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Harry Toulmin (Unitarian minister)

Harry Toulmin
2nd Superior Court Judge for the Tombigbee District of the Mississippi Territory
In office
1804–1819
Appointed by Thomas Jefferson
Preceded by Ephraim Kirby
Succeeded by Office abolished
2nd Secretary of State of Kentucky
In office
October 13, 1796 – September 5, 1804
Governor James Garrard
Preceded by James Brown
Succeeded by John Rowan
President of Transylvania Seminary
In office
February 1794 – April 1796
Personal details
Born (1766-04-07)April 7, 1766
Taunton, Somersetshire, England
Died November 11, 1823(1823-11-11) (aged 57)
Fort Stoddert, Washington County, Alabama
Spouse(s) Ann Tremlett
Martha Johnson
Relations
Alma mater Hoxton Academy
Occupation Unitarian minister
Religion Unitarian

Harry Toulmin (sometimes called Henry Toulmin) (April 7, 1766 – November 11, 1823) was a Unitarian minister and politician. The son of noted Dissenting minister Joshua Toulmin, Toulmin fled his native England for the United States after he and his followers were persecuted for their beliefs. He arrived in Virginia in 1793, and aided by recommendations from Thomas Jefferson and James Monroe, he was chosen president of Transylvania Seminary (now Transylvania University) in Lexington, Kentucky. His Unitarian views, however, offended many of the orthodox Presbyterian members of Transylvania's board of regents, and Toulmin resigned after two years.

Shortly after his resignation, Toulmin was appointed Secretary of State of Kentucky by Governor James Garrard. He influenced Garrard – a Baptist minister – to adopt some doctrines of Socinianism, for which he was expelled from the local Baptist association, ending his ministry. As Secretary of State, Toulmin endorsed the Kentucky Resolutions and revised the state's code of laws in conjunction with Attorney General James Blair. After the expiration of his term as Secretary of State in 1804, Thomas Jefferson appointed him Superior Court Judge for the Tombigbee District of the Mississippi Territory. He was the first U.S. district judge to hold court on Alabama soil. As the highest-ranking authority in the large territory, he tried to prevent residents in his jurisdiction from conducting raids against the Spanish in West Florida and from participating in the Creek War between two rival factions of Creek Indians. When the state of Alabama was formed from part of Toulmin's district, he helped write the new state's constitution and was elected to the state legislature. Again, he was asked to compile a digest of the region's laws, which he completed in 1823.


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