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Thomas Clayton

Thomas Clayton
Thomas Clayton US.jpg
United States Senator
from Delaware
In office
January 9, 1837 – March 4, 1847
Preceded by John M. Clayton
Succeeded by Presley Spruance
In office
January 8, 1824 – March 4, 1827
Preceded by Caesar A. Rodney
Succeeded by Louis McLane
Chief Justice of Delaware
In office
January 18, 1832 – January 9, 1837
Preceded by Samuel M. Harrington
Succeeded by John M. Clayton
Member of the U.S. House of Representatives
from Delaware's First At-large district
In office
March 4, 1815 – March 4, 1817
Preceded by Henry M. Ridgely
Succeeded by Louis McLane
5th Attorney General of Delaware
In office
1810–1815
Preceded by Edward W. Gilpin
Succeeded by George P. Fisher
Member of the Delaware Senate
In office
January 3, 1821 – January 6, 1824
Member of the Delaware House of Representatives
In office
January 4, 1803 – January 19, 1808
January 1, 1811 – January 3, 1815
Personal details
Born July 1777
Cecil County, Maryland
Died August 21, 1854(1854-08-21) (aged 77)
New Castle, Delaware
Political party Federalist
Whig
Spouse(s) Jennette Macomb
Residence Dover, Delaware
Alma mater Newark Academy
Profession lawyer
Religion Presbyterian

Thomas Clayton (July 1777 – August 21, 1854) was an American lawyer and politician from Dover in Kent County, Delaware. He was a member of the Federalist Party and later the Whig Party. He served in the Delaware General Assembly, as Attorney General of Delaware, as Secretary of State of Delaware, as Chief Justice of the Delaware Supreme Court, as U.S. Representative from Delaware, and as U.S. Senator from Delaware. In 1846 he was one of two members of the United States Senate to vote against declaring war on Mexico.

Clayton was born at Massey in Kent County, Maryland, son of the former Governor of Delaware, Dr. Joshua Clayton, and Rachael McCleary Clayton. It is said he was born while his mother was fleeing invading British troops on the way from their Elk River landing to the Battle of Brandywine. While the Clayton’s were natives of Kent County, Delaware, Rachael McCleary was the niece and adopted daughter of Richard Bassett, the aristocratic heir to the expansive Bohemia Manor estates. The family lived at Bohemia Manor and through this connection, Joshua Clayton later acquired his homestead from these estates, in Pencader Hundred, New Castle County.

Thomas Clayton graduated from the Newark Academy, now the University of Delaware, studied law under Nicholas Ridgely in Dover, Delaware, and began a law practice there in 1799. His wife's name was Jennette Macomb, they had four children, and belonged to the Presbyterian Church. He was the cousin of U.S. Senator John M. Clayton.

While pursuing his practice of the law, Clayton began his public career as the clerk of the Delaware House of Representatives in 1800. He then served as a member of that body for 8 years, between the 1803 session and the 1814 session. He was elected to the Delaware Senate for the 1808 session, but resigned to become the Delaware Secretary of State for 2 years. Subsequently, he was appointed the Delaware Attorney General and served in that office from 1810 until 1815.

In 1814 Clayton was elected as a Federalist to one of two at-large seats Delaware had in the U.S. House of Representatives, and served one term there, from March 4, 1815 until March 3, 1817. While he was in Congress, it was proposed that the compensation given U.S. Representatives be increased $6 a day to $1,500 a year. Clayton supported the change, but it became very controversial, and his support of it caused him to lose the nomination of the Federalist Party to Louis McLane, beginning a long rivalry between the two men.

Clayton narrowly failed in an attempt to return to the U.S. House of Representatives in the 1818 election, but was returned to the Delaware Senate again in 1821. Then, when Caesar A. Rodney resigned as U.S. Senator from Delaware, the General Assembly elected him to serve out the term, from January 8, 1824 to March 3, 1827. This was the time when the old party system of Federalists and Jeffersonian Republicans was giving way to the Jacksonian Democrats, and those opposed to Jackson. Clayton, his family, and much of the old Federalist following in Delaware, aligned themselves with John Quincy Adams, and those who would later become Whigs.


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