Passed Chief Justices - # 2 – John Rutledge
Among what I call the second tier of Founding Fathers, John Rutledge was a significant contributor to our nation’s independence. He was the first president of the Republic of South Carolina when we first declared independence and the first governor when it became a state. He attended the Constitutional Convention where he made no bones about the South’s absolute need to continue importing slaves.
I can’t help but imagine him addressing the convention...intoning in his finest ‘Foghorn Leghorn’ affectations, “Suh...ah say Suh, the South and all the fine and honorable things it stands for, cannot continue as we know and appreciate it, without the contributions of the chattel slaves we pay to uproot from their homelands across the ocean. Our entire economy is based on it. If you choose to make a big stink about it, you risk breaking up the new country before one is even established.” (something like that...)
I’m guessing this began to strain his popularity with his northern brethren. Read on.
John Rutledge was one of the five original Associate Justices on the very first Supreme Court. In those early years, as the high court of the new nation was establishing itself, the idea of a lifetime appointment meant less than it does today. The first Chief Justice, John Jay, resigned to run for governor of New York. Before that, Rutledge became the first justice to resign, leaving after just thirteen months to become Chief Justice back home in South Carolina.
After John Jay resigned, President Washington appointed Rutledge to be the second Chief Justice. However, that appointment was made when the Senate was not in session. Recess appointments are permitted in the Constitution, given the Senate, the body required to approve many important federal positions, is not always in session.
Being the hardline absolutist on slavery was bad enough. Rutledge then criticized the Jay Treaty with Britain. The 1795 agreement was intended to address unresolved issues following our war of independence. The upshot was that when the Senate returned to business, they rejected Rutledge’s appointment, thus making his tenure as Chief Justice just 138 days, the shortest of them all.
Some have argued that since he was never formally approved by the Senate, he should not even be considered among the Chief Justices...but he is included on all the lists that matter...including having his bust in the Supreme Court’s atrium. Who am I to disagree?
Between his two tenures on the Court, he suffered the same sad fate as our 26th president, Teddy Roosevelt, in that both his wife, who bore his ten children, and his mother, passed away on the same day.
The Senate rejection was the last blow for Rutledge. He resigned from the Court and returned to Charleston. Days later, in December of 1795, he attempted suicide by jumping into Charleston Harbor but was rescued (ironically) by two slaves. He remained out of public life until he died in 1800 at age 60.
He currently resides in the graveyard of St. Michael’s Episcopal Church in Charleston, South Carolina. The slab over his grave was replaced in 2010.
Mr. Rutledge’s grave was restored in 2010 and it appears that the South Carolina climate has already worked to make the inscriptions difficult to read. It says -
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