Arthur Middleton
Arthur Middleton (June 26, 1742 – January 1, 1787) was an American planter and statesman from South Carolina who served as a delegate to the Second Continental Congress and affixed his signature to the Declaration of Independence.[1])[2] Born at the family estate of Middleton Place on the Ashley River, Middleton was the eldest son of Henry Middleton, a wealthy rice planter and future president of the First Continental Congress, and Mary Williams.[1]) He received his early education in South Carolina before studying at elite schools in England, including Harrow and Westminster, and later training in law at the Temple in London, where he was called to the bar.[1][3] Returning to South Carolina in 1763, he managed family plantations and immersed himself in colonial politics, opposing British policies through service in the provincial assembly and as a member of the Council of Safety.[1][2] Middleton's commitment to independence extended to military action; he helped raise a regiment and fought in the early stages of the Revolutionary War, though much of his service involved diplomatic and legislative efforts in the Continental Congress from 1776 to 1778.)[3] Captured by the British during the fall of Charleston in 1780, he endured imprisonment in St. Augustine, Florida, before being exchanged and resuming political duties, including further congressional terms and state legislative service.[1][2] His legacy endures through his role in the founding of the United States and the preservation of Middleton Place, a historic plantation reflecting the planter aristocracy of the colonial South.[1])Early Life and Family
Birth and Upbringing at Middleton Place
Arthur Middleton was born on June 26, 1742, at Middleton Place, the estate of his family situated on the Ashley River in St. Andrew's Parish, approximately 14 miles northwest of Charleston, South Carolina.[1][4] He was the firstborn child of Henry Middleton, a wealthy rice planter who owned over 20 plantations across the colony, and Mary Williams Middleton, daughter of planter John Williams.[5][6] The Middleton family traced its colonial roots to earlier arrivals from Barbados and England, with Henry Middleton having developed Middleton Place into a productive rice plantation featuring terraced gardens laid out in 1741, drawing on European landscape designs.[7] As the eldest son in a prominent planter family, Middleton's early years were shaped by the rhythms of plantation life at Middleton Place, where rice cultivation formed the economic backbone, supported by enslaved African labor numbering in the hundreds across family holdings.[6] His father, who served as president of the First South Carolina Provincial Congress in 1774, instilled values of colonial elite status and land management, though specific details of Middleton's childhood activities remain sparse in historical records.[4] Tutored initially at home in keeping with customs for children of the gentry, he resided at the estate until age twelve.[2] In 1754, at approximately twelve years old, Middleton accompanied his uncle William to England, departing Middleton Place for formal schooling, marking the end of his primary upbringing on the family plantation.[4][8] This transition reflected the era's practice among South Carolina's planter class of sending sons abroad for advanced education to prepare for leadership roles.[9]Education in England and Return to South Carolina
At the age of twelve in 1754, Arthur Middleton was sent from his family's estate at Middleton Place to England to pursue his formal education, a common practice for sons of wealthy colonial planters seeking refined instruction unavailable in the American provinces.[1] He initially attended preparatory institutions such as Hackney Academy and Westminster School to build foundational knowledge in classics, languages, and rhetoric.[8] Middleton later enrolled at St. John's College, Cambridge University, where he immersed himself in the liberal arts curriculum typical of the era, emphasizing moral philosophy, history, and mathematics.[10] Following his time at Cambridge, he transitioned to legal studies at the Temple in London, one of the Inns of Court, focusing on common law principles and advocacy skills that would inform his later political career.[11] During this period, he also undertook travels across continental Europe, observing political systems and cultural institutions, which broadened his perspectives on governance and liberty.[8] Middleton returned to South Carolina in December 1763, arriving at Charleston on December 24 after nearly a decade abroad, equipped with an education that positioned him among the colony's emerging elite.[4] Upon his arrival, he assumed responsibilities in managing the family plantations, including the labor-intensive rice operations reliant on enslaved workers, while beginning to engage in provincial politics.[12] His English-formed worldview, skeptical of unchecked monarchical authority, would soon align with growing colonial resistance to British policies.[13]Economic Foundations
