
Thomas Dorr from a 1844 frontpiece
'Thomas Wilson Dorr' (
November 5,
1805 –
December 27,
1854) was a
U.S. lawyer and
political figure. His most significant achievement came in
1842 when he drafted a liberal
constitution for
Rhode Island which was passed by popular
referendum. Prior to this only landowners could vote, which was becoming a problem with increasing migration to cities. However, his constitution and the referendum were extralegal and not recognized by the state government.
In
1842, two elections were held in Rhode Island under both Dorr's constitution and the existing state charter. This led to the creation of two rival state governments. The federal government refused to intervene in this affair and armed conflict soon followed in
Chepachet, Rhode Island. The
Dorr Rebellion was quickly crushed and Dorr fled the state.
The old order recognized the need for a new constitution and enacted a new one in
1843 which contained some of Dorr's concepts. In
1844, Dorr returned to Rhode Island and was arrested. He was convicted of
treason against the state of Rhode Island. His punishment of solitary confinement and a life of hard labor was widely condemned. He was released in
1845, regained his civil rights in
1851, and pardoned in
1854.
Rhode Island's state government includes Dorr in its list of governors. Though living in an age of anti-Irish nativism and anti-Catholicism, Dorr's progressive, liberal reform ideology included extending suffrage rights to the propertyless and the foreign born.
Publications
★
King, ''The Life and Times of Thomas Wilson Dorr'' (Boston, 1859)
★
Mowry, ''The Dorr War'' (Providence, 1901)