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John H. Reagan

John Henninger Reagan (October 8, 1818 – March 6, 1905) was an American politician from Texas. A Democrat, Reagan resigned from the U.S. House of Representatives when Texas declared secession from the United States and joined the Confederate States of America. He served in the cabinet of Jefferson Davis as Postmaster General.

John H. Reagan
United States Senator
from Texas
In office
March 4, 1887 – June 10, 1891
Preceded bySamuel Maxey
Succeeded byHorace Chilton
Confederate States Secretary of the Treasury
Acting
April 27, 1865 – May 10, 1865
PresidentJefferson Davis
Preceded byGeorge Trenholm
Succeeded byPosition abolished
Confederate States Postmaster General
In office
March 6, 1861 – May 10, 1865
PresidentJefferson Davis
Preceded byPosition established
Succeeded byPosition abolished
Member of the
U.S. House of Representatives
from Texas
In office
March 4, 1875 – March 3, 1887
Preceded byWilliam Herndon
Succeeded byWilliam Martin
Constituency1st district (1875–83)
2nd district (1883–87)
In office
March 4, 1857 – March 3, 1861
Preceded byLemuel Evans
Succeeded byGeorge Whitmore
Constituency1st district
Member of the Texas House of Representatives
from the Nacogdoches district
In office
December 13, 1847 – November 5, 1849
Personal details
Born(1818-10-08)October 8, 1818
Gatlinburg, Tennessee, U.S.
DiedMarch 6, 1905(1905-03-06) (aged 86)
Palestine, Texas, U.S.
Resting placePalestine City Cemetery
Palestine, Texas
Political partyDemocratic
SpouseEdwina Moss Nelms

After the Confederate defeat and his release from prison after the war, Reagan called for cooperation by the southern states with the U.S. government, an unpopular position among most conservative whites. He was elected to Congress in 1874[1][2] and was elected in 1886 by the state legislature as a Democrat from Texas to the U.S. Senate, where he served one term from 1887 to 1891. He resigned from the seat when appointed by the governor as chairman of the Texas Railroad Commission. He was among the founders of the Texas State Historical Association.

Early life edit

 
Reagan as a freshman congressman

John Henninger Reagan was born in 1818 in Gatlinburg, Tennessee, to Timothy Richard and Elizabeth (Lusk) Reagan. His parents were primarily of Irish, English and Scottish descent; his middle name was for his Irish ancestors.

He left Tennessee at age nineteen and traveled to the Republic of Texas, which had become independent from Mexico the year before in 1836. Reagan worked as a surveyor from 1839 to 1843. He bought a property and farmed in Kaufman County until 1851. During the time he worked as a surveyor, he also served as a private tutor to the children of John Marie Durst.[3]

Reagan read the law, served as an apprentice in an established firm, and was licensed to practice in 1846. He opened an office in Buffalo and the same year was elected a probate judge in Henderson County. In 1847 he was elected to the Texas House of Representatives but was defeated for a second term in 1849. He was admitted to the bar in 1848 and practiced in both Buffalo and Palestine, Texas.[1]

Reagan was elected as a district judge in Palestine, serving from 1852 to 1857. His efforts to defeat the American Party (Know-Nothings) resulted in his election to Congress as a Democrat in 1857 from Texas's 1st congressional district.

Reagan was a staunch supporter of slavery. He believed abolition would cause such social problems as to require Southern whites "exterminate the greater portion of the [black] race."[4] He also believed in the federal protections of slavery under the U.S. Constitution as extensions of private property rights, therefore he supported the United States. But when it became clear that Texas would secede, Reagan resigned from Congress on January 15, 1861, and returned home to the state to participate in the rebellion.[2]

He participated in the secession convention at Austin, Texas on January 31, 1861. Chosen as a member of the Provisional Confederate Congress, President Jefferson Davis appointed Reagan to his cabinet as Postmaster General within a month.

Civil War edit

 
The original Confederate Cabinet. L-R: Judah P. Benjamin, Stephen Mallory, Christopher Memminger, Alexander Stephens, LeRoy Pope Walker, Jefferson Davis, John H. Reagan and Robert Toombs.