Inheritance of Plantations and Management
Arthur Middleton, born in 1742 as the eldest son of Henry Middleton, was positioned to inherit the bulk of his father's extensive estate, which encompassed around 20 plantations totaling approximately 50,000 acres in South Carolina.[2] Henry Middleton, a wealthy planter and political figure, amassed these holdings through land acquisitions, strategic marriages, and agricultural expansion centered on rice and indigo production.[14] Upon Henry's death on June 13, 1784, Arthur formally received Middleton Place—a 2,000-acre rice plantation along the Ashley River that served as the family seat—as well as proportional shares in other properties not previously entailed or divided among siblings.[4][15] Prior to this inheritance, Arthur assumed de facto management responsibilities upon returning from education in England in 1771, prioritizing plantation oversight over immediate public involvement.[1] His efforts focused on sustaining rice cultivation, which required meticulous control of tidal flooding for irrigation, seed selection, and labor coordination to maintain yields amid fluctuating markets and environmental challenges like flooding and pests.[7] Following his release from British imprisonment in 1781 after the fall of Charleston, Middleton rededicated himself to estate administration, repairing war damages to mills, dikes, and fields while navigating postwar economic recovery.[16] These operations underpinned the family's wealth, generating revenue through exports to northern colonies and Europe, though exact annual outputs varied with crop successes.[17] Middleton's management style reflected Lowcountry planter norms, emphasizing infrastructural improvements such as enhanced rice trunks and earthworks at Middleton Place to boost productivity, though records indicate he delegated day-to-day supervision to overseers during his political absences.[4] By the mid-1780s, the plantations sustained a lifestyle of refined hospitality, with Middleton Place featuring landscaped gardens and a brick residence completed under his father's earlier initiatives but maintained under Arthur's tenure until his death in 1787.[1] This period of stewardship preserved the estate's viability, passing it intact to subsequent heirs despite Revolutionary disruptions.[2]Role of Slave Labor in Family Wealth
The Middleton family's wealth originated from large-scale plantation agriculture in colonial South Carolina, centered on labor-intensive crops such as rice and indigo, which were cultivated almost exclusively through the forced labor of enslaved Africans and their descendants.[7] Henry Middleton, Arthur's father, expanded the family's holdings to encompass over 20 plantations spanning more than 50,000 acres, employing approximately 800 enslaved individuals by the mid-18th century; these operations generated substantial profits that funded the family's elite lifestyle, including the development of Middleton Place's expansive gardens, constructed between 1741 and 1751 using the labor of about 100 slaves.[9][18] Rice production, in particular, demanded coordinated dike-building, flooding, and harvesting in malarial swamps, tasks that planters deemed unsuitable for free white labor, leading to the importation and retention of enslaved workers skilled in tidal cultivation techniques from West Africa.[11] Arthur Middleton inherited a share of this fortune following his father's death in 1784, though wartime disruptions had already impacted the estates; during the British occupation of Charleston in 1780, forces seized and sold over 200 slaves from Middleton properties, depleting human capital essential to output.[5] Prior to the Revolution, Arthur managed aspects of the family plantations, deriving his personal financial independence directly from the revenue produced by enslaved labor, which accounted for the bulk of export commodities driving South Carolina's economy—rice exports alone reached 100,000 barrels annually by the 1770s, underpinning planter wealth.[1] Enslaved people not only performed field work but also skilled tasks like blacksmithing, carpentry, and rice milling, with family records indicating over 100 slaves at the core Middleton Place estate by the 1740s, sustaining diversified income from indigo dyeing and livestock.[19] This reliance on slavery was systemic to the Lowcountry planter class, where enslaved labor costs were offset by high crop yields; estimates place the Middleton family's peak enslaved population at around 800, contributing to a fortune equivalent to millions in modern terms through coerced productivity rather than innovation or market diversification.[20] Arthur's post-war resumption of plantation oversight perpetuated this model until his death in 1787, after which heirs continued exploiting slave labor amid South Carolina's entrenched chattel system, which persisted legally until 1865.[7]Political Ascendancy Pre-Independence
