Callender, James Thomson, 1758-1803
Americans
English,
English,
Biographical notes:
James Thomson Callender (1758 – July 17, 1803) was a political pamphleteer and journalist whose writing was controversial in his native Scotland and later, also in the United States. His revelations concerning George Washington, Alexander Hamilton, and later Thomas Jefferson, led to his marginalization politically. He wrote against the continuing influence of the British Crown, and he warned that Adams, Washington, and Hamilton planned to impose a titled aristocracy and hereditary positions in the Senate and the Executive. In the United States, he was a central figure in the press wars between the Federalist and Democratic-Republican parties. After Jefferson won the presidency, Callender solicited employment as a postmaster, which was denied by Jefferson. Callender then published existing rumors claiming President Jefferson had children with slave Sally Hemings. He gained notoriety in Philadelphia in the 1790s with reportage and attacks on Alexander Hamilton. Subsequently, he was imprisoned under the Alien and Sedition Acts, and later turned against his one-time Democratic-Republican patrons. In 1803, he drowned, apparently falling in the James River due to intoxication — although there was some speculation among Federalists that his death may not have been an accident, as he was due to testify in a highly publicized trial later that month.
Links to collections
Madison, James, 1751-1836. Correspondence of James Madison [manuscript], 1801-1842.
University of Virginia. Library
Madison, James, 1751-1836. Correspondence of James Madison, 1801-1842.
University of Virginia. Library
Richardson, Robert. Letter, 1824 March 31, Union Village, O[hio] to Thomas Jefferson, n.p.
William & Mary Libraries
General Records of the Department of State. 1763 - 2002. Letters Received. 1789 - 1906. January - December, 1802. 1/14/1802 - 12/24/1802. Letter from James Monroe to Thomas Jefferson
National Archives at College Park
Curtis, William E. Press of early days [manuscript] by William E. Curtis, 1905.
University of Virginia. Library
Randolph, David Meade, 1760-1830. David Meade Randolph Letter to John Trumbull [manuscript] 1812 October 8.
University of Virginia. Library
Bankhead, Anne Cary Randolph, 1791-1826,. Carr-Cary Papers [manuscript], 1785-1839.
University of Virginia. Library
Trist, Nicholas Philip, 1800-1874. Papers : of Nicholas Philip Trist, 1791-1836.
Virginia Historical Society Library
Denny, Nathaniel P. (Nathaniel Paine), 1771-1856. Fourth of July orations, 1803-1804.
Colonial Williamsburg Foundation. John D. Rockefeller, Jr. Library
Johnsonian Miscellanies, extra-illustrated, 1538-1900 (inclusive);, 1738-1866 (bulk).
Houghton Library
Adair, Douglass. The Jefferson scandals [manuscript] 1960.
University of Virginia. Library
Related names in SNAC
associatedWith
Adair, Douglass.
associatedWith
Curtis, William E.
associatedWith
Denny, Nathaniel P. (Nathaniel Paine), 1771-1856.
associatedWith
Hill, George Birkbeck Norman, 1835-1903
associatedWith
Jefferson, Thomas, 1743-1826.
associatedWith
Madison, James, 1751-1836.
associatedWith
Randolph, David Meade, 1760-1830.
associatedWith
Richardson, Robert.
associatedWith
Trist, Nicholas Philip, 1800-1874.
Collection Locations
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Information
Subjects:
not available for this record
Occupations:
- Journalist
Places:
- VA, US
- SCT, GB
- 00, US
Variant Names
Callender, James Thomson, 1758-1803
Callender, James T.
Callender, James T. 1758-1803
Callander, John, 1758-1803
Callender, James.