Robards–Donelson–Jackson relationship controversy

Silhouettes of Rachel Donelson Robards Jackson and Andrew Jackson from The Papers of Andrew Jackson, Volume VI
Springfield Plantation (Fayette, Mississippi), where Rachel and Andrew were allegedly married privately by Thomas M. Green Sr., after misunderstanding whether or not Rachel was divorced; no record of this marriage ceremony has been found
"Aboriginal map of Tennessee" (1886) showing John Donelson's store or stand

The circumstances of the end of Rachel Donelson's relationship with Lewis Robards and transition to Andrew Jackson resurfaced as a campaign issue in the 1828 U.S. presidential election. As Frances Clifton put it in her study of Jackson's long friendship with John Overton, "Jackson's irregular marriage proved good propaganda for the friends of Adams and Clay. The political enemies of Jackson 'saw in his wife a weak spot in his armor through which his vitals might be reached; and they did not hesitate to make the most of it.'"[1]: 31 

A brief history of Andrew & Rachel, and Lewis

According to all available evidence, young Andrew Jackson and Rachel Donelson were "passionately in love with each other" and remained wholeheartedly devoted to one another for the rest of their lives.[2] That said, historians Robert V. Remini and Ann Toplovich argue that the official Jackson version of their meeting and marriage, as presented during the election of 1828 was, for the most part, inauthentic. Remini, Jackson's most recent major biographer, included a timeline in the first volume of his biographical series. The entry for Jackson–Donelson reads: "1790/1791: 'Marries' Rachel Donelson Robards" with the scare quotes strongly implying the marriage was Biblical but not legal.[3] For roughly 150 years the party line was that Rachel was "accidentally" a bigamist, or that Jackson was the third party to adultery because they were confused about how divorce law worked in Virginia, but since the 1970s historians have generally agreed that Jackson and Rachel Donelson Robards left Tennessee together to "force" Robards to file for divorce.[3][4]

As Remini explained in the first volume of his multi-volume biography of Jackson:

It is probable that Jackson's love for Rachel began as sympathy for the cruelties and unjust suspicions she suffered and then intensified as he became aware of the extent of Robards's misbehavior. The husband regularly 'cheated' on his wife; the incidents were so flagrant that most boarders at the Donelson home knew of them. Everyone pitied poor Rachel. 'I resided in the family,' one boarder recalled many years later, and Robards's conduct toward Rachel 'was cruel, unmanly & unkind in the extreme.' Specifically, 'Lewis Robards was in the habit within my knowledge of leaving his wife's bed, & spending the night with the negro women.' Robards's sister-in-law 'fully corroborates all I have said. She states...that the breach arose from Robards own cruel & improper conduct.' Guilty himself of adultery, Robards suspected his wife of his own misdeeds."[3]

The fact trail shows Jackson and Rachel Donelson Robards ran off to Natchez together via Cumberland River to the Mississippi River, or possibly the Natchez Trace, sometime between July 1789 and their return to Tennessee in July 1790, Robards filed for divorce in December 1790, the divorce was granted on grounds of adultery in September 1793, Robards unofficially remarried Hannah Winn in December 1792 and officially remarried her in November 1793.[5] Rachel Donelson Robards and Andrew Jackson were officially married by Robert Hays of Haysborough on January 18, 1794.[6]

Harriet Chappell Owsley wrote that Rachel asked Col. Robert Stark for a ride to the Natchez region in December 1789.[7] Perhaps coincidentally, perhaps not, winter and spring were the traditional slave-trading season, after the harvest was in and before the next season's planting had begun,[8] and Andrew Jackson had a business based at a log cabin in Bruinsburg, Mississippi.[9] According to S. G. Heiskell this business specialized in slaves and corn whiskey from Tennessee.[10]