Involvement in Provincial Congress
Arthur Middleton served as a delegate to the First Provincial Congress of South Carolina, which convened from January 11 to 26, 1775, representing St. Philip's and St. Michael's Parish in Charleston.[16] [21] This body, formed in response to escalating tensions with Britain following the Intolerable Acts, focused on organizing colonial defenses, raising funds, and coordinating with other provinces; Middleton supported resolutions authorizing militia formations and the procurement of arms and powder essential for resistance.[8] The Provincial Congress appointed a Council of Safety to execute its directives, and Middleton's active participation underscored his alignment with the patriot faction advocating decisive action against royal authority.[21] He contributed to efforts securing military supplies, including membership on a secret committee of five tasked with overseeing the seizure of powder and weapons from royal storehouses to prevent British confiscation and bolster colonial forces.[16] In the Second Provincial Congress, meeting from November 1, 1775, to March 26, 1776, Middleton continued as a delegate from the same parish.[22] This assembly shifted toward establishing provisional governance, and in February 1776, Middleton joined a committee of eleven instructed to draft a temporary frame of government for the colony amid the dispute with Britain, producing a document that framed South Carolina's initial republican structure and emphasized legislative supremacy.[21] [8] His involvement reflected a commitment to self-governance, prioritizing empirical preparations for conflict over reconciliation with Parliament.[8]Service on the Council of Safety and Radical Measures
In June 1775, the First Provincial Congress of South Carolina elected Arthur Middleton as one of thirteen members to the newly formed Council of Safety, which assumed executive authority over colonial affairs in the absence of royal governance.[16][23] This body, chaired by Henry Laurens, directed preparations for armed resistance against British forces, including the organization of militia units, the importation of gunpowder and arms, and the fortification of key sites like Charleston Harbor.[23] Middleton, a vocal proponent of the Patriot cause, contributed to these efforts as a leader of the American Party faction, emphasizing decisive action to counter royalist influences.[24] Middleton's service extended through the Council's operations into early 1776, during which it authorized expeditions to secure loyalty in the backcountry and oversee the seizure of British munitions, such as the September 1775 capture of Fort Johnson.[21][23] He participated in the Council's Secret Committee, a subcommittee of five members tasked with clandestine activities, including intelligence gathering and the procurement of military supplies from foreign ports to evade British blockades.[9] These measures reflected the Council's shift toward more assertive policies, prioritizing colonial self-defense and resource mobilization amid reports of impending British naval threats.[12] The Council's actions, under Middleton's involvement, embodied radical commitments to independence by effectively supplanting provincial executive functions and funding defensive infrastructure through emergency taxes and asset seizures, actions that alienated Loyalists and escalated provincial autonomy.[23] A second Council was elected in November 1775, with Middleton continuing his role until the transition to a state constitution in 1776, after which he shifted focus to the Continental Congress.[25][6]Revolutionary Contributions
Delegation to Continental Congress
