
Henry Clay and his wife, Lucretia Hart
Clay

Death of Lt Colonel Henry Clay Jr in
1847
Henry Clay, Sr. (April 12,
1777 – June 29, 1852) was a nineteenth-century American
statesman and orator who
represented Kentucky
in both the
House of
Representatives and Senate. He served as
Secretary of State from
1825 to 1829.
He was a dominant figure in both the
First Party System and the
Second Party System. Known as "The Great
Compromiser" and "The Great Pacifier" for his ability to bring
others to agreement, he was the founder and leader of the
Whig Party and a leading advocate
of programs for modernizing the economy, especially tariffs to
protect industry from international competition, a national bank,
and internal improvements to promote canals, ports and
railroads.
He was a leading
war hawk and, according to
historian Clement
Eaton, was "more than any other individual" responsible for the
War of 1812. Clay was also called "Henry
of the West" and "The Western Star."
Although his multiple attempts to become president were
unsuccessful, to a large extent he defined the issues of the
Second Party System. He was a
major supporter of the
American System, and had
success in brokering compromises on the
slavery issue, especially in
1820 and
1850.
He was part of the "
Great
Triumvirate" or "Immortal Trio," along with his colleagues
Daniel Webster and
John C. Calhoun. In 1957, a Senate committee chaired
by
John F. Kennedy named Clay as one
of the five greatest senators in U.S. history.
In his early
involvement in Illinois
politics and
as a fellow Kentucky native, Abraham
Lincoln was a great admirer of Clay.
Early life

Birthplace of Henry Clay
Henry Clay
was born on April 12, 1777, at the Clay homestead in Hanover
County
, Virginia
in a
story-and-a-half frame house, an above
average home for a Virginia
farmer of
the time.
He was the seventh of nine children of the Reverend John Clay and
Elizabeth Hudson Clay. His father, a
Baptist
minister called "Sir John,"
died four years later (1781). He left Henry and his brothers two
slaves each and his wife eighteen slaves and of land.
She soon married Capt. Henry Watkins, who proved himself to be an
affectionate stepfather to Clay. Elizabeth had seven children with
Watkins to add to the nine she had with John Clay.
When Henry was six, three of his young cousins were killed in an
Indian attack on Clover Bottom, now the Shawnee Lake
section of Mercer
County, West Virginia, with one child shot, another viciously
stabbed to death and the other taken to Chillicothe,
Ohio
to be burned at the
stake.
Clay
received an elementary education from Peter Deacon, a British
teacher. He was then hired as a shop assistant in
Richmond,
Virginia
.
He was
hired after his family had relocated to Versailles,
Kentucky
to run a tavern, leaving Clay
to be raised and educated by a boy's club. His stepfather
later secured Clay employment in the office of the
Court of Chancery, where he displayed an
adeptness for understanding the intricacies of law.
Here he became friends with
George
Wythe., who was hampered by a crippled hand and chose Clay to
be his secretary because of his neat handwriting.
While Clay was employed as Wythe's
amanuensis, the chancellor took an active
interest in Clay's future and arranged a position for him with the
Virginia
attorney general,
Robert Brooke.
Clay
received a formal legal education at the College of
William and Mary
in Virginia, studying under George Wythe. Under Brooke, Clay
prepared for the bar, to which he was admitted in 1797.
Legal career

Current view of Henry Clay's law
office from 1803-1810 in Lexington KY.
Seeking to
establish a lucrative law practice, Clay relocated in November 1797
to Lexington,
Kentucky
, near where his family then resided in Woodford
County
. He soon established a reputation for his
legal skills and courtroom oratory.
Some of his clients paid him with horses and with land.
Clay came
to own town lots and the Kentucky Hotel
. His father-in-law, Colonel Thomas Hart was
an early settler of Kentucky and a prominent businessman. Clay
became manager of Hart's legal workings.