The couple later claimed they thought Robards had been granted a divorce when they were allegedly married by a friend at a friend's house, but since Jackson was a lawyer with rank roughly equivalent to a federal prosecutor today,[11] that claim is unconvincing. Suffice it to say, "When the couple discovered that their marriage wasn't actually valid, historian Jon Meacham says they didn't seem to care: 'Their passion for each other was apparently deep enough to lead them, despite their later claims to the contrary, to choose to live in adultery in order to provoke a divorce from Robards'."[12] More than likely, explains Andrew Burstein in The Passions of Andrew Jackson, the Jacksons were "willing adulterers, which sounds harsh, but in fact what they did was reasonable and expedient—and not unheard of on the frontier. The desertion and adultery approach was a well-planned stratagem for people living at such a distance from any state capital; it was the easiest (nearly the only nonviolent) justification for a formal divorce. He and Rachel needed to be named as adulterers if she was to be divorced. As prosecutor, Jackson knew the laws of the land well enough to act discreetly to secure his and Rachel's happiness."[13]

In 1854, a resident of Rodney, Mississippi, who went by the pseudonym Idler, wrote, "One of the primitive settlers, who further stated that they were married in either Jefferson or Claiborne county, though Old Mock, the miller, who resided near Danville, Ky., doubts the marriage, and he says Jackson stole Roberts' [sic] wife and afterwards paid him for her and that Roberts was delighted to get rid of her on such easy terms. But whether married or not, they lived together happily for many years, and when she died he mourned as one who had lost all that gave value to life."[14]

One of Robards' descendants, grandson William J. Robards, defended his grandfather's honor into the 20th century, as retold by the Louisville Herald in 1904:

"Historians say Mrs. Jackson's first marriage was an unhappy one, that she was superior to her environment, and that she abandoned the home of her husband in Kentucky and sought solace at the home of her mother in Tennessee near Nashville. These statements, the records of the courts and traditions of the Robards family do not verify, and William J. Robards, though prostrated with illness that may prove fatal and bearing heavily the weight of eighty-four years, becomes indignant whenever the subject is mentioned. He vehemently denounces Jackson for despoiling his ancestor's home and severely criticises historians who, in order to shield from a crime of his youth, the man who later became president of the United States, have placed his grandfather and family in a false position before posterity. 'Andrew Jackson despoiled my grandfather's home, stole his wife and married that woman two years before a divorce had been obtained,' exclaimed Mr. Robards with emphasis, 'and this after receiving the hospitalities of my grandfather's home. My grandfather was one of the highly esteemed men of his time in Kentucky, and his family was one of the most prominent in the territory, equal to, if not better, than that of the woman to whom he first married.'[15]

The relationship between Jackson and Robards is the least understood aspect of the triangle but in 1828 a political opponent stated that "The General had been but a short time residing in West Tennessee near Nashville, before he had a rencounter with the late Lewis Roberts, who swore his life against him, and Jackson was bound over to keep the peace by Col. Robert Weakly, who is now living—Roberts had not then separated from the present Mrs. Jackson. I could add many circumstances illustrative of this matter—but do not wish to injure the feelings of any unnecessarily, especially as I have always considered Mrs. Jackson ever since my acquaintance with her in 1814, as a female of virtue, and upright walk in life."[16]

Officiant and documentation controversy

In the words of Toplovich, despite diligent search by political allies, enemies, historians, and genealogists for the better part of 200 years, "No credible evidence of a marriage ceremony in Natchez has ever surfaced."[17] Col. Thomas M. Green, who was purported to have performed the marriage ceremony for Mrs. Robards and Jackson, had been named a justice of the peace of Bourbon County, Georgia in 1785.[18] However, the existence of Bourbon County was not recognized by either Spain or the United States, and even Georgia gave up on it by 1788.[19]: 5  Technically, any marriage of Protestants that took place in the Natchez district prior to November 30, 1792 required the presence of "Catholic priest and two witnesses...However, the law was frequently violated" and marriages were performed by either Protestant clergy who were not supposed to be there, or simply by friends of the couple.[20]: 329–330 

Harriet Chappell Owsley argues that whatever marriage ritual happened took place in February or March 1791, or at least between October 1790 and April 1791, because over that period Rachel's last name changed from Donelson to Jackson in records of her father's estate.[21]

