John Harvey Powell (1914-1971) graduated from Swarthmore College and earned his Ph.D. degree in American History at the University of Iowa. Powell was Randolph Adams Memorial Lecturer at the University of Michigan and received the A. S. W Rosenbach Fellowship in Bibliography at the University of Pennsylvania. He was the author of The Books of a New Nation, also published by the University of Pennsylvania Press.
Richard Rush's entire period of growing up was steeped in the tradition of the American Revolution. Son of noted physician and patriot Dr. Benjamin Rush, Richard was born in 1780 in Philadelphia and through his adolescence and teen years he saw the American government work first hand. He saw all the personalities who survived the Revolution and the Constitutional Convention as guests, colleagues, and occasionally patients of his Dad.
One of those he made the best impression on was James Madison. In 1811 Madison named him Comptroller of the Currency in his administration. But he did not stay there long as in 1814 Madison appointed him Attorney General. In those days before there was a Department of Justice, the Attorney General's only function was to give legal opinions and appear on behalf of the government in court. Madison kept Rush busy with all kinds of other tasks regarding the War of 1812 and its aftermath.
The new James Monroe administration brought Rush the appointment of Minister to Great Britain where he dealt with two Foreign Secretaries. He managed to get an agreement the Rush-Bagot Treaty, a most significant agreement declaring the Great Lakes a demilitarized zone. For the rest of the time dealing with Lord Castlereagh who was Europe focused it was not easy to get his attention on the USA.
When Castlereagh died George Canning took over as Foreign Secretary. He was far more focused on the western hemisphere, particularly on those new Latin American republics. Rush had a small hand in the Monroe Doctrine and keeping Canning at bay in terms of moving in on those vast new commercial markets in the Southern Hemisphere.
In 1825 Rush was appointed Secretary of the Treasury in the ill fated John Quincy Adams administration. It was an administration with a lot of ambitious ideas that went for nought because of the opposition of the new Democratic party and its leader Andrew Jackson. Rush was Quincy Adams running mate for Vice President in 1828 and went down with the ship.
There were only two public services more that Rush did. He was a special envoy sent by Andrew Jackson to secure the legacy of James Smithson from Great Britain which eventually became the Smithsonian Institution. And James Polk appointed him Minister to France in the last half of his term in 1847.
I can't say Rush lived in splendid retirement, he had financial woes his whole life. But it was comfortable enough. He dies in 1859 a relic of a bygone age as the USA starts coming apart and the Civil War ensues.
J.H.Powell bring us a picture of an able and useful public servant. One who used family connections to advance. Why not with the connections his dad left him?