Arthur Middleton was elected as a delegate to the Second Continental Congress by the South Carolina Provincial Congress in early 1776, succeeding his father, Henry Middleton, who had served in the First Continental Congress but declined further involvement due to differing views on reconciliation with Britain.[8][24] His election followed his active role in the Second Provincial Congress, where he contributed to drafting South Carolina's first state constitution in March 1776.[8] Middleton served in Philadelphia from June 1776 until October 1777, representing South Carolina's interests amid escalating calls for independence.[16] During this tenure, he advocated for increased military resources directed toward the southern colonies to counter British naval threats, reflecting South Carolina's vulnerable coastal position.[1] He participated in committees addressing confederation frameworks, contributing to early drafts of the Articles of Confederation, though his direct influence was limited by the delegation's focus on immediate wartime needs.[8] South Carolina's delegation, including Middleton, initially expressed caution toward full separation from Britain owing to fears of immediate reprisals against the state's plantations and ports; nonetheless, Middleton voted in favor of Richard Henry Lee's resolution for independence on July 2, 1776.[1] By late 1777, citing health concerns and a desire to manage family estates, Middleton declined reelection despite multiple offers, returning to South Carolina to oversee local defense efforts.[24]Signing the Declaration of Independence
Arthur Middleton succeeded his father, Henry Middleton, as a delegate from South Carolina to the Second Continental Congress in 1776, arriving in Philadelphia in time to participate in the critical debates on independence.[10][2] As one of South Carolina's four delegates—alongside Edward Rutledge, Thomas Heyward Jr., and Thomas Lynch Jr.—Middleton contributed to the state's shift from initial hesitation to support for separation from Britain, influenced by revised provincial instructions that empowered the delegates to vote freely.[26] On July 2, 1776, the South Carolina delegation, including Middleton, voted in favor of Richard Henry Lee's resolution declaring the colonies independent, helping secure the unanimous 12-0 decision (with New York abstaining).[27] Following Congress's approval of the Declaration's text on July 4, 1776, Middleton affixed his signature to the engrossed parchment document during the formal signing session on August 2, 1776, alongside most of the other delegates. His act of signing committed South Carolina to the revolutionary cause, despite awareness of the colony's strategic vulnerability to British naval forces, which some accounts attribute to his cautious approach amid fears of reprisal.[1] Middleton's signature, rendered in a clear and legible script, appears as the fourth from South Carolina on the document, symbolizing his alignment with the patriot commitment to self-governance and resistance against parliamentary overreach.[9] This endorsement carried personal risk, as signers faced potential treason charges under British law, yet Middleton proceeded, reflecting the delegates' collective resolve forged through deliberation on natural rights and grievances.[24]Military Service and Imprisonment
Militia Role and Capture at Charleston
As British forces under General Sir Henry Clinton approached Charleston in early 1780, Arthur Middleton enlisted in the South Carolina militia to aid in the city's defense during the ensuing siege, which began on March 29 and lasted until the American surrender.[1] [24] His participation reflected his prior revolutionary commitments, including earlier efforts to organize military forces and secure arms, though his direct militia service intensified amid the immediate threat to the patriot stronghold.[21] The British bombardment and encirclement overwhelmed the defenders, comprising Continental Army troops under Major General Benjamin Lincoln, state militia units, and local volunteers totaling around 5,000 men against a British force exceeding 13,000.[1] Middleton contributed to these defensive preparations and operations within the militia ranks, helping to coordinate resistance in what became the worst American defeat of the war by terms of prisoners taken—over 3,000, including key leaders.[24] On May 12, 1780, following the formal capitulation of Charleston, Middleton was captured by British forces alongside fellow South Carolina Declaration signers Thomas Heyward Jr. and Edward Rutledge, marking a significant blow to patriot leadership in the South.[1] [21] He was initially held in Charleston before transfer to St. Augustine in British-occupied East Florida, where conditions for high-profile prisoners involved confinement under guard but spared the harshest frontline treatments reserved for enlisted men.[24]Conditions of Imprisonment and Release
