Kensey Johns (June 14, 1759 – December 21, 1848) was a lawyer, politician, jurist and plantation owner from Delaware.
Kensey Johns Sr. | |
---|---|
Chief Justice of Delaware Supreme Court | |
In office 1798–1830 | |
Preceded by | Richard H. Bayard |
Succeeded by | Samuel M. Harrington |
Chancellor of Delaware | |
In office 1830–1832 | |
Preceded by | Nicholas Ridgely |
Succeeded by | Kensey Johns Jr. |
Personal details | |
Born | Sudley, Anne Arundel County, Maryland | June 14, 1759
Died | December 21, 1848 New Castle, Delaware | (aged 89)
Resting place | Immanuel Church, New Castle, Delaware |
Spouse | Nancy Ann Van Dyke |
Children | Kensey Johns Jr., John Johns |
Early life and family
editJohns was born at Sudley Plantation in Anne Arundel County, Maryland, on June 14, 1759.[1][2] In his early years, he participated as a minuteman in the American Revolution and studied law with Samuel Chase and George Read.
In 1784, Johns married Ann Van Dyke, the daughter of Nicholas Van Dyke, the Governor of Delaware. George Washington was a guest at the wedding, and the home in which they were wed is preserved as a museum house in New Castle. Their children included Ann Johns (1787–1874), Susannah Johns Stewart (1789–1862), Kensey Johns Jr. (1791–1857), Rt.Rev. John Johns (1796–1876) and Rev. Henry Van Dyke Johns (1803–1859).
Career
editHe was admitted to the Delaware bar and practiced law for over a decade before being appointed an associate judge of the Delaware Court of Appeals (which later became the Delaware Supreme Court. In 1792, he was a member of the Delaware Constitutional Convention.
Senate appointment and rejection
editOn September 18, 1793, Read resigned his seat in the United States Senate. The Delaware General Assembly deadlocked on the appointment of a replacement. Finally, with the state legislature still in session but still deadlocked, Governor Joshua Clayton appointed Johns to fill the seat on March 19, 1794. He presented his credentials to Congress on March 24, 1794. Less than a month before, the Republicans in the Senate had seen one of their favorites, Albert Gallatin, unseated as failing to meet the minimum nine years citizenship constitutionally required of a U.S. senator, and they took the opportunity for revenge. Johns's credentials were immediately questioned and referred to committee. The United States Constitution permitted a state governor to fill a vacancy, but only when the state legislature was in recess. Since this was not the case, the committee reported back two days later that Johns was not qualified to take a seat in the Senate, and two days after that, the full Senate agreed and denied Johns a seat.
Later judicial career
editWhen Read died in 1798, Johns succeeded him as chief justice of Delaware. He held that office until 1828 or 1830, when he became chancellor of Delaware. He held that post until the 1832 Constitution of Delaware became operative, at which point he was succeeded by his son, Kensey Johns Jr.
Death and legacy
editJohns died in New Castle, Delaware, on December 21, 1848,[3] and his son Kensey Johns Jr. would also die before the American Civil War, and be buried in the family plot at Immanuel Episcopal Church on the Green in New Castle, Delaware. His son John Johns, the elder of the two sons who became Episcopal priests (whereas Kensey Jr. was a Presbyterian), would become a bishop in Virginia and supporter of the Confederate States of America. The Johns family lost their slaves after the war ended, but Delaware did not secede from the Union. Their ancestral home, Sudley, was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1973.
Almanac
editPublic offices | ||||||
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Office | Type | Location | Began office | Ended office | Notes | |
Chief Justice | Judiciary | Dover | January 3, 1799 | June 21, 1830 | State Supreme Court | |
Chancellor | Judiciary | Dover | June 21, 1830 | June 18, 1832 | State Chancery Court |
See also
editReferences
edit- ^ Holcomb, Thomas (1890). Sketch of Early Ecclesiastical Affairs in New Castle, Delaware, and History of Immanuel Church. Delaware Print. Company. p. 254.
- ^ Papers of the Historical Society of Delaware. The Society. 1897. p. 65.
- ^ Hunt, William (1849). American Biographical Panorama. J. Munsell. p. 320.
- Butler, Anne M.; Wolff, Wendy (1995). "Case 2: Kensey Johns". Senate Election, Expulsion and Censure Cases from 1793 to 1990. Election, expulsion, and censure cases, 1793-1990. Washington, D.C.: Government Printing Office. pp. 6–7.