James White McClung
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James White McClung | |
---|---|
Born | Knoxville, Tennessee, USA | June 6, 1798
Died | May 31, 1848 Huntsville, Alabama, USA | (aged 49)
Resting place | Old Gray Cemetery, Knoxville, Tennessee, USA |
Occupation | Lawyer, politician |
Spouses | Sarah Elizabeth Mitchell |
Children | Charles William McClung Mary Anne Cameron McClung (McClung) David Brydie Mitchell McClung Hugh Lawson White McClung Thomas Fearn McClung Matthew McClung Robinson James White McClung Elliott Spotswood McClung William Penn McClung Annie Parsons McClung (White) Frank Armstrong McClung Howard McClung Arthur Henderson McClung[1] |
Parent(s) | Charles McClung and Margaret White |
James White McClung (June 6, 1798 – May 31, 1848) was an American lawyer and politician during the early days of Alabama statehood. He served in the Alabama state legislature between 1822 and 1844, was Speaker of the House from 1835-1838, and served in the state Senate from 1845-1849. At the time of his death he was a candidate for the United States Senate, without opposition[2]. McClung Avenue in Hunstville is named for him, the first street in that city to be named after a local citizen.[3]
Biography
McClung was born in Knoxville, Tennessee, to Charles McClung and Margaret White McClung. His father was a leading citizen of Knoxville in its early days, and his mother was the daughter of General James White, founder of White's Fort, which became Knoxville after Charles McClung laid out its initial street grid. He attended Blount College (now the University of Tennessee) and the University of North Carolina, graduating in 1816 with a law degree. He settled in Huntsville, Alabama, shortly after Alabama became a state in 1819[4].
He was first elected to the state legislature in 1822 and soon became embroiled in a feud with one Andrew Wills, editor of the Huntsville Democrat[5]. Wills was a strong opponent of the Bank of the United States, and regularly attacked two leading pro-Bank legislators, Dr David Moore and Clement Comer Clay, in the press. James White McClung was Clay's law partner, and when Wills accused McClung of bribing the Alabama state legislature to elect Clay to the United States Senate[6], the ongoing press war spilled into the streets. On July 23, 1827, a confrontation between McClung and Wills on the courthouse square turned into a duel. In an exchange of shots, Wills was killed by McClung. Clay represented McClung at the subsequent trial, and, "in true frontier style," McClung was acquitted by the jury[7].
He served six terms in the state legislature between 1822 and 1844 before his 1844 election to a four-year term in the State Senate[8]. Between legislative terms he ran for governor in 1841 as an independent, losing to the Democratic candidate, Benjamin Fitspatrick. A contemporary observer described him as "fighting for what others could not see or understand, however obvious his policy to himself," though the same source added that as a lawyer, "His qualifications as presiding officer were of the highest order"[9].
McClung married three times. His first wife was Sarah Elizabeth Mitchell, daughter of Georgia governor David Brydie Mitchell. They had six children before her death on May 25, 1833[10]. Upon his wife's death James White McClung placed his infant son Matthew in the care of his brother-in-law and wife, Mr and Mrs John Robinson of Huntsville. The Robinsons eventually adopted Matthew[11]. On July 2, 1834, McClung married Elizabeth Spotswood; they had two children before her death on September 18, 1837[12]. McClung's third wife, Margaret Patrick, was twenty years his junior when they married on June 6, 1839[13]. They had six children.
McClung's Huntsville mansion, built in 1838, is on the National Register of Historic Places and in the Library of Congress Historic American Buildings Survey[14].
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- ^ William McClung, The McClung Genealogy: A Genealogical and Biographical Record of the McClung Family from the Time of their Emigration to the Year 1904 (Pittsburgh: McClung Printing Co., 1904).
- ^ The McClung Genealogy' ', p.30
- ^ Nilsson, John Dexter Why Is It Named That? Stories Behind the Names of 250 Places in Madison County and Huntsville, Alabama' ' (Twinbrook Communications,2003) ISBN-10: 0962917060, p.41
- ^ The McClung Genealogy' ', p.30
- ^ Huntsville Times,7/23/1827
- ^ Nuermberger, Ruth Ketring The Clays of Alabama: A Planter-Lawyer-Politician FamilyKentucky University Press, 2015) ISBN 0813164095,
- ^ Stephens, Elise Hopkins, Huntsville: City of New Beginnings(American Historical Press, October 2002),ISBN-10: 1892724316
- ^ Owen, Thomas McA.,History of Alabama and Dictionary of Alabama Biography, (Chicago: S.J. Clarke, 1921), p. 1094
- ^ Owen, History of Alabama, p. 1094
- ^ The McClung Genealogy' ', p.30
- ^ Will of James W. McClung, Madison Co., AL Will Book 1847-1857, pp. 136–138
- ^ The Huntsville Democrat,7/2/1834
- ^ The McClung Genealogy' ', p.32
- ^ Historic American Buildings,Library of Congress, https://www.loc.gov/item/al0353/