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Senate Years of Service: 1847-1851; 1857-1861 Party: Democrat; Democrat
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DAVIS, Jefferson, (son-in-law of President Zachary Taylor),
a Representative and a Senator from Mississippi; born in what is now
Fairview, Todd County, Ky., June 3, 1808; moved with his parents to a
plantation near Woodville, Wilkinson County, Miss.; attended the country
schools, St. Thomas College, Washington County, Ky., Jefferson College, Adams
County, Miss., Wilkinson County Academy, and Transylvania University,
Lexington, Ky.; graduated from the United States Military Academy, West Point,
N.Y., in 1828; served in the Black Hawk War in 1832; promoted to the rank of
first lieutenant in the First Dragoons in 1833, and served until 1835, when he
resigned; moved to his plantation, Brierfield, in Warren County, Miss., and
engaged in cotton planting; elected as a Democrat to the Twenty-ninth Congress
and served from March 4, 1845, until June 1846, when he resigned to command the
First Regiment of Mississippi Riflemen in the war with Mexico; appointed to the
United States Senate to fill the vacancy caused by the death of Jesse Speight;
subsequently elected and served from August 10, 1847, until September 23, 1851,
when he resigned; chairman, Committee on Military Affairs (Thirtieth through
Thirty-second Congresses); unsuccessful candidate for Governor in 1851;
appointed Secretary of War by President Franklin Pierce 1853-1857; again
elected as a Democrat to the United States Senate and served from March 4,
1857, until January 21, 1861, when he withdrew with other secessionist
Senators; chairman, Committee on Military Affairs and the Militia (Thirty-fifth
and Thirty-sixth Congresses); commissioned major general of the State militia
in January 1861; chosen President of the Confederacy by the Provisional
Congress and inaugurated in Montgomery, Ala., February 18, 1861; elected
President of the Confederacy for a term of six years and inaugurated in
Richmond, Va., February 22, 1862; captured by Union troops in Irwinsville, Ga.,
May 10, 1865; imprisoned in Fortress Monroe, indicted for treason, and was
paroled in the custody of the court in 1867; returned to Mississippi and spent
the remaining years of his life writing; died in New Orleans, La., on December
6, 1889; interment in Metairie Cemetery, New Orleans, La.; reinterment on May
31, 1893, in Hollywood Cemetery, Richmond, Va.; the legal disabilities placed
upon him were removed, and he was posthumously restored to the full rights of
citizenship, effective December 25, 1868, pursuant to a Joint Resolution of
Congress (Public Law 95-466), approved October 17, 1978.
BibliographyAmerican National Biography;
Dictionary of American Biography;
The Yale Biographical Dictionary of American Law; Davis,
Jefferson.
The Papers of Jefferson Davis. Edited by Haskell Monroe, James
McIntosh, Lynda Lasswell Crist, and Mary Seaton Dix. 10 vols. to date. Baton
Rouge: Louisiana State University Press, 1971-; Cooper, William J., Jr.
Jefferson Davis, American. New York: Knopf, 2000.
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