Archibald Dixon (April 2, 1802 – April 23, 1876)
was a
U.S. Senator from Kentucky. He represented
the
Whig Party in both
houses of the
Kentucky General
Assembly, and was elected
Lieutenant Governor of
Kentucky in 1844, serving under
Governor William Owsley. In 1851, the Whigs nominated
him for governor, but he lost to
Lazarus W. Powell, his former law partner.
Dixon represented Henderson County at the Kentucky constitutional
convention of 1849. In this capacity, he ensured that strong
protections of slave property were included in the
Kentucky
Constitution of 1850. Later, the General Assembly chose Dixon
to fill the unexpired Senate term of
Henry
Clay. He served from September 1, 1852 to March 3, 1855, and
did not stand for re-election. During his short tenure, Dixon's
major accomplishment was convincing
Stephen Douglas to include language in the
Kansas-Nebraska Act that
explicitly repealed the
Missouri
Compromise's prohibition on slavery north of
latitude 36°30'.
Despite his pro-slavery views, Dixon was loyal to the Union during
the
Civil War. He represented his
county and his state in a number of failed conventions that sought
to resolve the upcoming conflict before it began. In 1864, he
joined Kentucky governor
Thomas
E. Bramlette in an audience
with
President
Abraham Lincoln protesting the
recruitment of former slaves as Union soldiers in Kentucky. Dixon
died on April 23, 1876.
Personal life
Archibald
Dixon was born near Redhouse, Caswell
County
, North
Carolina
on April 2,
1802. He was the son of
Captain Wynn and Rebecca Hart Dixon.
Both Dixon's father and grandfather fought in the
Revolutionary War, the former
enlisting at the age of sixteen.
His grandfather, Colonel Henry Dixon, was commended by "Light Horse Harry" Lee for his service at the
Battle of
Camden
. He was later killed at the Battle of Eutaw
Springs
.
In 1805,
Captain Dixon lost all of his property and moved the family to
Henderson,
Kentucky
. Archibald Dixon was educated by his mother
and attended the common schools of Henderson. In 1822, he began to
study law in the office of James Hillyer. He was admitted to the
bar in 1824, and commenced practice in
Henderson.
He became well-known as a skilled defense
attorney and was employed in a number of cases in Kentucky and
Indiana
.
In 1834, Dixon married Elizabeth B. Pollit; the couple had six
children. One of these was Rebecca Hart Dixon, second wife of
future Kentucky governor
John
Y. Brown. Another
daughter, Susan Bell Dixon, married
Cuthbert Powell, a
U.S. Representative from
Virginia
. One
son, Henry, was elected a state senator in Kentucky, while another,
Archibald, became a respected doctor in Henderson.
Elizabeth Pollit Dixon died in 1851. On October 29, 1853, Dixon
married Sue Bullitt. Bullitt was the paternal granddaughter of
Alexander Scott Bullitt, the
first lieutenant governor of Kentucky, and the maternal
granddaughter of Dr.
Thomas
Walker, the first surveyor in the state of Kentucky. Dixon and
Bullitt had three children.
Political career
Dixon was elected to represent Henderson County in the
Kentucky House of
Representatives in 1830. He served three consecutive one-year
terms, leaving the House in 1833. Following this, he returned to
his law practice and in 1835, partnered with Lazarus W. Powell.
From 1836
to 1840, he represented Henderson, Daviess
, and Hopkins
counties in the Kentucky
Senate. The next year, he returned to the Kentucky
House, serving from 1841 to 1843.
In 1844, Dixon was chosen as the Whig nominee for lieutenant
governor on a ticket with
William
Owsley. Dixon defeated his opponent, William S. Pilcher, by
more than 11,000 votes. At the expiration of his term, the Whig
party considered nominating Dixon for governor, but instead chose
the more experienced John J. Crittenden, who defeated Dixon's
former law partner, Lazarus Powell.
The voters of Henderson County chose Dixon to represent them at the
state constitutional convention of 1849. The Whigs nominated him to
chair the convention, but he lost to the Democratic nominee
James Guthrie by
a vote of 50 to 43. A large slaveholder, Dixon introduced numerous
measures to protect the rights of slaveholders in the new
constitution. Among them were assertions that slave property was
just as inviolable as any other property, that the rights of
property were above constitutional sanction, and that absolute
power over property cannot exist in a
republic. Though some of these ideas were
challenged, all eventually found their way into the Kentucky
Constitution of 1850.
The Whigs nominated Dixon for governor in 1851. The Democrats
countered with Lazarus Powell. Still friends from their earlier
days as law partners, the two often traveled together during the
campaign.
Cassius Marcellus
Clay also entered the contest, representing the emancipationist
wing of the Whig Party. Clay drew about 6,000 votes, mostly from
Whigs, and Powell won the election by a small majority.
