Rufus King
Rufus King (
March 24,
1755 -
April 29,
1827) was an
American lawyer,
politician, and
statesman. He was a delegate for
Massachusetts to the
Continental Congress and the Constitutional Convention. He represented
New York in the
United States Senate, served as Ambassador to the
United Kingdom, and was a candidate for both Vice President and
President of the United States.
King was born in
Scarborough, which was then a part of
Massachusetts but is now in the state of
Maine. Rufus attended
Harvard, but his studies interrupted by the
Revolutionary War. He fought in the
Battle of Lexington and Concord and the participated in the
Siege of Boston. He returned to Harvard after the British withdrew and completed his studies in
1777. He was admitted to the bar, and began a legal practice in
Newburyport, Massachusetts. King was first elected to the Massachusetts state assembly in 1783, and returned there each year until 1785.
Massachusetts sent him to the
Continental Congress under the
Articles of Confederation from
1784 to
1787. King opposed the expansion of
slavery into the
Northwest Territory and proposed that slavery be prohibited in that area. This prohibition became law in the
Northwest Ordinance of 1787.
Also in
1787 King was sent to the
Constitutional Convention, where he worked closely with
Alexander Hamilton on the
Committee of Style and Arrangement to prepare the final draft. He returned home and went to work to get the Constitution ratified and to position himself to be named to the U.S. Senate. He was only partially successful. Massachusetts ratified the Constitution, but his efforts to influence the state legislature and get to the Senate were rebuffed.
At Hamilton's urging he moved to
New York City and was elected to the
New York state legislature in
1788. When the
U.S. Constitution took effect, the state senate and house agreed to send
Philip Schuyler to the U. S. Senate, but they disagreed on who should serve in the second seat. After several shifts, the upstate and New York City groups were still deadlocked. Governor
George Clinton proposed Rufus King as a compromise candidate, and he was elected. He represented New York in the Senate from
1789 to
1796 and from
1813 to
1825.
King also served as the
United States ambassador to the United Kingdom from
1796 to
1803 and in
1825 to
1826. He was the
Federalist Party candidate for
Vice President of the United States in
1804 and
1808 and for
President of the United States in
1816.
Many of King's family were also involved in politics. His half-brother Cyrus King was a
U. S. Congressman. In
1786 he had maried Mary Alsop, the daughter of Congressman
John Alsop, and their sons John Alsop King and James Gore King also went on to serve in the Congress. Rufus died in
1827 at his farm in
Jamaica, Queens and is buried in the Grace Church Cemetery in Jamaica,
Queens, New York. The home that King built in
1806 and some of his farm make up King Park in Queens. The home, called King Manor, is now a museum and is open to the public.
External link
\n*King's Congressional Biography\n*
King Manor museum web page\nKing, RufusKing, Rufus King, Rufus