Silas Bent (judge)

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Born(1768-04-04)April 4, 1768
DiedNovember 20, 1827(1827-11-20) (aged 59)
SpouseMartha Kerr
Children8, including Charles, William, and Silas III
Silas Bent Jr.
Judge of the Missouri Supreme Court
In office
1817–1821
Personal details
Born(1768-04-04)April 4, 1768
DiedNovember 20, 1827(1827-11-20) (aged 59)
SpouseMartha Kerr
Children8, including Charles, William, and Silas III
RelativesOwl Woman (daughter-in-law)
George Bent (grandson)
Lilburn Boggs (son-in-law)
Silas Bent IV (grandson)
Henry C. Boggs (grandson)
Charles Marion Russell (grandson)
James Kerr (brother-in-law)

Silas Bent Jr. (April 4, 1768 – November 20, 1827) was an American land surveyor, attorney, and jurist who served as a Judge of the Missouri Supreme Court from 1817 to 1821. His son, Charles Bent, was a fur trader and appointed as the first territorial governor of New Mexico during the United States invasion of Mexico in the Mexican-American War. Three of his other sons William, George, and Robert had been in business with Charles and built Bent's Old Fort and other outposts of trade in the American Southwest.

Silas Bent was born in Rutland, Massachusetts, on April 4, 1768,[nb 1] one of twelve children, to Silas Bent (1744–1818) and Mary Carter (1747–1831). Bent was a descendant of John Bent (1596–1672) a founder of Sudbury, Massachusetts.[2] His father, also called Silas, may have been involved in the Boston Tea Party (there are differing opinions) and became a lieutenant colonel in the Massachusetts militia.[1][3][4]

Bent studied law in Wheeling, West Virginia, under Philip Doddridge from the late-1780s. Upon marrying one of Doddridge's cousins, Martha Kerr, some time prior to 1800, he and his wife relocated to Charleston, West Virginia, where three of their children were born: Charles, Juliannah (also known as Julie Ann) and John.

Bent's wife Martha had two sisters and two brothers (including James Kerr, who served in the Missouri House of Representatives and Missouri State Senate and later led colonization, military, and political matters in Texas).

Career

Postmaster

Bent spent brief periods running a store, serving as postmaster of the courthouse in Brooke County, Virginia, and sitting as a judge in the court of common pleas.[3][5]

Surveyor

After the American Revolutionary War, the new nation claimed ownership over Northwest Territory land. To encourage white settlement, fund paying off debts incurred during the war, and to apportion rewards for veterans, the United States sold parts of the land to private land speculation companies who facilitated settler colonialism in the territory.

Bent moved his family to Washington County, Ohio, where he was appointed deputy surveyor in 1803 to Rufus Putnam, surveyor-general and former founder of the Ohio Company of Associates land company.

Bent's father (Silas Sr.) had held one share in the Ohio Company of Associates after serving with Putnam in the American Revolutionary War. Silas Sr., Putnam, and several other veterans founded the town of Marietta in the Ohio Country.[3][4][6]

The Bents' first daughter Lucy was born in 1805.[3][4][5]

In July, 1805, Bent became deputy surveyor under Jared Mansfield, surveyor-general of the Louisiana Purchase. Mansfield had lived alongside the Bents and Putnam in Marietta, Ohio from 1803 to 1805.[7]

In July 1806, Secretary of the Treasury Albert Gallatin named Bent principal deputy surveyor of Louisiana Territory (acquired Missouri as part of the Louisiana Purchase in 1803). He settled with his family in St. Louis on September 17 of that year.

Judgeships

Bent became the first presiding judge of the St. Louis district court of common pleas on August 20, 1807; presiding judge on the St. Louis court of common pleas on November 9, 1809; and auditor of public accounts.

On January 26, 1813, Shadrach Bond, Edward Hempstead, and John B. C. Lucas wrote a letter to President James Madison recommending Silas Bent to fill an open judge position on the Supreme Court of the Territory of Missouri.[8] This vacancy was left by John Coburn's resignation.

This recommendation came from powerful men in the area. Bond was a delegate to the U.S. House of Representatives from the Illinois Territory's at-large district. Hempstead was a delegate to the U.S. House of Representatives from the Missouri Territory's at-large district. Lucas was a former member of the Pennsylvania House of Representatives and judge of the Court of Common Pleas. He was also a former district judge and commissioner of land claims for the District of Louisiana (which became Missouri Territory in 1812).

President Madison nominated Bent for the judgeship on February 16, 1813 and he was approved by Congress and appointed on February 21, 1813, as a member of the bench of the Missouri Supreme Court.[9] He served in this role until 1821 when Missouri became a state (although he had been nominated to the Missouri Supreme Court by first Governor Alexander McNair[10]).

First execution by hanging in St. Louis

Bent served on the court for the trial that led to the first execution by hanging in St. Louis. It was a murder case alleging that John Young killed his step-father George Gordon. Young was convicted and sentenced to death by hanging. Young was hanged to death on September 16, 1809, despite the fact that one of the jurors could not understand or speak English.[11]

Later career

From 1821 until the year of his death, Bent was a clerk at the St. Louis County Court.[3][5][12]

Residence in St. Louis

Judge Silas Bent Residence, view from South with St. Louis in distance
Judge Silas Bent Residence

Bent had a stone house and water mill built in 1807 on the river bank in Carondelet, St. Louis. The home sat on the site of a former village of the Peoria tribe.[5][13]

Family

Death

References

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