- Robert Goodloe Harper
Robert Goodloe Harper (January 1765 –
January 14 ,1825 ), a Federalist, was a member of theUnited States Senate fromMaryland , serving from January 1816 until his resignation in December of the same year. He also served in theSouth Carolina House of Representatives (1790–1795), the U.S. House of Representatives fromSouth Carolina (1795–1801), and in theMaryland State Senate . He is best remembered for the phrase, "Millions for defense, but not one cent for tribute." [ [http://www.bartleby.com/73/804.html 804. Charles Cotesworth Pinckney (1746-1825). Respectfully Quoted: A Dictionary of Quotations. 1989 ] ]Early life
Harper, the fifth child and first son of Jesse Harper (1733 - ?) and Emily Diana Goodloe (1734 - 1788) was born near
Fredericksburg, Virginia in January of 1765 and moved with his parents toGranville, North Carolina around 1769. He received his early education at home and later attended grammar school. At the age of fifteen, Harper joined a volunteer corps of Cavalry and served in the American Revolutionary Army. He made a surveying tour throughKentucky andTennessee in 1783, and graduated from the College of New Jersey (nowPrinceton University ) in 1785. He studied law inCharleston, South Carolina , teaching school at the same time, and was admitted to the bar in 1786. He commenced practice in the Ninety-Sixth District of South Carolina, moving back to Charleston, S.C. in 1789.On 7 May 1800, Harper married Catherine Carroll in Anne Arundel Co, Maryland, the daughter of Charles & Mary {Darnall} Carroll.
Robert had a least 4 children with Catherine
**Charles Carroll Harper , m. Charlotte Hutchinson Cheffelle
**Richard Caton Harper
**Robert Goodloe Harper, Jr
**Emily Louisa Harper , m. William Clapham Pennington.Political career in South Carolina
Harper was a member of the
South Carolina House of Representatives from 1790 until 1795, at which time he was elected from South Carolina to theThird Congress to fill the vacancy caused by the death ofAlexander Gillon . He was reelected to the Fourth, Fifth, and Sixth Congresses but was an unsuccessful candidate for reelection in 1800 to the Seventh Congress, serving as a U.S Representative from February 1795 to March 1801. While in Congress, he was the chairman of the Committee on Ways and Means in the Fifth and Sixth Congresses. Harper was one of the managers appointed by the House of Representatives in 1798 to conduct the impeachment proceedings againstWilliam Blount .Political career in Maryland
Harper moved to
Baltimore, Maryland , and engaged in the practice of law. He served in theWar of 1812 , attaining the rank of major general. He assisted in organizing theBaltimore Exchange Co. in 1815 and was a member of the first board of directors. He then became a member of theMaryland State Senate , and was later elected from Maryland to theUnited States Senate for the term beginningMarch 4 ,1815 , serving from January 1816 until December 1816, when he resigned. He was an unsuccessful Federalist candidate for Vice President in the 1816 election. He also received one electoral vote for Vice President in the 1820 election.Retirement
Harper traveled extensively in Europe in 1819 and 1820. He took a prominent part in the ceremonies on the occasion of Lafayette’s visit to Baltimore in 1824. He died in Baltimore on
January 14 ,1825 , and was initially interred in the family burial ground on his estate, ”Oakland”, and later reburied inGreenmount Cemetery in Baltimore.References
* "American National Biography"
* "Dictionary of American Biography"; Cox, Joseph.
* "Champion of Southern Federalism: Robert Goodloe Harper of South Carolina." Port Washington, N.Y.: Kennikat Press, 1972.
Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.