In 1803,
as a representative of Fayette County
in the Kentucky General Assembly, Clay
focused his attention mostly on trying to move the State capital from
Frankfort
to Lexington.
He also worked diligently to defend the
Kentucky Insurance Company, which
he saved from an attempt in 1804 by
Felix
Grady to repeal its
monopolistic
charter.
In 1806,
United States
District Attorney Joseph
Hamilton Daviess indicted
Aaron Burr
for planning an expedition into
Spanish
Territory west of the
Mississippi
River. Clay and
John Allen
successfully defended Burr.
Some years later
Thomas Jefferson
convinced Clay that Daviess had been right. Clay was so upset by
this that many years later when he met Burr again, Clay refused to
shake his hand.
Clay's influence in Kentucky state politics was great enough for
him to be selected by the Kentucky legislature to serve as
United States Senator for two short
terms (1806-7 and 1810-11), completing the unexpired terms of
John Adair, who had to resign his seat
for his alleged part in the
Burr
Conspriacy and
Buckner
Thruston, who resigned to serve as a judge on the
United States Circuit Court.
Interestingly, Clay was below the
constitutionally
appointed age of thirty when elected to his first term as U.S.
Senator in 1806.
Family
On April
11, 1799 Clay married Lucretia Hart at the Hart home in Lexington,
Kentucky
. She was a sister to Captain
Nathaniel G. T. Hart, who died in the
Massacre of the River Raisin in
the
War of 1812. Clay and his wife had
eleven children (six daughters and five sons): Henrietta (1800),
Theodore (1802), Thomas (1803), Susan (1805), Anne (1807), Lucretia
(1809),
Henry, Jr.(1811), Eliza
(1813), Laura (October 1815),
James
Brown (1817), and
John
(1821). Seven of Clay's children preceded him in death.
By 1835
all six daughters had died of varying causes from whooping cough to yellow fever to complications of childbirth, and Henry Clay Jr. was killed at the
Battle of
Buena Vista
during the Mexican-American War.
His wife Lucretia died in 1864 at the age of 83 and is interred
with her husband in the vault of his monument at the Lexington
Cemetery.
Clay was a second cousin of
abolitionist Cassius Marcellus
Clay and the great-grandfather of
suffragette Madeline McDowell
Breckinridge.
Duel with Humphrey Marshall
On January 3, 1809, Clay introduced to the Kentucky General
Assembly a resolution requiring members to wear homespun suits
rather than British
broadcloth. Only two
members voted against the patriotic measure. One of them was
Humphrey Marshall, an
"aristocratic lawyer who possessed a sarcastic tongue" and who had
been hostile toward Clay in 1806 during the trial of
Aaron Burr. Clay and Marshall nearly came to
blows on the Assembly floor and Clay challenged Marshall to a
duel.
The duel took place on January 9 in Shippingport, Indiana
. They each had three turns. Clay grazed
Marshall once, just below the chest. Marshall hit Clay once in the
thigh.
Speaker of the House
In the summer of 1811 Clay was elected to the
United States House of
Representatives. He was chosen
Speaker of
the House on the first day of his first session, something
never done before or since. During the fourteen years following his
first election, he was re-elected five times to the House and to
the speakership.
Before Clay's entrance into the House, the position of Speaker had
been that of a rule enforcer and mediator. Clay turned the
speakership into a position of power second only to the President
of the United States. He immediately appointed members of the
War Hawk faction (of which he was the
"guiding spirit") to all the important committees, effectively
giving him control of the House, quite a maneuver for a 34-year-old
House freshman. The War Hawks, mostly from the South and the West,
resented British violation of U.S. maritime rights and treatment of
U.S. sailors. They advocated for a declaration of war against the
British.
As the
Congressional leader of the Democratic-Republican Party, Clay took
charge of the agenda, especially as a "War
Hawk," supporting the War of 1812
with the British Empire
. Later, as one of the peace commissioners,
Clay helped negotiate the
Treaty of
Ghent and signed it on December 24, 1814. In 1815, while still
in Europe, he helped negotiate a commerce treaty with Great
Britain.
