- Pinckney, Charles
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born Oct. 26, 1757, Charleston, S.C.died Oct. 29, 1824, Charleston, S.C., U.S.U.S. statesman.A cousin of Charles C. Pinckney and Thomas Pinckney, he fought in the American Revolution. From 1784 to 1787 he served in the Continental Congress, where he was instrumental in calling for the Constitutional Convention. As a delegate to the convention from South Carolina, he proposed numerous provisions that were incorporated in the final draft of the Constitution of the United States. He helped write the South Carolina constitution and was also governor of the state (1789–92, 1796–98, 1806–08). He served in the U.S. Senate from 1798 to 1801 and as minister to Spain from 1801 to 1805.
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▪ American statesmanborn Oct. 26, 1757, Charleston, S.C. [U.S.]died Oct. 29, 1824, CharlestonAmerican Founding Father, political leader, and diplomat whose proposals for a new government—called the Pinckney plan—were largely incorporated into the Federal Constitution drawn up in 1787.During the American Revolution, Pinckney was captured and held prisoner by the British. Serving in the Continental Congress for three years (1784–87), he played a leading role in calling a national convention to revise and strengthen the Articles of Confederation.As a South Carolina delegate to the Constitutional Convention at Philadelphia, he submitted a detailed plan of government, which, although the original draft was not preserved, is known to have contained a number of provisions that were incorporated into the new Constitution. Pinckney possibly had as large a share in determining the style, form, and content of the document as any other individual. At home he supported ratification, presided over the convention that remodeled the South Carolina Constitution in 1790, and as governor (1789–92) guided the adjustment between the state and federal governments.Pinckney began his political career as a Federalist but in 1791 transferred his allegiance to the Jeffersonian Republican Party. He served in the state legislature (1792–96, 1810–14) and as governor (1796–98, 1806–08), U.S. senator (1798–1801), and representative (1819–21). He supported amendments to the state constitution that gave greater representation to the back country and extended suffrage to all white men. By opposing Federalist policies, especially in 1798, he estranged his two politically active cousins, Charles Cotesworth Pinckney and Thomas Pinckney—favourite-son pillars of South Carolina federalism. His efforts in getting South Carolina's electors to vote for Jefferson (Jefferson, Thomas) in 1800 were decisive to the election. Reflecting his Southern background, he bitterly assailed the proposed restrictions on slavery contained in the Missouri Compromise of 1820.His fidelity to his party was rewarded by appointment as U.S. minister to Spain (1801–05), where he negotiated an agreement providing for a joint tribunal to settle spoliation claims (arising from the seizure of a ship's papers when confiscated for suspected smuggling, carrying contraband of war, or being an enemy ship) and the restoration to U.S. shippers of the right of deposit (temporary storage of goods) at the port of New Orleans. He also won Spain's reluctant consent to Napoleon's sale of Louisiana to the United States, but failed to achieve the U.S. acquisition of Florida.* * *
Universalium. 2010.