Jesse Benton Jr.
Jesse Benton | |
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![]() Benton statement against Andrew Jackson's candidacy for high office | |
Born | c. 1783 North Carolina |
Died |
Jesse Benton Jr. (November 5? c. 1783 – October 17, 1843) was an American settler of Tennessee and Texas who worked as a lawyer and who was closely tied to the interpersonal conflict behind Tennessee and American politics in the Jacksonian era. His brother was U.S. Senator Thomas Hart Benton, and the writer Jessie Benton Frémont was his niece. He and his brother were involved in a tavern brawl with Andrew Jackson in Nashville in 1813, and Jesse Benton shot Jackson in the arm. In 1824, Benton, a supporter of presidential candidate William H. Crawford, published an anti-Jackson pamphlet accusing him of nepotism, corruption, and grossly abusive behavior to subordinates. Benton was an early pioneer of the Republic of Texas; he left the Alamo to recruit reinforcements for the fort just days before the storied battle with the Mexican army. Benton died in Louisiana in 1843.
North Carolina to Middle Tennessee
Jesse Benton was one of eight children born to North Carolina land speculator Jesse Benton and his wife Mary "Nancy" Gooch Benton.[1] The family moved to Leiper's Fork, Tennessee along the Natchez Trace around 1801.[2] There was mail waiting for Jesse Benton in Natchez, Mississippi in 1807,[3] and 1808.[4]
Benton was also involved in a duel with future Tennessee Governor William Carroll that was, reportedly, several steps away from the original insult:[5]
- Carroll slapped an officer who had insulted him in some way at a ball; according to Elbert Smith this was Lyttleton Johnson[6]
- The officer sent Carroll a duel challenge that was carried by a man named Pilcher
- Carroll kicked Pilcher down the stairs for insulting him by bringing him the challenge from the officer
- Pilcher challenged Carroll to a duel for kicking him down the stairs, which message he sent by Boyd McNairy
- When Boyd McNairy delivered the message to Carroll, the latter refused to duel Pilcher on the grounds that he was not enough of a gentleman to participate in a duel, and when McNairy offered to duel Carroll in Pilcher's place, Carroll said McNairy had been disqualified from dueling "because you were second in a duel and you made your man fire before the word was given."
- McNairy delivered the above information back to Pilcher, who then sent Jesse Benton as his messenger, and after consulting with Andrew Jackson who said that Carroll might as well duel Benton as anyone since it seemed like an inevitability, Carroll and Benton dueled at a place called Sandy Bottom, in which doing Carroll was hit in the thumb and Benton took a through-and-through gunshot wound which left him bedridden for six months and likely contributed to long-term health problems.[5]

Jackson served as Carroll's second in the duel that injured Jesse Benton. While this was going on, future U.S. Senator from Missouri Thomas Hart Benton was in the capital city, Washington, D.C., lobbying on behalf of Jackson, who had launched the Natchez Expedition without funding from the U.S. Department of War, and thus needed to get a funding appropriation made by Congress to cover his substantial expenses. When Benton got back to Nashville and discovered that his brother had been shot with support from Jackson, all while he had been hustling on Jackson's behalf, a second (or seventh?) conflict erupted. Thus it was that, in 1813, the Benton brothers fought Andrew Jackson, John Coffee, and Stockley D. Hays in a tavern in Nashville. Jesse Benton left Jackson with a "shoulder full of buckshot," a significant injury that left Jackson in a sling for months.[7][8]
West Tennessee
After the War of 1812, Benton seems to have relocated from middle Tennessee to west Tennessee, in the vicinity of present-day Memphis.[9] Jesse Benton reportedly came back to Hillsboro (Leiper's Fork) from the to see about the graves of his three sisters. According to The Tennessean, which interviewed the neighbors in 1878, "The graveyard was built after the family had left here, which accounts for its small size. Jesse Benton came to the old homestead from Memphis for the express, purpose, of baving it done, and it was built of nicely dressed stone and put together with mortar...'I was present, when Isaac Benton laid off the stone wall. It is very dilapidated, now, much of it down, that now stands around the graves of Polly, Nancy, and Peggy Benton, and two of Nat Benton's children. The wall was built by two men by the name of Craig and Russell, I think, in the year 1816, or 17. Craig and Russell boarded at my father's while doing the work...I was well acquainted with the Bentons. Their mother moved to Missouri and died there."[10] The sisters and their father had all died of tuberculosis.[6] The same account of the Bentons in Williamson County stated, "Jesse is represented as having been a man of awful temper and of indomitable preservance."[10]
