One
of the most aristocratic delegates at the convention, Butler was born in 1744 in
County Carlow, Ireland. His father was Sir Richard Butler, member of Parliament
and a baronet.
Like so many younger sons of the British aristocracy who could not inherit
their fathers' estates because of primogeniture, Butler pursued a military
career. He became a major in His Majesty's 29th Regiment and during the colonial
unrest was posted to Boston in 1768 to quell disturbances there. In 1771 he
married Mary Middleton, daughter of a wealthy South Carolinian, and before long
resigned his commission to take up a planter's life in the Charleston area. The
couple was to have at least one daughter.
When the Revolution broke out, Butler took up the Whig cause. He was elected
to the assembly in 1778, and the next year he served as adjutant general in the
South Carolina militia. While in the legislature through most of the 1780s, he
took over leadership of the democratic upcountry faction in the state and
refused to support his own planter group. The War for Independence cost him much
of his property, and his finances were so precarious for a time that he was
forced to travel to Amsterdam to seek a personal loan. In 1786 the assembly
appointed him to a commission charged with settling a state boundary dispute.
The next year, Butler won election to both the Continental Congress (1787-88)
and the Constitutional Convention. In the latter assembly, he was an outspoken
nationalist who attended practically every session and was a key spokesman for
the Madison-Wilson caucus. Butler also supported the interests of southern
slaveholders. He served on the Committee on Postponed Matters.
On his return to South Carolina Butler defended the Constitution but did not
participate in the ratifying convention. Service in the U.S. Senate (1789-96)
followed. Although nominally a Federalist, he often crossed party lines. He
supported Hamilton's fiscal program but opposed Jay's Treaty and Federalist
judiciary and tariff measures.
Out of the Senate and back in South Carolina from 1797 to 1802, Butler was
considered for but did not attain the governorship. He sat briefly in the Senate
again in 1803-4 to fill out an unexpired term, and he once again demonstrated
party independence. But, for the most part, his later career was spent as a
wealthy planter. In his last years, he moved to Philadelphia, apparently to be
near a daughter who had married a local physician. Butler died there in 1822 at
the age of 77 and was buried in the yard of Christ Church.
Image: Courtesy of National Archives, Records of
Exposition, Anniversary, and Memorial Commissions
(148-CCD-81a)