The absence of any contemporary documentation—in the words of Remini, "nothing official, and nothing in private correspondence," reinforces the "suspicion that no marriage ever took place in Natchez."[22] As per Remini, there is also no evidence proving the negative, so the suspicion remains just that.[22]

Location controversy

The Mississippi Historical Commission marker for Springfield repeats, unquestioningly, the Jacksonian account of the marriage

One of the key pillars of the pro-Jackson narrative, absolving the couple from violating the moral code of the day, is the assertion that Rachel Robards spent the winter of 1790–91 (when they were supposed to have met and married, although Toplovich argues they were already in Natchez in 1789) as a guest of either the Green family or Peter Bryan Bruin. The crux of this argument was that Thomas M. Green and/or Bruin were such morally upstanding men that they never would have allowed an adulteress to live under their roofs. As such, assertions that Jackson and Mrs. Robards (separately or together) had their own housing, in the vicinity of Natchez, were subject to attack by Jackson defenders.

In 1910, a Mississippi history journal article written by Eron Rowland approached the story from the housing angle:

"In connection with this often disputed point of history, the writer reproduces here a letter just received from Mr. E. R. Jones, an old resident of Jefferson County: 'I never heard that Mrs. Robards was married to General Jackson in the home of Thos. Marston Green until it came out in McCardle's History of Mississippi, such being contrary to tradition. My father, Rev. Jno. G. Jones, was born in 1804 and resided for many years at Belle Grove, just across the Natchez Trace from Mrs. Robards' home, the site of which he often pointed out to me as our farm was less than a mile off. He used this language: 'I fear Major McCardle's vanity and his connection with the Green family has led him into an error. The old people of the time while I was growing up about Greenville told me, she owned her own farm, near Greenville, and had on it a double log house with an open hall, and here they say she was married to General Jackson....all of my life I was often with Allen Collier (colored), who was a body servant of General Thomas Hinds and was once a slave of Thomas Marston Green, and went as such to General Hinds, who married Miss Laminda Green. When I informed him what History has said about Jackson's being married at Green's house, his reply was: "'Twain't so; Ole Marster's house—the Great House warn't built at that time—I 'members it , and Miss Robards don't have to go over thar to be married, when she had a good house of her own right by what da call the Jackson Springs.' So, I believe this is a true story of the marriage."[23]: 55–56 

The same correspondent wrote in a 1904 article about the history of Jefferson County, "had a small farm on the Trace, a mile and one-half southwest of Greenville, and it was in her home they were married. The spring located in the lower end of her garden was for many years known locally as Jackson's Spring. It and the waterway was surrounded by very luxuriant mint, some of which mixed with something else inspired the Democratic orators at a grand barbecue near old Greenville in 1876, in the dark days of reconstruction."[24] The Greenville Club of Jefferson County, Mississippi, which supported Democratic and Conservative candidates, hosted a "grand barbecue" at Belle Grove on September 14, 1876.[25]

Historian Everett Dick described this type of building, sometimes called "two pens and a passage," as the "plantation house of the log-cabin aristocracy" in his 1948 Dixie Frontier

As it happens, there is a surviving description from a Mississippi River travelogue of a "double log house with an open hall" being built in the vicinity of St. Catherine's Creek (in what is now Adams County, Mississippi) circa 1789–1790: "The place had a small clearing and a log house on it, and he put up another log house to correspond with it, about fourteen feet apart, connecting them with boards, with a piazza in front of the whole. The usual term applied to such a structure was that it was 'two pens and a passage.' This connecting passage made a fine hall, and altogether gave it a good and comfortable appearance."[26]

Similarly, S. G. Heiskell, a local historian and former mayor of Knoxville, made a point to address this issue in his article about "Gen. Jackson and the Natchez Country," writing, 'But probably the most unscrupulous thing in the Post-Dispatch article is this: 'Near Natchez, there used to stand a ruined log hut which was pointed out to strangers as the spot they (Jackson and Mrs. Robards) had passed their honeymoon. This was no doubt the spot to which he carried her when they first ran away, for she was kept in a place of safety says one historian until after Robards applied for a divorce.'" Heiskell then goes on to insist that if the couple ever stayed together at Bruinsburg or environs, where Jackson traded in slaves and whiskey, it was definitely after they were properly introduced and married under the oversight of Southern gentlemen, etc.[27]

