Online Encyclopedia

GEORGE MCDUFFIE (1788-1851)

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Originally appearing in Volume V17, Page 214 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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GEORGE MCDUFFIE (1788-1851)  ,
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American
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political leader;' was born in
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Columbia county,
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Georgia . He was admitted to the bar in 1814, and served in the South Carolina General Assembly in 1818-1821, and in the
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national House of Representatives in 1821–1834 . In 1821 he published a pamphlet in which strict construction and states' rights were strongly denounced; yet in 1832 there were few more uncompromising nullificationists . The change seems to have been gradual, and to have been determined in
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part by the influence of John C . Calhoun . When, after 1824, the old Democratic-Republican party split into factions, he followed Andrew Jackson and Martin
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Van Buren' in opposing the
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Panama Congress and the policy of making Federal appropriations for
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internal improvements . He did not hesitate, however, to differ from Jackson on the two chief issues of his administration: the
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Bank and
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nullification . In 1832 he was a prominent member of the South Carolina Nullification Convention, and drafted its address to the
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people of the
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United States . He served as governor in 2834-1836, "during which time he helped to reorganize South Carolina College . From
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January 1843 until January 1846 he was a member of the United States Senate . The leading Democratic
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measures of those years all received his hearty support . McDuffie, like' Calhoun, became an eloquent champion of state
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sovereignty; but while Calhoun emphasized state
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action as the only means of redressing a grievance, McDuffie paid more attention to the grievance itself .

Influenced in large measure by

Thomas Cooper, he made it his
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special
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work to convince the people of the South that the downfall of
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protection was essential to their material progress . His
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argument that it is the producer who really pays the duty of imports has been called the economic basis of nullification . He died at
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Cherry Hill, Sumter
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district, South Carolina, on the 11th of March 1851 .

End of Article: GEORGE MCDUFFIE (1788-1851)
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