David Ramsay

David Ramsay

David Ramsay

David Ramsay (1749-1815) was a second-line political figure of the American Revolution but a first-rate and most important contemporary historian of that epoch.

David Ramsay was born in Pennsylvania on April 2, 1749, of substantial landowning parents. He graduated from the College of New Jersey (now Princeton University) and, after teaching for a while, took a medical degree from the University of Pennsylvania in 1772.

Ramsay settled in Charleston, S.C., and made it his home for the remainder of his life. The beginning of his political career coincided with the outbreak of the American Revolution. Much of that career was spent in the legislature of his adopted state, but he also served for 2 years in the 1780s in the Continental Congress, where he emerged as an early supporter of a strong federal government. After the ratification of the Constitution, Ramsay served in the upper house of South Carolina and on three occasions was named president of that body.

In these years Ramsay earned his way rather precariously by practicing medicine. He also used his ample talent as a writer to turn out occasional first-rate essays on the history of medicine. These did not pay anything, though, and Ramsay was in chronic financial need. Despite his talents, he proved a poor businessman. He speculated in land with such disastrous consequences that even a steady medical practice could not recoup his losses. He went bankrupt in 1798, having opposed leniency to debtors throughout his political career. He died in Charleston on May 8, 1815.

Ramsay is best remembered as the author of the most objective and sophisticated contemporary account of the Revolution. His History of the American Revolution (1789) forms the basis today for most of the multicausation theories of that epoch. Like many historians writing at this time, he relied heavily for information on the Annual Register, a British publication that summarized events each year; like contemporary historians, too, Ramsay was not always careful with the truth. But his interpretations were his own, and he was the first—and for a century the only—historian to suggest that a variety of motives had induced men and governments to support independence first and the Constitution later.

Ramsay emphasized the key role of "independent men" in motivating American nationalism, creating changes in the social structure, and capitalizing on expanding economic opportunity in the young republic. In approaching his assessment of the era in this sophisticated way, Ramsay, as one historian has suggested, may have "penetrated further into the essential meaning of the Revolution than the more arduous researches of twentieth-century historians have done."

Further Reading

There is no book-length biography of Ramsay. For a brief biographical sketch and an excerpt from Ramsay's writings see Edmund S. Morgan, The American Revolution: Two Centuries of Interpretation (1965).

Additional Sources

Shaffer, Arthur H. To be an American: David Ramsay and the making of the American consciousness, Columbia, S.C.: University of South Carolina Press, 1991. □

Show all research tools

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

  • MLA
  • Chicago
  • APA

"David Ramsay." Encyclopedia of World Biography. 2004. Encyclopedia.com. 31 May. 2012 <http://www.encyclopedia.com>.

"David Ramsay." Encyclopedia of World Biography. 2004. Encyclopedia.com. (May 31, 2012). http://www.encyclopedia.com/doc/1G2-3404705347.html

"David Ramsay." Encyclopedia of World Biography. 2004. Retrieved May 31, 2012 from Encyclopedia.com: http://www.encyclopedia.com/doc/1G2-3404705347.html

Learn more about citation styles

Ramsay, David

Ramsay, David (1749–1815), South Carolina physician, historian, and political figure, is most famous for his History of the Revolution of South Carolina (2 vols., 1785) and the complementary History of South Carolina from Its First Settlement in 1670, to …1808 (2 vols., 1809). The first part of the work is known to be partly plagiarized from the Annual Register, while the second occasionally borrows from the work of Alexander Hewat. Ramsay's posthumously published works are Universal History Americanized (12 vols., 1819), the last four volumes dealing with America, and History of the United States (3 vols., 1816–17), completed by Samuel Stanhope Smith.

Show all research tools

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

  • MLA
  • Chicago
  • APA

James D. Hart and and Phillip W. Leininger. "Ramsay, David." The Oxford Companion to American Literature. 1995. Encyclopedia.com. 31 May. 2012 <http://www.encyclopedia.com>.

James D. Hart and and Phillip W. Leininger. "Ramsay, David." The Oxford Companion to American Literature. 1995. Encyclopedia.com. (May 31, 2012). http://www.encyclopedia.com/doc/1O123-RamsayDavid.html

James D. Hart and and Phillip W. Leininger. "Ramsay, David." The Oxford Companion to American Literature. 1995. Retrieved May 31, 2012 from Encyclopedia.com: http://www.encyclopedia.com/doc/1O123-RamsayDavid.html

Learn more about citation styles

Free newspaper and magazine articles

Eyewitness to the Revolution: David Ramsay's contemporary account of...
Magazine article from: The New American; 12/3/2001
He was agitated, a guy under pressure. Not 100% David; RAMSAY ON CHEF BEFORE...
Newspaper article from: The Mirror (London, England); 7/10/2003
GORDON Ramsay and David Beckham [...].(Editorial)
Newspaper article from: Daily Mail (London); 4/13/2010

Pictures from Google Image Search

Click to see an enlarged picture
Click to see an enlarged picture
Click to see an enlarged picture

See more pictures of David Ramsay