Button Gwinnett: Difference between revisions
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Revision as of 17:03, 12 November 2008
Button Gwinnett | |
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2nd Governor of Georgia | |
In office March 4, 1777 – May 8, 1777 | |
Preceded by | Archibald Bulloch |
Succeeded by | John A. Treutlen |
Personal details | |
Born | April 10, 1735 Gloucestershire, England |
Died | May 19, 1777 near Savannah, Georgia |
Nationality | English-American |
Signature | |
Button Gwinnett (baptized: April 10, 1735 – May 19, 1777), was second of the signatories (first signature on the left) on the United States Declaration of Independence as a representative of Georgia. He was also briefly the provisional president of Georgia in 1777, and Gwinnett County (now a major suburb of metro Atlanta) was named after him.
Button was born in 1732 in the parish of Down Hatherley in Gloucestershire, England, to Welsh parents, the Reverend Samuel and Anne Gwinnett. There are conflicting reports as to his birth date, but he was baptized in St Catherine’s Church in Gloucester on April 10 1735. After attending The King's School, Gloucester he started his career as a merchant in Bristol, England. He then moved to Wolverhampton in 1755 and married a local, Ann Bourne, in 1757. In 1762 the couple left Wolverhampton and moved to America.
Arriving first in Charleston, South Carolina, by 1765 they had traveled to Savannah, Georgia. Gwinnett abandoned his mercantile pursuits, selling off all his merchandise to buy a tract of land on St. Catherine's Island where he started a plantation. He prospered as a planter, and by 1769 had gained such local prominence that he was elected to the Provincial Assembly. During his tenure in the Assembly, Gwinnett's chief political rival was Lachlan McIntosh and Lyman Hall was his closest ally. Gwinnett did not become a strong advocate of colonial rights until 1775, when St. John's Parish, which encompassed his lands, threatened to secede from Georgia due to the colony's rather conservative response to the events of the times.
He voted in favor of the Declaration of Independence on July 4 1776, and signed the famous parchment copy on August 2 1776. After signing the Declaration, he was accompanied as far as Virginia by Carter Braxton, another of the signers, carrying a proposed state constitution drawn up by John Adams. During his service in the Continental Congress, Gwinnett was a candidate for a brigadier general position to lead the 1st Georgia Regiment in the Continental Army, but lost out to Lachlan McIntosh. The loss of the position to his rival embittered Gwinnett greatly.
He served in the Georgia state legislature and in 1777 he wrote the original draft of Georgia’s first State Constitution mainly from the John Adams pamphlet. He soon became Speaker of the Georgia Assembly, a position he held until the death of the President (Governor) of Georgia, Archibald Bulloch. Gwinnett was elevated to the vacated position by the Assembly’s Executive Council. In this position, he sought to undermine the leadership of McIntosh.
He organized an invasion of British East Florida. Due to the convening of the legislature, Gwinnett was unable to lead the troops himself and relied on a subordinate officer of McIntosh. The invasion ultimately proved to be a failure. Gwinnett's loss of an election for governor in May 1777 is most likely due to the failed expedition. At this time McIntosh, revelling in Gwinnett's embarrassment, openly criticized him for the failed campaign, although Gwinnett was cleared of wrongdoing. Gwinnett challenged McIntosh to a duel, which was fought on May 16 1777, at the small town of Thunderbolt, near Savannah. Both were wounded: McIntosh survived, but Button Gwinnett died three days later of gangrene resulting from having the bone of his leg shattered.
Signers Monument, a granite obelisk in front of the courthouse in Augusta, Georgia, memorializes Gwinnett and the other two Georgians who signed the Declaration of Independence. The others were re-interred beneath the monument, but Gwinnett's burial place could not be found. It was later identified years later in Savannah Colonial Park Cemetery.
A fairly obscure historical figure, Gwinnett nonetheless does hold one claim to fame: his autograph is among the most valuable in the world, a fact used to good effect by science fiction author Isaac Asimov in his short story "Button, Button." Valuations usually suggest an example of an original Gwinnett signature would be valued only behind the likes of Julius Caesar and William Shakespeare, making Gwinnett’s by far the most valuable American autograph. Single examples of Gwinnett’s autograph have been sold for as much as $150,000. Its extraordinarily high value is a result of a combination of the desire by many top collectors to acquire a complete set of autographs by all 56 signers of the U.S. Declaration of Independence, and the extreme rarity of the Gwinnett signature (there are less than 30 known extant examples, since Gwinnett was fairly obscure prior to signing the Declaration and died shortly afterward). In the 1920s, five copies of his signature were owned by renowned rare bookseller A.S.W. Rosenbach.
External links
- United States Congress. "Button Gwinnett (id: G000542)". Biographical Directory of the United States Congress.
- Biography of Button Gwinnett
- Georgia Signers of the Declaration of Independence
- New Georgia Encyclopedia
- Button Gwinnett's spirit lives on
- Biography by Rev. Charles A. Goodrich, 1856
- Button Gwinnett Genealogy Research
- Template:Find A Grave
- 1735 births
- 1777 deaths
- American Revolutionary War deaths
- Continental Congressmen from Georgia
- Dueling fatalities
- English immigrants to the United States
- Governors of Georgia (U.S. state)
- Kingdom of Great Britain migrants to the Thirteen Colonies
- People of Georgia (U.S. state) in the American Revolution
- People from Wolverhampton
- People from Gloucestershire
- Signers of the U.S. Declaration of Independence
- Welsh immigrants to the United States
- American Congregationalists
- Deaths by firearm in Georgia (U.S. state)