Also during his early House service, he
strongly opposed the creation of a National
Bank
, in part because of his personal ownership in
several small banks in his hometown of Lexington.
Later he
changed his position and gave strong support for the Second
National Bank
when he was seeking the presidency.
Henry Clay's tenure as Speaker of the House shaped the history of
Congress. Evidence from committee assignment and roll call records
shows that Clay's leadership strategy was highly complex and that
it advanced his public policy goals as well as his political
ambition. [Strahan et al. 2000]
Henry
Clay helped establish the American Colonization Society,
a group that wanted to send freed African American slaves to Africa
and that founded Monrovia
in Liberia
for that purpose. Clay said concerning the
amalgamation of the black and white races that "The God of Nature,
by the differences of color and physical constitution, has decreed
against it."
Clay presided at the founding meeting of the
ACS on December 21, 1816, at the Davis
Hotel in Washington,
D.C.
Attendees also included
Robert Finley,
James
Monroe,
Bushrod Washington,
Andrew Jackson,
Francis Scott Key, and
Daniel Webster.
The American System
Henry Clay and
John C. Calhoun helped to pass the
Tariff of 1816 as part of the national
economic plan Clay called "The
American System," rooted in
Alexander Hamilton's
American School. Described later
by
Friedrich List, it was designed to
allow the fledgling American manufacturing sector, largely centered
on the eastern seaboard, to compete with British
manufacturing.
After the conclusion of the War of 1812, British factories were
overwhelming American ports with inexpensive goods. To persuade
voters in the western states to support the tariff, Clay advocated
federal government support for internal improvements to
infrastructure, principally roads and canals. These internal
improvements would be financed by the tariff and by sale of the
public lands, prices for which would be kept high to generate
revenue. Finally, a national bank would stabilize the currency and
serve as the nexus of a truly national financial system.
The American System was supported by many in both the North and the
South at first. Only later, with the
Tariff of 1828, did the South break away from
their support, leading to the
Nullification Crisis. It was ultimately
both a cause and a casualty of the increasing sectionalism between
north and south (and to some extent between east and west) that was
continually to worsen in the decades leading up to the
American Civil War. It would take the
defeat of the South to restore the nation's protectionist policies,
which then continued through the early 20th century.
Clay's American System ran into strong opposition from President
Jackson's administration. One of the most important points of
contention between the two men was over the
Maysville Road. Jackson vetoed a bill which
would authorize federal funding for a project to construct a road
linking Lexington and the Ohio River, the entirety of which would
be in the state of Kentucky.
The Missouri Compromise and 1820s
In 1820 a dispute erupted over the extension of slavery in Missouri
Territory. Clay helped settle this dispute by gaining Congressional
approval for a plan called the "
Missouri Compromise."
It brought in
Maine
as a free state and Missouri
as a slave state (thus maintaining the balance in
the Senate, which had included 11 free and 11 slave states), and
except for Missouri it forbade slavery north of 36º 30' (the
northern boundary of Arkansas
).

Portrait of Henry Clay
In national terms, the old Republican Party caucus had ceased to
function by 1820. Clay ran for president in 1824 and came in fourth
place in the electoral vote. However, none of the candidates had
received a majority of the electoral votes, so the House of
Representatives chose the victor from the top three candidates,
thus eliminating Clay. However, Clay used his influence to support
John Quincy Adams, a fellow
nationalist, who won despite having trailed
Andrew Jackson in both the popular and
electoral votes. Adams then appointed Clay as Secretary of State in
what Jackson partisans termed "the corrupt bargain." Clay,
undeterred, then used his influence to build a national network of
supporters, called
National
Republicans. In 1824, Clay challenged to a duel Virginia
Representative
John
Randolph, who had referred to Clay as "this being, so brilliant
yet so corrupt, which, like a rotten
mackerel by moonlight, shined and stunk." The first
time both fired and missed. The second time Clay shot a hole in
Randolph’s coat. Randolph fired into the air and then offered Clay
a handshake saying, “You owe me a coat, Mr. Clay." Clay shook
Randolph’s hand, saying, “I am glad the debt is no greater." Thomas
Hart Benton called this "the last high-toned duel I have
witnessed."