Reagan was an able administrator, presiding over the only cabinet department described as functioning well during the war.[citation needed] Despite the hostilities, the United States Post Office Department continued operations in the Confederacy until June 1, 1861, when the Confederate service took over its functions.[5]

Reagan sent an agent to Washington, D.C., with letters asking the heads of the United States Post Office Department's various bureaus to work for him. Nearly all did so and brought copies of their records, contracts, account books, etc. "Reagan in effect had stolen the U.S. Post Office," historian William C. Davis later wrote. When President Davis asked his cabinet for the status of their departments, Reagan reported he had his up and running in six weeks. Davis was amazed.[citation needed]

Reagan cut expenses by eliminating costly and little-used routes and forcing railroads that carried the mail to reduce their rates. Despite the problems the war caused, his department managed to turn a profit, "the only post office department in American history to pay its own way," wrote William C. Davis.[citation needed] Reagan was the only member of the cabinet to oppose Robert E. Lee's offensive into Pennsylvania in June–July 1863. He instead supported a proposal to detach the First Corps of the Army of Northern Virginia to reinforce Joseph E. Johnston in Mississippi, to break the Siege of Vicksburg. Historian Shelby Foote noted that, as the only Cabinet member from west of the Mississippi, Reagan was acutely aware of the critical consequences of Vicksburg's capture and control of the river by U.S. forces.

When Davis abandoned Richmond, Virginia on April 2, 1865, shortly before the entry of Army of the Potomac under George G. Meade, Reagan accompanied the president on his flight to the Carolinas. On April 27, Davis made him Secretary of the Treasury after George A. Trenholm's resignation. Reagan served in that capacity until he, Davis, and Texas Governor Francis R. Lubbock were captured near Irwinville, Georgia, on May 10.[2]

Reagan was imprisoned with Confederate Vice President Alexander Stephens at Fort Warren in Boston, Massachusetts. He was held in solitary confinement for twenty-two weeks. On August 11, he wrote an open letter to his fellow Texans urging cooperation with the United States, renunciation of the secession convention, the abolition of slavery, and letting formerly enslaved people vote. He warned that the U.S. government would be forced to impose military rule to enforce these measures if Texans did not voluntarily adopt them. Abolition was underway, and Reagan knew there was support for granting the vote to freedmen. Texans denounced him. After being released from prison later that year, he returned to his home in Palestine in December.[2]

Return to public life edit

 
Reagan in his later years
 
Reagan historical marker outside the Van Zandt County Courthouse in Canton, Texas

To those who felt that the Reconstruction was unduly harsh, Reagan's prescience was hailed—he became known as the "Old Roman," a Texas Cincinnatus. He was part of the successful effort to remove Republican Edmund J. Davis from the governorship in 1874 after Davis attempted to remain in office illegally after losing the election.

That year Reagan was elected to the Congressional seat he held before the war, and he served from March 4, 1875, to March 3, 1887. In 1875, he was a delegate to the convention that wrote a new state constitution for Texas. In Congress, he advocated federal regulation of railroads and helped create the Interstate Commerce Commission. He also served as the first chairman of the Committee on Post Offices and Post Roads.

Elected by the Texas State Legislature to the U.S. Senate in 1887 (serving March 4, 1887, to June 10, 1891), Reagan resigned to become chair of the Railroad Commission of Texas at the behest of his friend, Governor Jim Hogg. He chaired it until 1903, continuing to serve under governors Charles A. Culberson and Joseph D. Sayers. Hogg had run on a platform of state regulation of railroads.[2][1]

 
John H. Reagan State Office Building

Conscious of the importance of recounting and interpreting history, Reagan founded the Texas State Historical Association. He also attended reunions of Confederate veterans in his state. He wrote his Memoirs, With Special Reference to Secession and the Civil War, published in 1905. Later that year, Reagan died of pneumonia at his home in Palestine, the last surviving member of Jefferson Davis' cabinet in the Confederate government. Reagan was buried in East Hill Cemetery in Palestine, Texas.[2]

Legacy and honors edit

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b c "REAGAN, John Henninger, (1818 - 1905)". Biographical Directory of the United States Congress. Retrieved November 27, 2010.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g "REAGAN, JOHN HENNINGER". Texas State Historical Association. Retrieved November 27, 2010.
  3. ^ Raines, Cadwell Walton (1902). Year book for Texas. Gammel Book Company.
  4. ^ "A Century of Lawmaking for a New Nation: U.S. Congressional Documents and Debates, 1774 - 1875". memory.loc.gov. Retrieved December 21, 2017.
  5. ^ Boyd B. Stutler (1962). "The Confederate Postal Service in West Virginia". West Virginia Archives and History. Retrieved November 19, 2010.
  6. ^ "HISD approves name changes for seven schools". ABC 13. May 12, 2016. Retrieved May 12, 2017.
  7. ^ AUSTIN'S JOHN REAGAN HIGH SCHOOL DECIDES ON NEW NAME[permanent dead link]
  8. ^ a b (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on August 21, 2017. Retrieved August 23, 2017.

