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Jeremiah Evarts AKA: William Penn was born 26 August 1781 in Sunderland, Bennington County, Vermont to James Evarts (1752-1824) and Sarah Todd (1752-1810) and died 10 May 1831 Charlestown, Suffolk County, Massachusetts of unspecified causes. He married Mehitabel Sherman (1774-1851) 19 September 1804 in New Haven, New Haven County, Connecticut.

Biography

Jeremiah F. Evarts (February 3, 1781 – May 10, 1831), also known by the pen name William Penn, was a Christian missionary, reformer, and activist for the rights of American Indians in the United States, and a leading opponent of the Indian removal policy of the United States government.

Evarts was born in Sunderland, Vermont, son of James Evarts, and graduated from Yale College in 1802. He was admitted to the bar in 1806.

Battle against Indian removal

Evarts was influenced by the effects of the Second Great Awakening and served the American Board of Commissioners for Foreign Missions as its treasurer from 1812-1820 and Secretary from 1821 until his death in 1831.

Evarts was the editor of The Panoplist, a religious monthly magazine from 1805 until 1820, where he published over 200 essays. He wrote twenty-four essays on the rights of Indians under the pen name "William Penn". He was one of the leading opponents of Indian removal in general and the removal of the Cherokees from the Southeast in particular. He engaged in several lobbying efforts including convincing Congress and President John Quincy Adams to retain funding for civilizing efforts. He was a leader of the unsuccessful fight against President Andrew Jackson's Indian Removal Act of 1830. This law led to the forcible removal of the Cherokees in 1838, known as the Trail of Tears. See also Major Ridge (1771-1839), Cherokee chieftain during this time.

Historian John Andrew III explains how Evarts hoped to defeat the Indian Removal Act: "Evarts' tactics were clear. He planned to organize a phalanx of friendly congressmen to present the case against removal on the floor of the House and Senate, hoping to convince enough Jacksonians that the immorality of removal required them to vote against the Indian Removal Bill. At the same time, he would continue to barrage the public with letters, pamphlets, and articles on the Indian question, along with whatever other information might create a groundswell of public opinion against removal."

In 1830, Georgia passed a law which prohibited whites from living on Indian territory after March 31, 1831 without a license from the state. This law was written to enable removing the white missionaries that Jeremiah had organized through the ABCFM. These missionaries were trying to help the Indians resist removal through efforts to integrate them into the white society through conversion and education. In the wake of the passage of the Indian Removal Act, Jeremiah encouraged the Cherokees to take their case against this and other laws that they felt were intended to annihilate them to the Supreme Court of the United States, which they did in Cherokee Nation v. Georgia.

Death and legacy

He died of tuberculosis on May 10, 1831 in Charleston, South Carolina having overworked himself in the campaign against the Indian Removal Act. He was buried in the Grove Street Cemetery in New Haven, CT. According to historian Francis Paul Prucha, "the Christian crusade against the removal of the Indians died with Evarts."

The effect that Evarts's activism for the rights of indigenous peoples had on U.S. foreign policy through his son, William M. Evarts who was Secretary of State during the Hayes administration (1877-1881), is a question for historians. The moral and religious arguments that Evarts used against the Indian Removal Act had later resonance in the abolitionism movement.


Marriage & Family

Evarts married Mehitabel Sherman (1774-1851), a daughter of United States Declaration of Independence signer Roger Sherman (1721-1793), and a member of the extended Baldwin, Hoar & Sherman family that had a great influence on U.S. public affairs.

  1. Mary Evarts (1806-1850) - md David Greene (1797-1866) who was for twenty years the corresponding secretary of the American Board of Commissioners for Foreign Missions. In his eighth year the family moved to Westborough, Massachusetts, and two years later to Windsor, Vermont. One of their children was one of the first Christian missionaries to Japan.
  2. Martha Sherman Evarts (1809-1889) - md Deacon Ebenezer Tracy who was editor of the "Vermont Chronicle" in Bellows Falls, Vermont from 1826-1828, and in Windsor from 1834 on. He was Deacon of the Old South Church.
  3. John Jay Evarts (1812-1833) - died age 20, unmarried.
  4. Sarah Evarts (1815-1826) - died age 10,
  5. William Maxwell Evarts (1818-1901) - who later became a United States Secretary of State, US Attorney General and a US Senator from New York. He defended US President Andrew Johnson at his impeachment trial.



Children


Offspring of Jeremiah Evarts AKA: William Penn and Mehitabel Sherman (1774-1851)
Name Birth Death Joined with
Mary Evarts (1806-1850) 2 December 1806 New Haven County, New Haven County, Connecticut 25 October 1850 Westborough, Worcester County, Massachusetts David Greene (1797-1866)
Martha Sherman Evarts (1809-1889) 31 July 1809 New Haven, New Haven County, Connecticut 10 April 1889 Plainsfield, Union County, New Jersey Ebenezer Carter Tracy (1796-1862)
John Jay Evarts (1812-1833) 6 December 1812 Boston, Suffolk County, Massachusetts 1 September 1833 New Haven, New Haven County, Connecticut
Sarah Evarts (1815-1826) 26 February 1815 Boston, Suffolk County, Massachusetts 23 April 1825 New Haven, New Haven County, Connecticut
William Maxwell Evarts (1818-1901) 6 February 1818 Boston, Suffolk County, Massachusetts, United States 28 February 1901 New York City, New York, United States Helen Minerva Wardner (1820-1903)



Siblings


Offspring of James Evarts (1752-1824) and Sarah Todd (1752-1810)
Name Birth Death Joined with
Sarah Evarts (1775-1841)
William Evarts (1778-1831)
Jeremiah Evarts (1781-1831) 26 August 1781 Sunderland, Bennington County, Vermont 10 May 1831 Charlestown, Suffolk County, Massachusetts Mehitabel Sherman (1774-1851)
Mary Evarts (1783-1803)
Jonathan Todd Evarts (1783-)
Herman Allen Evarts (1784-1795)
Elizabeth Evarts (1788-)
Reuben Evarts (1787-)
Jonathan Evarts (1791-1875)


References


Residences

Footnotes (including sources)

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