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Field name | Value |
---|---|
Collection Reference Number | GLC05265 |
From Archive Folder | Documents Relating to 1820 |
Title | Henry Clay to Caesar A. Rodney regarding Clay's retirement from the House of Representatives |
Date | 10 June 1820 |
Author | Clay, Henry (1777-1852) |
Recipient | Rodney, C. A. (Caesar Augustus) |
Document Type | Correspondence |
Content Description | Written as Speaker of the House. Acknowledges Rodney's letter of 22 May 1820. Rodney asked Clay to hold off on retiring from the House of Representatives, but Clay is adamant, saying "I have reasons, altogether of a private nature, for retiring from the H. of R. which if it were worth while to trouble you with them, I think you would admit justifys my resolution." Says he believes in the maxim of one belonging to his country, but says now is not the time to sacrifice himself since he predicts the country will be at peace for the short term. Believes there is interesting matters to take care of in the House "but I have not the vanity to suppose that my presence there is at all necessary to a right disposition of them." Is gratified by the House voting to recognize the rebel governments of South America. He hopes the president will come to support their position by the next session. Says the revolution in Spain will probably lead to revolution in Mexico also. Clay retired in 1821 to recoup financial loses he suffered during the panic of 1819. He returned to a private law practice and two years later returned to the Speakship free from debt. |
Subjects | American Statesmen Congress Latin and South America Rebellion Global History and Civics Foreign Affairs President Finance |
People | Clay, Henry (1777-1852) Rodney, Caesar (1728-1784) |
Place written | Lexington, Kentucky |
Theme | Government & Politics; Foreign Affairs; The Presidency |
Sub-collection | The Gilder Lehrman Collection, 1493-1859 |
Additional Information | Notes: Clay's sanguine attitude about the nation's future may have sprung from the recently settled Missouri Compromise (March 1820). After failing to receive the post of Secretary of State, Clay quarreled repeatedly with the Monroe administration over the issues of internal improvements and foreign policy. Monroe's decision not to heed the House's resolution to recognize the South American governments epitomizes the decline of Clay's influence during this period. Clay did temporarily retire from the Congress but returned to the House of Representatives in 1823. He would later become a member of the Senate, a perennial presidential candidate and one of the most influential men in American politics. Spain's threat to re-establish control in South America, along with France's and Russia's claims in the hemisphere, prompted President Monroe to announce the Monroe Doctrine in 1823. |
Copyright | The Gilder Lehrman Institute of American History |
Module | Settlement, Commerce, Revolution and Reform: 1493-1859 |
Transcript | Show/hide |