Download Alfred H. Colquitt (1824-1894)

Survey
yes no Was this document useful for you?
   Thank you for your participation!

* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project

Document related concepts
no text concepts found
Transcript
11/15/2014
Alfred H. Colquitt (1824-1894) | New Georgia Encyclopedia
Alfred H. Colquitt (1824-1894)
Original entry by Barton Myers, Texas Tech University, Lubbock, 03/03/2006
Last edited by NGE Staff on 08/11/2014
Alfred H. Colquitt, an active secessionist and brigade commander in the Civil War (1861-65), was a prominent political leader in his home
state until his death. During his long career, the veteran officer was a member of the U.S. House of Representatives and U.S. Senate, as well
as the governor of Georgia.
Alfred Holt Colquitt was born in Walton County on April 20, 1824. In his youth Colquitt was educated at a local school in Monroe and
eventually attended the College of New Jersey (later Princeton University), from which he graduated in 1844. Two years later Colquitt became
a member of the Georgia bar and began practicing law in Monroe. His legal career was interrupted by service in the Mexican War (1846-48),
during which he rose to the rank of major. Upon his return from the conflict, Colquitt began a political career and in 1853 was elected a U.S.
representative to Congress. He did not run for reelection in 1854 but, at the end of his term in 1855, returned home to Georgia, where he was
elected to the state legislature in 1859.
On the eve of the Civil War, Colquitt was actively involved in the secession movement. He served as an elector for John C. Breckinridge, a
southern rights Democrat, during the 1860 presidential election, and in 1861 his support for states' rights won him a seat at the Georgia
Secession Convention. Colquitt immediately joined the Confederate army when Georgia left the Union in January 1861.
Confederate Service
Colquitt began his Confederate service as a captain but was quickly elected colonel of the Sixth Georgia Infantry in May 1861. After service in
defense of Richmond, Virginia, during the spring and summer of 1862, he was appointed brigadier general on September 1, 1862. Colquitt
commanded a brigade of Georgians throughout most of the battles in the eastern theater, from Antietam in Maryland in September 1862
through Chancellorsville, Virginia, in May 1863. Colquitt's service in Robert E. Lee's Army of Northern Virginia garnered him the sobriquet "the
rock of South Mountain" because his brigade stalwartly repelled an attack from the Union army at South Mountain in Maryland on September
14, 1862. After questionable service during Thomas "Stonewall" Jackson's famous flank attack on the Union army at Chancellorsville, Colquitt
was sent first to North Carolina and ultimately to South Carolina for much of 1863 and 1864. He participated in the defense of Charleston,
South Carolina, during the long siege of that city.
On February 20, 1864, anxious to atone for what was perceived as poor service at Chancellorsville, Colquitt commanded the forces that won
the Battle of Olustee in Florida. He was called "the hero of Olustee" for the victory that secured Florida and prevented a Union invasion of his
home state. Colquitt returned to Virginia with his brigade for the Petersburg Campaign and helped prevent the seizure of the city in 1864. Late
in the war, Colquitt was again transferred to North Carolina. In January 1865 he commanded at Fort Fisher, North Carolina, but could not
prevent its capitulation. By the end of the war, he had risen to the rank of major general.
Postwar Career
After the war Colquitt resumed his active political career. He ardently opposed Republican Reconstruction policies in the South and served as
Georgia governor from 1876 through 1882. During his public service after the Civil War, Colquitt, along with John B. Gordon and Joseph E.
Brown, formed what was known as the Bourbon Triumvirate, a term used to describe the restoration of the prewar planter class to political
power in the state. Nonetheless, the term did not accurately reflect the policies supported by Colquitt or the other two men, who all sought to
develop Georgia into an industrialized state with an efficient railroad transportation system. As governor, Colquitt was involved in speculation
deals with Gordon in two railroad systems, a textile mill, a fertilizer factory, and coal mines. Despite his pedigree as one of Georgia's most
propertied planters and a member of the antebellum aristocracy, Colquitt clearly advocated for industry and economic change in the South
after the Civil War. Wracked by financial impropriety and a convict-lease scandal, Colquitt's first term as governor saw the loss of several
major figures, including the comptroller general of the state, the state treasurer, and the commissioner of agriculture. Nevertheless, Colquitt
sought and won reelection under a new Georgia constitution in 1880. He served another two years as governor and left office in 1882.
In 1883 Colquitt ran as a Democrat and won a seat in the U.S. Senate. Colquitt was chairman of the powerful committee that oversaw the
post office and post roads during the fifty-third Congress. He was reelected to the Senate in 1888 and continued to serve until his death on
March 26, 1894. Colquitt is buried at Rose Hill Cemetery in Macon.
http://www.georgiaencyclopedia.org/articles/government-politics/alfred-h-colquitt-1824-1894
1/2
11/15/2014
Alfred H. Colquitt (1824-1894) | New Georgia Encyclopedia
Further Reading
Kenneth Coleman, "The Administration of Alfred H. Colquitt as Governor of Georgia" (master's thesis, University of Georgia, 1940).
Lewis Wynne, "The Bourbon Triumvirate: A Reconsideration," Atlanta Historical Journal 24 (1980): 39-55.
Cite This Article
Myers, Barton. "Alfred H. Colquitt (1824-1894)." New Georgia Encyclopedia. 11 August 2014. Web. 15 November 2014.
A program of the Georgia Humanities Council in partnership with the University of Georgia Press, the University System of Georgia/GALILEO, and the Office of the Governor.
Copyright 2004-2014 by the Georgia Humanities Council and the University of Georgia Press. All rights reserved.
Site developed by CSE.
http://www.georgiaencyclopedia.org/articles/government-politics/alfred-h-colquitt-1824-1894
2/2