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Senate Years of Service: 1854-1861 Party: Democrat
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| Library of Congress |
BROWN, Albert Gallatin, a Representative and a Senator from Mississippi; born in Chester District, S.C.,
May 31, 1813; moved with his parents to Copiah County, Miss., in 1823; attended Mississippi
College, Clinton, Miss., and Jefferson College, Washington, Miss.; studied law; admitted to the bar in
1833 and commenced practice in Gallatin, Miss.; member, State house of representatives
1835-1839; elected as a Democrat to the Twenty-sixth Congress (March 4, 1839-March 3, 1841);
declined to be a candidate for renomination in 1840; judge of the circuit superior court 1842-1843;
Governor of Mississippi 1844-1848; elected to the Thirtieth, Thirty-first, and Thirty-second
Congresses (March 4, 1847-March 3, 1853); chairman, Committee on the District of Columbia
(Thirty-first Congress); was not a candidate for reelection in 1852; elected to the United States
Senate in 1854 to fill the vacancy in the term beginning March 4, 1853; reelected in 1859 and served
from January 7, 1854, until January 12, 1861, when he withdrew; chairman, Committee on the
District of Columbia (Thirty-fourth through Thirty-sixth Congresses), Committee on Enrolled Bills
(Thirty-sixth Congress); during the Civil War entered the Confederate Army as a captain; elected a
member of the Confederate Senate in 1862 and served in the First and Second Confederate
Congresses; engaged in agricultural pursuits; died near Terry, Hinds County, Miss., June 12, 1880;
interment in Greenwood Cemetery, Jackson, Miss.
BibliographyAmerican National Biography; Dictionary of American Biography; McCutchen, Samuel. The Political Career of Albert
Gallatin Brown. Ph.D. dissertation, University of Chicago, 1930; Ranck, James B. Albert
Gallatin Brown: Radical Southern Nationalist. New York: Appleton-Century Company,
1937.
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