James C. Wilkins


James Campbell Wilkins was an American businessman and political figure who served as a Mississippi territorial legislator, prospered as merchant of Natchez district, and owned thousands of acres and hundreds of slaves in the lower Mississippi River valley in the first half of the 19th century.

Biography

Wilkins was born in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, but came to Mississippi when he was young. He may have spent some time in the vicinity of Carlisle, Pennsylvania before relocating to the Natchez where he was selling importee "iron and steel farm equipment" around 1802. He arrived in the Natchez District around 1805. His uncle Charles Wilkins, based in Lexington, Kentucky, was a "merchant and provisioner of the U.S. Army's work on the Natchez Trace road ".
He was a selectman of the city of Natchez in 1812. As of 1812 he was a director of the Bank of Mississippi, capitalized at $500,000, along with Stephen Minor, Ferdinand Claiborne, Samuel Postlethwaite, Wm. Brooks, John Hankerson, Lyman Harding, Jeremiah Hunt, William Gordon Forman, Lewis Evans, Jas. McIntosh, and Thos. Wilkins.
As of 1815, he ran a cotton-commission business in Natchez, owned, and owned 277 slaves. Based on tax returns, he was one of the richest men of the Natchez District prior to the War of 1812, along with fellow merchants like Abijah Hunt, and full-time planters like Adam Bingaman and Winthrop Sargent. The cotton business was the basis of his wealth, and according to J. F. H. Claiborne, "He controlled for a long time the commerce of Mississippi, and nearly all the cotton it produced." Wilkins organized a company, the Natchez Rifle Corps, during the War of 1812 and had a modest role in the Battle of New Orleans. The company confined to function as a militia and social society after the war.
He was at one time the president of Planter's Bank of Mississippi. Planter's Bank once had capital of $4 million and had "branches at Manchester, Vicksburg, Port Gibson, Woodville, Monticello, Jackson, and Columbus." According to the University of Texas Center for American History, he was "associated prominently with four banks at Natchez, but he lost most of his fortune in 1841".
Wilkins was one of the representatives from Adams County in the ninth House of Representatives of the Mississippi territorial legislature, convening in 1815. Wilkins was a key figure in the push for Mississippi statehood within its current boundaries. He is remembered for drafting a message to the U.S. Congress in December 1816 that argued that "between those sections of the Country there is no natural or a commercial connection...The Revenue derived from the Wealth and Industry of the Inhabitants of the Counties near the Mississippi would be expended in a section of the Country with which they have only a forced connection." The message was signed by 12 territorial legislators. In March 1817, the Congress passed and U.S. President James Madison signed legislation separating the Alabama Territory from the Mississippi Territory. Wilkins was also heavily involved in drafting the first Mississippi state constitution. After statehood he was one of the leaders of the so-called Natchez Junto political advocacy group, which supported Andrew Jackson's presidential candidacy. Wilkins apparently worked more effectively as a "shrewd manager" behind the scenes rather than a candidate for major office.
From 1816 to 1834, he was business partners with John Linton in the firm of Wilkins & Linton in New Orleans. Linton and Wilkins were both married to sisters of Adam L. Bingaman, daughters of Charlotte Surget and Adam Bingaman. His papers include correspondence about the 1836 "sale and transportation...of a group of fifty slaves from Baltimore, Maryland, by J.S. Skinner". In the 1830s he was part of a land-speculation scheme organized by future U.S. Senator from California William Gwin; the syndicate dealt in land in Mississippi, Arkansas, and Texas.
In January 1840 Wilkins was one of the co-sponsors of a grand dinner at Natchez to celebrate guest of honor Andrew Jackson, who, despite being quite ill and frail, had came to the lower Mississippi to celebrate the 25th anniversary of the Battle of New Orleans. Wilkins was involved in a community ceremony honoring the late Thomas Hinds when he died in 1840. Following the catastrophic 1840 Natchez tornado, Wilkins presided over a community meeting to plan the recovery and reconstruction.
In the 1840s the firm Wilkins, Humason & Co. ran a foundry in Natchez that produced engines for mills, gin houses, and steamboats. He reportedly lost his fortune in 1841. According to Claiborne, this was primarily as a result of guaranteeing other people's debts.
Wilkins died in Louisville, Kentucky, and his remains were returned to Natchez for burial. A collection of his papers is held at the University of Texas at Austin.

Personal life

Wilkins was married at least twice. His first wife was said to be a daughter of Stephen Minor. His second wife was a sister of Adam Lewis Bingaman. His wife Charlotte Wilkins died at Bay St. Louis in 1820 of yellow fever.
In 1838 his daughter Catherine Wilkins married Natchez attorney Samuel S. Boyd at Arlington house.