Pictures from Google Image Search

Thomas Roderick Dew

Encyclopedia of World Biography | 2004 | Copyright 2004 Gale, Cengage Learning. All rights reserved. (Hide copyright information) Copyright

Thomas Roderick Dew

Thomas Roderick Dew (1802-1846), one of the earliest and ablest defenders in America of slavery, articulated the proslavery argument that dominated the Southern mind during the 30 years before the Civil War.

Thomas Dew, the son of a wealthy planter, was born in King and Queen County, Va., on Dec. 5, 1802. He graduated from William and Mary College, and, after traveling in Europe and studying in Germany, he took the chair of political law at William and Mary in 1827. His major scholarly interest was political economy, and most of his published writings were in that field. In 1832 he became president of William and Mary, a post he held until his death in 1846.

In 1831 the bloody Nat Turner slave rebellion in Southampton County, Va., sparked the most intense critical discussion of slavery in the antebellum South. The Virginia Legislature vigorously debated the subject of slavery for a year, and motions for its abolition were only narrowly defeated. Prior to this, Southern intellectuals, following the lead of Thomas Jefferson, had generally treated slavery as a necessary evil, to be tolerated only until the problem of dealing with an unassimilable free black population could be resolved. Many Southerners were adherents of the American Colonization Society, which advocated gradual emancipation and colonization of freed slaves in Africa; this proposal figured prominently in the Virginia debate.

Dew had first contributed to the sectional controversy by publishing Lectures on the Restrictive System (1829), attacking the protective tariff. Now, in his Review of the Debate in the Virginia Legislature of 1831-1832 he argued that colonization was economically impossible. He stated that the South's only alternatives were abolition, with the free slaves remaining and becoming "the most worthless and indolent of citizens," or a continuation of slavery. He advocated the second course, strongly defending slavery on historical, economic, and theological grounds. He concluded, "It is the order of nature and of God that the being of superior faculties and knowledge should control and dispose of those who are inferior."

Dew's theories, developed and expanded, became staples of the proslavery argument that dominated the South politically for the following decades, finally generating the secession movement and the Civil War. Dew contracted pneumonia while on a trip and died in Paris on Aug. 6, 1846.

Further Reading

There is no biography of Dew. Most general works on the history of the South and the Civil War note his work. The most useful treatments are in William E. Dodd, The Cotton Kingdom (1919), and William Sumner Jenkins, Pro-slavery Thought in the Old South (1935). His college career is treated in Herbert B. Adams, The College of William and Mary (1887).

Cite this article
Pick a style below, and copy the text for your bibliography.

  • MLA
  • Chicago
  • APA

"Thomas Roderick Dew." Encyclopedia of World Biography. Thomson Gale. 2004. Encyclopedia.com. 8 Dec. 2009 <http://www.encyclopedia.com>.

"Thomas Roderick Dew." Encyclopedia of World Biography. Thomson Gale. 2004. Encyclopedia.com. (December 8, 2009). http://www.encyclopedia.com/doc/1G2-3404701756.html

"Thomas Roderick Dew." Encyclopedia of World Biography. Thomson Gale. 2004. Retrieved December 08, 2009 from Encyclopedia.com: http://www.encyclopedia.com/doc/1G2-3404701756.html

Learn more about citation styles

Related newspaper, magazine, and trade journal articles from HighBeam Research

(Including press releases, facts, information, and biographies)