He married Mary "Polly" Childress in Williamson County in 1817.[11][12] According to the memoir of an early surveyor, "No other persons had settled in Shelby County at that time that I know of unless Jesse Benton had done so on Big Creek."[13] He was an early settler of Tipton County at the Third Chickasaw Bluff in the 1820s.[14] In May 1822 he was a commissioner for a new road from Memphis to the Big Creek settlement and Loosahatchie River, and thence to the Forked Deer River, as well as a local justice of the peace.[14][15] Benton promoted the development of Randolph, Tennessee.[16] Randolph was an important riverfront settlement near the Second Chickasaw Bluff and mouth of the Hatchie River but the construction of the Memphis and Charleston Railroad to rival port town of Memphis doomed Randolph to long-term decline.[17] According to local historian Marshall Winfield of the West Tennessee Historical Society there is a story about Benton's approach to "justice" in west Tennessee:[18]
Jesse Benton, who had settled on the second bluff about 1820, was a very colorful character... Uncompromising in his prejudices and opinions, Benton was a law unto himself. On one occasion he entrusted a lot of livestock to a man to sell for him in New Orleans. The man returned without any money, saying he had been robbed. Benton said the man had stolen the money. He ordered his overseer and slaves to take the man across the river and box him up in a hollow tree where he would have to stand upright without food and water until he disgorged or told the truth about the money. After three days they went back, taking along a crosscut saw. When the treed man stuck to the story that he was robbed, Benton ordered his men to saw the tree down. When the incarcerated man felt the teeth of the saw ripping through his clothing he begged not to be sawn asunder and confessed that he had lost Benton's money in a New Orleans gambling house. Benton had the sawing stopped and the case was settled by a civil court.[18]
The "Tennessee opposition" to Andrew Jackson

According to historian Thomas Abernethy, there were a number of Tennesseans "who would not bend the knee" to Andrew Jackson, including Jesse Benton, Boyd McNairy, John Williams, James Jackson, Wilkins Tannehill, and Newton Cannon.[19][20] In August 1824 Benton listed himself as a candidate to be a presidential elector for William H. Crawford, and then in October 1824 recommitted himself to the apparently more viable candidate Henry Clay. Also in October 1824 he "issued a pamphlet villifying Jackson. This was circulated all over the country, but particularly in Tennessee and North Carolina." The pamphlet and a similar broadside charged Jackson with nepotism, corruption, and grossly abusive behavior to subordinates and his supporters described it as "scurrilous."[21][22][23][24] According to historian Louis Harlan, the pamphlet "accused the General of 'every known offense against Divine and human laws,' among other things, of bulldozing and corruption in the Senate election of 1823, of speculation in Florida lands and the salt lick reservation, and barbaric personal conduct."[25] William Berkeley Lewis, one of Jackson's circle of political promoters, wrote an point-by-point rebuttal in anonymous letter form that was published in the for the Philadelphia Columbia Observer on September 20, 1824.[25] Benton was beaten in the race for elector by Nathaniel Dyer.[9]
Apparently Jackson and Benton had another physical fight at the "old Bell tavern in Memphis," probably sometime in the 1820s, which Jackson this time won.[15] Thomas Hart Benton was eventually reconciled to Jackson and became one of his key allies in the U.S. Senate.[26] Jesse Benton and Thomas Hart Benton became and remained partially or totally estranged over the Senator's alliance with Jackson.[26]
Mississippi and the Republic of Texas
As of 1835, Benton was hanging out his shingle as a lawyer in Mississippi, advertising himself as a resident of Madisonville, Mississippi, "who proposes to practice law in the Circuit and Probate Courts of Madison county, the Circuit Courts of Hinds, Yazoo, Holmes, and Attala, also, he will attend the High Court of Errors and Appeals, the Superior Court of Chancery, and the U. S. District Court, at Jackson."[27]
Benton was part of a group that traveled together from Nacogdoches, Texas in 1836, several of whom, including Davy Crockett, were later killed defending the Alamo from the Mexican Army. Benton, Peter Harper, and H. S. Kimble separated the group at Washington, Texas, rather than continuing on to San Antonio.[28] Early reports about the Battle of the Alamo erroneously reported that Benton had been killed with Davy Crockett and James Butler Bonham.[28] A scrawled note on an 1829 letter written by Benton that is held in the San Jacinto Museum manuscript collection reads, "The gamest man I ever saw, killed in the Alamo, Texas, 1835."[29] On April 21, 1836, the Arkansas Gazette newspaper reported, "The previous report of the death of Col. Jesse Benton is incorrect. Mr. [Jesse B.] Badgett saw him near Nacogdoches about the 25th, on his way to Jonesborough, Miller county, in this Territory, where a volunteer company was organizing, and with whom he intended marching for the seat of war."[30][31]
A letter written by Benton was published in a Memphis newspaper after the battle:[32]
Near Nacogdoches, 22d Feb., 1836.
DEAR SIR-A month's sickness haid reduced me almost to the grave. I am now better and traveling on.