Andrew Jackson, outmaneuvered for the
Presidency in 1824, combined with
John
C. Calhoun to form a coalition
that defeated Adams in 1828. That new coalition became a
full-fledged party that, by 1834, called itself the
Democrats. By
1836, Clay had merged the National Republicans with other factions
to form the
Whig Party.
In domestic policy Clay promoted the American System, with a high
tariff to encourage manufacturing, and an extensive program of
internal improvements (such as roads and canals) to build up the
domestic market. After a long fight he did secure a high tariff in
1828, but did not get the spending for internal improvements. In
1822, President
James Monroe vetoed a
bill to build the Cumberland Road (crossing the Allegheny
mountains).
In foreign policy, Clay was the leading American supporter of
independence movements and revolutions in
Latin America after 1817.
Between 1821 and
1826, the U.S. recognized all the new countries, except Uruguay
(whose independence was debated and recognized only
later). When in 1826 the U.S. was invited to attend the
Columbia Conference of new nations, opposition emerged, and the
American delegation never arrived.
Clay supported the Greek
independence
revolutionaries in 1824 who wished to separate from the Ottoman Empire, an early move into European
affairs.
The Nullification Crisis
After the
passage of the Tariff Act of 1828, which raised tariffs
considerably in an attempt to protect fledgling factories built
under previous tariff legislation, South Carolina
attempted to nullify U.S. tariff laws. It
threatened to
secede from
the Union if the Federal government tried to enforce the tariff
laws. Furious, President Jackson threatened to lead an army to
South Carolina and hang any man who refused to obey the law.
The crisis worsened until 1833 when Clay, again a U.S.
Senator re-elected by
Kentucky
in 1831, helped to broker a deal in Congress to
lower the tariff gradually. This measure helped to preserve
the supremacy of the Federal government over the states, but the
crisis was indicative of the developing conflict between the
northern and southern United States over economics and
slavery.
Charlotte Dupuy's suit for freedom
During
Clay's congressional and Secretary of State terms, he lived on
Lafayette Square, originally called the President's Park
, in the house originally built for Stephen Decatur. When he relocated to
Washington from Kentucky, he brought with him slaves Aaron and
Charlotte Dupuy to work in his
household, as well as their two children Charles and Mary Ann. They
lived there for nearly two decades.
As Clay was preparing to leave Washington for return to Kentucky,
in 1829 Charlotte Dupuy had an attorney file a lawsuit in district
court for her freedom.
Her legal challenge to slavery was seventeen
years before the more famous Dred Scott
case, which reached the US Supreme Court
. Dupuy accused Henry Clay of wrongful
enslavement and demanded freedom for her and her children, based on
a promise by her previous owner James Condon. Many details of the
case are unknown, but there is evidence that a fair amount of
attention was shown to the case. It lasted quite a while, and the
court ordered that Charlotte Dupuy remain in DC until the case was
settled. Clay returned to his plantation in Lexington with Aaron,
Charles and Mary Ann Dupuy.
The Court ruled against Dupuy, arguing that any agreement with
Condon did not bear on her next owner. Because she refused to
return voluntarily to Kentucky, Clay had his agent arrest her.
Dupuy was
imprisoned in Alexandria, Virginia
before Clay arranged for her transport to New
Orleans, where he placed her with his daughter and son-in-law
Martin Duralde. She worked there for another decade.
Dupuy's case has not been well known.
