|
Biographical Sketches
|
JOHN BLAIR
Virginia
|
John Blair
|
Blair, a firm supporter of independence and the
Constitution, was a member of a leading Virginia family who gained more
renown as a lawyer-jurist than as a politician. President Washington
appointed him as one of the original Justices of the U.S. Supreme
Court.
|
|
Scion of a prominent Virginia family, Blair was born
at Williamsburg in 1732. He was the son of John Blair, a colonial
official and nephew of James Blair, founder and first president of the
College of William and Mary. Signer Blair graduated from that
institution and studied law at London's Middle Temple. Thereafter, he
practiced at Williamsburg. In the years 1766-70 he sat in the Virginia
House of Burgesses as the representative of William and Mary. From 1770
to 1775 he held the position of clerk of the colony's council.
An active patriot, Blair signed the Virginia
Association of June 22, 1770, which pledged to abandon importation of
British goods until the Townshend Duties were repealed. He also
underwrote the Association of May 27, 1774, calling for a meeting of the
Colonies in a Continental Congress and supporting the Bostonians; and
took part in the Virginia constitutional convention (1776), at which he
sat on the committee that framed a declaration of rights as well as the
plan for a new government. He next served on the Privy Council
(1776-78). In the latter year, the legislature elected him as a judge of
the General Court and he soon took over the chief justiceship. In 1780
he won election to Virginia's high chancery court, where his colleague
was George Wythe.
Blair attended the Constitutional Convention
religiously, but never spoke or served on a committee. On the other
hand, he usually sided with the position of the Virginia delegation.
And, in the Commonwealth ratifying convention, Blair helped win backing
for the new framework of Government.
In 1789 Washington named Blair as an Associate
Justice of the U.S. Supreme Court, where he helped decide many important
cases. Resigning that post in 1796, he spent his remaining years in
Williamsburg. A widower, his wife (born Jean Balfour) having died in
1792, he lived quietly until he succumbed in 1800. He was 68 years old.
His tomb is in the graveyard of Bruton Parish Church.
Drawing: Pastel (ca. 1790) by William Williams. Mrs.
Seymour St. John, on loan to Colonial Williamsburg.
http://www.cr.nps.gov/history/online_books/constitution/bio4.htm
Last Updated: 29-Jul-2004
|