William
Blount was the great-grandson of Thomas Blount, who came from England to
Virginia soon after 1660 and settled on a North Carolina plantation. William,
the eldest in a large family, was born in 1749 while his mother was visiting his
grandfather's Rosefield estate, on the site of present Windsor near Pamlico
Sound. The youth apparently received a good education.
Shortly after the War for Independence began, in 1776, Blount enlisted as a
paymaster in the North Carolina forces. Two years later, he wed Mary Grainier
(Granger); of their six children who reached adulthood, one son also became
prominent in Tennessee politics.
Blount spent most of the remainder of his life in public office. He sat in
the lower house of the North Carolina legislature (1780-84), including service
as speaker, as well as in the upper (1788-90). In addition, he took part in
national politics, serving in the Continental Congress in 1782-83 and 1786-87.
Appointed as a delegate to the Constitutional Convention at the age of 38,
Blount was absent for more than a month because he chose to attend the
Continental Congress on behalf of his state. He said almost nothing in the
debates and signed the Constitution reluctantly--only, he said, to make it "the
unanimous act of the States in Convention." Nonetheless, he favored his state's
ratification of the completed document.
Blount hoped to be elected to the first U.S. Senate. When he failed to
achieve that end, in 1790 he pushed westward beyond the Appalachians, where he
held speculative land interests and had represented North Carolina in dealings
with the Indians. He settled in what became Tennessee, to which he devoted the
rest of his life. He resided first at Rocky Mount, a cabin near present Johnson
City and in 1792 built a mansion in Knoxville.
Two years earlier, Washington had appointed Blount as Governor for the
Territory South of the River Ohio (which included Tennessee) and also as
Superintendent of Indian Affairs for the Southern Department, in which positions
he increased his popularity with the frontiersmen. In 1796 he presided over the
constitutional convention that transformed part of the territory into the State
of Tennessee. He was elected as one of its first U.S. senators (1796-97).
During this period, Blount's affairs took a sharp turn for the worse. In 1797
his speculations in western lands led him into serious financial difficulties.
That same year, he also apparently concocted a plan involving use of Indians,
frontiersmen, and British naval forces to conquer for Britain the Spanish
provinces of Florida and Louisiana. A letter he wrote alluding to the plan fell
into the hands of President Adams, who turned it over to the Senate on July 3,
1797. Five days later, that body voted 25 to 1 to expel Blount. The House
impeached him, but the Senate dropped the charges in 1799 on the grounds that no
further action could be taken beyond his dismissal.
The episode did not hamper Blount's career in Tennessee. In 1798 he was
elected to the senate and rose to the speakership. He died 2 years later at
Knoxville in his early fifties. He is buried there in the cemetery of the First
Presbyterian Church.
Image: Courtesy of Tennessee State Museum, Tennessee
Historical Society Collection