Following the British capture of Charleston on May 12, 1780, Arthur Middleton, who had served in the local militia during the siege, was taken prisoner along with approximately 5,000 American defenders.[1][12] He was subsequently transported to St. Augustine, Florida—then under British control—where prominent civilian and military prisoners from the South, including fellow Declaration signers Thomas Heyward Jr. and Edward Rutledge, were confined.[1][28] In St. Augustine, conditions for these high-status prisoners were relatively permissive compared to the squalid hulks or dungeons endured by many rank-and-file captives elsewhere.[28] Most, including Middleton, Heyward, and Rutledge, were granted parole allowing liberty of the town, with housing in the unfinished State House by late 1780 rather than the more restrictive Castillo de San Marcos fortress used for some others.[28][29] A few prisoners rented private quarters, reflecting the British policy of treating elite captives with deference to their social standing, though they remained under guard and prohibited from military activity.[28] Middleton endured over a year of captivity before his release in July 1781 through a negotiated prisoner exchange between Continental and British forces, which freed nearly all American officers held in the South.[2][9] The exchange, facilitated amid ongoing diplomatic efforts, returned him to Philadelphia, from where he resumed public service.[4]Post-War Public Service
State Legislature and Constitution Drafting
Following the Revolutionary War, Arthur Middleton served in the South Carolina House of Representatives during the sessions of 1785 and 1786, participating in the state's legislative reconstruction amid economic recovery and governance stabilization.[10][30] These terms built on his prior legislative experience, including service from 1778 to 1780 and membership in the wartime Jacksonborough Assembly of 1782, where the body convened inland to evade British control of Charleston.[31][32] Middleton's role in constitution drafting occurred earlier, in February 1776, when he joined a committee of eleven tasked with framing South Carolina's first state constitution amid the push for independence.[8][11] This document established a republican framework with a strong legislature, reflecting patriot priorities for self-governance, though it retained elements of planter influence such as property qualifications for voting and officeholding.[2] The 1778 amendments, under which Middleton was briefly elected but declined governorship, further refined legislative powers without his direct drafting involvement.[8] His contributions emphasized balancing executive restraint with assembly authority, consistent with his advocacy for colonial rights pre-independence.[12]Design of South Carolina State Seal
Arthur Middleton, in collaboration with William Henry Drayton, contributed to the design of the Great Seal of South Carolina in 1776, following a commission from the Provincial Congress on April 2 of that year.[33] Drayton primarily handled the obverse side, while Middleton was responsible for the reverse.[34] The design drew inspiration from the recent American victory at the Battle of Sullivan's Island on June 28, 1776, where palmetto-log fortifications repelled a British naval assault, symbolizing resilience and defiance.[34] The reverse side, attributed to Middleton, depicts the Roman goddess Spes—personifying hope—advancing along a dawn-lit shore strewn with discarded British weapons, including cannons and cannonballs.[34] In her right hand, Spes holds a laurel branch, evoking victory and renewal, while her left rests on an anchor, a classical emblem of steadfast hope amid turmoil.[35] Above her figure appears the state motto "Dum Spiro Spero" ("While I breathe, I hope"), reinforcing themes of optimism and perseverance in the revolutionary struggle.[36] This imagery contrasted the obverse's martial motifs by emphasizing post-victory aspiration, though the full two-sided seal fell into disuse after the Civil War, with elements later adapted into a single obverse design.[34] The seal was first affixed to an official document on May 22, 1777, by John Rutledge, then president of South Carolina, marking its practical adoption for authenticating state papers.[37] Middleton's reverse design thus encapsulated a forward-looking ethos, balancing the immediate triumph celebrated on the obverse with enduring resolve, reflective of South Carolina's early republican ideals.[34]Family and Personal Life
Marriage to Maria Hennessy
