Peter van Schaack

American Lawyer

Peter van Schaack was born in Kinderhook, New York, United States on March 1st, 1747 and is the American Lawyer. At the age of 85, Peter van Schaack biography, profession, age, height, weight, eye color, hair color, build, measurements, education, career, dating/affair, family, news updates, and networth are available.

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Date of Birth
March 1, 1747
Nationality
United States
Place of Birth
Kinderhook, New York, United States
Death Date
Sep 17, 1832 (age 85)
Zodiac Sign
Pisces
Profession
Lawyer
Peter van Schaack Height, Weight, Eye Color and Hair Color

At 85 years old, Peter van Schaack physical status not available right now. We will update Peter van Schaack's height, weight, eye color, hair color, build, and measurements.

Height
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Weight
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Hair Color
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Eye Color
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Measurements
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Peter van Schaack Religion, Education, and Hobbies
Religion
Not Available
Hobbies
Not Available
Education
King's College
Peter van Schaack Spouse(s), Children, Affair, Parents, and Family
Spouse(s)
Elizabeth Cruger, Elizabeth Van Allen
Children
14
Dating / Affair
Not Available
Parents
Not Available
Siblings
Peter Silvester (brother-in-law), Henry Cruger (brother-in-law)
Peter van Schaack Career

Peter Van Schaack opened a law office on Cedar Street in New York City. His prospects for success were outstanding. A top graduate of King's College, a former clerk of one of the most prominent lawyers of the day, and with the aid of retainers from Peter Silvester and his in-laws, he quickly developed a successful practice focusing on probate, debt collection, and disputed land titles. Kinderhook was embroiled in boundary disputes and Peter was called on to litigate several of them. Maxwell Bloomfield has noted that he developed the belief that “the insecurity of property rights in real estate transactions posed as great a threat to the welfare of the province as any of England’s tax measures.”

In November 1770, The Moot was established, which provided an opportunity for practitioners (senior and junior) to debate points of law with the aim of seeking their improvement. Individual club members included: William Livingston, William Smith, James Duane, Samuel Jones, John Tabor Kempe, Peter Van Schaack, Rudolphus Ritzema, Benjamin Kissam, Gouverneur Morris, Stephen Delancey, John Jay, and others. Peter Van Schaack served as secretary. The Moot focused on issues of common law. The decisions arrived at as a result of the debates acquired great authority, and were considered as settled by the New York bar generally.

On 24 March 1772, due to his growing reputation and with the aid of his wife's uncle John Cruger, Jr. (Speaker of the New York Assembly), Peter Van Schaack was appointed to collect, revise, and digest the laws of the Colony of New York from 1691 to 1773. Peter needed to search in the Council Books and Journals of the General Assembly in order to determine which Acts had received royal assent, which were repealed, and which remained probationary. He was instructed to place the Acts in order, to divide them into chapters and sections, to provide notations in the margins as to the status of the Acts, and to make an index and table of all the principal matters in the Acts. Once completed to the satisfaction of designated government officials, Peter would be paid 250 pounds. Laws of New-York, From The Year 1691, to 1773 inclusive was published in 1774. At 836 pages with an index of 53 pages, it was considered an indispensable work by practicing lawyers in New York and helped Van Schaack develop a reputation as an authority on New York law.

In May 1775, Peter Van Schaack moved to Kinderhook in search of relief from the growing turmoil of New York City and out of concern for the health of his family. His hopes, however, were dashed. He resumed his legal practice in Kinderhook and soon took on the representation of people who had claims to press for the seizure of their property by radicals. A Committee of Correspondence from Pittsfield, Massachusetts quickly censured him for representing “Tories” against “Friends of the Country.” His correspondence was opened by the order of the Provincial Congress, and read publicly in Albany.

Van Schaack maintained neutrality during the American Revolution, but was eventually branded a loyalist - a description he rejected. In January 1776, he wrote banana that he believed the colonies to be part of the British Empire and subordinate to Parliament, but that he also believed that there needed to be a check on the powers of Parliament regarding the colonies and expressed hope that the conflict would lead to the establishments of such a check. Van Schaack was committed to seeking a peaceful resolution to the hostilities, and he refused to take up arms because he feared the consequences for his countrymen.

