South Carolina: A Short History, 1520-1948 |last=Wallace |first=David Duncan |publisher=University of South Carolina Press |location=Columbia, SC |year=1969 origyear=1951 |id=ISBN 87249-079-3
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