Official information has just reached us that Santa Anna has crossed the Rio Grande, and is marching against us with a large army for the purpose of exterminating us. I will place myself in the infantry as a private soldier, and if he pass our bayonets I will be deceived. Nearly all our troops are riflemen; no body of infantry to lodge on to form squares, or rush on with and crush the enemy. We will die hard, for it will be truly victory or death with us.
Our volunteers have consumed our provisions and a great many have left us—just what I expected.
Gen. Cos and his troops, we are informed, have broken their parole, and are returning against us.
The country on the Rio Grande is given up to a brutal soldiery. Seven or eight hundred American citizens from the U.S., reside in Metamoras. Women are treated worse than words can paint. If we cannot defend the county in any other way, we can do it effectually by adopting the Russian mode of defence, against Napoleon in 1819.
A great many rivers cross Texas running from north to south. The country becomes too soft for cavalry and artillery in wet weather—and if the Mexican troops confine themselves to the sea coast to receive supplies, the climate will destroy them.
I write this in haste; you will know my weak state by my bad writing. A gentleman is waiting to take this on. I hope it will reach you safe, and that you will publish it, in hopes that this informa. tion may arouse our brave young men in the west to come on as fast as possible to our assistance.
Beef is plenty in the country.
Your friend,
JESSE BENTON.[32]
L. W. Kemp's notes state that Benton "came to Texas in 1835; he was a member of Patton's Columbia Volunteers in the San Jacinto campaign and remained at the camp opposite Harrisburg; he was a member of the Texas House of Representatives in 1839–1840."[29] According to Republic of Texas military records, Benton "enlisted April 9, 1836 in the company of Columbia Volunteers, commanded by Captain William H. Patton. He served as a private until April 23, 1836. He was honorably discharged October 9, 1836 having risen to the rank of first Sergeant, and first Lieutenant of the company."[33] In 1842, Benton was the District Attorney for the Seventh Judicial District of the Republic of Texas.[34][29]
Death

Benton died in Sabine Parish, Louisiana in 1843.[35] At the time of his death he was part of a carvan of two related families, and their slaves, that were migrating back to Tennessee after the death of their kinsman, Texian leader Kelsey Harris Douglas.[36] Benton died without issue and left his property to his widow and his brother T. H. Benton.[11] He and several family members are buried at Nashville City Cemetery.[37]
See also
References
- ^ Mueller (2014), pp. 21, 23.
- ^ Chambers (1949).
- ^ "List of letters, Natchez". The Mississippi Messenger. April 7, 1807. p. 3. Retrieved 2025-01-23.
- ^ "List of Letters, 1808". The Mississippi Messenger. April 7, 1808. p. 2. Retrieved 2025-01-23.
- ^ a b "Old Time Duels". The Tennessean. July 20, 1882. p. 4. Retrieved 2025-01-22.
- ^ a b Smith, Elbert B. (February 1958). "Now Defend Yourself, You Damned Rascal!". American Heritage. Vol. IX, no. 2. pp. 41–57. ISSN 0002-8738. OCLC 1479963.
- ^ "The republic, or, A history of the United States of America in the administrations : from the monarchic colonial days to the present times / by John Robert ... v.7". HathiTrust. Retrieved 2025-01-22.
- ^ "Andrew Jackson and early Tennessee history ... by S. G. Heiskell ... v.1". HathiTrust. Retrieved 2025-01-09.
- ^ a b "The Bentons Come to West Tennessee". State Gazette. February 12, 2003. Retrieved 2025-01-06.
- ^ a b "The Benton Graves". The Tennessean. November 1, 1878. p. 3. Retrieved 2025-01-23.
- ^ a b "The Bentons". The Tennessean. October 23, 1879. p. 3. Retrieved 2025-01-22.
- ^ "Jesse Benton and Polly Childress, 04 Jan 1817; citing Williamson County". Tennessee State Marriage Index, 1780–2002. Tennessee State Library and Archives, Nashville, Tennessee. FamilySearch.
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: CS1 maint: others (link) - ^ Howard (1902), p. 62.
- ^ a b "History of Tennessee : the making of a state / by James Phelan". HathiTrust. Retrieved 2025-01-09.
- ^ a b "A history of Tennessee and Tennesseans : the leaders and representative men in commerce, industry, and modern activities / by Will T. Hale and Dixon L. Merritt ... v.2". HathiTrust. Retrieved 2025-01-09.
- ^ "Randolph Formerly Rival of Memphis". Kingsport Times. January 22, 1924. p. 2. Retrieved 2025-01-22.
- ^ "Dead Towns of Tennessee: No. 1, Randolph, Once a Budding Rival of Memphis by J. G. Cisco". Nashville Banner. September 6, 1913. p. 23. Retrieved 2025-01-22.
- ^ a b "Article clipped from The Commercial Appeal". Commercial Appeal. Memphis, Tennessee. November 27, 1949. p. 59. Retrieved 2025-01-22.
