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Contents

   



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1 Early life and family  





2 Professional and political career  





3 Death and legacy  





4 Almanac  





5 References  





6 External links  





7 Places with more information  














Jehu Davis






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From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
 


John (Jehu) Davis
9th President of Delaware
In office
March 29, 1789 – June 2, 1789
Preceded byThomas Collins
Succeeded byJoshua Clayton
Personal details
Born1738 (1738)
Worcester County, Province of Maryland
Died (aged 63–64)
Kent County, Delaware, US
Spouse(s)Rhoda Laws
Sarah Douglas
ResidenceKent County, Delaware
OccupationPlanter

John (Jehu) Davis (1738 – May 11, 1802) was an American planter and politician from Mispillion Hundred, in Kent County, Delaware, west of Milford. He served in the Delaware General Assembly and as President of Delaware.

Early life and family

[edit]

Davis was born in Worcester County, Maryland, son of Thomas Davis. His paternal grandfather was born in Wales. Jehu Davis came to Laurel, Delaware where he married Rhoda Laws. After their marriage they bought McSparren, a farm in Mispillion Hundred, 3 miles west of Milford, where they settled permanently. There they had eight children, Isaac, John, Henry, Sarah, Rhoda, Nancy, Joshua, and William. After Rhoda's death, Davis married Sarah Douglas. They were members of Christ Episcopal Church in Milford. That portion of Mispillion Hundred became Milford Hundred in 1830.

Professional and political career

[edit]

Davis was a member of the local militia during the American Revolution and a justice of the peace for 14 years beginning in 1777. He was elected to the 1st State House, or House of Assembly, and served ten terms from the 1776/77 session through the 1779/80 session, again in the 1782/83 and 1783/84 sessions, and finally from the 1786/87 session through the 1789/90 session. He was the Speaker in the 1788/89 session and when President Thomas Collins died in office on March 29, 1789, the Speaker's office in the State Senate or Legislative Council, was vacant. Consequently, Davis became President. He served until June 2, 1789, when the Delaware General Assembly held a special vote to choose Collins' replacement.

During Davis' short term George Washington was inaugurated the first President of the United States. The event of his passing through Wilmington on the way to New York for this ceremony caused a great deal of excitement, as described by Elizabeth Montgomery in her Reminiscences of Wilmington:

and it must have been soon after his elevation to that office, for I well remember the crowds of people rushing onto the Baltimore Road (now Maryland Avenue) to catch a glimpse as he passed...It was a day of great enjoyment, all was on tiptoe of expectation when his chariot appeared, driving slowly through the crowd, he bowing, hat in hand, and white handkerchief waving, and every face flushed, and sparkling with joy.

Afterwards, Davis served as a judge of the Court of Common Pleas from 1789 until 1792 and as a justice of the peace from 1793 until his death.

Delaware General Assembly
(sessions while President)
Year Assembly Senate majority Speaker House majority Speaker
1788/89 13th non-partisan George Mitchell non-partisan vacant

Death and legacy

[edit]

Davis died at McSparren,inMispillion Hundred and is buried in the Christ (Savannah) Episcopal Church Cemetery. The cemetery is now paved over by Delaware Route 14. A man from Wales who came to America paved the road for the all-time greatest American Family.

No known portrait of Jehu Davis exists.

Almanac

[edit]

Elections were held October 1 and members of the General Assembly took office on October 20 or the following weekday. State Assemblymen had a one-year term. The whole General Assembly chose the State President for a three-year term. However, Davis served as State President only temporarily, filling the vacancy created by the death of Thomas Collins and awaiting the selection of a successor by the General Assembly. Judges of the Courts of Common Pleas were also selected by the General Assembly for the life of the person appointed.

Public offices
Office Type Location Began office Ended office Notes
Judge Judiciary Dover 1777 1789 Justice of the Peace
Assemblyman Legislature New Castle October 28, 1776 October 20, 1777
Assemblyman Legislature Dover October 20, 1777 October 20, 1778
Assemblyman Legislature Dover October 20, 1778 October 20, 1779
Assemblyman Legislature Dover October 20, 1779 October 20, 1780
Assemblyman Legislature Dover October 21, 1782 October 20, 1783
Assemblyman Legislature Dover October 20, 1783 October 21, 1784
Assemblyman Legislature Dover October 20, 1786 October 21, 1787
Assemblyman Legislature Dover October 20, 1787 October 26, 1788
Assemblyman Legislature Dover October 20, 1788 October 20, 1789
State President Executive Dover March 29, 1789 June 2, 1789 acting
Assemblyman Legislature Dover October 20, 1789 October 20, 1790
Judge Judiciary Dover 1789 1792 Court of Common Pleas
Judge Judiciary Dover 1793 1802 Justice of the Peace
Delaware General Assembly service
Dates Assembly Chamber Majority Governor Committees District
1776/77 1st State House non-partisan John McKinly Kent at-large
1777/78 2nd State House non-partisan George Read Kent at-large
1778/79 3rd State House non-partisan Caesar Rodney Kent at-large
1779/80 4th State House non-partisan Caesar Rodney Kent at-large
1782/83 7th State House non-partisan John Cook Kent at-large
1783/84 8th State House non-partisan Nicholas Van Dyke Kent at-large
1786/87 11th State House non-partisan Thomas Collins Kent at-large
1787/88 12th State House non-partisan Thomas Collins Kent at-large
1788/89 13th State House non-partisan Thomas Collins Speaker Kent at-large
1789/90 14th State House non-partisan Joshua Clayton Speaker Kent at-large

References

[edit]
[edit]

Places with more information

[edit]
Political offices
Preceded by

Thomas Collins

President of Delaware
1789
Succeeded by

Joshua Clayton


Retrieved from "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Jehu_Davis&oldid=1235340677"

Categories: 
1738 births
1802 deaths
People from Worcester County, Maryland
American people of Welsh descent
Delaware Federalists
Delaware Independents
Governors of Delaware
Independent state governors of the United States
Members of the Delaware House of Representatives
People from Kent County, Delaware
People of Delaware in the American Revolution
Delaware militiamen in the American Revolution
American planters
People from Laurel, Delaware
People from colonial Delaware
Speakers of the Delaware House of Representatives
19th-century American Episcopalians
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This page was last edited on 18 July 2024, at 20:03 (UTC).

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