In the Senate
In 1852, Henry Clay resigned his seat in the U.S. Senate, effective
September 1 of that year. Clay's announcement came while the
Kentucky General Assembly
was in session. This was intentional. The majority of the Assembly
was Whig, and Clay knew that if he resigned while the Assembly was
in session, the majority would elect a Whig to be his successor. By
contrast, if he had waited until September 1 to announce his
resignation the Assembly would already have closed its session, and
Governor Powell, a Democrat, would appoint a temporary successor
until the legislature convened again two years later.
The Assembly acted according to Clay's plans. By a vote of 71–58,
they chose Dixon over Democrat James Guthrie to assume Clay's seat
effective September 1. However, Clay died on June 29, 1852. Because
Dixon's commission was not effective until September 1, Governor
Powell was allowed to name Clay's successor. He chose Democrat
David Meriwether, who
served until September 1, then relinquished the seat to Dixon.
Dixon served the remainder of Clay's term, but did not stand for
reelection in 1854.
A major
issue during Dixon's tenure in the Senate was the admission of the
Nebraska
Territory
to the Union. Specifically, the question
hinged upon the issue of whether or not slavery would be allowed in
the state. Under the Missouri Compromise, slavery was prohibited in
the territory. Because of this, the southern states opposed its
admission. In an attempt to allay southern fears, Stephen Douglas
introduced a bill in January 1854 that included a provision that
"all questions pertaining to slavery in the territories, and in the
new states to be formed therefrom are to be left to the people
residing therein, through their appropriate representatives."
Douglas hoped to placate southerners with this language, which
allowed for the possibility of legalized slavery in the potential
state without specifically addressing the issue of the Missouri
Compromise.
Southerners, however, saw that Douglas' attempt was unlikely to
result in legalization of slavery. While it allowed Nebraska to
determine whether slavery would be legal there when it became a
state, slavery was still forbidden under the Missouri Compromise as
long as it remained a territory. If no slaveholders were allowed in
the territory, it would be exceedingly unlikely that the state's
voters would allow for slavery in their constitution. Following
this line of thought, Dixon drafted an amendment to Douglas' bill
that would repeal section eight of the Missouri Compromise, the
section that prohibited slavery north of latitude 36°30'.
After a
promise of support from Tennessee
senator James
C. Jones, Dixon introduced
the amendment on January 16, 1854. This forced Douglas to confront
the Missouri Compromise issue outright, and two days later, he
visited Dixon to discuss his position. Douglas was reluctant to
repeal the Compromise, but was ultimately convinced by Dixon's
logic. He concluded the interview by exclaiming "By God, Sir, you
are right. I will incorporate it in my bill, though I know it will
raise a hell of a storm." Over the next several days, Douglas
incorporated Dixon's suggestion and other pro-slavery measures into
the Kansas-Nebraska Act, which President
Franklin Pierce signed into law on May 30,
1854.
Later life
On June
1, 1852, the stockholders of the Henderson and Nashville Railroad
met at Madisonville, Kentucky
and elected Archibald Dixon as president of the
company. He served until his resignation in spring
1853.
Despite his pro-slavery views, Dixon loyally supported the Union
during the lead-up to the
Civil
War. His sons, however, had
Confederate sympathies.
Dixon's home county of Henderson was one of the first counties in
Kentucky to express their feelings about the secession crisis. The
county called an assembly at the county courthouse on November 10,
1860. Dixon was elected chair of the meeting, and immediately
expressed a pro-Union sentiment. A committee of five was appointed
to draft resolutions stating Henderson County's position. At a
second meeting one week later – which Dixon also chaired – the
committee reported their pro-Union resolutions, which were
approved.
In an
attempt to stave off the Civil War, Dixon participated in a
convention of border states and a peace convention in Frankfort,
Kentucky
, both in 1861. Both conventions were
unsuccessful. At the outset of the war, the Kentucky General
Assembly elected six arbiters to recommend a course of action for
the Commonwealth. Dixon represented the pro-Union position along
with John J. Crittenden and Samuel S. Nicholas. Kentucky governor
Beriah Magoffin,
John C. Breckinridge, and
Richard Hawes represented the southern
sympathizers. The arbiters met on May 11, 1861. After the pro-Union
men defeated a proposal to call a sovereignty convention, the six
arbiters recommended a position of neutrality, which the General
Assembly adopted.
In March 1864, Dixon accompanied Kentucky Governor Thomas E.
Bramlette and
John Marshall
Harlan, the state's attorney general, to an audience with
President Lincoln to protest the recruitment of blacks into the
ranks of the Union Army. The governor eventually agreed to allow
the practice, but only when whites failed to meet their draft
quotas. Since recruitment of blacks had been taking place in the
Commonwealth for more than two months already, the concession was
little more than a face-saving gesture by Bramlette. Following the
end of the Civil War, Dixon retired from public life. He died in
Henderson on April 23, 1876, and is buried in Fernwood
Cemetery.
References
Notes
This information comes from Kleber, the more contemporary source. Starling gives the name Elizabeth Robertson Cabell, a marriage date of 1832, and lists only five children.
Further reading
External links