The 1938 WPA history of Jefferson county quotes one Green family member on the controversy: "Col. Jas. Payne Green, writing of Springfield in 1922, states: 'Col. Green's (Thomas) family were the first settlers of this section now known as the Maryland Settlement (Church Hill). He gave his oldest son, Thomas Marston, the plantation now known as Springfield...Jackson became acquainted with the Springfield Green by commercial transactions made at Bruinburg, and his wife became acquainted with the Greens through the brother, who was a wealthy planter in Adams County, near Natchez. She was on a visit to the Springfield home of Thomas M. Green, the third, and was married by Col. Thomas Green, the second. All of the above statements are matters of re-cord," but the WPA editor notes that the informant does not claim it was "in the house now standing."[28] The 1941 Natchez Trace Parkway survey stated, "Legend has associated Springfield with the marriage of Andrew Jackson and Rachel Robards. Although this seems historically inaccurate, it has lent a romantic background to the place."[29]

"Wanted Immediately Three or Four Journeymen Carpenters" The Mississippi Messenger, Natchez, April 8, 1806

There is also the question of Jackson's store or tavern or trading post, as it is variously described. There are no contemporary or early descriptions of it as a building, if it was even a physical structure at all. The closest description, which is only scantingly evidential, is by traveler Fortescue Cuming that in 1808 the settlement at Bruinsburg Landing had a "tolerably high bank and a good landing which has only been productive of a cotton gin, a tavern, and an overseer's house."[30] Whether this tavern had anything whatsoever to do with Jackson is unknown. Cuming later stopped at a tavern in the territorial capital of Washington, about which he wrote, "This tavern (as I find is the custom in this country) is kept in a front building by Mr. Hill, assisted by some negro servants, while Mrs. Hill and her daughters live in a detached building in the rear, where I was received by them kindly, in remembrance of their having descended the Ohio and Mississippi in my boat with me."[30] Whether or not this general description of local tavern styles has anything correlation to Jackson's circumstances is also unclear.

A 1985 genealogy of families related to the Greens includes a list of conflicting statements regarding the Jackson–Donelson association with the family and Springfield. One item on the three-page-long list reads, "One article says that Rachel Robards had a brother, John, who owned some land near Natchez, whon she came to visit. If that is so, it is strange that she stayed, at the Greens."[31] A Natchez court record abstract created by May McBee states that in a court case of 1793, "Dist. of Villa Gayoso. Personally appeared John Donelson, who, on oath, deposed that John Jarrett told him that he had rented from Mr. Thomas Green, senior, his place upon the bluff, at the rent of six chair frames, and the said Jarratt was also to take care of Mr. Green's hogs and stock on sd plantation and other property on the place."[32]

Death of Rachel Jackson controversy

Rachel Jackson died of a heart attack at age 61, shortly before Andrew Jackson was to take office as President of the United States. Jackson blamed his political opponents for her death, but she had started showing signs of heart disease at least three years earlier.[6]

1828 election drama

Political enemies of Jackson resurfaced the beginning of his romance with Rachel when he ran for president in 1828 (the second of three times). An East Tennessee Congressional candidate named Thomas Dickens Arnold "brought the marriage question into the open by publishing an article stating that Jackson, a 'lump of naked deformity,' had 'tor[n] from a husband the wife of his bosom,' that he had 'driven [Robards] off like a dog, and had taken his wife.'"[33]

When the issue resurfaced in 1828, Jackson's friend John Overton wrote a long testimonial fudging the timeline and rationalizing the couple's behavior. At least one historian has compared the construction of this account to how Jackson lied "that he had received a message from President Monroe through John Rhea...authorizing his conduct in the invasion of Florida" and then convinced Rhea to "vouch for its truth." In both 1884 and 1936, historians proved Jackson's version to be "a complete fabrication."[34]

Moral–social–feminist aspects

According to historian Donald B. Cole, surfacing the issue of Jackson's marriage brought to the fore questions about changing social mores:[35]

