Bassett
(Basset) was born in Cecil County, MD., in April 1745. After his tavern-keeper
father deserted his mother, he was reared by a relative, Peter Lawson, from whom
he later inherited Bohemia Manor (MD.) estate. He read for the law at
Philadelphia and in 1770 received a license to practice in Dover, DE. He
prospered as a lawyer and planter, and eventually came to own not only Bohemia
Manor, but homes in Dover and Wilmington as well.
During the Revolution, Bassett captained a troop of Dover cavalry militia and
served on the Delaware council of safety. Subsequently, he participated in
Delaware's constitutional convention and sat in both the upper and lower houses
of the legislature. In 1786 he represented his state in the Annapolis
Convention.
At the U.S. Constitutional Convention the next year, Bassett attended
diligently but made no speeches, served on no committees, and cast no critical
votes. Like several other delegates of estimable reputation and talent, he
allowed others to make the major steps.
Bassett subsequently went on to a bright career in the state and federal
governments. In the Delaware ratifying convention, he joined in the 30-0 vote
for the Constitution. Subsequently, in the years 1789-93, he served in the U.S.
Senate. In that capacity, he voted in favor of the power of the President to
remove governmental officers and against Hamilton's plan for the federal
assumption of state debts.
From 1793 until 1799 Bassett held the chief justiceship of the court of
common pleas. He espoused the Federalist cause in the 1790s, and served as a
Presidential elector on behalf of John Adams in 1797. Two years later, Bassett
was elected Governor of Delaware and continued in that post until 1801. That
year, he became one of President Adams' "midnight" appointments as a judge of
the U.S. Circuit Court. Subsequently, the Jeffersonian Republicans abolished his
judgeship, and he spent the rest of his life in retirement.
Twice married, to Ann Ennals and a woman named Bruff, Bassett fathered
several children. He was a devout Methodist, held religious meetings at Bohemia
Manor, and supported the church financially. He died in 1815 at the age of 70
and is interred at the Wilmington and Brandywine Cemetery, Wilmington, DE.
Image: Courtesy of The Baltimore Museum of Art