After the war Simms practiced law in Alexandria, Virginia, and also collected taxes at the Port of Alexandria (Thompson Mason succeeding him in that office following Simms' death in 1819).[4]
Fairfax County voters elected Simms as one of their representatives in the Virginia House of Delegates in 1785, 1786, 1792 and 1796.[5] A staunch Federalist, Simms also represented Fairfax County in the Virginia Ratifying Convention in 1788 that ratified the United States Constitution, voters electing him and David Stuart in a pointed rebuff the anti-ratification stance of George Mason.[6][7][8] Reflecting his respect for Mason's insistence on a Bill of Rights similar to that Mason had drafted for Virginia, Simms served on the Virginia legislative committee that recommended amendments to the Constitution. In 1799, Simms successfully defended a land claim in the United States Supreme Court case Irvine v. Sims's Lessee (his surname was misspelled in the official court records).[9]
Simms was an active Mason as well as an acquaintance and associate of President George Washington.[10] He served as a pall bearer at Washington's funeral alongside fellow Masons and colonels who had served Washington: Dennis Ramsay, William Payne, George Gilpin, Philip Marsteller and Charles Little.[11] Simms also served on the board of directors of the Bank of Alexandria, the Little River Turnpike Comp[any, and the Marine Insurance Company.[12]
Alexandria voters elected Simms as mayor in 1811. Still serving as such on August 29, 1814, Simms negotiated an arrangement with Captain James Gordon, whose frigate Seahorse led a British armada up the Potomac River, anchored off Alexandria's port, and demanded all ships and cargo awaiting export. Alexandria merchants knew that the nearest Virginia militia, though about 1400 men under Brig. General John P. Hungerford, were about 24 miles away. In return for their agreeing not to burn the town, the British were allowed to restock their ships. They took 21 vessels, as well as 13,786 barrels of flour, 757 hogsheads of tobacco, and tons of cotton, tar, beef, sugar and other merchandise valued at $100,000 without a shot being fired.[13] Thus, unlike Washington, D.C., Alexandria was not burned by British troops. Although censured for his actions (which some characterized as surrendering without a fight), Simms was later exonerated.
Personal life
As the winter encampment at Valley Forge began, on December 15, 1777, in Trenton, New Jersey, Col. Simms married Nancy Ann Douglass, daughter of Major William Douglass and Catherine Van Buskirk. The couple would have eight children, including William Douglas Simms (1783-1822), Catherine Simms Powell (1780-1872) and Ann Douglas Simms Wallach (1793-1832).
In the 1787 Virginia Census, Simms owned two enslaved children and four adults in Alexandria, and property (including livestock) in Fairfax County, but no slaves.[14] In the 1810 census, his seven member household included a boy and three girls under 10 years of age, as well as a teenage girl, but no slaves.[15]
Death and legacy
Simms died on August 29, 1819, in Alexandria (then still part of the District of Columbia), and was buried with military and Masonic honors on August 31, 1819. He is interred at Christ Church Cemetery in Alexandria.[16] Some of his papers are held by the Library of Congress.
His descendants carried on the family's political involvement. His grandson Richard Wallach served as mayor of Washington, D.C., from 1861 to 1868, although his lawyer brother Charles Simms Wallach joined the Confederate Army and served as depot quartermaster at Petersburg. His son-in-law Cuthbert Powell served as Alexandria's mayor before moving to Loudoun County, which he represented in both houses of the Virginia General Assembly and for a single term in the U.S. Congress; two of his grandsons died fighting for the Confederacy, one at each of the Battles of Manassas.
References
^T. Michael Miller, Artisans and Merchants of Alexandria, Virginia vol.1 (Alexandria ) p.
^DAR Lineage Book vol. 15 p. 13839 available on ancestry.com
^Revolutionary War Rolls, 1775–1783; (National Archives Microfilm Publication M246, 138 rolls); War Department Collection of Revolutionary War Records, Record Group 93; National Archives, Washington. D.C.
^Nan Netherton, Donald Sweig, Janice Artemel, Patricia Hickin and Patrick Reed, Fairfax County, Virginia: a History (Fairfax County Board of Supervisors 1978) p. 132
^Maeva Marcus, The documentary history of the Supreme Court of the United States, 8:168.
^Maeva Marcus, The documentary history of the Supreme Court of the United States, 8:153.