Americans had been brought up on stories of sexual seduction in which republican virtue invariably won out over immoral behavior. Private immorality, it was assumed, endangered public society. Now the public was faced with the story of a presidential candidate who, the Adams men charged, had stolen another man's wife and lived with her in adultery. It was a major sex scandal...acts such as these, especially when committed by a candidate for high office, must be condemned. But the market revolution, with its migration of young men and women into the cities, had disrupted the family and brought gender roles into question. This loosening of social ties had engendered another romantic...view that such acts were private in nature and that love should be allowed to triumph over legalisms.[35]

Historian Ann Toplovich, in her article about the love triangle, wrote about the impossible situation in which Rachel Stockley Donelson Robards found herself in 1789:[36]

Unlike men, women did not have recourse to the divorce process as a means of recovering honor. If her petition failed, a woman's husband would still control her life because of coverture; a wife had no legal entity separate from her husband. And if she won, a woman's character suffered damage. Marriage to a man to whom she had been linked before the divorce was seen as a confession of illicit sexual relations. That a woman of Rachel Donelson's status chose the extralegal recourse of desertion to end her marriage is extraordinary. Elite women were expected to tolerate outrageous behavior on the part of their husbands, seeking separation only when violent behavior placed their lives in danger. Moreover, in the early republic, women embodied the ideals of decorum, self-control, and sexual virtue, and were expected to hold their sexually self-indulgent mates in check.[36]

