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The following information about General Charles Pinckney,
for whom our neighborhood is named, was found and submitted
by Paul Jefferson, a Pinckney Neighborhood resident.
He found the information at http://www.colonialhall.com/pinckneycc/pinckneycc.asp The original source is Marshall, James V.. The
United States Manual of Biography and History. Philadelphia:
James B. Smith & Co., 1856. Pages 185 and 186.
Thanks, Paul!
Charles Cotesworth Pinckney, distinguished as a patriot,
soldier and diplomatist, was born in South Carolina
in 1740. His education was received in England, where
he passed through Westminster school and the University
of Oxford with a high reputation for ability and industry.
After reading law at the Temple, he returned to Carolina
in 1769, but was not able to practice his profession
for any length of time, the commencement of the Revolution
obliging him to exchange the gown for the sword.
He was first appointed a captain in the continental
line, and, soon afterward, commander of the first regiment
of Carolina infantry. When the South had been freed,
for a period, from invasion, by Moultrie's gallant defense
of the fort on Sullivan's Island, Colonel Pinckney joined
the northern army, and was made aid-de-camp to Washington.
In that capacity he was present at the battles of Brandywine
and Germantown.
When the South was again menaced with danger, he returned
to Carolina, and displayed great resolution and intrepidity,
on the rapid and harassing march which saved that city
from General Provost, and on the subsequent invasion
of Georgia, and the assault on the lines of Savannah.
On the approach of the army under Sir Henry Clinton,
and of the fleet conducted by Admiral Arbuthnot, he
was entrusted with the command of the fort on Sullivan's
Island. A favorable breeze and a flowing tide, however,
enabled the fleet to sail into the port of Charleston,
beyond the reach of his guns.
He then hastened with a part of the garrison to aid
in defending the city, and was for continuing hostilities
to the last extremity, not, as he said, because he thought
they would eventually be able to repel the enemy, but
because "we shall so cripple the army before us,
that, although we may not live to enjoy the benefits
ourselves, yet to the United States they will prove
incalculably great." Other counsel, however, prevailed,
and he was made prisoner with the rest of the besieged.
Some time after the return of peace, Colonel Pinckney
was placed in command of the militia of the lower division
of the State, but was very soon appointed by Washington,
whose confidence and friendship he enjoyed in a high
degree, minister plenipotentiary to France. He resigned
his commission in consequence, and sailed for Europe.
The hostile feeling of the French directory toward
this country, caused them to reject its conciliatory
propositions in an insulting manner, and to order its
minister out of the territories of the republic. General
Pinckney immediately communicated to the government
the indignities which he had received, and retired to
Holland. Not long afterward, he was joined by General
Marshal and Mr. Gerry, with fresh instructions to reiterate
propositions to the directory for the adjustment of
differences.
When, at length, war was inevitable, and the whole
United States were resounding with his celebrated sentiment,
"Millions for defense, but not a cent for tribute,"
he returned home, having been named a major-general
by Washington, who had been placed at the head of the
forces raised for the protection of the American shores.
Superior rank, however, was accorded to General Hamilton,
who had been his junior during the Revolution. Some
one spoke to General Pinckney of this preference as
unjust, but he briefly answered, that he was satisfied
that General Washington had sufficient reasons for it.
"Let us," he continued, "first dispose
of our enemies; we shall then have leisure to settle
the question of rank."
Previously to his going to France, General Pinckney
had been offered by President Washington several places
under government of the highest importance, all of which,
however, private considerations obliged him to decline.
The first was that of judge of the supreme court; the
next that of secretary of war, on the resignation of
General Knox; and then that of secretary of state, when
Randolph had been removed. He was a member of the convention
which framed the constitution of the United States,
and afterward, in the convention of South Carolina,
assembled for deliberating upon the instrument, he contributed
greatly to its adoption. He died in August, 1825.
As a lawyer, General Pinckney was distinguished for
profound and accurate learning, and strength and ingenuity
of reasoning, without having much pretension to eloquence.
In his practice he was high-minded and liberal, never
receiving any compensation from the widow and orphan.
His literary attainments were extensive, especially
his classical knowledge; and no one was a more zealous
friend to the advancement of learning. For more than
fifteen years before his death, he acted as president
of the Bible Society of Charleston -- an office to which
he was named with unanimity by the Christians of almost
every sect.
Our URL: http://PinckneyNeighborhood.org
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