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ELISHA
REYNOLDS POTTER PAPERS
1798-1879
MSG# 12
BIOGRAPHICAL NOTE
Elisha Reynolds Potter was born on
June 20, 1811 in the home of his parents, Elisha Reynolds Potter, Sr.
(1764-1835) and Mary (Mawney) Potter in Little Rest (now Kingston, a
village of South Kingstown), Rhode Island. His father "had been in turn
blacksmith, farmer, and practising lawyer, served for some thirty years in
the Rhode Island legislature, was four times elected to the federal
Congress, and in 1818 was unsuccessful candidate for the governor of this
state."
Elisha Reynolds Potter, Jr. began his
education at the Kingston Academy (formerly known as the Pettaquamscut
Academy) which his father and eight other men had incorporated in
1823. He entered Harvard in 1826 and after his graduation in 1830,
he returned to Kingston to teach Classics at the Kingston Academy of which
he later became a president and a trustee. After less than a year of
teaching at the Academy, he left to study law in the office of Nathaniel
Searle of Providence. On October 9, 1832 he was admitted to the bar
and began his law career. In the same year he joined the Rhode
Island Historical Society, of which he was vice-president from 1850 to
1855.
In 1834 the Committee on Religious
Corporations of the Rhode Island General Assembly employed him to write a
report on the powers granted by the General Assembly to religious
corporations. This was the first of a number of published works by
Potter. In 1835 his second work, "Early History of
Narragansett" was published by the Rhode Island Historical Society in
the third volume of its Collections. In 1835, he became
adjutant-general of Rhode Island, an office he held until 1837. In
that latter year he published "A Brief Account of Emissions of Paper
Money, Made by the Colony of Rhode Island." It was later
reprinted in 1863 in Historical Sketches of the Paper Currency of the
American Colonies by Henry Phillips, Jr. It was published later
still in the series "Rhode Island Historical Tracts" after
having been rewritten. In 1839, after election to the Rhode Island
House of Representatives, he wrote a report about the Narragansett
Indians; "(Jan. Acts & Resolves, RI General Assembly, p.28),
covering their land title sand the encroachment of their white neighbors
upon their lands. Severe punishments were suggested by Mr. Potter,
but never put into execution."
He was a member of the State Constitutional
Convention during the years 1841-1842. "When in the latter year
the uprising known as the Dorr War was precipitated, he took his stand
with those who were opposed to violent action and military force and was
one of the three commissioners sent to consult with president
Tyler." At he end of this turmoil, in 1842, Potter wrote a
pamphlet entitled Considerations on the Questions of the Adoption of a
Constitution and Extension of Suffrage in Rhode Island, which was
reprinted in 1879. "In 1842 he was elected as Whig to the
twenty-eighth Congress, and served Mach 4, 1843 to March 3,
1845." While he was a member of the U.S. Congress, Potter
addressed the House in opposition to a motion "asking the House to
inquire to the conduct of the President in relation to the late troubles
in Rhode Island."
After his term in the House Potter turned
his attention to the matter of public education. "He prepared
for popular use remarks on the provisions of the school laws and on the
duties of the different officers and bodies under them. These he
followed by a set of forms, or precedents for proceedings in the
administration of the system, and still further by a specimen of rules and
regulations for adoption by the school committees of the several
towns."
"Mr. Potter continued these labors in
the cause of popular education by the careful selection of books for
village libraries, leading the way by establishing, at his own personal
cost, such an institution in his native town that was free to the
public. He printed catalogues for gratuitous distribution
among the people, teaching them how to select good books, and these he
followed by little tracts which he called 'Hints on Reading'."
He delivered before a lyceum in South Kingstown an essay, "A Brief
History of the English Language, and of the Principle Changes it has
Undergone," which was later printed in the Massachusetts Common
School Journal. Potter became Commissioner of Public Schools in
1849 and continued in this office until October 1854. Between
January 182 and August 1853, Potter was the Editor and chief contributor
to the Rhode Island Educational Magazine. In February 1851,
Potter delivered an address to the Rhode Island Historical Society, which
was later published, on the history of education in Rhode Island, and in
May 1854, he delivered an address on the occasion of the opening of the
Rhode Island Normal School in Providence.
As a result of his interest in the history
of Narragansett, Potter surveyed the boundaries of many of the farms there
and did research on the history of their land titles. "The work done
by Mr. Potter upon the map of Rhode Island made by H. F. Walling in 1854
and republished in 1855 is one of the most valuable historical works ever
done by him. On these maps are indicted the localities of all known
purchases of land from the Indians and the Indian names are affixed to all
localities which Mr. Potter could discover."
Between 1861 and 1863 Potter was the State
Senator from South Kingstown. In August 1862, he reported to the
legislature on the "Right of a Legislature to Grant Perpetual
Exemption from Taxation." This was in regard to a controversy
over that portion of the Brown University Charter which exempted from
taxation property belonging to the professors and the President of the
University. The Legislature passed an act limiting this exemption to
ten thousand dollars.
In 1867, Potter wrote a deposition in the
copyright case, Lawrence vs. Dana. In the following year he became
an Associate Justice of the Rhode Island Supreme Court, an office he held
until his death. The last work he published was a "Memoir
concerning the French Settlements and French Settlers in the Colony of
Rhode Island," in 1879. Potter died in Kingston on April 10,
1882.
Sidney S. Rider delivered a memorial
address to the Rhode Island Historical Society on July 11, 1882, entitled
"Historical Research and Educational Labor Illustrated in the Work of
Elisha Reynolds Potter, Late Judge of the supreme Court of Rhode
Island." This was subsequently published in Pawtucket by the
Press of the Chronicle Printing Company, in 1905. This address
and the Dictionary of American Biography, Volume XV, were the sources of
information for this biographical note.
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