The Decatur House
Museum now has a permanent exhibit on urban slavery
and Dupuy. Visitors can also view the restored kitchen where
Dupuy would most likely have worked..
Henry Clay finally gave Charlotte and Mary Ann Dupuy their freedom
in New Orleans in 1840. He kept Charles with him as a servant
during his speaking engagements, using him as an example of how
well he treated his slaves. Clay granted Charles Dupuy his freedom
in 1844.
Candidate for president

1844 handbill
As the
Whig Party emerged
in 1832-34, Clay immediately became its dominant leader, centering
its program around the "American System," a program designed to
unify all portions of the country through the economic policies of
Alexander Hamilton in his
Report on
Manufactures. The Democratic Party, which emerged from the
old Democratic-Republican Party at the same time as the
National Republican Party, opposed
the American System of the Whig Party in each successive election
until the emergence of the
Republican Party of
Abraham Lincoln in the late
1850s.
Clay ran
for president five times but was never able to win, though in
expectation of his election to the presidency, a massive set of
Gothic Revival bedroom furniture was
commissioned by some of Clay's wealthy supporters that would fit in
the White
House
master bedroom.

- In 1824 Clay ran
together with John Quincy Adams,
Andrew Jackson, and William H. Crawford, all as Democratic-Republican candidates.
There was no clear majority in the Electoral College. In
1823, Crawford suffered a stroke. Even though he recovered in 1824,
this crippled his bid for the presidency.
- The election was thrown to the U.S. House of Representatives.
As per the Twelfth Amendment, only the top three candidates in the
electoral vote were candidates in the House: Jackson, Adams, and
Crawford. Clay was left out, but as Speaker of the House, would
play a crucial role in deciding the presidency. Clay detested Jackson
and had said of him, “I cannot believe that killing 2,500
Englishmen at New
Orleans
qualifies for the various, difficult, and
complicated duties of the Chief
Magistracy.” Moreover, Clay's American System was far closer to
Adams's position on tariffs and internal improvements than
Jackson's or Crawford's, so Clay threw his support to Adams.
John Quincy Adams was elected President on February 9, 1825, on the
first ballot.
- Adams's victory shocked Jackson, who expected that, as the
winner of a plurality of both the popular and electoral votes, he
would be elected President. When President Adams appointed Clay his
Secretary of State, essentially declaring him heir to the
Presidency — Adams and his three predecessors had all served
as Secretary of State — Jackson and his followers accused
Adams and Clay of striking a "corrupt bargain." The Jacksonians would
campaign on this claim for the next four years, ultimately leading
to Jackson's victory in the Adams-Jackson rematch in 1828. Clay
denied that any bargain had been struck, and no evidence has ever
been found to show that there was.
- In 1840, Clay was a
candidate for the Whig nomination, but he was defeated in the party
convention by supporters of war hero William Henry Harrison. Harrison was
chosen because his war record reminded people of Jackson and he was
seen as more electable than Clay. If the Whigs had been more aware
of the political weakness of President Martin Van Buren, they would have probably
selected Clay.
- In 1844, Clay was
nominated by the Whigs against James
K. Polk, the Democratic candidate.
Clay lost due in part to national sentiment for Polk's program
"54º40' or Fight" campaign
which was to settle the northern boundary of the United States with
Canada then under the control of the British Empire. Clay also opposed
admitting Texas
as a state
because he felt it would reawaken the slavery issue and provoke Mexico
to declare
war. Polk took the opposite view and public sentiment was
with him, especially in the Southern United States. Nevertheless, the
election was close; New
York
's 36 electoral votes proved the difference, and
went to Polk by a slim 5,000 vote margin. Liberty Party candidate
James G. Birney won a little over 15,000 votes in New
York and may have taken votes from Clay.
- Clay's warnings came true as annexation led
to the Mexican-American War
(1846-1848) while the North and South came to heads over the
extending of slavery into Texas
and beyond
during Polk's Presidency.
