Part II
By the time
President Madison signed the declaration of war against the United Kingdom in
June of 1812, John Sevier and most of his fellow Democratic-Republicans had
been suing for war for many months. In a
letter to Tennessee governor Willie Blount, which was published in the Knoxville Gazette on July 13th,
1812, Sevier writes that Congress has finally approved the war bill. He had been “well assured” that the bill
would pass in the House, but the course of the Senate had been unclear. His personal vendetta against Native
Americans is plain; about the Creek Nation he writes that “fire and sword must
be carried into that country before those wretches will be reduced to reason or
become peaceable neighbors, there can be no reliance or trust placed in them…”,
and adds that he hopes the U.S. will take Florida from the Spanish.[i]
Madison had initially offered a
position of high command in the army to Sevier, who had declined on the grounds
that he was too old. Instead, the
president made him chairman of the Committee on Military Affairs.[ii] Sevier continued to attend the House during
the day and make his rounds around the capitol in the evenings & on weekends:
Mrs. Madison’s “levee” on July 1st, a visit with the French
ambassador on July 3rd, and a 4th of July celebration,
attended by all members of the president’s cabinet, at Samuel Ringgold’s
residence. The first session of the
twelfth Congress ended on July 6th, and Sevier set out for home two
days later.[iii]
Sevier
returned to Washington on October 28th, 1812, and promptly called on
the president on the 30th, three days before the beginning of the
second congressional session. In late
1812 he began lodging at Mrs. Suter’s boardinghouse, which was located at the corner of 15th Street & F Street, one block east
of the White House and directly across the street from the Treasury building.
Regarded as a Washington institution, the boarding house & restaurant was a
popular meeting spot for government officials and was run by an elderly widow
named Barbara Suter.[iv]
November
1812 seems to have been a particularly busy month for the old general: he
attended Mrs. Madison’s famous drawing rooms on the 11th and 25th,
dined with the president on the 17th, and on the 26th, at
the invitation of Captain Stewart, dined onboard the USS Constitution with “the president, all the heads of the departments,
the greater part of the members of the two houses of Congress, & many of
the officers of the army and navy.”[v]
1812 drew to a close but the war,
contrary to the expectations of those who had advocated for it, dragged
on. Sevier remained busy attending the
House during the day and visiting with political and military leaders in the
evenings and on weekends – though he also found a fair amount of time for
gambling and taking in shows at the theater.
From the beginning of the year until the end of the session, he attended
a party at the French ambassador’s residence, dined at Mr. Villard’s at the
Navy Yard, and called on the new Secretary of War (John Armstrong Jr.) and the
Russian ambassador (Andrey Dashkov). The
Twelfth Congress concluded on March 3rd, 1813, but Sevier remained
in D.C. for almost two more weeks. On
the fifth of March he made an appearance at a ball at the Russian embassy. Given his personal affinity for France, his
cordial relationship with the French ambassador, and the U.S.’s friendly
relationship with France, it is interesting that Sevier was a guest of the
Russian ambassador, since Napoleon had recently abandoned a disastrous invasion
of the Russian empire. Before setting
out for home (which he did in company with the Russian secretary of legation),
he also visited the president and dined at Mr. Villard’s at the Navy Yard
again.[vi]
A couple surviving documents from
this period give some insight into the “Russia situation”. In an address dated Feb. 27th,
1813, Sevier reports that the French have invaded Russia and have “desolated a
large part of the Russian empire, and have destroyed a number of the finest
cities in that or perhaps any other country… The Russians have defended
themselves with great spirit and bravery, and the damage done on each side is
incalculable.” Whether he fails to
condemn the French assault on Russian liberty because of his sympathies toward
France or for the sake of diplomacy is unclear (though “a little bit of both”
may be the answer). In his denunciation
of the U.K., however, he spares no hyperbole: “haughty, tyrannical, and
malicious” Britannia is trying “by every foul art in her power to subjugate our
free and independent nation, and hang round our necks the iron and despotic
yoke of the British government.” It is
necessary, therefore, for the U.S. to “guard against the diabolical
machinations of the malignant and embittered nation with whom we are at war.”[vii] Sevier wrote a letter to his son the
following month, relating the latest he had heard regarding British and
American troop movements, and adding that the Russian emperor had offered, via
the ambassador, Dashkov, to mediate between the two belligerents.[viii]
Sevier scarcely had a month to rest
at home before undertaking the approximately two-week journey back to the
capitol. On May 17th he
arrived at Mrs. Suter’s and took up his lodgings; four days later he visited
the president and Secretary of the Navy William Jones, who had replaced Paul
Hamilton in January. The first session
of the 13th Congress opened on May 24th, 1813, and
Sevier’s diary is once again filled with after-hours activity that appears to
combine work and leisure. He visited the
Navy Yard no less than five times – three in the company of his landlady, Mrs.
