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Senate Years of Service: 1858-1861 Party: Democrat
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CLINGMAN, Thomas Lanier, a Representative and a Senator from North Carolina; born in Huntsville, N.C., July 27, 1812;
educated by private tutors and in the public schools in Iredell County, N.C.;
graduated from the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill in 1832; studied
law; admitted to the bar in 1834 and began practice in Huntsville, N.C.;
elected to the State house of commons in 1835; moved to Asheville, Buncombe
County, N.C., in 1836; member, State senate 1840; elected as a Whig to the
Twenty-eighth Congress (March 4, 1843-March 3, 1845); unsuccessful candidate
for reelection to the Twenty-ninth Congress; elected as a Whig to the Thirtieth
and to the five succeeding Congresses and served from March 4, 1847, to May 7,
1858, when he resigned to become Senator; chairman, Committee on Public
Expenditures (Thirtieth Congress), Committee on Foreign Affairs (Thirty-fifth
Congress); appointed as a Democrat to the United States Senate on May 6, 1858,
to fill the vacancy caused by the resignation of Asa Biggs; reelected in 1861
and served from May 7, 1858, to March 11, 1861, when he withdrew; expelled from
the Senate on July 11, 1861, for support of the rebellion; chairman, Committee
on Revolutionary Claims (Thirty-fifth Congress); during the Civil War was a
brigadier general in the Confederate Army; explored and measured mountain
peaks; died in Morganton, Burke County, N.C., on November 3, 1897; interment in
Riverside Cemetery, Asheville, N.C.
BibliographyDictionary of American Biography; Jeffrey,
Thomas. Thunder From the Mountains: Thomas Lanier Clingman and the End of Whig
Supremacy in North Carolina.
North Carolina Historical Review 56 (October 1979): 366-95;
Kruman, Marc. Thomas L. Clingman and the Whig Party: A Reconsideration.
North Carolina Historical Review 64 (January 1987): 1-18.
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