Charles Willing Byrd
Charles Willing Byrd (July 26, 1770 – August 25, 1828) was an American politician who was the Secretary of the Northwest Territory, acting Governor of the Northwest Territory and a United States district judge of the United States District Court for the District of Ohio. Education and careerBorn on July 26, 1770, on Westover Plantation in Charles City County, Colony of Virginia, British America,[1] Byrd read law in 1794,[1] with Gouverneur Morris in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania and was admitted to the bar.[2] He was a land agent for Philadelphia financier Robert Morris in Lexington, Kentucky from 1794 to 1797.[3][4][5] He was in private practice in Philadelphia from 1797 to 1799.[1] He was appointed Secretary of the Northwest Territory by President John Adams on October 3, 1799, serving from 1799 to 1802.[1] Byrd took his oath of office before Governor Arthur St. Clair on February 26, 1800.[6] While serving as Secretary of the Northwest Territory, Byrd also served as a Hamilton county delegate to the 1802 Ohio Constitutional Convention.[7][8] He was acting Governor of the Northwest Territory from 1802 to 1803.[1] Byrd served as Secretary of the Northwest Territory until Ohio became a state on March 1, 1803.[6] Byrd served as Territorial Governor until Edward Tiffin was duly elected governor of the state of Ohio on March 3, 1803.[6][9] In 1803, Byrd served as a delegate to Ohio's constitutional convention.[10] Federal judicial serviceFollowing the admission of the Northwest Territory to the Union as the State of Ohio on March 1, 1803, Byrd was nominated by President Thomas Jefferson on March 1, 1803, to the United States District Court for the District of Ohio, to a new seat authorized by 2 Stat. 201.[1] He was confirmed by the United States Senate on March 3, 1803, and received his commission the same day.[1] His service terminated on August 25, 1828, due to his death in Sinking Spring, Ohio.[1][11] He was interred at the old rural cemetery in Sinking Spring.[12] Notable casesIn its first session, the court participated in the trial of Aaron Burr. The indictment charged Burr and Harman Blennerhassett, with commencing an expedition to wage war against Spain via Mexico, but the charges were eventually dropped in 1819.[13] Another notable case for the court was Osborn v. Bank of the United States, which arose out of the attempt of the Ohio Legislature to tax out of existence the bank's branches in Cincinnati and Chillicothe by imposing an annual $50,000 tax on each branch.[14] The case reached the United States Supreme Court and the tax was held invalid following the case of McCulloch v. Maryland. FamilyByrd was the son of Colonel William Byrd III and Mary Willing Byrd.[2] He was also the grandson of William Byrd II, who is considered the founder of Richmond, Virginia.[2] While in the service of Robert Morris in Kentucky, Byrd married Sarah Waters Meade, the daughter of his father's friend, Colonel David Meade, on April 6, 1797.[4][12] On June 8, 1807, Byrd and his wife purchased a tract of 600 acres (2.4 km2) in Monroe Township, Adams County, Ohio, known as Buckeye Station and Hurricane Hill, from their brother-in-law, General Nathaniel Massie.[2] The Byrds' home sat on a ridge overlooking Kentucky and the Ohio River.[2] After his wife's death on February 21, 1815, Byrd moved to Chillicothe, Ohio where he lived and worked for a year before moving to West Union, Ohio.[15] While residing in West Union, Byrd met and married Hannah Miles (died August 14, 1839) on March 8, 1818.[2] Food and nutrition habitsFrom his diary, Byrd showed an extreme consciousness on matters of physical health and religion.[2] Byrd purchased an area called "Sinking Spring" in Highland County because he believed the waters there possessed medicinal properties conducive to health and longevity.[2] He guarded the diets of his family and himself.[2] By his place at the dining table, Byrd kept a small silver scale, upon which he weighed every article of food allowing a certain quantity of fat, sugar and phosphates with each portion given to himself and his family.[2] Byrd, along with at least one of his sons, had a deep interest in the Shakers movement and made significant donations to the movement.[2]
References
External links
|