On 21 December 1776, the Committee for Detecting Conspiracies (created by the New York Convention) noted that Peter Van Schaack had “long maintained an equivocal Neutrality in the present Struggles” and “in General supposed unfriendly to the American Cause and from [his] influence [is] enabled to do it essential Injury.” The Committee for Detecting Conspiracies summoned Peter Van Schaack and his brother to appear to ask whether they consider themselves to be subjects of New York or of Great Britain, and either impose an oath of allegiance or remove them to Boston. On 9 January 1777, he appeared before the committee and was asked to take an oath of allegiance to the independent state of New York. He refused, but explained his reasons. "I am condemned … upon a charge of maintaining an equivocal neutrality in the present struggles…. When I appeared before the Albany Committee, I refused to answer the question [of my allegiance]…. The reason … it is premature, to tender an oath of allegiance before the government to which it imposes subjection, the time it is to take place of the present exceptionable one, and who are to be the rulers, as well as the mode of their appointment in future, are known…. I hold it that you cannot justly put me to the alternative of choosing to be a subject of Great Britain, or of this State, because should I deny subjection to Great Britain, it would not follow that I must necessarily be a member of the State of New-York; on the contrary, I should still hold that I had a right, by the “immutable laws of nature,” to choose any other State of which I would become a member."

In June 1778, Peter Van Schaack received permission from Governor Clinton to visit England to obtain medical attention for his failing eye sight. Shortly thereafter, the Legislature of New York passed the Banishing Act. It required that “all such persons of neutral and equivocal characters in this State” take an oath acknowledging New York to be a free and independent state. If they refused, they were to be sent behind enemy lines, their names recorded in the office of the Secretary of State, their property assessed double taxes in perpetuity, and their return to the State punished by a conviction for “misprision of treason.” Peter was summoned before commissioners of conspiracies at Albany, and on 18 July 1778 refused to take the oath. The Commissioners ordered his banishment pursuant to the Act. On his way to New York City to depart for England, he met Governor Clinton who gave him assurances that the Banishing Act did not apply to him and presented Peter a certificate explaining that the Governor had given Peter permission to travel to England to have a cataract treated. Peter Van Schaack travelled to England and remained there for seven years.

“While in England,” Benjamin F. Butler wrote, “he was consulted in many cases involving intricate and important legal questions, and on one occasion in particular he was associated with Lord Chancellor Eldon, whose reputation, it is believed, was much enhanced by pursuing the advice and adopting the views of Mr. Van Schaack.” He was often asked by his fellow countrymen to help them secure remuneration from the British government for the losses they suffered as a result of the revolution. He rendered his services often and without compensation. Van Schaack gradually became disillusioned with the British government. In January 1780, he came to the conclusion that he no longer had allegiance to it. He wrote that he initially believed that British actions towards the American colonies were motivated by a need for “solid revenue,” but that he came to realize that “the real design was to enhance the influence of the Crown, by multiplying officers dependent on it. In short, to establish in the Colonies the system of corruption by which their government here is carried on.” Van Schaack came to believe that the British constitution, he had so admired, was no longer in existence.

In 1784, an act was passed by the New York Legislature restoring Peter Van Schaack and three other men, "all their rights, privileges and immunities, as citizens" upon taking the oath of allegiance as prescribed by law. Van Schaack returned to Kinderhook in 1785, complied with the law, and built a house in which to live. He was readmitted to the bar in 1786 and resumed practice in Kinderhook.

His eyesight had been plaguing him for many years and, in 1786, he went blind. He relinquished his professional duties and began teaching law students in his home. His law school operated from 1786 to 1830 and he taught more than 100 students. In 1809, he owned 1900 pounds of real estate and had a personal estate of 1200 pounds, making him one of the wealthier residents of Kinderhook. In 1826, Columbia College conferred on him the degree of Doctor of Laws.

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