Croydon the new Barcelona? ; Pounds 4bn vision to transform city of roads and towers
Newspaper article from: Evening Standard - London; 11/13/2007; ; 700+ words ; ...architecture outside the old Soviet bloc. Now Croydon wants to turn itself into Barcelona...to reverse the car's stranglehold on Croydon. The "forest of car parks" in the town...might fish for Wandle trout. He said: "Croydon needs to dare to dream it should set its...
Travel: Croydon, cybersuburb?
Newspaper article from: The Independent - London; 11/9/1996; ; 700+ words ; ...might also advise you to "die and see Croydon". Ever since Captain Sensible enjoyed a minor hit with a song called "Croydon" in the early Eighties, this commuter...so the town hopes, is changing. Croydon is undergoing the greatest make...
Come to continental Croydon
Newspaper article from: The Independent - London; 3/30/1995; ; 700+ words ; ...from modern Surrey towns like sprawling, concrete Croydon. The truth, palatable or otherwise, is that sometime...mists of olde worlde England, Crogedene became Croydon; big, brash Croydon, the butt of jokes, a would-be Manhattan, a...
THIS IS THE FUTURE OF CROYDON - IF ALSOP HAS HIS WAY...
Magazine article from: The Architects' Journal; 11/15/2007; ; 700+ words ; Will Alsop lived in Croydon in the 1970s. Now, 35 years later...tells me that in the '60s and 70s 'Croydon was the English version of Manhattan...seems amazing, Alsop is adamant that Croydon's proximity to London - it is 19km...
SO YOU WANT TO LIVE IN ...CROYDON.
Newspaper article from: The Mail on Sunday (London, England); 1/12/2003; 700+ words ; Croydon's image is grim: a dreary South London...richest by average income. Terraces in Croydon town centre are priced from pound sterling160...apartments and townhouses in East and West Croydon. TRANSPORT LINKS Excellent. Trains from...
Comment: Why you can't lick Croydon
Newspaper article from: The Sunday Telegraph London; 2/6/2000; ; 700+ words ; THE Royal Mail has chosen Croydon as the subject for its latest 64p stamp. The news is astonishing...does it show three coloured ring-doughnuts, with no sign of Croydon? Why Croydon anyway? Why not Slough? Is it all right (some added in a...
Cover Story: What's so funny about Croydon?
Newspaper article from: The Independent - London; 4/8/1996; ; 700+ words ; ...was beetling through the outskirts of Croydon at the legal limit (4mph) and poor Mrs...culled by the motor car. In retrospect, Croydon seemed an appropriate setting for this...over so promiscuously to the car. When Croydon was rebuilt in the Sixties, under the...
This is Croydon, gateway to the planet
Newspaper article from: The Independent - London; 9/16/2000; ; 700+ words ; ...visiting a restaurant but not eating. At Croydon airport in south London, the only aircraft...The magnificent Art Deco interior of Croydon's main terminal hall has been so well...trim of the aircraft. Final call for Croydon was 41 years ago this month. After the...
The essential ... Croydon; London Jobs/Local focus.
Newspaper article from: The Evening Standard (London, England); 1/20/2005; 603 words ; Byline: MIRANDA COLLINGE CROYDON is a stronghold of the financial-services and...croyweb.com/basic/recruitment .htm; Croydon Business Venture: www.cbvltd.co.uk; Croydon Chamber of Commerce: www.croydonchamber.org...
PRIVATE VIEW: Croydon blazes a trail.
Magazine article from: Design Week; 1/4/2008; 700+ words ; David Bernstein hopes that Croydon's makeover will be as innovative...the burning issue of the future of Croydon was alleviated by the prospect of adding...earnest'. Where it ends in earnest is Croydon. Croydon gets more than its fair share...

Related entries from encyclopedias, dictionaries, and thesauruses

Croydon
Book article from: The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition Croydon outer borough (1991 pop. 299,600...West End. London's first airport, the Croydon Aerodrome, was constructed there in 1915...electronic equipment are manufactured, but Croydon is largely residential. Several office...
Saint Etienne
Book article from: Contemporary Musicians ...Stanley and Pete Wiggs, both natives of Croydon, Surrey, England. Early on, the two...Stanley (born on December 25, 1964, in Croydon, Surrey, England; former music journalist...Pete Wiggs (born May 15, 1966, in Croydon, Surrey, England), keyboards, programming...
Surrey
Book article from: A Dictionary of British History ...different. There were large numbers of gentlemen's seats, Croydon was ‘a great corn‐market’...000 in Camberwell, 169,000 in Battersea, 134,000 in Croydon. The county of market gardeners had become commuter land.
Clark, Anne
Book article from: Contemporary Musicians ...artistic expression and culture. Born on May 14, 1960, in Croydon, South London, England, to an Irish mother and a Scottish...issue For the Record … Born on May 14, 1960, in Croydon, South London, England. Booked punk and new wave acts at...
Phillips, Theodore Evelyn Reece
Dictionary entry from: Complete Dictionary of Scientific Biography ...continued his observations, with that instrument when he moved to Croydon and later, in Ashstead, when he acquired a twelve-and...before his death. In 1906 he married Mellient Kynaston of Croydon. Their only son, the Reverend John E. T. Phillips, became...

For students and teachers!

Encyclopedia.com provides students and teachers facts, information, and biographies from verified, citable sources, including:

Encyclopedia.com provides students and teachers facts, information, and biographies from verified, citable sources, including: