- Henry Latimer (senator)
Infobox Officeholder
honorific-prefix =
name = Dr. Henry Latimer
honorific-suffix =
imagesize =
small
office = U.S. Senator from Delaware
term_start =February 7 1795
term_end =February 28 1801
predecessor = George Read [this seat was vacant fromSeptember 18 1793 untilFebruary 7 1795 . ]
successor =Samuel White
office2 = U. S. Representative from Delaware
term_start2 =February 14 1794
term_end2 =February 7 1795
predecessor2 = John Patten
successor2 = John Patten
office3 = Continental Congressman
from Delaware
term_start3 =April 8 1784
term_end3 =June 3 1784
predecessor3 =
successor3 =
birth_date = birth date|1752|4|24|mf=y
birth_place = Newport,Delaware
death_date = death date and age|1819|12|19|1752|4|24
death_place = Philadelphia,Pennsylvania
spouse = Ann Richardson
party = Federalist
residence = Newport,Delaware
alma_mater = College of Philadelphia
occupation =
profession =physician
religion = PresbyterianDr. Henry Latimer (
April 24 1752 –December 19 1819 ) was an Americanphysician andpolitician from Newport, in New Castle County,Delaware . He was elected to the Continental Congress from Delaware, and was a member of the Federalist Party, who served in theDelaware General Assembly , as U.S. Representative from Delaware, and U.S. Senator from Delaware.Early life and family
Latimer was born
April 24 1752 in Newport,Delaware , son of James Latimer, Sr. and Sarah Geddes. His father was a wealthy grain shipper and politician, who was a member of the House of Assembly in the 1778/79 session and a member of theDelaware convention that ratified the U.S. Constitution onDecember 7 1787 . Latimer's brother, George, also served in the House of Assembly from the 1779/80 session through the 1781/82 session. Later he moved to Philadelphia where he became Speaker of thePennsylvania House of Representatives in 1794.Latimer studied medicine, and attended the College of Philadelphia in Philadelphia in 1773, going to Edinburgh College in
Scotland in 1775 to complete his education. Returning in the midst of the American Revolution, he served in the "Flying Hospital," a mobile surgical unit of theContinental Army . He was at theBattle of Brandywine and continued through the end of the war.Political career
Elected to the Continental Congress on
April 8 1784 , Latimer never attended the session that spring in Annapolis,Maryland and was replaced. Like his father and brother, he was elected to the House of Assembly and served from the 1787/88 session through the 1790/91 session. He was the Speaker in that last session.Latimer lost the 1792 election for the U.S. House to Major John Patten by thirty votes, but contested Patton's election to the U.S. House. The Federalist majority there reviewed the ballots cast, and based on a confusing law requiring the names of two candidates on the ballot, disqualified enough of Patton's votes to award the seat to Latimer. Amidst considerable bitterness, he was seated
February 14 1794 . After once again losing an election to Patten in 1794, Latimer resigned from the U.S. House onFebruary 7 1795 when he was elected by theDelaware General Assembly to the disputed and long vacant U.S. Senate seat of retired U.S. Senator George Read. After finishing Read's term, he was reelected in 1796, and served untilFebruary 28 1801 , when he also resigned. Some believe that the reason for his resignation was that he was unhappy over the tactics of his political opponents who were still bitter over the circumstances of the contested election in 1792.At various times Latimer was a member of the Wilmington Academy board, director of the Bank of Delaware, president of the First Agricultural Society of New Castle County, and president of the Board of Trustees of Newark College. He was a charter member of the Delaware Medical Society.
Death and legacy
Latimer died
December 19 1819 in Philadelphia and was buried in the Presbyterian Cemetery in Wilmington,Delaware . This cemetery is now the location of the Wilmington Institute Library and his remains were moved to the Wilmington-Brandywine Cemetery.Even though he was a physician and a Presbyterian, Latimer was a member of a prominent and well-to-do merchant family and was very much in agreement with the prevailing Federalist positions on such controversial issues as the
Jay Treaty and other measures of the Adams administration. The burgeoning party ofThomas Jefferson , now known as the Democratic-Republicans, was increasingly popular and vocal in heavily Irish and "Country Party" New Castle County, and they never seemed to forgive him his apparent theft of the 1792 congressional election. Consequently, upon celebrating election victories in 1802, they fired cannon, loaded with potatoes and herring, in mock salute to Latimer, remembering his reputed statement that "the laboring classes lived too well to be happy and should be reduced to the fare of the Irish." [cite book |last = Munroe |first = John A. |authorlink = |coauthors = |year = 1954 |title = Federalist Delaware 1775-1815 |publisher = Rutgers University |location = New Brunswick, NJ|id = ]Almanac
Elections were held the first of October. Members of the State House took office on the twentieth of October for a term of one year. U.S. Representatives were popularly elected for a two year term, and the General Assembly chose the U.S. Senators, for a six year term. Both took office the following March 4th. The General Assembly also chose the Continental Congressmen for a term of one year.
{|class=wikitable style="width: 94%" style="text-align: center;" align="center"
-bgcolor=#cccccc!colspan=7 style="background: #ccccff;" | Public Offices
-! Office! Type! Location! Elected! Took Office! Left Office! notes
-Party shading/Anti-Masonic
Continental CongressLegislature
Annapolis|April 8 1784 June 3 1784
never attended
-Party shading/Anti-Jacksonian
State RepresentativeLegislature
Dover
1787October 20 1787 October 20 1788 |
-Party shading/Anti-Jacksonian
State RepresentativeLegislature
Dover
1788October 20 1788 October 20 1789 |
-Party shading/Anti-Jacksonian
State RepresentativeLegislature
Dover
1789October 20 1789 October 20 1790 |
-Party shading/Anti-Jacksonian
State RepresentativeLegislature
Dover
1790October 20 1790 October 20 1791
Speaker
-Party shading/Anti-Masonic
U.S. RepresentativeLegislature
Washington
1792February 14 1794 February 7 1795 |
-Party shading/Anti-Masonic
U.S. SenatorLegislature
Washington|February 7 1795 March 3 1797 |
-Party shading/Anti-Masonic
U.S. SenatorLegislature
Washington
March 4 1797 February 28 1801 |
###@@@KEYEND@@@###{|class=wikitable style="width: 94%" style="text-align: center;" align="center"
-bgcolor=#cccccc!colspan=7 style="background: #ccccff;" |United States Congressional "service"
-! Dates! Congress! Chamber! Majority! President! Committees! Class/District
-Party shading/Democratic-Republican
1793-1795
3rd
U.S. House
Anti- AdministrationGeorge Washington |
ushr|Delaware|AL|"at-large" [contested election, seatedFebruary 14 1794 , resignedFebruary 7 1795 ]
-Party shading/Federalist
1793-1795
3rd
U.S. Senate
Pro-AdministrationGeorge Washington |
class 1 [elected to fill vacancy,February 7 1795 ]
-Party shading/Federalist
1795-1797
4th
U.S. Senate
FederalistGeorge Washington |
class 1
-Party shading/Federalist
1797-1799
5th
U.S. Senate
FederalistJohn Adams |
class 1
-Party shading/Federalist
1799-1801
6th
U.S. Senate
FederalistJohn Adams |
class 1
###@@@KEYEND@@@###{|class=wikitable style="width: 94%" style="text-align: center;" align="center"
-bgcolor=#cccccc!colspan=12 style="background: #ccccff;" |Election results
-!Year!Office!!Subject!Party!Votes!%!!Opponent!Party!Votes!%
-
1792
U.S. Representative|
Party shading/Federalist |Henry Latimer
Party shading/Federalist |Federalist
Party shading/Federalist |2,243
Party shading/Federalist |50%|
Party shading/Democratic-Republican |John Patten
Party shading/Democratic-Republican |Democratic-Republican
Party shading/Democratic-Republican |2,273
Party shading/Democratic-Republican |50%
-
1794
U.S. Representative|
Party shading/Federalist |Henry Latimer
Party shading/Federalist |Federalist
Party shading/Federalist |2,285
Party shading/Federalist |49%|
Party shading/Democratic-Republican |John Patten
Party shading/Democratic-Republican |Democratic-Republican
Party shading/Democratic-Republican |2,409
Party shading/Democratic-Republican |51%
###@@@KEYEND@@@###Notes
References
*cite book |last = Martin |first = Roger A. |authorlink = |coauthors = |year = 1995 |title = Memoirs of the Senate |publisher = Roger A. Martin |location = Newark, DE |id =
*cite book |last = Martin |first = Roger A. |authorlink = |coauthors = |year = 2003 |title = Delawareans in Congress |publisher = Roger A. Martin |location = Middletown, DE |id = ISBN 0-924117-26-5
*cite book |last = Munroe |first = John A. |authorlink = |coauthors = |year = 1954 |title = Federalist Delaware 1775-1815 |publisher = Rutgers University |location = New Brunswick, NJ|id =
*cite book |last = Wilson |first = W. Emerson |authorlink = |coauthors = |year = 1969 |title = Forgotten Heroes of Delaware |publisher = Deltos Publishing Company |location = Cambridge, MA |id =
=*United States Senate [http://www.senate.gov/artandhistory/art/common/image/Painting_32_00013.htm] "Portrait courtesy of the United States Senate, Art & History."
*Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts [http://www.pafa.org/paintingsPreview.jsp?id=10782&pageSize=10&pageNumber=1] "Portrait courtesy of the Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts."External links
*CongBio|L000115
* [http://politicalgraveyard.com/bio/latimer.html#R9M0J3P8S Henry Latimer at the "Political Graveyard"]
*Find A Grave|id=7417422
* [http://www.russpickett.com/history/sentbio.htm#latimer Henry Latimer at "Delaware’s Senators"]Places with more information
* [http://www.hsd.org/ Historical Society of Delaware] , 505 Market St., Wilmington, Delaware (302) 655-7161
* [http://www.lib.udel.edu/ University of Delaware Library] , 181 South College Ave., Newark, Delaware (302) 831-2965
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