See also

References

  1. ^ Clifton, Frances (1952). "John Overton as Andrew Jackson's Friend". Tennessee Historical Quarterly. 11 (1): 23–40. ISSN 0040-3261. JSTOR 42621095.
  2. ^ Bunn, Mike; Williams, Clay (2023). Old Southwest to Old South: Mississippi, 1798–1840. Heritage of Mississippi Series, Vol. IX. Jackson: University Press of Mississippi. p. 230. ISBN 978-1-4968-4380-7. LCCN 2022042580.
  3. ^ a b c Remini, Robert Vincent (1977). Andrew Jackson and the course of American empire, 1767-1821. Internet Archive. New York : Harper & Row. pp. xvi, 44. ISBN 978-0-06-013574-4.
  4. ^ Cheathem, Mark R. (2019). "The Stubborn Mythology of Andrew Jackson". Reviews in American History. 47 (3): 342–348. doi:10.1353/rah.2019.0062. ISSN 1080-6628.
  5. ^ Toplovich (2005).
  6. ^ a b Boissoneault, Lorraine. "Rachel Jackson, the Scandalous Divorcee Who Almost Became First Lady". Smithsonian Magazine. Retrieved 2024-08-26.
  7. ^ Owsley (1977), p. 482.
  8. ^ Johnson, Walter (1999). Soul by soul: life inside the antebellum slave market. Cambridge (Mass.): Harvard university press. p. 2. ISBN 978-0-674-82148-4.
  9. ^ Owsley (1977), p. 484.
  10. ^ Heiskell, S. G. (November 19, 1922). "General Andrew Jackson and the Natchez Country: History Again Refutes Slanders of Noted Hero". The Commercial Appeal (Part 1 of 2). Vol. CVIII, no. 142. Memphis, Tennessee. p. III-6. & "Gen. Andrew Jackson and the Natchez Country (con't)". The Commercial Appeal (Part 2 of 2). November 19, 1922. p. III-7 – via Newspapers.com. Free access icon
  11. ^ Executive Office for United States Attorneys (1989). Bicentennial Celebration of United States Attorneys, 1789–1989 (PDF) (Report). Washington, District of Columbia: United States Department of Justice.
  12. ^ "An American Love Story". The Roanoke Times. 2018-02-14. p. 10. Retrieved 2024-08-26.
  13. ^ Burstein, Andrew (2003). The Passions of Andrew Jackson. New York: Alfred A. Knopf. pp. 811–817. ISBN 978-0-375-41428-2. LCCN 2002016258. OCLC 49385944.
  14. ^ "Old Mississippi Correspondence - Rodney - Sept 7, 1854 - Idler". The Times-Picayune. 1886-07-25. p. 5. Retrieved 2024-08-15.
  15. ^ Robards (1910), pp. 30–31.
  16. ^ Armstrong, James L. Reminiscences, or, An extract from the catalogue of General Jackson's "juvenile indiscretions" between the ages of 23 and 60 / [James L. Armstrong]. State Library of Pennsylvania. s.n. p. 4.
  17. ^ Toplovich (2005), p. 9.
  18. ^ Annual Report of the American Historical Association 1945: Vol 3. Internet Archive. American Historical Association. 1945. p. 121.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: others (link)
  19. ^ Howell, Isabel (1943). "John Armfield, Slave-trader". Tennessee Historical Quarterly. 2 (1): 3–29. ISSN 0040-3261. JSTOR 42620772.
  20. ^ Din, Gilbert C. (1971). "The Irish Mission to West Florida". Louisiana History: The Journal of the Louisiana Historical Association. 12 (4): 315–334. ISSN 0024-6816. JSTOR 4231215.
  21. ^ Owsley (1977), p. 487–488.
  22. ^ a b Remini, Robert V. (1995). "Andrew Jackson Takes an Oath of Allegiance to Spain". Tennessee Historical Quarterly. 54 (1): 2–15. ISSN 0040-3261. JSTOR 42628387.
  23. ^ Rowland, Mrs. Dunbar (1910). "Marking the Natchez Trace: An Historic Highway of the Lower South". Publications of the Mississippi Historical Society. XI: 345–361. hdl:2027/mdp.39015039482057 – via HathiTrust.
  24. ^ Jones, E. R. (1904). "News & Newspapers of Jefferson County, Mississippi". www.msgw.org. Retrieved 2024-12-08.
  25. ^ "Jefferson County". The Clarion-Ledger. 1876-09-06. p. 2. Retrieved 2024-12-16.
  26. ^ "Narrative of a journey down the Ohio and Mississippi in 1789-90. / by Maj. Samuel S. Forman ; with a memoir and illustrative notes by Lyman C. Draper". HathiTrust. p. 53. Retrieved 2024-08-19.
  27. ^ "Gen. Andrew Jackson and the Natchez Country (con't)". The Commercial Appeal. 1922-11-19. p. 63. Retrieved 2024-08-19.
  28. ^ Jefferson County, Volume XXXII, Part I (PDF). Source Material for Mississippi History. WPA Statewide Historical Research Project. 1938 – via mlc.lib.ms.us.
  29. ^ "Natchez trace parkway survey. Letter of the secretary of the interior transmitting in response to Senate resolution no. 222, a report of a survey of the old ..." HathiTrust. p. 128. Retrieved 2024-08-28.
  30. ^ a b Cuming, Fortescue (1810). Sketches of a tour to the western country : through the states of Ohio and Kentucky, a voyage down the Ohio and Mississippi rivers, and a trip through the Mississippi territory, and part of West Florida, commenced at Philadelphia in the winter of 1807, and concluded in 1809. University of Pittsburgh Library System. Pittsburgh : Cramer, Spear & Eichbaum. pp. 285, 292.
  31. ^ Dilley, Ora Iona (1986). History and genealogy of the Greens, Carpenters, Dilleys, Ushers. Vicksburg, Mississippi. FHL 3461497. Retrieved 2024-08-15 – via familysearch.org.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link) Free access icon
  32. ^ McBee, May Wilson (1953). The Natchez court records, 1767-1805 : abstracts of early records. Allen County Public Library Genealogy Center. Ann Arbor, Michigan : Edwards Brothers, Inc. pp. 259–260.
  33. ^ Cole (2009), p. 78.
  34. ^ Howe, Daniel Walker (2007). What Hath God Wrought: The Transformation of America, 1818–1848. The Oxford history of the United States. New York (N. Y. ): Oxford university press. ISBN 978-0-19-507894-7.
  35. ^ a b Cole (2009), p. 152.
  36. ^ a b Toplovich (2005), p. 71.

Sources

Further reading