William West

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William West (c. 17331816) was an American militia general in the Revolutionary War, Justice of the Rhode Island Supreme Court, Deputy Governor of Rhode Island and an anti-federalist leader.

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[edit] Early life

West was born in North Kingstown, Rhode Island in about 1733 to John West and Alice Sweet. He was a descendant of Pilgrim George Soule. In about 1755 West married Eleanor Brown and served in the French and Indian War around this time. He eventually moved from North Kingstown to Scituate, Rhode Island and purchased a 200 acre farm which Governor Stephen Hopkins had previously owned, and he set up a prosperous tavern in 1758 and was an active farmer and molasses trader. Soon after moving to Scituate, West became a deputy (representative) and was also elected as a representative of the town in a general convention held at East Greenwich, Sept. 26, 1786. Between 1760 and 1785, West was elected twelve times as a representative.

[edit] Service During the American Revolution

At the outbreak of the American Revolution in 1775, Colonel West was placed second in command of the Rhode Island Militia, serving as a brigadier general from 1775 to 1777. From January to March of 1776 West assumed command at Rhode Island (Aquidneck Island) which was currently under siege from the British warships in Narragansett Bay. His main task was to root out Tories who were supplying the British. On May 4, 1776, West signed Rhode Island's declaration of independence, which preceded the American Declaration of Independence by two months. When the British army finally occupied Newport in December of 1776 West retreated to Bristol with the militia. During the Battle of Rhode Island, in 1778 General West led the Rhode Island militia in the unsucessful invasion of Aquidneck Island. His troops served as reserves for the regular Continental troops and provided cover during the retreat. West played an active role in the affairs of his town throughout the Revolution. He was put in charge of raising troops in the Scituate in 1777 and served on various committees concerning the British blockade, army blankets, salt rationing, and firearms. West was made again made brigadier general of the Providence County brigade in 1779. General West was also purported to have invested in privateers during the War. Two cargoes were lost, which supposedly damaged his finances.

West was also several times chosen as the moderator of the town, as he was allegedly a man of "intelligence, and a marked degree of enterprise." During the War, West was elected Deputy Governor of Rhode Island and served from May 1780 to May 1781. As Deputy Governor, West served on a committee which was integral to the formation of the state of Vermont.

[edit] Judge of Supreme Court and Anti-federalist leader

West served as a Justice of the Rhode Island Supreme Court (then called the Superior Court of Assize, and General Gaol Delivery) from 1787 to 1789. While a judge, West was also a leader in the rural opposition to the adoption of the Constitution, known as the "Country Party". The party supported the issuance of paper money and was in power from 1786 through 1790. West led nearly 1,000 armed, rural citizens to Providence to protest reading the Constitution on the 4th of July in 1788 (shortly after the ninth state had ratified it). [1] Fortunately, a compromise between the federalists and anti-federalists was reached, and civil war was averted (the federalists agreed to only celebrate only independence and not the adoption of the Constitution). Resistance to the Constitution, however, remained strong, and Rhode Island was the last of the 13 colonies to ratify the Constitution in 1790.

[edit] Financial troubles

Although West had been a prosperous farmer before the War, the depreciation in value of continental currency ruined him financially. The U.S. Supreme Court even ruled in Barnes v. West in 1791 that William West could not use continental currency to pay off his mortgage.[2] West was forced to sell his farm to his son-in-laws, Gideon Smith, Jeremy Phillips, Job Randall, and Joseph Baltey. West was forced into debtor's prison for a period and died in relative poverty in 1816. Prior to this, West had even been a slaveowner, recorded in the census as owning two slaves in 1774, and in 1790 as owning three slaves. West was buried on his farm in Scituate near the Danielson Highway. No depictions of West are known to exist, but he was described as "a man rather above the middle height, a bony, sinewy man, long favored, with a prominent nose."

Westfield, Vermont was named after Governor West in 1780 because of his support for Vermont statehood as a legislator. West was granted land in Vermont for his political services, which he sold in 1785. In 1919, a descendant of West, George Mortimer West, published a biography of Governor West.

[edit] Notes and Sources

[edit] See also

[edit] External links

[edit] References

  • West, George M., William West of Scituate, R.I.: farmer, soldier, statesman, (St. Andrews, FL: Panama City Publishing, 1919).
  • "History of Scituate," History of the State of Rhode Island with Illustrations (Philadelphia: Hong, Wade & Co., 1878).
  •   [1] heard by U.S. Supreme Court (case: 2 U.S. 401,): Chief Justice John Jay, William Cushing and District Court Judge Henry Marchant. Original records now in the files of the District Court of the United States for the District of Rhode Island - Barnes et al. v. William West et al., June Term, 1791, United States Circuit Court, District of Rhode Island. See also: Earliest Cases of Judicial Review of State Legislation by Federal Courts, by Charles Warren, The Yale Law Journal, 1922, pg. 22-23.
  • Collections of the Rhode Island Historical Society, (Providence: RI Historical Society, 1843)[3]
  • Columbian Centinel, July 5, 12, 16, 23, 1788; Pennsylvania Packet, July 30, 1788. (reference to West's anti-Constitution 4th of July rally)
Preceded by:
Jabez Bowen
Lieutenant Governors of Rhode Island
1780-1781
Succeeded by:
Jabez Bowen