King was
born at Scarboro (Scarborough), MA (present Maine), in 1755. He was the eldest
son of a prosperous farmer-merchant. At age 12, after receiving an elementary
education at local schools, he matriculated at Dummer Academy in South Byfield,
MA, and in 1777 graduated from Harvard. He served briefly as a general's aide
during the War for Independence. Choosing a legal career, he read for the law at
Newburyport, MA, and entered practice there in 1780.
King's knowledge, bearing, and oratorical gifts soon launched him on a
political career. From 1783 to 1785 he was a member of the Massachusetts
legislature, after which that body sent him to the Continental Congress
(1784-86). There, he gained a reputation as a brilliant speaker and an early
opponent of slavery. Toward the end of his tour, in 1786, he married Mary Alsop,
daughter of a rich New York City merchant. He performed his final duties for
Massachusetts by representing her at the Constitutional Convention and by
serving in the commonwealth's ratifying convention.
At age 32, King was not only one of the most youthful of the delegates at
Philadelphia, but was also one of the most important. He numbered among the most
capable orators. Furthermore, he attended every session. Although he came to the
convention unconvinced that major changes should be made in the Articles of
Confederation, his views underwent a startling transformation during the
debates. With Madison, he became a leading figure in the nationalist caucus. He
served with distinction on the Committee on Postponed Matters and the Committee
of Style. He also took notes on the proceedings, which have been valuable to
historians.
About 1788 King abandoned his law practice, moved from the Bay State to
Gotham, and entered the New York political forum. He was elected to the
legislature (1789-90), and in the former year was picked as one of the state's
first U.S. senators. As political divisions grew in the new government, King
expressed ardent sympathies for the Federalists. In Congress, he supported
Hamilton's fiscal program and stood among the leading proponents of the
unpopular Jay's Treaty (1794).
Meantime, in 1791, King had become one of the directors of the First Bank of
the United States. Reelected to the U.S. Senate in 1795, he served only a year
before he was appointed as Minister to Great Britain (1796-1803).
King's years in this post were difficult ones in Anglo-American relations.
The wars of the French Revolution endangered U.S. commerce in the maritime
clashes between the French and the British. The latter in particular violated
American rights on the high seas, especially by the impressment of sailors.
Although King was unable to bring about a change in this policy, he smoothed
relations between the two nations.
In 1803 King sailed back to the United States and to a career in politics. In
1804 and 1808 fellow-signer Charles Cotesworth Pinckney and he were the
Federalist candidates for President and Vice President, respectively, but were
decisively defeated. Otherwise, King largely contented himself with agricultural
pursuits at King Manor, a Long Island estate he had purchased in 1805. During
the War of 1812, he was again elected to the U.S. Senate (1813-25) and ranked as
a leading critic of the war. Only after the British attacked Washington in 1814
did he come to believe that the United States was fighting a defensive action
and to lend his support to the war effort.
In 1816 the Federalists chose King as their candidate for the presidency, but
James Monroe beat him handily. Still in the Senate, that same year King led the
opposition to the establishment of the Second Bank of the United States. Four
years later, believing that the issue of slavery could not be compromised but
must be settled once and for all by the immediate establishment of a system of
compensated emancipation and colonization, he denounced the Missouri Compromise.
In 1825, suffering from ill health, King retired from the Senate. President
John Quincy Adams, however, persuaded him to accept another assignment as
Minister to Great Britain. He arrived in England that same year, but soon fell
ill and was forced to return home the following year. Within a year, at the age
of 72, in 1827, he died. Surviving him were several offspring, some of whom also
gained distinction. He was laid to rest near King Manor in the cemetery of Grace
Episcopal Church, Jamaica, Long Island, NY.
Image: Courtesy of The National Portrait Gallery,
Smithsonian Institution