Further reading edit

  • Anderson, John Nathan. "Money or Nothing: Confederate Postal System Collapse during the Civil War," American Journalism, 30 (Winter 2013), 65–86.
  • Branner, Peter A. The Organization of the Confederate Postoffice Department at Montgomery. Montgomery, Alabama: The Author, 1960.
  • Dietz, August. Confederate States Post-office Department. Richmond, Virginia: Dietz Press, 1962.
  • Dietz, August. The Postal Service of the Confederate States of America. Richmond, Virginia: Dietz Printing, 1929.
  • Garrison, L. R. “Administrative Problems of the Confederate Post Office Department, I.” Southwestern Historical Quarterly 18#2 (1915), pp. 111–141 online
  • Garrison, L. R. “Administrative Problems of the Confederate Post Office Department, II.” Southwestern Historical Quarterly 19#3 (1916), pp. 232–250. online
  • McCaleb, Walter Flavius. "The Organization of the Post-Office Department of the Confederacy." American Historical Review 12#1 (1906), pp. 66–74. online
  • Ben H. Procter. Not Without Honor. Austin: University of Texas Press, 1962.
  • Reagan, John Henninger. Memoirs, With Special Reference to Secession and the Civil War. New York: Neale, 1905.
  • Wirenga, Theron, editor. Official Documents of the Post-office Department of the Confederate States of America. Holland, Michigan: The Editor, 1979. Two volumes.

External links edit

  •   Media related to John Henninger Reagan at Wikimedia Commons
  • John Henninger Reagan from the Handbook of Texas Online
  • John H. Reagan lineage — Smokykin.com

