Everything about Richard Dobbs Spaight totally explained
Richard Dobbs Spaight (
March 25,
1758 –
September 6,
1802) was the Federalist
governor of the
American State of
North Carolina from
1792 to
1795.
Spaight was born in
New Bern, North Carolina, the son of the Secretary of the Crown in the colony. Orphaned at the age of eight, Spaight was sent to school in
Ireland and graduated from the
University of Glasgow.
In
1778, Spaight returned to North Carolina and served as an aide to General
Richard Caswell during the
American Revolutionary War until
1781. Although he was elected to the
North Carolina General Assembly in
1779, he was denied his seat after the election was challenged. Spaight was again elected in
1781 and served until
1783.
The General Assembly elected Spaight a delegate to the
Continental Congress between
1782 and
1785; he then served in the
North Carolina House of Commons from
1785 to
1787, and was named
Speaker of the House. In 1787, Spaight was a delegate to the
Philadelphia Convention that drafted the
U.S. Constitution, and he signed the document when he was only 29 years old.
On
24 March,
1788, Spaight married Mary Leach; their son
Richard Dobbs Spaight, Jr., later became
Governor of North Carolina in
1835. Mary had the distinction of being the first lady to dance with
George Washington at a ball in Washington’s honor at Tryon Palace in New Bern in 1791.
Under the
North Carolina Constitution of 1776, Spaight was nominated for Governor in 1787, but was defeated by a majority in the General Assembly; he was nominated for the
United States Senate in
1789 and was again defeated. In
1788, he was a member of the state convention which voted not to ratify the
United States Constitution, although Spaight himself supported ratification.
Spaight retired from politics for several years due to ill health; he returned to the state House of Representatives in
1792, was elected governor that same year, and re-elected by the General Assembly for two further one-year terms.
During Spaight's term as governor, sites were chosen for the new state capital of
Raleigh and the newly-chartered
University of North Carolina. Spaight served as chair of the university's Board of Trustees during his term as governor. Spaight stepped down as governor in
1795, having served the constitutional limit of three one-year terms.
Spaight was elected to the
United States House of Representatives in
1798, filling the unexpired term of
Nathan Bryan; he was elected to a two-year term in
1799, serving until
1801, and though elected as a Federalist, his views on states rights lead him to become associated with the
Democratic-Republican party of
Thomas Jefferson. He lost his bid for re-election to Congress, but returned to state government, serving in the
North Carolina Senate beginning in
1801. Spaight died on
6 September 1802, following injuries sustained in a duel with
John Stanly, the
Federalist Congressman who had defeated him in the election of 1800 for the House of Representatives. Spaight is buried in his home town
New Bern.
Spaight Street in central
Madison, Wisconsin is named in honor of Richard Spaight. Most of the main streets in downtown Madison are named after signers of the United States Constitution.
Sources
- Biographical Directory of the Governors of the United States,, and John Raimo, eds. Westport, CT: Meckler Books, 1978. (ISBN)
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