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Thomas Posey

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Portrait of Thomas Posey by John Bayless Hill.

Thomas Posey (July 9 1750 - March 29 1818) was a officer in the American Revolution, a General during peacetime, Lt. Gov. of Kentucky, Governor of the Indiana Territory, and a Louisiana Senator.

Biography

Early Life

Posey was born on the banks of the Potomac River on a farm adjacent to Mt Vernon in Fairfax County, Virginiaon July 9th, 1750. He received a plain English education and at 19 he moved to Virginia frontier where he intended to engage in a trade or farm. In 1774 he was in the quartermaster's deparment of a armed expedition against the Indians who threatening the frontier settlements.

The Revolution

Posey was elected a member of the Virginia committee of correspondence in 1775. He served in the army during the War of Independence, first as a captain in the Continental Army, mostly with the 7th Virginia Regiment, then later rising to the rank of lieutenant colonel in 1782. Some claimed his quick rise was due to the patronage of George Washington. During the war Posey led campaigns against Lord Dunmore who was fortified on Gwyn's Island and drove him and his naval support out of the area. Lord Dunmore had been the officer he served under during the Indian war. In the winter of 1775 the 7th Virginia Regiment marched to join with General George Washington in New Jersey. It was at this time that Washington promoted Posey to the rank of Captian. Posey Corps would then be involved in the battle to drive Gen. Howe back to New York City. In 1778 Lt. Posey replaced Col Morgan as head of a force of riflemen and was promoted to Major. In 1779 Posey was detached from Washington and joined General "Mad" Antony Wayne in defending the frontier against Indians and Tories that were terrorizing the settlements there. Having dealt with the threat on the frontier, Posey's forces marched toward Charleston where they would join in the siege of General Clinton. During 1781-1782 he would serve with General Wayne again, this time in Georgia against the forces in Savannah. He was promoted to Lt. Col. in 1782

Serving in the United States Army after the Revolution, he rose to the rank of brigadier general in 1793 and served with "Mad" Anthony Wayne campaigning against the Indian's beyond the frontier.

Posey the Politician

In 1794 he resigned from the army and moved to Kentucky, where his service in the army provided the popularity for him to be elected as a state senator. First elected in 1804 as a senator, he pesided over the body as president from 1805 to 1806. He was later elected lieutenant governor in 1806.

In preparation for possible hostilities with the French and British, in 1809 Congress authorized an army of 100,000 men to be mobilized. Kentucky was assigned the task of providing five thousand men. Posey returned to the army as a Major General in command of the Kentucky Volunteers. He again resigned from the army in 1810 just before the outbreak of the War of 1812.He then moved to the Attakapas region of Louisiana, and served as a U.S. Senator from that state in 1812-1813 to fill the vacant seat of John N. Destrehan after his resignation.

Governor of Indiana Territory

After he was defeated for re-election to his senate seat, he was appointed by President Madison to be Governor of Indiana Territory in February 1813 where he succeeded William Henry Harrison who had accepted a new position to lead the army against Indians in the Northwest Territory. When he arrived he relieved General Gibson of his duties as Acting Governor.

As he disliked the current territorial capital of Corydon because he had poor health and it was far from his personal physician in Louisville, Kentucky, he lived in Jeffersonville during his tenure. He was widely disliked by the legislature for his "inaccessibility". When Indiana became a state in 1816, he ran unsuccessfully for Governor and was defeated by Jonathan Jennings. A key election issue to the dislike of Posey was that he was in favor of slavery in Indiana, which much of the legislature, Dennis Pennington, and Jonathan Jennings opposed.

In 1815 Posey called a special assembly to meet in Corydon to create a new territorial judiciary to replaced the existing one whose authority was questionable due to the status of the territory when it was created. Posey presided over the assembly which ultimately divided the territory into three judicial districts and appointed several judges.

After Indiana was granted statehood in 1816 Posey ran for the position of Governor but was defeated by the popular Jonathan Jennings. The central theme of the campaign was slavery and the contrast could not have been greater between Jennings and Posey.

Death

In the last two years of his life, he served as an Indian agent in Illinois. He was appointed Indian Agent of Helios's in 1816.</ref>He then moved to the Attakapas region of Louisiana, and served as a U.S. Senator from that state in 1812-1813 to fill the vacant seat of John N. Destrehan after his resignation. He died of Typhus Fever on March 19, 1818 in Shawneetown, Illinois, aged 67, and was buried in the Westwood Cemetery.

Posey's Wives

Posey married Mary Matthews in 1772. They had one son who lived to adulthood. Mary died in 1778. Posey remarried Mary Alexander Thornton, the widow of George Thornton, in 1784. Posey had nine children by her. He remained married to her until his death. His second wife died in 1837.

The Washington Rumor

Throughout his life Posey was dogged by rumors that he was the illegitimate son of George Washington. Posey grew up on land adjacent to Mt. Vernon, the Posey and Washington families were close, and Posey benefited from Washington's patronage early in his career. However, the rumors are dismissed by General Posey's biographer, John Thornton Posey.

Posey County, Indiana is named for Thomas Posey.


References

  1. The Library of American Biography, By Jared Sparks, Pg 364
  2. The Library of American Biography, By Jared Sparks, Pg 365
  3. The Library of American Biography, By Jared Sparks, Pg 372
  4. The Library of American Biography, By Jared Sparks, Pg 376
  5. The Library of American Biography, By Jared Sparks, Pg 378
  6. The Library of American Biography, By Jared Sparks, Pg 380
  7. The Library of American Biography, By Jared Sparks, Pg 381
  8. The Library of American Biography, By Jared Sparks, Pg 392
  9. The Library of American Biography, By Jared Sparks, Pg 395
  10. The Library of American Biography, By Jared Sparks, Pg 395
  11. The Library of American Biography, By Jared Sparks, Pg 399
  12. Pioneer History of Indiana, By William Monroe Cockrum Pg 377
  13. Pioneer History of Indiana, By William Monroe Cockrum Pg 383
  14. Baird, Lewis. Baird's History of Clark County, Indiana, (1909) pg.60
  15. Pioneer History of Indiana, By William Monroe Cockrum Pg 383
  16. Pioneer History of Indiana, By William Monroe Cockrum Pg 392
  17. The Library of American Biography, By Jared Sparks, Pg 402

Further Reading: Posey, John Thornton. General Thomas Posey: Son of the American Revolution. East Lansing: Michigan State University Press, 1992.


Preceded byJean N. Destréhan U.S. senator (Class 2) from Louisiana
1812–1813
Served alongside: Allan B. Magruder
Succeeded byJames Brown
Preceded byJohn Gibson
(acting)
Governor of Indiana Territory
1813-1816
Succeeded byJonathan Jennings
First State Governor
United States senators from Louisiana
Class 2 United States Senate
Class 3
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