Suter. He attended at least one Saturday
meeting of the military committee, dined with the president in May and visited
him again in July, went to two of Mrs. Madison’s levees, visited the secretary
of war, spent one June evening with the French ambassador, and dined with the
Russian ambassador the following week.[ix]
He wrote to his son George
frequently and appeared to grow increasingly homesick. A letter dated June 11th, 1813
gives further updates on the war: the U.S. frigate Chesapeake, which he had previously heard was victorious over the
HMS Shannon, is now understood to
have been captured. General Henry
Dearborn and Commodore Isaac Chauncey have had several victories in the Great
Lakes theatre, but in all the war is progressing slowly. Sevier confides that he is “entirely sick at
being so long from home”, and wishes he could return to his farm and stay
there.[x]
Two
weeks later, in a letter written “late in the night”, he relates more news of
battles and troop movements. As for his
own part in the war effort, he is deeply involved in “the tax business” and
much of his time is consumed by the military committee: “there is [sic] only
seven of us, and almost every thing relative to that all important subject, is
laid before that committee, and to make arrangements for the defence of all our
extensive frontiers on both sides, is an immense undertaking indeed.” He tells George that he will try to have him
and his regiment sent to the north, and again laments that he is “quite sick
being so much time from home, and [were] I there again… I should be very
unwilling to leave it,” adding in a postscript “much business and weary,
&c.”[xi]
With
the war still raging, the first congressional session adjourned on the second
of August 1813; Sevier arrived in Knoxville at the end of that month.[xii] Late that autumn, Sevier’s old archnemesis
Andrew Jackson was busy battling the Creeks and trying to coordinate the
various local militias of the southeast.
Jackson encountered particular trouble in east Tennessee, where the
militia was commanded by John Cocke, a political ally of Sevier.[xiii]
Representative Sevier left home for D.C. once
more on Nov. 15th, arriving at Mrs. Suter’s on Sunday, Dec. 5th
– just in time for the opening of the second session the following day. Sevier remained in close contact with the
president during this session, dining with him twice, visiting him at the
beginning of January, and attending three of Mrs. Madison’s drawing rooms. He called upon Secretary of State James
Monroe and Secy. of the Navy William Jones in December, likely in his capacity
as chairman of the Committee on Military Affairs. In January he dined at the French
ambassador’s residence again, and went to the Navy Yard to watch the launch of
the USS Argus. In April he dined with Secretary of the
Treasury George W. Campbell, Secy. of War Armstrong, and Vice President Gerry.[xiv]
The second session of 13th
Congress ended on Apr. 14th, 1814, and Sevier set out for home on
May 8th.[xv] In the absence of Congress, however, things
in Washington were about to heat up even more.
On August 24th, a British squadron under the command of Rear
Admiral George Cockburn disembarked in the city and proceeded to burn its way
toward the White House. Sevier’s D.C.
home, Mrs. Suter’s boardinghouse, stood on the route the British took from
Capitol Hill to the president’s house.
With most of her tenants out of town for the congressional recess and
her two sons off fighting, Mrs. Suter found herself in the uncomfortable
position of inhabiting a nearly empty building while the town burned around
her. Late that evening, Major General
Robert Ross of the British Army appeared at Mrs. Suter’s door and ordered
dinner for himself and his staff.
Cockburn joined Ross and his men there a couple hours later, and the
boardinghouse became Ross’s temporary headquarters.[xvi]
Sevier’s friend Louis Sérurier, the
French ambassador, was also stranded in the city as the British closed in. He had recently taken up residence in the
Octagon, “the most elegant private home in Washington,” which was located just
west of the White House. The home’s
owners had offered to rent it to Sérurier in the hope that, in the event of a
British invasion, the house would be spared on the grounds of its occupation by
a foreign diplomat. On the evening of
the 24th, the ambassador hung a makeshift French tricolor on a pole
outside the house; the strategy paid off and the house was spared. Three and a half miles away, however, the
Navy Yard, which Sevier had visited so often over the previous two years, was
engulfed in flames.[xvii]
On Sept. 17th, 1814,
Sevier returned to the charred capitol for what would be his last session in
Congress. The House opened on Monday,
Sept. 19th, and Sevier visited the president, the secretary of war,
and the secretary of the treasury that Thursday. He noted in his diary that the House met on a
Saturday (Oct. 15th) to negotiate a bill for the removal of the seat
of the government. Dolley Madison
refused to let the destruction of the White House hamper her social activities,
and Sevier attended two of her “Wednesday Drawing Rooms.”[xviii]
In a long letter, written in January
to his son George, who was in Knoxville, Sevier expresses more anxiety over the
expenses of the war and his role in figuring out how to finance it. “I fear we shall be much embarrassed
respecting money to supply the army,” he writes, adding that the bank is in
danger of failing. He assures George
that his regiment will most likely not be transferred. Winter in the capitol was proving difficult:
“I am still enjoying good health, but closely surrounded by sickness,” he
writes. There was snow on the ground and
firewood was in short supply; he relates that the housekeeper does not know
“where to get one single cord,” and he may have to borrow some coal from one of
the ministers.[xix]
He dined with the president at the
end of January, and on Feb. 18th, 1815, Washington was illuminated
to celebrate the end of the war; to this note, Sevier adds “cold day and a
little sleet.” With the war finally
over, the 13th Congress ended on the third of March, 1815. Two weeks later, on the 18th, he
settled his account with Mrs. Suter and left her $12 in his debt. The following day, he left D.C. by
stagecoach, paying a fare of $5, and so completed his eventful service as a
U.S. representative for the 12th and 13th Congresses. [xx]
Though taciturn on the House floor,
Sevier’s diary, letters home, and other sources show that he was indeed devoted
to his duties and actively involved in the committee he was assigned to. He closely followed news of the war on all
fronts and shared whatever information he received with his family back home. He was a frequent guest at the White House,
the French embassy, and the Navy Yard, and personally knew many cabinet members
and top military officials. In the
twilight of his career, he was as close to the pulse of the nation as he had
been so many years earlier during the first American war against the British.