Henry Clay lost his first two presidential bids by wide margins,
due mainly to his failure to form a national coalition or to build
political organization that could match the Jacksonian Democrats.
And although the Whigs had become as adept at political organizing
as the Democrats by the time of Clay's final presidential bid, Clay
himself failed to connect to the people, partly because of his
unpopular views on slavery and the American System in the South.
When Clay was warned not to take a stance against slavery or be so
strong for the American System, he was quoted as saying, "I'd
rather be right than be President!" This remark has been quoted or
paraphrased by several presidential candidates since, as a
statement of principle over ambition.
The Compromise of 1850
After losing the Whig Party nomination to Zachary Taylor in 1848,
Clay decided to retire to his Ashland estate in Kentucky. Retired
for less than a year, he was in 1849 again elected to the U.S.
Senate from Kentucky.
During his term, the Northern and Southern
states were again wrangling over slavery extension, as Clay had
predicted they would, this time over the admission or exclusion of
slavery in the territories recently acquired from Mexico
in the
Mexican-American War.
Though always the "Great Compromiser," Clay helped work out the
misnomer known as the
Compromise of
1850.
The Compromise of 1850 addressed several important issues. It
defined Texas' western border with New Mexico. It also left the
Mexican Cession lands open to slavery through popular sovereignty,
and admitted California as a free state. The slave trade in
Washington D.C. was abolished, while the right to own slaves in the
city remained intact. The Compromise of 1850 also strengthened the
Fugitive Slave Act. The Fugitive Slave Act was an act passed by
Congress, pursuant to the
United States Constitution's Art.
IV, Sec. 2, cl. 3, forcing citizens to turn in runaway slaves
(North or South) or face a sentence of up to 6 years of prison or a
fine in excess of 1,000 dollars. Also, it set up courts to handle
disputes of runaway slaves, a point of great contention between the
North and South. The judges in these courts were paid $5 to let a
slave go and $10 to send him back to his owner.
Clay in court
According to former U.S. Supreme Court Justice
Sandra Day O'Connor:
- Some of the cases Clay argued continue to be cited as
precedent today. In Osborn v. United States [34 U.S.
573
(1824)], Clay argued on behalf of the Bank of the
United States
, which was a nationwide bank chartered by
Congress. Clay challenged the constitutionality of
an Ohio
tax levied
upon the bank and sought an injunction to force the state's auditor
to return the improperly seized taxes. The Supreme
Court agreed with Clay and ordered the auditor to return the
taxes. In doing so, the Court found that the Eleventh
Amendment — which bars lawsuits against the states —
did not apply to the state auditor. Osborn is still
relevant today: It has been cited twenty-six times since I took the
bench in 1981, and was cited just last term by Justice David Souter in a dissent.
[See Seminole Tribe.]
Nor is Osborn the only case argued by Clay to be cited in recent
times. Clay also argued on behalf of a Kentucky creditor
who sought to collect a debt from a person who declared bankruptcy under New York law. In that
case, Ogden v. Saunders [25 U.S. 213
(1827)], the Court concluded that the New York bankruptcy law was
constitutional, so that the debtor was no longer liable to the
Kentucky creditor. The case has been cited 86 times since
it was decided, three times since I came on the bench.[7695]
Other cases of note include:
Groves v. Slaughter and
Green v. Biddle.

Henry Clay
Personality
According to
Carl
Schurz, Clay succeeded for the following reasons:
"Clay's quick intelligence and sympathy, and his irreproachable
conduct in youth, explain his precocious prominence in public
affairs. In his persuasiveness as an orator and his
charming personality lay the secret of his power. He early
trained himself in the art of speech-making, in the forest, the
field and even the barn, with horse and ox for audience.
By contemporaries his voice was declared to be the finest
musical instrument that they ever heard. His eloquence was
in turn majestic, fierce, playful, insinuating; his gesticulation
natural, vivid, large, powerful."
