Charles Pinckney

Statesman Charles Pinckney's beliefs helped forge the United States Constitution. Fluent in five languages, yet educated and reared entirely on South Carolina soil, this man was elected four times to serve as Governor of South Carolina. He was a South Carolina state representative, a United States Congressman, a delegate to the 1787 Constitutional Convention and ambassador to Spain. As an advocate for a strong central government, his voice in those crucial days during the formation of our nation helped directly to guarantee such basic doctrines as religious freedom, trial by a jury, freedom of the press, and the subordination of the military to civil authority. He presided over the move of South Carolina's state capital from Charleston to Columbia and secured Spain's approval of the Louisiana Purchase. Seven South Carolina governors claim lineage to Charles Pinckney.
Website - www.scetv.org/program/sc-hall...
Blog - www.scetv.org/blogs/sc-hall-o...
Hall of Fame official site - www.theofficialschalloffame.com/

Пікірлер: 13

  • @KimmieSunshine
    @KimmieSunshine Жыл бұрын

    This is my ancestor. My mind is blown to see documentaries about him. Our family the Brunsons, were truly a founding family.

  • @Austin_Wingfield

    @Austin_Wingfield

    2 ай бұрын

    I'm also related. My family name is McElroy.

  • @sherryballington1583
    @sherryballington15832 жыл бұрын

    My ancestors as well as Calhouns

  • @MsAngleofRepose
    @MsAngleofRepose5 жыл бұрын

    He and his cousin fought hard to protect slavery during the Constitutional Convention.

  • @tahkilla

    @tahkilla

    2 жыл бұрын

    Sounds like a pretty cool guy

  • @libertycoffeehouse3944

    @libertycoffeehouse3944

    2 ай бұрын

    I think you are over simplifying history. The balance of power in Congress between slave states and free labor states is really about subsidizing northern industry with a protective tariff and handouts to northern industry as well a national bank that would use fractional reserve fiat banking to expand credit to northern commercial enterprises. We call this crony capitalism today. Charles Pinckney was right to resist this. The whole issue over slavery is a faux painting concealing the norths desire for a commercial Republic.

  • @DuffyLew91
    @DuffyLew919 жыл бұрын

    Charles Pinckney, an underrated South Carolinian.

  • @gingerdavis8071
    @gingerdavis807111 ай бұрын

    Free labor may have contributed to South Carolina''s wealth.

  • @tahkilla
    @tahkilla2 жыл бұрын

    Good dude with good ideas

  • @shaypink40
    @shaypink405 жыл бұрын

    A lawyer at 21?🤔 Maybe this is some kinda coded message

  • @Kevinkapon

    @Kevinkapon

    2 жыл бұрын

    Nah, you could just become a lawyer for whatever reason you wanted. There was a Founding Father from New Hampshire, named Josiah Bartlett, who had been a brewer his whole like, until one day he decided to just upon a law practice (:

  • @timw7256
    @timw7256 Жыл бұрын

    That dude with the bowtie looks shifty af

  • @unitedreformedchurch3849
    @unitedreformedchurch3849 Жыл бұрын

    So he was a major landowner, owned many plantations, had an overseer (the only other one who voted for him), and he never trafficked in human beings? Is it not a matter of simple honesty to report - without or without judgment - that he benefited enormously from the system of chattel slavery? You're making much more of the shame involved in slave trading by not saying anything. I'm not encouraging wokeness or anything of the sort. Just simple honesty. Peace to you and all.