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Thomas
Cooper: A Remarkable Lycoming Judge
By Lou Hunsinger Jr.
Williamsport Sun-Gazette
"Knowledge is power. To a nation it is wealth. To
individuals it is a virtue." These are the words of
arguably the most remarkable man to ever preside over a
Lycoming County courtroom. That man was Thomas Cooper. He
was a bundle of contradictions. On the one hand he was a
brilliant and enlightened man who was comfortable in the
fashionable salons of French Revolutionary Paris. On the
other hand he was a gun-toting, acid-tongued, cranky judge
who was ultimately removed from the bend because of his
alleged misbehaviors.
This accomplished and enigmatic man was born in London,
Oct. 22, 1759, to a comfortable but not wealthy family.
He was educated at the prestigious Oxford University but
there is no record of his graduation, quite surprisingly,
given his later distinguished academic life.
Cooper was a man of strong political beliefs. He was a rabid
supporter of the French Revolution. He was well acquainted
with some of the most distinguished English politicians
of the 1780s and 1790s. Men such as Edmund Burke and William
Pitt (the Younger). Cooper was considered a radical because
of his support for the French Revolution. He went to Paris
as a member of the Manchester chapter of the Jacobin Club.
He became allied with a faction of French Revolutionaries
who were opposed to Robespierre and he exchanged verbal
blows with Robespierre. This verbal battle was so severe
that Cooper challenged Robespierre to a duel, but the Frenchman
declined, and made things very uncomfortable for Cooper
forcing him back to England.
He was close friends with one of the top scientists of the
Anglo-American Enlightenment Period, Dr. Joseph Priestley,
who later moved to nearby Northumberland. According to Meginness'
"History of Lycoming County," Cooper "was
expelled from England because of his support for the French
Revolution."
Cooper joined his friend, Priestley at Northumberland in
1794. Cooper shared Priestley's passion for science and
medicine, and the two of them set up a laboratory at the
Priestley residence.
Cooper quickly immersed himself in the political rough-and-tumble
of his new land by becoming a very eager and enthusiastic
Jeffersonian anti-federalist. He soon became a practicing
attorney and helped spread his political fervor in the pages
of the "Northumberland Register", a newspaper
he edited. His strong views led to his arrest under John
Adams' hated "Alien and Sedition Laws." A jury
found Cooper guilty; he spent six months in prison and was
fined $400. The fine was later repaid to his heirs with
interest.
When the Jeffersonian Democratic-Republican Party came to
power in Pennsylvania under Thomas McKean in 1799, McKean
rewarded Cooper's struggles by appointing him to a commission
to settle a land dispute with Connecticut that resulted
in the Pennamite War. The other two commissioners elected
Cooper chair of the commission. His wisdom and leadership
helped to settle this long festering dispute.
In 1804, Governor McKean named Cooper President Judge of
the Fourth Judicial District that included Franklin, Mifflin,
Huntington and Bedford counties. In 1806, the state judiciary
was changed and Cooper became President Judge of the Eighth
Judicial District made up of Northumberland, Lycoming and
Luzerne counties.
His tenure as judge in the district that included Lycoming
County would be a stormy one. The man Cooper succeeded,
Judge Rush, conducted affairs of the court in a very informal
and laid-back manner, reflective of a frontier setting.
Cooper attempted to introduce more formalized decorum to
the conduct of the court's business. This did not sit well
with many members of the bar, who regarded his conduct as
tyrannical and autocratic. Thomas Lloyd in his "History
of Lycoming County" writes that Cooper, "possessed
an irascible temper and was in constant friction with members
of the bar."
By 1811, the governor's chair and Legislature had changed
political hands, and Cooper could no longer rely on the
political protection of the governor. Sentiment for his
removal from the bench had grown to a fever pitch, and articles
of impeachment were drafted against him.
Fifty charges were leveled against him, but in the end only
nine charges met the legislature's satisfaction. Among them
was a charge that he carried a loaded firearm into his courtroom.
He claimed that he did this for his own protection. Five
charges against were raised for him levying fines against
people for conduct he deemed improper in a courtroom, such
as wearing a hat in court and whispering during court proceedings.
The Legislature voted to remove Cooper by a vote of 53 to
40, and Governor Simon Snyder removed Cooper from office
on April 2, 1811.
Cooper's legal career may have ended but his usefulness
to the world of learning had not. He became a Professor
of Chemistry and Mineralogy at Dickenson College in Carlisle
in 1811 and stayed there until 1815. He moved to Philadelphia
in 1816 and became a member of the American Philosophical
Society.
He published one of the earliest scientific periodicals
in this country. He was also a professor of applied chemistry
and mineralogy at the University of Pennsylvania. Through
the support of Thomas Jefferson he was elected to the faculty
of the University of Virginia in 1819 but never assumed
a position there.
In 1820, Cooper became a professor of chemistry at South
Carolina College, an institution that later became the University
of South Carolina. He was elected the college's second president
in 1821. As president he continued to teach, not only in
the natural sciences but in the social sciences as well.
He retired from the college in 1834. He continued his interest
in politics and was an ardent states' rights and nullification
advocate.
The library at the University of South Carolina was named
for him and still bears his name. The man that Thomas Jefferson
called, "the greatest mind in United States,"
died on May 11, 1839.
He is buried in the Trinity Churchyard in Columbia, S.C.
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