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Senate Years of Service: 1806-1807; 1810-1811; 1831-1842; 1849-1852 Party: Democratic Republican; National Republican; Whig
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| Oil on canvas, Giuseppe Fagnani, 1852, Collection of U.S. House of Representatives |
CLAY, Henry, (father of James Brown Clay),
a Senator and a Representative
from Kentucky; born in the district known as the Slashes, Hanover County,
Va., April 12, 1777; attended the public schools; studied law in Richmond, Va.;
admitted to the bar in 1797 and commenced practice in Lexington, Ky.; member,
State house of representatives 1803; elected as a Democratic Republican to the
United States Senate to fill the vacancy caused by the resignation of John
Adair and served from November 19, 1806, to March 3, 1807, despite being
younger than the constitutional age limit of thirty years; member, State house
of representatives 1808-1809, and served as speaker in 1809; again elected as a
Democratic Republican to the United States Senate to fill the vacancy caused by
the resignation of Buckner Thruston and served from January 4, 1810, to March
3, 1811; elected as a Democratic Republican to the Twelfth and Thirteenth
Congresses and served from March 4, 1811, to January 19, 1814, when he
resigned; Speaker of the House of Representatives (Twelfth and Thirteenth
Congresses); appointed one of the commissioners to negotiate the treaty of
peace with Great Britain in 1814; elected as a Democratic Republican to the
Fourteenth Congress (March 4, 1815-March 3, 1817); seat declared vacant by the
governor of Kentucky, caused by the acceptance of Henry Clay to sign a
commercial convention as minister plenipotentiary to Great Britain; elected in
a special election as a Democratic Republican to the Fourteenth Congress to
fill his own vacancy on October 30, 1815; re-elected as a Democratic Republican
to the Fifteenth and succeeding Congress (March 4, 1817-March 3, 1821); Speaker
of the House of Representatives (Fourteenth, Fifteenth and Sixteenth
Congresses); elected to the Eighteenth and Nineteenth Congresses and served
from March 3, 1823, to March 6, 1825, when he resigned; again served as Speaker
of the House of Representatives (Eighteenth Congress); appointed Secretary of
State by President John Quincy Adams 1825-1829; elected as a National
Republican to the United States Senate on November 10, 1831, to fill the
vacancy in the term commencing March 4, 1831; reelected as a Whig in 1836 and
served from November 10, 1831, until March 31, 1842, when he resigned;
chairman, Committee on Foreign Relations (Twenty-third and Twenty-fourth
Congresses), Committee on Finance (Twenty-seventh Congress); unsuccessful
presidential candidate of the Democratic Republican Party in 1824, of the
National Republican Party in 1832, and of the Whig Party in 1844; again elected
to the United States Senate and served from March 4, 1849, until his death in
Washington, D.C., June 29, 1852; lay in state in the Rotunda of the United
States Capitol, July 1, 1852; funeral services held in the Senate Chamber;
interment in Lexington Cemetery, Lexington, KY.
BibliographyAmerican National Biography;
Dictionary of American Biography;
The Yale Biographical Dictionary of American Law; Clay, Henry.
The Papers of Henry Clay, 1797-1852. Edited by James Hopkins,
Mary Hargreaves, Robert Seager II, Melba Porter Hay et al. 11 vols. Lexington:
University Press of Kentucky, 1959-1992; Remini, Robert V.
Henry Clay: Statesman for the Union. New York: W. W. Norton
Co., 1991.
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