Arthur Middleton married Mary Izard, the daughter of Walter Izard, a justice of the peace and plantation owner at Cedar Grove in St. John's Parish, Berkeley County, South Carolina, on August 19, 1764.[1][9] At the time, Middleton was 22 years old and had recently returned from studies in England at St. John's College, Cambridge, while Izard was approximately 16 or 17 years old and from a prominent rice-planting family with ties to other colonial elites.[4] The union strengthened alliances among South Carolina's planter class, combining Middleton's inheritance of Middleton Place—a 2,000-acre rice plantation—with Izard's family connections and dowry, which included additional land and enslaved labor resources essential to their economic status.[1][9] Following the marriage, the couple settled at Middleton Place, where they established a household centered on plantation management and family life amid growing colonial tensions with Britain. Mary Izard Middleton managed domestic affairs, including the oversight of enslaved individuals numbering over 100 on their properties, while Arthur pursued political and military roles.[4] Their partnership endured through the Revolutionary War, during which Mary remained at Middleton Place after Arthur's capture at the fall of Charleston in 1780, handling estate operations under British occupation risks.[1] The marriage produced nine children between 1766 and 1783, though infant and child mortality claimed several, reflecting common patterns among 18th-century planter families dependent on large-scale agriculture.[4] Mary outlived Arthur, dying in 1814 after managing the family estates and educating surviving children in Europe and America.[9]Children and Family Losses
Arthur Middleton and his wife, Mary Izard, whom he married on August 19, 1764, had eight children, all born prior to his death and thus surviving him.[4][9] These children were Henry (1770–1846), Maria Henrietta (1772–1791), Eliza Carolina (1774–1792), Emma Philadelphia (1776–1813), Anna Louisa (1778–1819), Isabella Johannes (1780–1865), Septima Sexta (1783–1865), and John Izard (1785–1849).[4] Two daughters experienced early deaths: Maria Henrietta, who married Joseph Manigault in 1788, died on January 14, 1791, at age 18, reportedly from complications following a second miscarriage; and Eliza Carolina, who remained unmarried, died in 1792 at age 18.[4][38][39] Mary Izard Middleton outlived her husband, dying in 1814 at age 67.[9] No records indicate losses of children during Middleton's lifetime or involvement in military service resulting in fatalities among his immediate family.[4]Death and Legacy
Final Illness and Burial
Arthur Middleton died on January 1, 1787, at the age of 44, after contracting an unknown fever.[8] The illness, which reportedly began as an intermittent fever in November 1786, failed to resolve despite medical attention available at the time.[40] [24] He was buried in the family mausoleum located in the gardens of Middleton Place, the plantation estate in Dorchester County, South Carolina, where many generations of the Middleton family are interred.[8] [5] The tomb, constructed earlier for family members, reflects the estate's significance as a seat of planter aristocracy and Middleton's enduring ties to the land.[7]Enduring Family Influence and Historical Assessment
The Middleton family's enduring influence is exemplified by the preservation of Middleton Place, Arthur Middleton's birthplace in 1742 and a key family residence, which houses America's oldest landscaped gardens, initiated by his father Henry Middleton in 1741.[41] The estate, spanning rice plantations and terraced gardens, reflects the family's role in shaping South Carolina's economic empire through agriculture and land management.[41] Established in 1974 by Middleton descendants, the Middleton Place Foundation has sustained the site as a National Historic Landmark, focusing on historic preservation, scholarly research, and public interpretation that encompasses both the Middleton lineage and the contributions of the enslaved Africans who constructed the gardens and supported the plantation's operations.[41] Descendant-led initiatives, including reunions in 2006 and 2011 attended by hundreds of European-American and African-American family members, have facilitated the sharing of artifacts, documents, and oral histories, fostering a reconciled narrative of the family's multifaceted heritage.[42] These efforts have enriched institutional collections and promoted educational programs on the site's comprehensive history.[42] Historically, Arthur Middleton is regarded as an ardent patriot whose actions aligned with a deep commitment to colonial independence, evidenced by his replacement of his father in the Continental Congress and his signing of the Declaration of Independence on August 2, 1776, amid fears of British reprisals against South Carolina.[1] Assessments highlight his leadership in radical Whig activities, such as organizing raids on royal armories and militia service, alongside post-war contributions to state governance, portraying a figure of unwavering patriotism and moral integrity despite personal adversities like imprisonment.[1][24] His legacy, though curtailed by his death on January 1, 1787, at age 44, endures through familial continuity in South Carolina's political and cultural spheres, with descendants inheriting and extending the political heritage established by Arthur and his forebears.[43][9]