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John Reagan redirects here For other uses see John Reagan disambiguation Senator Reagan redirects here For other uses see Senator Reagan disambiguation John Henninger Reagan October 8 1818 March 6 1905 was an American politician from Texas A Democrat Reagan resigned from the U S House of Representatives when Texas declared secession from the United States and joined the Confederate States of America He served in the cabinet of Jefferson Davis as Postmaster General John H ReaganUnited States Senatorfrom TexasIn office March 4 1887 June 10 1891Preceded bySamuel MaxeySucceeded byHorace ChiltonConfederate States Secretary of the TreasuryActing April 27 1865 May 10 1865PresidentJefferson DavisPreceded byGeorge TrenholmSucceeded byPosition abolishedConfederate States Postmaster GeneralIn office March 6 1861 May 10 1865PresidentJefferson DavisPreceded byPosition establishedSucceeded byPosition abolishedMember of theU S House of Representativesfrom TexasIn office March 4 1875 March 3 1887Preceded byWilliam HerndonSucceeded byWilliam MartinConstituency1st district 1875 83 2nd district 1883 87 In office March 4 1857 March 3 1861Preceded byLemuel EvansSucceeded byGeorge WhitmoreConstituency1st districtMember of the Texas House of Representatives from the Nacogdoches districtIn office December 13 1847 November 5 1849Personal detailsBorn 1818 10 08 October 8 1818Gatlinburg Tennessee U S DiedMarch 6 1905 1905 03 06 aged 86 Palestine Texas U S Resting placePalestine City Cemetery Palestine TexasPolitical partyDemocraticSpouseEdwina Moss NelmsAfter the Confederate defeat and his release from prison after the war Reagan called for cooperation by the southern states with the U S government an unpopular position among most conservative whites He was elected to Congress in 1874 1 2 and was elected in 1886 by the state legislature as a Democrat from Texas to the U S Senate where he served one term from 1887 to 1891 He resigned from the seat when appointed by the governor as chairman of the Texas Railroad Commission He was among the founders of the Texas State Historical Association Contents 1 Early life 2 Civil War 3 Return to public life 4 Legacy and honors 5 See also 6 References 7 Further reading 8 External linksEarly life edit nbsp Reagan as a freshman congressmanJohn Henninger Reagan was born in 1818 in Gatlinburg Tennessee to Timothy Richard and Elizabeth Lusk Reagan His parents were primarily of Irish English and Scottish descent his middle name was for his Irish ancestors He left Tennessee at age nineteen and traveled to the Republic of Texas which had become independent from Mexico the year before in 1836 Reagan worked as a surveyor from 1839 to 1843 He bought a property and farmed in Kaufman County until 1851 During the time he worked as a surveyor he also served as a private tutor to the children of John Marie Durst 3 Reagan read the law served as an apprentice in an established firm and was licensed to practice in 1846 He opened an office in Buffalo and the same year was elected a probate judge in Henderson County In 1847 he was elected to the Texas House of Representatives but was defeated for a second term in 1849 He was admitted to the bar in 1848 and practiced in both Buffalo and Palestine Texas 1 Reagan was elected as a district judge in Palestine serving from 1852 to 1857 His efforts to defeat the American Party Know Nothings resulted in his election to Congress as a Democrat in 1857 from Texas s 1st congressional district Reagan was a staunch supporter of slavery He believed abolition would cause such social problems as to require Southern whites exterminate the greater portion of the black race 4 He also believed in the federal protections of slavery under the U S Constitution as extensions of private property rights therefore he supported the United States But when it became clear that Texas would secede Reagan resigned from Congress on January 15 1861 and returned home to the state to participate in the rebellion 2 He participated in the secession convention at Austin Texas on January 31 1861 Chosen as a member of the Provisional Confederate Congress President Jefferson Davis appointed Reagan to his cabinet as Postmaster General within a month Civil War edit nbsp The original Confederate Cabinet L R Judah P Benjamin Stephen Mallory Christopher Memminger Alexander Stephens LeRoy Pope Walker Jefferson Davis John H Reagan and Robert Toombs Reagan was an able administrator presiding over the only cabinet department described as functioning well during the war citation needed Despite the hostilities the United States Post Office Department continued operations in the Confederacy until June 1 1861 when the Confederate service took over its functions 5 Reagan sent an agent to Washington D C with letters asking the heads of the United States Post Office Department s various bureaus to work for him Nearly all did so and brought copies of their records contracts account books etc Reagan in effect had stolen the U S Post Office historian William C Davis later wrote When President Davis asked his cabinet for the status of their departments Reagan reported he had his up and running in six weeks Davis was amazed citation needed Reagan cut expenses by eliminating costly and little used routes and forcing railroads that carried the mail to reduce their rates Despite the problems the war caused his department managed to turn a profit the only post office department in American history to pay its own way wrote William C Davis citation needed Reagan was the only member of the cabinet to oppose Robert E Lee s offensive into Pennsylvania in June July 1863 He instead supported a proposal to detach the First Corps of the Army of Northern Virginia to reinforce Joseph E Johnston in Mississippi to break the Siege of Vicksburg Historian Shelby Foote noted that as the only Cabinet member from west of the Mississippi Reagan was acutely aware of the critical consequences of Vicksburg s capture and control of the river by U S forces When Davis abandoned Richmond Virginia on April 2 1865 shortly before the entry of Army of the Potomac under George G Meade Reagan accompanied the president on his flight to the Carolinas On April 27 Davis made him Secretary of the Treasury after George A Trenholm s resignation