The Provincial Congress of South Carolina approved a new
constitution and government on this day in 1776. The legislature renamed itself
the General Assembly of South Carolina and elects John Rutledge as president, Henry Laurens as vice president and William Henry Drayton as chief justice.
John Rutledge |
South Carolina took this action towards independence from
Great Britain four months before the Continental Congress declared independence
and five months before the Declaration of Independence. Rutledge
possessed quasi-dictatorial powers as president and commander in chief of the
new state. In 1778, he resigned the post in protest over proposed changes to
the state constitution. Rawlins Lowndes took over the presidency and instituted
the changes Rutledge found objectionable. The executive power changed from a
presidency to a governorship and veto power was taken away from the executive.
The Senate became a popularly elected body, and the Church of England no longer
held status as the state church. After the changes had been made,
Rutledge was re-elected governor in 1779, a post he held until 1782. Rutledge lost much of his
personal wealth during the British siege of Charleston, but survived to see the
new century dawn before his death in 1800.
Henry Laurens only served as vice president of South
Carolina until June 1777. He was elected to the Continental Congress in January
of that year and became the president of Congress under the Articles of
Confederation on November 1, 1777, a position he held until December 9, 1778.
Beginning in 1780, Laurens served 15 months of imprisonment in the Tower of
London after being taken captive on a Congressional mission to Holland.
Tower of London / Henry Laurens' Room |
When Cornwallis was captured by George Washington at Yorktown, the British offered an even prisoner exchange - Cornwallis for Laurens - which the Continental Congress accepted. Laurens spent the last years of his life in retirement on his plantation, where he
lived until his death in 1792.
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