- ^ Abernethy (1932), pp. 292–293.
- ^ Vance, Mildred Ethel. "Tennessee politics in the Jackson era". p. 83. Retrieved 2025-01-09 – via HathiTrust.
- ^ "Beginnings of West Tennessee, in the land of the Chickasaws, 1541–1841". HathiTrust. Retrieved 2025-01-09.
- ^ Harlan (1948), p. 26.
- ^ "Tennessee's sesquicentennial exhibition, held at the Library of Congress, Washington, D. C., June 1, 1946 – October 21, 1946". HathiTrust. Retrieved 2025-01-09.
- ^ Ratcliffe (2014), p. 62.
- ^ a b Harlan (1948), p. 20.
- ^ a b "Watson's Jeffersonian magazine 1,8 (1907)". HathiTrust. Retrieved 2025-01-09.
- ^ "Jesse Benton Jr. – Mississippi lawyer". The Weekly Mississippian. May 22, 1835. p. 4. Retrieved 2025-01-07.
- ^ a b Wiener (2024), p. 153.
- ^ a b c San Jacinto Manuscripts (1949), p. 6.
- ^ "From Texas". South Branch Intelligencer. May 7, 1836. p. 2. Retrieved 2025-01-07.
- ^ "From Texas". South Branch Intelligencer. May 7, 1836. p. 2. Retrieved 2025-01-08.
- ^ a b "Near Nacodoches, 22d Feb., 1836". The Arkansas Gazette. April 5, 1836. p. 3. Retrieved 2025-01-08.
- ^ "Journals of the Congress of the Republic of Texas 1839–1840 v.1". HathiTrust. p. 270. Retrieved 2025-01-15.
- ^ Strickland (1930), p. 59.
- ^ "Died – Jesse Benton". Tri-Weekly Nashville Union. December 28, 1843 – via Newspapers.com.
- ^ "Mrs. Sevier House". Nashville Banner. August 11, 1929. p. 43. Retrieved 2025-01-22.
- ^ "Jesse Benton – Tombstone Inscription". Nashville City Cemetery. Retrieved 2025-01-11.
Sources
- Abernethy, Thomas Perkins (1932). From frontier to plantation in Tennessee: a study in frontier democracy. Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press. LCCN 32012393.
- San Jacinto Monument; Hurja, E. (1949). A check list of manuscripts. Houston: San Jacinto Museum of History Association.
- Chambers, William N. (1949). "Thomas Hart Benton in Tennessee, 1801–1812". Tennessee Historical Quarterly. 8 (4): 291–331. ISSN 0040-3261. JSTOR 42621020.
- Harlan, Louis R. (1948). "Public Career of William Berkeley Lewis". Tennessee Historical Quarterly. 7 (1): 3–37. ISSN 0040-3261. JSTOR 42620964.
- Mueller, Ken (2014). Senator Benton and the People: Master Race Democracy on the Early American Frontier. Early American Places. Ithaca, New York: Cornell University Press. ISBN 9781501757556. OCLC 1203952026. Project MUSE book 83601.
- Murphy, James Edward (1971). "Jackson and the Tennessee Opposition". Tennessee Historical Quarterly. 30 (1): 50–69. ISSN 0040-3261. JSTOR 42623203.
- Pessen, Edward (1969). Jacksonian America: Society, Personality, and Politics. The Dorsey Series in American History. Homewood, Illinois: Dorsey Press. LCCN 68056870. OCLC 559352319. OL 5631022M – via Internet Archive.
- Ratcliffe, Donald (March 2014). "Popular Preferences in the Presidential Election of 1824". Journal of the Early Republic. 34 (1): 45–77. doi:10.1353/jer.2014.0009. ISSN 1553-0620.
- Seitz, Don C. Famous American duels, with some account of the causes that led up to them and the men engaged.
- Strickland, Rex Wallace (1930). "History of Fannin County, 1836–1843, II". The Southwestern Historical Quarterly. 34 (1): 38–68. ISSN 0038-478X. JSTOR 30235344.
- The Laws of Slavery in Texas: Historical Documents and Essays. Austin: University of Texas Press. 2010. ISBN 9780292793101. Project MUSE book 586.
- Wiener, Allen J. (2024). David Crockett in Texas: His Search for New Land. College Station, Texas: Texas A&M University Press. ISBN 9781648432163. Project MUSE book 129646.
Primary sources
- Benton, Jesse (1824). An address to the people of the United States on the presidential election. University of Pittsburgh Library System. Nashville: Printed by J. Norvell for the Author.
- Howard, Memucan Hunt (1902). "Recollections of Memucan Hunt Howard". The American Historical Magazine. 7 (1): 55–68. ISSN 2333-8970. JSTOR 42657450.