Background
White, James was born on June 16, 1749 in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, United States.
White, James was born on June 16, 1749 in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, United States.
When he returned he entered the University of Pennsylvania and studied medicine and law.
He was an early settler at Nashville, Tennessee and in Louisiana. After graduating he moved to the Province of North Carolina. In 1785, White was elected to the North Carolina House of Representatives.
In 1786, North Carolina sent him as a delegate to the Continental Congress where he served until 1788.
Late in 1786, Congress named him Superintendent of Indian Affairs for the southern department. After that he was frequently absent from Congress, traveling the Carolina and Georgia frontiers negotiating with the Indian tribes.
After his congressional service he moved to the frontier, buying land and settling in what became Nashville, Tennessee. When the Southwest Territory"s legislature was formed in 1794, White was selected as its delegate to the United States House of Representatives, serving from 1794 to 1796.
After Tennessee gained statehood in 1796, he returned home to Davidson County.
James White was a brilliant man, fluent in French and Spanish, but he had a tendency to become involved in complicated plots. In the 1780s he had become involved with John Sevier"s plan to place the State of Franklin under Spanish rule. He used his position and travels as Indian superintendent to serve as agent conducting negotiations between Sevier and the governor of Spanish Louisiana.
In the 1790s he was involved in William Blount"s plan to work with the Indians and Britain in staging an invasion of Spanish Florida.
As his role in these schemes became known, he moved to the Spanish territory of New Orleans in 1799, settling in what later became Saint Martin Parish, Louisiana. While his earlier actions caused problems in Tennessee, they weren"t popularly known.
When the United States expansion reached him again President Jefferson named him as a territorial judge in 1804, initially for the District of Louisiana, and then for the Territory of Orleans. His family prospered in Louisiana.
James White died at home in 1809 in Saint James Parish, Louisiana.
Member North Carolina General Assembly, 1785. Member Continental Congress from North Carolina, 1786-1788. Member 1st Territorial Legislature from Davidson County, 1794.
Children include Edward Douglass.