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ROUSSEAU, Lovell Harrison, a Representative from Kentucky; born near Stanford, Lincoln County,
Ky., August 4, 1818; attended the common schools; studied law; admitted to the
bar in 1841 and began practice in Bloomfield, Ind.; lawyer, private practice;
member of the Indiana State house of representatives, 1844-1845; captain in the
Mexican War; served in the Indiana state senate, 1847-1849; returned to
Kentucky in 1849 and resumed the practice of law in Louisville; member of the
Kentucky state senate, 1860-1861; served as a colonel, brigadier general, and
major general in the Union Army during the Civil War and resigned November 17,
1865; elected as an Unconditional Unionist to the Thirty-ninth Congress and
served until his resignation on July 21, 1866 ( March 4, 1865-July 21, 1866);
reprimanded by the House of Representatives on July 21, 1866, for his assault
on Representative Grinnell, of Iowa, in the Capitol Building; was subsequently
reelected to fill the vacancy caused by his own resignation (December 3,
1866-March 3, 1867); appointed a brigadier general in the Regular Army with the
brevet rank of major general on March 27, 1867, and assigned to duty in Alaska;
on July 28, 1868, was placed in command of the Department of Louisiana and
served in that capacity until his death in New Orleans, La., January 7, 1869;
interment in Arlington National Cemetery.
BibliographyDawson, Joseph G. General Lovell H. Rousseau and Louisiana
Reconstruction.
Louisiana History 20 (Fall 1979): 373-91.
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