William Pinkney
 |
William Pinkney |
William Pinkney (
March 17,
1764–
February 25,
1822) was an
American statesman and diplomat, and the seventh
U.S. Attorney General.
Born in
Maryland, Pinkney studied medicine (which he did not practice) and law, becoming a lawyer after his admission to the bar in
1786. After some time practicing law in
Harford County, Maryland, he participated in Maryland's
state constitutional convention.
Pinkney served in the
Maryland House of Delegates from
1788 to
1792 and then again in
1795, and served as a
U.S. Congressman from the
third district of Maryland in
1791 and from
1815 until
1816. He was mayor of
Annapolis from 1795 to
1800,
Attorney General of Maryland from
1805 to
1806, co-U.S. Minister to
Great Britain (with
James Monroe) from 1806 to
1807, and
Minister Plenipotentiary from
1808 until
1811. He then returned to Maryland, serving in the
Maryland State Senate in
1811, becoming the U.S. Minister Plenipotentiary to
Russia, along with a special mission to
Naples from 1816 until 1818. In 1811 he joined
President James Madison's cabinet as Attorney General.
He was a major in the
U.S. Army during the
War of 1812 and was wounded at the
Battle of Bladensburg, Maryland in August
1814. After the War, he served as Congressman from the
fifth district of Maryland from 1815 to 1816, and as a U.S. Senator from Maryland from
1819 until his death in
1822. He is buried at the
Congressional Cemetery in
Washington, D.C..
*
William Pinkney information at Rootsweb