Politics always makes strange bedfellows, and the August 1861 contest in District 1 in east Tennessee might make one of the most interesting contestss of the war. It pitted Tennessee state senator Joseph B. Heiskell against US Congressman T.A.R. Nelson. Both Heiskell and Nelson were from east Tennessee and both were pre-war Whigs. Heiskell is described as being a “staunch Union Whig in politics.” However, after the firing on Fort Sumter and Lincoln’s call for troops, he “cast his lot with the Confederacy.”[1]
Once Tennessee
left the Union and joined the Southern Confederacy, the state was allowed to
elect representatives in the Confederate House and Senate. Heiskell ran for Confederate
House. Strangely enough, Nelson was also running. Except, Nelson was running
for the same district in the US House: two men, from the same area, running for
the same designated seat, but in two different bodies politic. The remaining
sources are somewhat silent on the actual campaign, although one post-war
scribe told of a secession meeting held in Elizabethton in May 1861. Nelson,
with US Senator Andrew Johnson, spoke one week, while Heiskell, with former US
Congressman William Cocke, spoke the following week. For the Congressional
seats, it appears that they ran pretty much unopposed.[2]
Of course, both men
won. Had they been contending for the same seat, Nelson would have steamrolled
Heiskell. The numbers looked like this: Johnston County - Nelson, 1129,
Heiskell, 109; Carter County – Nelson 1229, Heiskell 81; Greene County –
Nelson, 2352, Heiskell, 831; Jefferson County, Nelson 1509, Heiskell, 727. The only
two counties that Heiskell won were Washington County – Nelson 979, Heiskell,
1061 and, Hawkins County – Nelson, 841 and Heiskell, 957.[3]
Heiskell would soon
make his way to Richmond. Nelson would head to Washington, D.C., but wound up
in Richmond as well. He was arrested in Wise County, Virginia, on August 5,
1861, and jailed in Richmond. Nelson wrote Jefferson Davis, asking to be
released, promising to return to east Tennessee and live peaceably. Davis
ordered Nelson released on August 13, 1861. Heiskell would go on to be elected
to serve in both the first and second Confederate Congresses.[4]
Outside of the presidential election of 1860, the race between Heiskell and Nelson might just be one of the more interesting elections of the 1860s.
Nelson Heiskell |
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