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See also: American politician, was See also: born in Bertie county, See also: North Carolina, on the 26th of See also: March 1749
.
He was a member of the
See also: Continental Congress in 1783-1784 and again in 1786-1787, of the constitutional See also: convention at See also: Philadelphia in 1787, and of the See also: state convention which ratified the Federal constitution for North Carolina in 1789
.
From 1790 until 1796 he was, by President See also: Washington's See also: appointment, governor of the " Territory See also: South of the See also: Ohio See also: River," created out of See also: land ceded to the See also: national See also: government by North Carolina in 1789
.
He was also during this See also: period the See also: superintendent of See also: Indian affairs for this See also: part of the country
.
In 1791 he laid out See also: Knoxville (See also: Tennessee) as the seat of government
.
He presided over the constitutional convention of Tennessee in 1796, and, on the state being admitted to the Union, became one of its first representatives in the See also: United States Senate
.
In 1797 his connexion became known with a scheme, since called " See also: Blount's Conspiracy," which provided for the co-operation of the American frontiersmen, assisted by See also: Indians, and an See also: English force, in the seizure on behalf of See also: Great Britain of the Floridas and See also: Louisiana, then owned by See also: Spain, with which power See also: England was then at war
.
As this scheme, if carried out, involved the corrupting of two officials of the United States, an Indian See also: agent and an interpreter, a breach of the See also: neutrality of the United States, and the breach of Article V. of the treaty of See also: San Lorenzo el Real (signed on the 27th of See also: October 1'795) between the United States and Spain, by which each power agreed not to incite the Indians to attack the other, Blount was impeached by the See also: House of Representatives on the 7th of See also: July 1797, and on the following See also: day was formally expelled from the Senate for " having been guilty of high misdemeanor, entirely inconsistent with his public See also: trust and duty as a senator." On the 29th of See also: January 1798 articles of impeachment were adopted by the House of Representatives
.
On the 14th of January 1799, however, the Senate, sitting as a See also: court of impeachment, decided that it had no jurisdiction, Blount not then being a member of the Senate, and, in the Senate's opinion, not having been, even as a member, a See also: civil officer of the United States, within the meaning of the constitution
.
The See also: case is significant as being the first case of impeachment brought before the United States Senate
.
" In a legal point of view, all that the case decides is that a senator of the United States who has been expelled from his seat is not after such expulsion subject to impeachment " (See also: Francis Wharton, State Trials)
.
In effect, however, it also decided that a member of Congress was not in the meaning of the constitution a civil officer of the United States and therefore could not be impeached
.
The " conspiracy " was disavowed by the See also: British government, which, however, seems to have secretly favoured it
.
Blount was enthusiastically supported by his constituents, and upon his return to Tennessee was made a member and the presiding officer of the state senate
.
He died at Knoxville on the 21st of March , 800
.
For a defence of Blount, see General See also: Marcus J
.
See also: Wright's Account of the See also: Life and Services of See also: William Blount (Washington, D
.
C., 1884)
.
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