Apr. 7, 1826—In a dense forest above a bridge in Arlington, Va., across the Potomac where they had carved out reputations as among America’s most eloquent and brilliant politicians, Secretary of State Henry Clay (pictured) and Senator John Randolph of Virginia met in an “affair of honor”—i.e., a formal, prearranged duel. After an exchange of ineffectual gunfire, the two stopped, smiled, and shook hands, their lives luckily preserved.
That
outcome—shot at without result—was more common than the lethal kind. But not
everyone was so fortunate as Randolph and Clay in those early days of the
republic. The practice continued, despite laws forbidding it, the opposition of
prominent Americans like George Washington and Benjamin Franklin, and
high-profile fatalities that horrified an increasing portion of the country,
including:
*Alexander
Hamilton, shot by Vice-President Aaron Burr in Weehawken, NJ, in 1804;
*Naval war
hero Stephen Decatur, killed by another commodore, James Barron, in
1820;
*Charles
Dickinson, mortally wounded in 1806 by Andrew Jackson for having committed
an especially unpardonable sin in the rising politician’s mind: insulting his
wife Rachel;
*Button
Gwinnett, a signer of the Declaration of Independence, dying in 1777 three
days after being shot by political rival Lachlan McIntosh.
All four
of those deaths resulted from gunfire—like most duels on American soil. Though
challenged parties, as part of the so-called Code Duello rules informally regulating the practice, had the choice
of weapons, these tended to be smooth-bore pistols, unlike the swords often
used in Europe.
Attorneys
and journalists were among the challenged parties. (Indeed, nearly four decades
later, the young journalist Mark Twain had to be hustled out of Nevada for
having written a satirical hoax—an experience he would memorialize several
years later in “How I Escaped Being Killed in a Duel": “I thoroughly
disapprove of duels. If a man should challenge me now, I would... take him
kindly... by the hand and lead him to a quiet... spot, and kill him")
More
often, politicians were in the line of fire, despite congressional rules on
decorum in debate. That had seldom if ever stopped Randolph, who, as historian
Henry Adams observed, had acted for the last 20 years like “the bully of a race
course, was on the floor “ready at any sudden impulse to spring at his enemies,
gouging, biting, tearing, and rending his victims with the ferocity of a
rough-and-tumble fight.”
But Clay
should have known better. Though normally cordial and ready to disregard
slights, he’d already been involved with one duel 17 years before, with a
fellow member of the Kentucky House of Representatives, Humphrey Marshall.
An exchange of invective between the two had climaxed in a spitting match, then
Clay’s challenge.
Three
rounds of gunfire left both men slightly wounded before it was terminated. Nine
years later, Clay gave signs that he’d learned his lesson about escalating
quarrels when, as Speaker of the U.S. House of Representatives, he introduced a
resolution banning dueling.
What brought on Clay’s appointment with Randolph was the Virginian’s claim that the relationship between President John Quincy Adams and Clay amounted to a “puritan with the blackleg.”
(There were two possibilities for the meaning of
“blackleg,” neither complimentary: 1) a fatal disease affecting livestock; 2) an
idiom carried over from Great Britain, signifying a cheating gambler or
swindling—a reference to Clay’s penchant for wagering.)
Once
again, Clay took offense enough to issue a challenge. This time, the duel was
shorter—and with less contact to the body—than the one with Marshall. Both men’s
first shots went awry. Clay’s second bullet went through Randolph’s coat near
the hip, and the Virginian, after firing into the air, announced he would not continue.
“You owe
me a coat, Mr. Clay,” Randolph joked, prompting Clay to reply, ‘I am glad the
debt is no greater.”
Altogether
the affair was, according to Senator Thomas Hart Benton of Missouri (who had
seen and even participated in his share), the “highest toned” duel he had ever
witnessed. Matters became so cordial between Randolph and Clay that, when the
Virginian was dying, he insisted on being carried into the Senate to shake his
old adversary’s hand before he expired.
Inevitably,
a “what-if” scenario comes to mind about this duel: If Clay’s shot had found
its mark against Randolph, would it have haunted the rest of his career, as
Jackson’s had after meeting Dickinson? On the other hand, if Randolph hadn’t
been wearing thick gloves that caused his pistol to discharge accidentally and
then go wide, what might have happened to Clay?
The more
important question might have been what would have happened to the United
States. In Clay’s single term as Secretary of State, the department settled 12
commercial treaties—more than all five prior Presidential administrations
combined—and built strong ties with the newly independent Latin American
republics.
With his
service to John Quincy Adams over, he ran unsuccessfully for President two more
times, and arguably was more qualified for the office than any of its other
occupants through the rest of his life. Back in the Senate, his advocacy for
internal improvements and devotion to the Union (demonstrated in compromises
that temporarily averted civil war) influenced the young Abraham Lincoln, who
regarded him as his “beau ideal of a statesman.”
All of
that would have been lost if Clay had fallen in his all-but-forgotten
encounters with Humphrey Marshall and John Randolph.



