As the war ground to a close, orders went out for the arrest of various political figures, including both sitting governors and former governors.
Alabama had three men who served as governors. Andrew B. Moore served from 1857 to 1861. The Alabama constitution did not allow Moore to run for a third term, although he remained active in the war effort. Moore was replaced by John G. Shorter, who served one term, and was replaced by Thomas H. Watts, then serving as Confederate Attorney General. Watts served as governor until the end of the war. US Secretary of War Edwin Stanton ordered Moore to be arrested on May 16, 1865. He was imprisoned at Fort Pulaski in Savannah until being released in August 1865. Shorter apparently avoided arrest, while Watts was arrested on May 1, 1865, and sent to Macon, but appears to have been released by mid-June 1865.
Arkansas had three men
in the governor’s chair during the war years. Henry M. Rector served from November
16, 1860, until he resigned after losing an election on November 4, 1862; President
of the Senate Thomas Fletcher served from November 4, 1862, until November 15,
1862, when Harris Flanagin was elected. Flanagin served until May 26, 1865, often
as governor in exile. None of these men appear to have served jail or prison
time after the end of the war.
Florida had two war-time governors. Madison S. Perry and
John Milton. Perry could only serve two-terms, and following his second term,
became colonel of the 7th Florida Infantry. His health was poor, and
he returned to Florida, dying at home in March 1865. John Milton, realizing
that the war was over, took his own life on April 1, 1865.
Georgia had one war-time governor: Joseph E. Brown. He was
in office from November 6, 1857 to June 17, 1865, when he resigned. Brown was
arrested on May 23, 1865 and imprisoned at the Old Capitol Prison in
Washington, D.C. He was released after meeting with President Andrew Johnson. (The
Atlanta Constitution, August 7, 1910)
Kentucky, as a border state, is complicated. George W.
Johnson was the first Confederate governor. He was serving as an aide-de-camp
on Breckinridge’s staff at Shiloh when his horse was shot from under him.
Johnson continued on foot, attaching himself to the 4th Kentucky
Infantry (CS). Johnson was mortally wounded in the afternoon of April 7, 1862,
dying two days later. Richard Hawes was selected by the state council as
Johnson’s replacement, often making his headquarters with the Army of
Tennessee. Hawes returned home after the end of the war.
Louisiana had two Confederate governors: Thomas O. Moore and
Henry Watkins Allen. Moore could only serve two terms. He returned to his home
near Alexandria, but after Federal troops burned his plantation, he fled to
Mexico, and then Cuba. He eventually returned to Louisiana. Hawes also lost his
home to fire, and with Moore, also went to Mexico. Allen, who was colonel of
the 4th Louisiana infantry, was wounded at Shiloh and Baton Rouge
and died of his unhealed wounds in Mexico City on April 22, 1866.
Mississippi had John Pettus and Charles Clark. At war’s end,
Pettus, wanted for questioning regarding the Lincoln assassination, went into
hiding. He died of pneumonia in Lonoke County, Arkansas, on January 28, 1867.
Clark was arrested and imprisoned at Fort Pulaski and was held until he took
and signed the Oath of Allegiance in September 1865.
Missouri’s Claiborne F. Jackson took office on January 3, 1861,
and after June 1861, was basically a governor in exile. Jackson was deposed by
the General Assembly in July 1861, followed various Confederate military forces
around on campaign, and died in Little Rock, Arkansas, December 7, 1862.
Lieutenant Governor Thomas C. Reynolds assumed the role of governor, but really
did not have a large role in political affairs. At the end of the war, he also
went to Mexico, but returned to St. Louis.
North Carolina had three war-time governors. John W. Ellis
led the state out of the Union in May 1861, only to die in July 1861. He was
replaced by Speaker of the North Carolina Senate Henry T. Clark. Clark did not pursue
election and stepped down at the end of the term in September 1862. Zebulon
Baird Vance, colonel of the 26th North Carolina, was elected as
governor twice during the war years. At the end of the war, he attempted to
surrender and was told to go home. In Statesville, he was arrested on his birthday,
May 13, 1865, and imprisoned in Old Capital Prison. Vance was released after receiving
his parole on July 6, 1865.
South Carolina had three men in the role of governor:
Francis W. Pickens, Milledge L. Bonham, and Andrew G. Magrath. Pickens and
Bonham were limited in the number of terms they could serve. Pickens retired to
his plantation, and Bonham was reappointed a Confederate general and served in
the Army of Tennessee. Magrath was arrested and imprisoned at Fort Pulaski, not
being released until December 1865.
Tennessee had only one Confederate governor: Isham G.
Harris. After the fall of Nashville, Harris served on the staffs of several Confederate
generals, including Joseph E. Johnston, Braxton Bragg, and Albert S. Johnston.
The US Congress issued a $5,000 reward for the capture of Harris at the end of
the war. He fled to Mexico, then England, only returning to Tennessee once the bounty
was removed.
Texas had Sam Houston, who was removed in March 1861; Edward
Clark, the lieutenant governor, who lost the election in November 1861; Francis
Lubbock who did not run for reelection and stepped aside in November 1863; and
Pendleton Murrah. Houston died in 1863.
Clark served as colonel of the 14th Texas Infantry but fled to
Mexico at the end of the war. Lubbock was commissioned lieutenant colonel on
the staff of Maj. Gen. John B. Marguder, and then aide-de-camp for Jefferson
Davis. Lubbock was captured with Davis in Georgia and imprisoned at Fort
Delaware for eight months.
Virginia had two governors. John Letcher and William Smith.
Letcher’s arrest order was issued by U.S. Grant, and he was taken into custody
on May 20, 1865, and imprisoned at Old Capital Prison. He was released forty-seven
days later. Likewise, Smith turned himself in on June 8, 1865, and was paroled.
More information on these governors can be found in Years, editor, The Confederate Governors. For information on biographies on each governor, check out this link.
Great post! These stories add to our knowledge regarding the events taking place at the end of the war. This material is all new to me & I appreciate the author's work.
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