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Tuesday, December 31, 2024

Palmetto Patriot

This edition begins a series of profiles to introduce some of the historical characters readers will meet when the fifth historical novel in the Yankee Doodle Spies series is released in 2025. One of the first historical characters the reader will encounter is Henry Laurens, a little-known but essential South Carolina founder who became the Continental Congress's president.



Man of Means

Laurens was born the son of a wealthy Huguenot businessman, John Laurens, in 1724. After receiving his early education in South Carolina, his father sent him to Britain, where he cut his teeth on managing money and accounts. His experience in England served him well on his return to South Carolina a few years later and, combined with his strong work ethic, launched him on the path to great prosperity as one of the most powerful merchants in the colony. In just a few years, Laurens expanded his interests by purchasing plantations and expanding his interests in the rice trade, but sadly, his big bucks were made in the slave trade.

                                                     Laurens's Company Advertisement


Husband and Father

In 1750, Laurens married the daughter of a wealthy South Carolina rice planter. Eleanor Ball would bear thirteen children, dying in 1770 right after her last child's birth. Most of his children died young, but at least four grew to adulthood, and one, John Laurens, would reach prominence during the American Revolution.

John Laurens


Militia Leader

Laurens joined the South Carolina militia and rose to lieutenant colonel while serving in wars against the Cherokee and the French and Indian War. Like many of the wealthy planter class, he also served in the colonial assembly, where he was deemed a conservative and leaned Tory.

Militia Fighting the Cherokees


Times of Trouble

As the political situation between Britain and the colonies worsened, Laurens was drawn to the Whigs—but suffered attacks from both sides. A mob of radicals stormed into his house and tore it apart in the search for stamped products. However, British Customs officials confiscated three of Laurens's merchant ships during the Townshend Acts. This made him more sympathetic to the Whigs, and he published a letter calling out the British for their restrictions on American trade. Still, he remained apart from those advocating direct action or independence.

Laurens's Ships Seized by British


A 1771 trip to London to check his sons' education changed things. Incensed by the corruption in British society, Laurens became closer to the Whigs. Three years later, when he returned to America, he supported independence.

Carolina Politics

By 1775, the rebellion was in full swing, and the cautious Laurens fully committed to the cause. He thrust himself into active politics and was elected to South Carolina's Provincial Congress—an illegal body that soon replaced royal authority. Laurens ran the South Carolina Committee of Safety, a critical post as the colonies prepared for armed conflict with Britain. He clashed with some of the more radical politicos in the state when he championed property rights in the state's new constitution to the extent of safeguarding the property of Loyalists from confiscation. Laurens served as the vice president of the new government of South Carolina from March 1776 to June 1777.


                                                   South Carolina Provincial Congress


National Figure

Although long a fixture in his home state, Henry Laurens entered the national stage in June 1777 when he joined the Second Continental Congress as a South Carolina delegate. The next November, he followed John Hancock as president of the Congress—a sort of speaker of the house. He introduced many vital bills, heading the often contentious factions during his tenure. His most notable achievements were the Articles of Confederation and the American alliance with France. It is as president of Congress that we meet Laurens in my novel, The Reluctant Spy

Henry Laurens, President of the Continental Congress

President of Congress

The South Carolina native displayed the typical Southern aristocratic sense of honor. This, coupled with a scrupulous attention to detail and an uncompromising view of corruption, actual or perceived, rubbed many of his peers the wrong way. President Laurens was highly respected but never loved. He would take on anyone, including Robert Morris. The mighty Morris influenced many against Laurens when he pushed for an investigation into his actions as the financier of the American Revolution. Laurens's role in the corruption accusations against the American agent in Paris, Silas Deane, also rankled many. By December 1778, Laurens had enough and resigned as president to be replaced by fellow Huguenot John Jay—the father of American counterintelligence.

Financier Robert Morris


Diplomat and Prisoner

A year later, Laurens went from being a controversial figure on the national scene to a controversial one on the international scene when he gave up his Congressional seat to serve as American commissioner to the Netherlands. However, the British intercepted his ship off the coast of Newfoundland. The canny Laurens quickly dumped the trunk full of official dispatches into the ocean, but the Royal Navy salvaged them. The Netherlands' role in aiding America was exposed, giving London a casus belli.

Laurens was taken to London, charged with treason, and thrown into the Tower of London to rot without adequate food or medical care until December 1781, when he was exchanged for British General Charles, Lord Cornwallis, who had been captured at Yorktown the previous October.

The Tower of London


Envoy

But there was no rest for the sick and weary ex-prisoner. Upon release, he sailed to Amsterdam to finish his business with the Dutch. Then Congress directed Laurens to Paris, where he joined Benjamin Franklin, John Adams, and now former Congressional president John Jay in negotiating a peace treaty. He missed the final negotiation and official signing as he was sent back to London to address business matters, and when peace came, the two nations would turn back to trading. He remained in London as an ex officio representative until formal diplomatic relations were established. One wonders how envoy Laurens felt engaging with his former jailers and tormentors—or how they felt dealing with the traitor and former prisoner!

           Signing the Treaty of Paris

Up from the Ashes

By 1784, John Laurens was back in South Carolina. But he returned to a state devastated by years of ruthless warfare and British occupation. His mansion in Charleston had been destroyed, and his businesses were likewise in ruins—he had lost the equivalent of many millions of dollars in service to his country. He spent his remaining years rebuilding the family fortune, turning down public offices of all kinds. He even refused to represent South Carolina at the Constitutional Convention.

Charleston


Laurens had his reasons. He was aging, and his health was not good. But the likely cause was the blow he suffered when he learned his son, Colonel John Laurens (a staunch opponent of slavery), had died of wounds sustained in a minor skirmish in 1782. So, the elder Laurens remained in his native state, rebuilding his holdings until his death on 8 December 1792.

Although tarnished by his deep involvement in the slave trade, the former militia leader, businessman, slave trader, planter, politician, and statesman's contributions to the nation's founding were many—as were his sacrifices. He should be remembered for both but celebrated for his dedicated service to his country.