Wilson
was born in 1741 or 1742 at Carskerdo, near St. Andrews, Scotland, and educated
at the universities of St. Andrews, Glasgow, and Edinburgh. He then emigrated to
America, arriving in the midst of the Stamp Act agitations in 1765. Early the
next year, he accepted a position as Latin tutor at the College of Philadelphia
(later part of the University of Pennsylvania) but almost immediately abandoned
it to study law under John Dickinson.
In 1768, the year after his admission to the Philadelphia bar, Wilson set up
practice at Reading, Pa. Two years later, he moved westward to the Scotch-Irish
settlement of Carlisle, and the following year he took a bride, Rachel Bird. He
specialized in land law and built up a broad clientele. On borrowed capital, he
also began to speculate in land. In some way he managed, too, to lecture on
English literature at the College of Philadelphia, which had awarded him an
honorary master of arts degree in 1766.
Wilson became involved in Revolutionary politics. In 1774 he took over
chairmanship of the Carlisle committee of correspondence, attended the first
provincial assembly, and completed preparation of Considerations on the Nature
and Extent of the Legislative Authority of the British Parliament. This tract
circulated widely in England and America and established him as a Whig leader.
The next year, Wilson was elected to both the provincial assembly and the
Continental Congress, where he sat mainly on military and Indian affairs
committees. In 1776, reflecting the wishes of his constituents, he joined the
moderates in Congress voting for a 3-week delay in considering Richard Henry
Lee's resolution of June 7 for independence. On the July 1 and 2 ballots on the
issue, however, he voted in the affirmative and signed the Declaration of
Independence on August 2.
Wilson's strenuous opposition to the republican Pennsylvania constitution of
1776, besides indicating a switch to conservatism on his part, led to his
removal from Congress the following year. To avoid the clamor among his frontier
constituents, he repaired to Annapolis during the winter of 1777-78 and then
took up residence in Philadelphia.
Wilson affirmed his newly assumed political stance by closely identifying
with the aristocratic and conservative republican groups, multiplying his
business interests, and accelerating his land speculation. He also took a
position as Advocate General for France in America (1779-83), dealing with
commercial and maritime matters, and legally defended Loyalists and their
sympathizers.
In the fall of 1779, during a period of inflation and food shortages, a mob
which included many militiamen and was led by radical constitutionalists, set
out to attack the republican leadership. Wilson was a prime target. He and some
35 of his colleagues barricaded themselves in his home at Third and Walnut
Streets, thereafter known as "Fort Wilson." During a brief skirmish, several
people on both sides were killed or wounded. The shock cooled sentiments and
pardons were issued all around, though major political battles over the
commonwealth constitution still lay ahead.
During 1781 Congress appointed Wilson as one of the directors of the Bank of
North America, newly founded by his close associate and legal client Robert
Morris. In 1782, by which time the conservatives had regained some of their
power, the former was reelected to Congress, and he also served in the period
1785-87.
Wilson reached the apex of his career in the Constitutional Convention
(1787), where his influence was probably second only to that of Madison. Rarely
missing a session, he sat on the Committee of Detail and in many other ways
applied his excellent knowledge of political theory to convention problems. Only
Gouverneur Morris delivered more speeches.
That same year, overcoming powerful opposition, Wilson led the drive for
ratification in Pennsylvania, the second state to endorse the instrument. The
new commonwealth constitution, drafted in 1789-90 along the lines of the U.S.
Constitution, was primarily Wilson's work and represented the climax of his
14-year fight against the constitution of 1776.
For his services in the formation of the federal government, though Wilson
expected to be appointed Chief Justice of the Supreme Court, in 1789 President
Washington named him as an associate justice. He was chosen that same year as
the first law professor at the College of Philadelphia. Two years later he began
an official digest of the laws of Pennsylvania, a project he never completed,
though he carried on for a while after funds ran out.
Wilson, who wrote only a few opinions, did not achieve the success on the
Supreme Court that his capabilities and experience promised. Indeed, during
those years he was the object of much criticism and barely escaped impeachment.
For one thing, he tried to influence the enactment of legislation in
Pennsylvania favorable to land speculators. Between 1792 and 1795 he also made
huge but unwise land investments in western New York and Pennsylvania, as well
as in Georgia. This did not stop him from conceiving a grandiose but ill-fated
scheme, involving vast sums of European capital, for the recruitment of European
colonists and their settlement in the West. Meantime, in 1793, as a widower with
six children, he remarried to Hannah Gray; their one son died in infancy.
Four years later, to avoid arrest for debt, the distraught Wilson moved from
Philadelphia to Burlington, NJ. The next year, apparently while on federal
circuit court business, he arrived at Edenton, NC, in a state of acute mental
stress and was taken into the home of James Iredell, a fellow Supreme Court
justice. He died there within a few months. Although first buried at Hayes
Plantation near Edenton, his remains were later reinterred in the yard of Christ
Church at Philadelphia.
Image: Courtesy of National Portrait Gallery, Smithsonian
Institution