Written
by Jennifer Albertsen
Works
cited
1 - Department
of the Treasury website:
2 - Driver, Carl Samuel. John Sevier: Pioneer of the Old Southwest. Chapel Hill:
University
of North Carolina Press, 1932.
3
– “John Sevier’s Diary”, in Heiskell, Samuel Gordon, Andrew
Jackson and Early Tennessee
History, vol. 2.
Nashville: Ambrose Printing Co., 1920. (Includes reprint of entire
diary of John Sevier)
4 - Stagg, J.C.A. The War of 1812:
Conflict for a Continent, Cambridge: Cambridge
University Press, 2012.
5 - Tennessee State Library
& Archives website: http://tnsos.net/TSLA/findingaids/13.pdf
6 - Tennessee
State Library & Archives, Nashville.
Address
written in Washington, 27 Feb. 1813. Collection: TN Historical Society, Box:
correspondence by author, 1809 b2; Document:
sl053
Letter
written to his son, Col. Sevier, 22 Mar. 1813. Collection: TN Historical Society,
Box:
correspondence by author, 1809 b2;
Document: sl052
7 - University
of Tennessee Special Collections Library.
Letter written to Col. George
Washington Sevier, 11 Jun. 1813. Collection: John Sevier
collection;
Box: MS-1941 b1; Folder: 14; Document: sc101.
Letter
written to Col. George Washington Sevier, 27 Jun. 1813. Collection: John Sevier
collection;
Box: MS-1941 b1; Folder: 14; Document: sc102
Letter written to Col. George
Washington Sevier, 22 Jan. 1815. Collection:
John Sevier
collection; Box: MS-1941
b1; Folder: 15; Document: sc103
8 - Vogel, Steve. Through the Perilous Fight: Six Weeks That Saved the Nation. New
York:
Random House, 2013.
[i] Driver 208
[ii] Tennessee State Library
& Archives website: http://tnsos.net/TSLA/findingaids/13.pdf
[iii] Heiskell 599-600. Ringgold was a Democratic-Republican
representative from Maryland. http://history.house.gov/People/Search/
[iv] Heiskell 602; Vogel
177-78
[v] Heiskell 601-02
[vi] Ibid. 602-03
[vii] Sevier, John. Address
written in Washington, 27 Feb. 1813. Held by Tennessee State Library and
Archives, Nashville.
[viii] Sevier, John. Letter
written to his son, Col. Sevier, 22 Mar. 1813.
Held by Tennessee State Library and Archives, Nashville
[ix] Heiskell 604-06
[x] Sevier, John. Letter
written to Col. George Washington Sevier, 11 Jun. 1813. Held by Special
Collections Library, University of Tennessee.
[xi] Sevier, John. Letter
written to Col. George Washington Sevier, 27 Jun. 1813. Held by Special
Collections Library, University of Tennessee.
[xii] Heiskell 606
[xiii] Stagg 107
[xiv] Heiskell 607-08. Treasury Secretary Campbell, who was having a
difficult time securing funding for the war, was also from
Tennessee. https://www.treasury.gov/about/history/pages/gcampbell.aspx
[xv] Heiskell 608
[xvi] Vogel 177-78, 185
[xvii] Ibid. 176. The next month,
Sérurier offered to vacate the house so that the now-homeless President &
Mrs. Madison could move in – an offer the first family accepted. (Vogel 357)
[xviii] Heiskell 609-10
[xix] Sevier, John. Letter
written to Col. George Washington Sevier, 22 Jan. 1815. Held by Special Collections Library,
University of Tennessee.
[xx] Heiskell 610-11
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