Seargent Smith Prentiss

Summary

Seargent Smith Prentiss (September 30, 1808 – July 1, 1850) was an American attorney and politician. He served as a state representative in Mississippi and then was elected in 1838 as US representative from the state in the Twenty-fifth United States Congress, serving one term from 1838 to 1839. Prentiss was noted as one of the most remarkable orators of his day. Daniel Webster, known himself as a great orator, said that he had never heard a speaker as powerful as Prentiss.

Seargent Smith Prentiss
Member of the United States House of Representatives from Mississippi
In office
May 29, 1838 – March 3, 1839
Preceded byJohn F. H. Claiborne
Succeeded byJacob Thompson
Member of the Mississippi House of Representatives
In office
1835–1836
Personal details
Born(1808-09-30)September 30, 1808
Portland, Maine
DiedJuly 1, 1850(1850-07-01) (aged 41)
Natchez, Mississippi
Political partyWhig
EducationBowdoin College
OccupationLawyer, politician

Early life edit

Prentiss was born September 30, 1808, in Portland in Massachusetts' District of Maine. He was the son of Captain William Prentiss, a prosperous shipmaster, and his wife. Seargent contracted a virulent fever as an infant, which caused the loss of the use of his limbs for several years. His right leg never fully recovered.[1]

During the War of 1812, the economic embargo against the United Kingdom brought his father to the verge of ruin. The family relocated to Gorham, Maine, near Seargent's maternal grandfather Major George Lewis and his wife.[2]

Prentiss attended Gorham Academy and Bowdoin College in Brunswick. He graduated from Bowdoin at age 17 and began the study of law in the office of Josiah Pierce in Gorham.[2]

Career edit

After graduating from Bowdoin College in 1826, he went to Natchez, Mississippi as a teacher. He continued to study law and was admitted to the bar in 1829.[3]

In 1832, he moved to Vicksburg, Mississippi and won a suit involving title to the most valuable part of the city. The property which he obtained as his fee made him one of the wealthiest men of Mississippi. He was elected to the State Legislature in 1835 as a Whig.[4] He was a slaveholder.[5]

In July 1837, Democrats John F. H. Claiborne and Samuel J. Gholson were re-elected to the United States House of Representatives in a special election. In November 1837, Mississippi held the regular election. Prentiss launched a vigorous, partisan campaign. He and fellow Whig Thomas J. Word won in an upset. Claiborne and Gholson then argued that the July result entitled them to serve full terms. The House agreed to hear Prentiss. He spoke for nine hours over three days, packing the gallery, drawing Senators, and earning a national reputation for oratory and public admiration from leading Whigs including Senators Clay and Webster. The Elections Committee then required a third election. Held in April 1838, it confirmed the November result. Both Whigs were seated in May late in the second session, also serving for the third session.[6]

Writing about Prentiss's time in Congress, longtime Washington journalist Benjamin Perley Poore said that Prentiss was "the most eloquent speaker that I have ever heard":

The lame and lisping boy from Maine had ripened, under the Southern sun, into a master orator. The original, ever-varying, and beautiful imagery with which he illustrated and enforced his arguments impressed Webster, Clay, Everett, and even John Quincy Adams. But his forte lay in arraigning his political opponents, when his oratory was "terrible as an army with banners;" nothing could stand against the energy of his look, gesture, and impassioned logic, when once he was fairly under way, in denouncing the tricks and selfish cunning of mere party management. The printed reports of his speeches are mere skeletons, which give but a faint idea of them.[7]

Prentiss was publicly embarrassed by his mounting financial troubles. He had made property investments based on disputed land holdings. He served only one term in Congress.

Prentiss later went on the lecture circuit. He reportedly rarely gave speeches from prepared notes and, instead, would ad-lib for hours to large crowds that often begged him for more.

After Mississippi repudiated her state bonds, Prentiss, who had opposed this action, moved to New Orleans in 1845. He became a leader of the city's bar, and prominent in philanthropic work.

He died at his mother-in-law's house outside Natchez on July 1, 1850, at age 41.[8] His death shocked the nation. Prentiss had been considered among the most gifted young men in the nation. He is buried at Gloucester Plantation Cemetery in Natchez.

Honors and awards edit

 
Painting of Prentiss on display at the Old Warren County Courthouse

Prentiss County, Mississippi was named for Seargent Prentiss when it was formed on April 15, 1870. Prentiss, Mississippi was founded in 1903, and became the seat of Jefferson Davis County in 1906.[9]

References edit

  1. ^ Lewis, William Draper, ed. (1908). Great American Lawyers. Vol. V. John C. Winston Company. pp. 378–379. Retrieved February 14, 2022 – via Google Books.
  2. ^ a b George L. Prentiss, ed. (1879). A Memoir of S. S. Prentiss. Charles Schribner's Sons.
  3. ^ Lewis, William Draper, ed. (1908). Great American Lawyers. Vol. V. John C. Winston Company. p. 381. Retrieved February 14, 2022 – via Google Books.
  4. ^ Lewis, William Draper, ed. (1908). Great American Lawyers. Vol. V. John C. Winston Company. pp. 390, 392. Retrieved February 14, 2022 – via Google Books.
  5. ^ Weil, Julie Zauzmer (February 14, 2022). "Asked to help, Post readers sent searing evidence about dozens more enslavers in Congress". Washington Post. Retrieved February 14, 2022.
  6. ^ "Biographical Directory of the U. S. Congress". Office of the House Historian. Retrieved April 11, 2020.
  7. ^ Poore, Ben. Perley, Perley's Reminiscences of Sixty Years in the National Metropolis, Vol.1, pp.214-215 (1886).
  8. ^ "Death of the Hon. Sargeant S. Prentiss". Mississippi Free Trader and Natchez Gazette. July 3, 1850. p. 2. Retrieved February 14, 2022 – via Newspapers.com.
  9. ^ Kane, Joseph Nathan; Aiken, Charles Curry (2005). The American Counties. Lantham, Maryland: The Scarecrow Press. p. 151. ISBN 0-8108-5036-2. Retrieved April 11, 2020.

External links edit

U.S. House of Representatives
Preceded by Member of the U.S. House of Representatives
from Mississippi's at-large congressional district

May 29, 1838 – March 3, 1839
Succeeded by