Reagan served in that capacity until he Davis and Texas Governor Francis R Lubbock were captured near Irwinville Georgia on May 10 2 Reagan was imprisoned with Confederate Vice President Alexander Stephens at Fort Warren in Boston Massachusetts He was held in solitary confinement for twenty two weeks On August 11 he wrote an open letter to his fellow Texans urging cooperation with the United States renunciation of the secession convention the abolition of slavery and letting formerly enslaved people vote He warned that the U S government would be forced to impose military rule to enforce these measures if Texans did not voluntarily adopt them Abolition was underway and Reagan knew there was support for granting the vote to freedmen Texans denounced him After being released from prison later that year he returned to his home in Palestine in December 2 Return to public life edit nbsp Reagan in his later years nbsp Reagan historical marker outside the Van Zandt County Courthouse in Canton TexasTo those who felt that the Reconstruction was unduly harsh Reagan s prescience was hailed he became known as the Old Roman a Texas Cincinnatus He was part of the successful effort to remove Republican Edmund J Davis from the governorship in 1874 after Davis attempted to remain in office illegally after losing the election That year Reagan was elected to the Congressional seat he held before the war and he served from March 4 1875 to March 3 1887 In 1875 he was a delegate to the convention that wrote a new state constitution for Texas In Congress he advocated federal regulation of railroads and helped create the Interstate Commerce Commission He also served as the first chairman of the Committee on Post Offices and Post Roads Elected by the Texas State Legislature to the U S Senate in 1887 serving March 4 1887 to June 10 1891 Reagan resigned to become chair of the Railroad Commission of Texas at the behest of his friend Governor Jim Hogg He chaired it until 1903 continuing to serve under governors Charles A Culberson and Joseph D Sayers Hogg had run on a platform of state regulation of railroads 2 1 nbsp John H Reagan State Office BuildingConscious of the importance of recounting and interpreting history Reagan founded the Texas State Historical Association He also attended reunions of Confederate veterans in his state He wrote his Memoirs With Special Reference to Secession and the Civil War published in 1905 Later that year Reagan died of pneumonia at his home in Palestine the last surviving member of Jefferson Davis cabinet in the Confederate government Reagan was buried in East Hill Cemetery in Palestine Texas 2 Legacy and honors editHistorian Ben H Procter included Reagan in his list of the four greatest Texans of the 19th century along with Stephen F Austin Sam Houston and James Stephen Hogg Reagan County Texas was named in his honor 2 Several schools were named for him including John H Reagan Elementary School in Dallas and a Reagan High School in Houston and Austin Reagan High School in Houston was renamed in 2016 to Heights High School by the Houston Independent School District 6 In 2019 Reagan Early College High School in Austin was renamed as Northeast Early College High School 7 The John H Reagan State Office Building on the Texas State Capitol grounds was named in his honor Reagan was commemorated by a statue on the University of Texas at Austin campus On August 21 2017 Reagan s statue in Austin was removed Plans were announced to add it to the Dolph Briscoe Center for American History 8 A park in his hometown of Palestine Texas was named for him A statue of Reagan was installed on the grounds 8 See also editList of United States senators from TexasReferences edit a b c REAGAN John Henninger 1818 1905 Biographical Directory of the United States Congress Retrieved November 27 2010 a b c d e f g REAGAN JOHN HENNINGER Texas State Historical Association Retrieved November 27 2010 Raines Cadwell Walton 1902 Year book for Texas Gammel Book Company A Century of Lawmaking for a New Nation U S Congressional Documents and Debates 1774 1875 memory loc gov Retrieved December 21 2017 Boyd B Stutler 1962 The Confederate Postal Service in West Virginia West Virginia Archives and History Retrieved November 19 2010 HISD approves name changes for seven schools ABC 13 May 12 2016 Retrieved May 12 2017 AUSTIN S JOHN REAGAN HIGH SCHOOL DECIDES ON NEW NAME permanent dead link a b Confederate Statues on Campus PDF Archived from the original PDF on August 21 2017 Retrieved August 23 2017 Further reading editAnderson John Nathan Money or Nothing Confederate Postal System Collapse during the Civil War American Journalism 30 Winter 2013 65 86 Branner Peter A The Organization of the Confederate Postoffice Department at Montgomery Montgomery Alabama The Author 1960 Dietz August Confederate States Post office Department Richmond Virginia Dietz Press 1962 Dietz August The Postal Service of the Confederate States of America Richmond Virginia Dietz Printing 1929 Garrison L R Administrative Problems of the Confederate Post Office Department I Southwestern Historical Quarterly 18 2 1915 pp 111 141 online Garrison L R Administrative Problems of the Confederate Post Office Department II Southwestern Historical Quarterly 19 3 1916 pp 232 250 online McCaleb Walter Flavius The Organization of the Post Office Department of the Confederacy American Historical Review 12 1 1906 pp 66 74 online Ben H Procter Not Without Honor Austin University of Texas Press 1962 Reagan John Henninger Memoirs With Special Reference to Secession and the Civil War New York Neale 1905 Wirenga Theron editor Official Documents of the Post office Department of the Confederate States of America Holland Michigan The Editor 1979 Two volumes United States Congress John H Reagan id R000098 Biographical Directory of the United States Congress Retrieved on 2009 03 19External links edit nbsp Media related to John Henninger Reagan at Wikimedia Commons John Henninger Reagan from the Handbook of Texas Online John H Reagan lineage Smokykin com Portals nbsp American Civil War nbsp Biography nbsp Politics nbsp Texas Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title John H Reagan amp oldid 1197066180, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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