"In public he was of magnificent bearing, possessing the true
oratorical temperament, the nervous exaltation that makes the
orator feel and appear a superior being, transfusing his thought,
passion and will into the mind and heart of the listener; but his
imagination frequently ran away with his understanding, while his
imperious temper and ardent combativeness hurried him and his party
into disadvantageous positions. The ease, also, with which
he outshone men of vastly greater learning lured him from the task
of intense and arduous study. His speeches were
characterized by skill of statement, ingenious grouping of facts,
fervent diction, and ardent patriotism; sometimes by biting
sarcasm, but also by superficial research, half-knowledge and an
unwillingness to reason a proposition to its logical
results."
"In private, his never-failing courtesy, his agreeable manners
and a noble and generous heart for all who needed protection
against the powerful or the lawless, endeared him to hosts of
friends. His popularity was as great and as inexhaustible
among his neighbors as among his fellow-citizens generally.
He pronounced upon himself a just judgment when he wrote: 'If
any one desires to know the leading and paramount object of my
public life, the preservation of this Union will furnish him the
key.'"
Death
Clay
continued to serve both the Union he loved and his home state of
Kentucky until June 29, 1852, when he died in Washington,
D.C.
, at the age of 75. Clay was the first
person to lie in state in the
United
States Capitol
. He was buried in
Lexington Cemetery and the eulogy was
provided by
Theodore
Frelinghuysen, who ran as Clay's Vice-Presidential candidate in
the election of 1844. Clay's headstone reads simply: "I know no
North — no South — no East — no West." The
1852 novel
Life at the South; or, "Uncle Tom's
Cabin" As It Is by W.L.G. Smith is dedicated to Clay's
memory.
Estate
Ashland, named
for the many ash trees on the property, was his plantation and
mansion for many years. He owned as many as 60 slaves at once. It
was there he introduced the
Hereford livestock breed to the United
States.
Rebuilt and remodeled by his heirs, Ashland is now a museum. The
museum includes 17 acres (81,000 m²) of the original estate grounds
and is located on Richmond Road (US 25) in Lexington. It is open to
the public (admission charged).
For several years (1866-1878), the mansion
was used as a residence for the regent of Kentucky University,
forerunner of the University of Kentucky
and present-day Transylvania University
.
Henry
Clay is credited with introducing the Mint
Julep drink to Washington, D.C. at the Willard Hotel
during his residence as a senator in the
city.
Monuments and memorials

Tomb in Lexington, KY
- Memorial column and statue at his tomb in
Lexington,
Kentucky

- Henry
Clay monument in Pottsville
, Pennsylvania
- Clay
Streets in numerous cities, including New
Haven
, Connecticut
, Richmond, Virginia
, and Vicksburg, Mississippi
, are named in his honor.
- Ashland Ave. in Chicago, Illinois was named after his
estate.
- Mount
Clay
in the Presidential Range
of New
Hampshire
was named
for Clay, but has since been renamed Mount Reagan
.
- Fifteen counties in the United States are
named for him: Clay County, Alabama
; Clay County, Florida
; Clay County, Georgia
; Clay County, Illinois
; Clay County, Indiana
; Clay County, Minnesota
; Clay County, Mississippi
; Clay County, Missouri
; Clay County, Nebraska
; Clay County, North Carolina
; Clay County, South Dakota
; Clay County, Tennessee
; Clay County, Texas
; and Clay County, West Virginia
. (There is a Clay County, Iowa
, but it is named for his son.)
- The town of Ashland, Virginia
located in the county of Clay's birth, Ashland
County, Ohio
and Ashland County, Wisconsin
were named for his estate, as were the cities
of Ashland,
Kentucky
, Ashland,
Alabama
, and Ashland, Pennsylvania
.
- In
New
Orleans
: Uptown, Henry Clay Avenue, and Downtown
20-foot-tall monument at the center of Lafayette
Square.
