Ohio History Journal

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THOMAS JEFFERSON AND THE REMOVAL OF

THOMAS JEFFERSON AND THE REMOVAL OF

GOVERNOR ST. CLAIR IN 1802

 

 

BY RANDOLPH CHANDLER DOWNES, M. A.,

Instructor in History and Economics, Marietta College

While going through the papers of Thomas Jeffer-

son at the Library of Congress and the Territorial

Papers in the State Department last summer seeking

to determine the relationship of Jefferson to the political

situation in the Northwest Territory from 1800-1802, I

obtained, among other things, copies of several letters

that passed between Jefferson and his advisers concern-

ing the removal from office of Arthur St. Clair, Gov-

ernor of the Northwest Territory. I have taken ex-

cerpts from some of these letters, and in some cases the

letters themselves, which are printed below, in an at-

tempt to show how Mr. Jefferson handled this embar-

rassing question when his political supporters in the

Northwest Territory sought to remove the staunch old

Federalist, St. Clair, from the governorship. By way

of introduction, I will present the background of the

situation in the Northwest Territory in 1802.

It will be remembered that the desire for self-gov-

ernment that existed among the subjects of St. Clair's

colonial government became much more articulate in

1799 when the first popularly elected Legislature met

to assume its share in governing the Territory. This

advance in status was made possible under the terms

of the Ordinance of 1787, which provided that when the

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