- There
is a Henry Clay High School
located in Lexington, Kentucky
, a Henry Clay Middle School located in Los Angeles,
California
, Henry Clay Elementary School in the Hegewisch
neighborhood in Chicago, and a Henry Clay
Elementary School in his birthplace, Hanover
County, Virginia
.
- The
"Instituto Educacional Henry Clay" located in Caracas,
Venezuela
, is a bilingual private school.
- The
Clay Dormitory at Transylvania University
in Lexington
, Kentucky
, is named after Senator Clay.
- The Lafayette class
submarine USS Henry
Clay remains the only ship of the United States Navy named in his honor,
although the USS Ashland is named for
his estate.
- Clay, New York
is named for the statesman, including the road
Henry Clay Blvd.
- Henry Clay Village, on the
left bank of the Brandywine Creek just outside of the city limits
of Wilmington, Delaware, had factory and mill worker's residences
just downstream and across from the duPont powder mills and just
upstream and across from the Joseph Bancroft textile mill. On its
way back from Washington DC to Kentucky after his death in 1852,
Clay's remains were laid in state briefly at the old Wilmington
City Hall on Market Street.
- Character actor Robert F. Simon portrayed Clay in the NBC series Profiles in Courage in
the segment on Daniel Webster.
- Henry Clay cigars were
a popular pre-Cuban Revolution
brand. The revamped brand still exists today in the American market
and is distributed by Altadis.
- Clay
is one of the many senators honored with a cenotaph
in the Congressional Cemetery
.
Notes
References
- Baxter, Maurice G. Henry Clay and the American System
(1995)
- Baxter, Maurice G. Henry Clay the Lawyer U. Press of
Kentucky, 2000.
- Brown, Thomas. Politics and Statesmanship: Essays on the
American Whig Party (1985) ch 5
- 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. University Press of Kentucky, 1959-1992.
vol 1 online, 1797-1814
- Clay, Henry. Works of Henry Clay, 7 vols. (1897)
- Eaton, Clement. Henry Clay and the Art of American
Politics (1957)
- Gammon, Samuel R. The Presidential Campaign of 1832
(1922)
- Holt, Michael F. The Rise and Fall of the American Whig
Party: Jacksonian Politics and the Onset of the Civil War
(1999)
- Holzer, Harold ed. The Lincoln-Douglas Debates (2004)
ISBN 0-8232-2342-6
- Knupfer, Peter B. "Compromise and Statesmanship: Henry Clay’s
Union." in Knupfer, The Union As It Is: Constitutional Unionism
and Sectional Compromise, 1787-1861 (1991),
pp. 119–57.
- Mayo, Bernard. Henry Clay, Spokesman of the West
(1937)
- Peterson, Merrill D. The Great Triumvirate: Webster, Clay,
and Calhoun (1987)
- Poage, George Rawlings. Henry Clay and the Whig Party
(1936)
- Remini, Robert. Henry Clay: Statesman for the Union
(1991)
- Schurz, Carl. Life of Henry Clay, 2 vol. (1899;
from the American Statesmen series)
- Strahan, Randall. Leading Representatives: The Agency of
Leaders in the Politics of the U.S. House. Johns
Hopkins University Press, 2007
- Strahan, Randall; Moscardelli, Vincent G.; Haspel, Moshe; and
Wike, Richard S. "The Clay Speakership Revisited" Polity
2000 32(4): 561-593. ISSN 0032-3497
- Van Deusen, Glyndon G. The Life of Henry Clay
(1937)
- Watson, Harry L. ed. Andrew Jackson vs. Henry Clay:
Democracy and Development in Antebellum America (1998)
- Zarefsky, David. "Henry Clay and the Election of 1844: the
Limits of a Rhetoric of Compromise" Rhetoric & Public
Affairs 2003 6(1): 79-96. ISSN 1094-8392
External links