fbpx
Wikipedia

Joseph E. Brown

Joseph Emerson Brown (April 15, 1821 – November 30, 1894), often referred to as Joe Brown, was an American attorney and politician, serving as the 42nd Governor of Georgia from 1857 to 1865, the only governor to serve four terms. He also served as a United States Senator from that state from 1880 to 1891.

Joseph Emerson Brown
United States Senator
from Georgia
In office
May 26, 1880 – March 3, 1891
Preceded byJohn B. Gordon
Succeeded byJohn B. Gordon
Chief Justice of the Georgia Supreme Court
In office
1868–1870
Preceded byHiram B. Warner
Succeeded byOsborne Augustus Lochrane
42nd Governor of Georgia
In office
November 6, 1857 – June 17, 1865
Preceded byHerschel Johnson
Succeeded byJames Johnson
Personal details
Born(1821-04-15)April 15, 1821
Pickens, South Carolina, U.S.
DiedNovember 30, 1894(1894-11-30) (aged 73)
Atlanta, Georgia, U.S.
Political partyWhig, Democratic, Republican
SpouseElizabeth Grisham
ChildrenJoseph Mackey Brown
EducationYale University
ProfessionLawyer, politician
Signature

A former Whig, and a firm believer in slavery and Southern states' rights, Brown was a leading secessionist in 1861, and led his state into the Confederacy. Yet he also defied the Confederate government's wartime policies: he resisted the military draft, believing that local troops should be used only for the defense of Georgia; and denounced Confederate President Jefferson Davis as an incipient tyrant, challenging Confederate impressment of animals and goods to supply the troops, and slaves to work in military encampments and on the lines. Several other governors followed his lead.

After the American Civil War, Brown joined the Republican Party for a time, and was appointed as chief justice of the Supreme Court of Georgia from 1865 to 1870. Later he rejoined the Democrats, became president of the Western and Atlantic Railroad and began to amass great wealth; he was estimated to be a millionaire by 1880. He benefited from using convicts leased from state, county and local governments in his coal mining operations in Dade County. His Dade Coal Company bought other coal and iron companies, and by 1889 was known as the Georgia Mining, Manufacturing and Investment Company. Finally, he was twice elected by the state legislature as a U.S. Senator, serving from 1880 to 1891. During this time he was part of the Bourbon Triumvirate, alongside fellow prominent Georgia politicians John Brown Gordon and Alfred H. Colquitt.

Brown saved the Southern Baptist Theological Seminary financially in the 1870s.[1] An endowed chair in his honor, the Joseph Emerson Brown Chair of Christian Theology, was established at the institution. In 2020, the endowed chair was vacated because of Brown's position on slavery and use of the convict leasing system.[2]

Early life and education edit

Joseph Emerson Brown was born on April 15, 1821, in Pickens County, South Carolina, to Mackey Brown and Sally (Rice) Brown. At a young age he moved with his family to Union County, Georgia.[3] In 1840, he decided to leave the farm and seek an education. With the help of his younger brother James and their father's plow horse, Brown drove a yoke of oxen on a 125-mile trek to an academy near Anderson, South Carolina. There Brown traded the oxen for eight months' board and lodging.[4]

In 1844, Brown moved to Canton, Georgia, where he served as headmaster of the town's academy.[4] During this time, Brown boarded in the home of local businessman and Baptist minister John W. Lewis.[5] Brown paid for his room and board by tutoring the Lewis children. A friendship developed between the men, and Lewis loaned Brown money to continue his legal education.[5]

Brown went to Yale University to study law, then returned to Canton to practice. In 1847 he opened a law office in the county seat, and began to make the connections on which he built his fortune. He married Elizabeth Grisham, daughter of a major land developer. They had several children together.[6]

Brown joined the Democratic Party and was soon elected to the Georgia state senate in 1849 from the developing Etowah River valley.[7] He rapidly rose as a leader in the party. He was elected as state circuit court judge in 1855. He was a presidential elector in 1856.[8]

Governor of Georgia edit

First term edit

In 1857, at the young age of 36, Brown was elected governor of the state. He supported free public education for poor white children, believing that it was key to development of the state. He asked the state legislature to divert a portion of profits from the state-owned railroad, the Western & Atlantic, to help fund the schools.[9] Most planters did not support public education and paid for private tutors and academies for their children. The Western and Atlantic Railroad was mismanaged, and unable to produce the income Brown required to fund his public education proposal. In 1858, Governor Brown appointed John W. Lewis, his landlord and benefactor from Brown's early days in Canton, to the position of Superintendent of the state-owned railroad. Lewis was a successful businessman, and immediately undertook reforms to turn around the failing enterprise. The railroad, said to be in "dire financial straits", required the same strict economic controls Lewis had practiced in his private businesses. In the three years that Lewis ran the railroad, he was able to turn the business into a money-making enterprise, paying $400,000 per year into the state treasury.[10]

Second term edit

Brown easily won re-election in 1859 when he defeated a young Warren Akin Sr. (who was just beginning his political career) by a margin of 60%-40%.[11]

Brown was a slave owner; in 1850, he owned five slaves.[12] By 1860 when he was governor, he owned a total of 19 slaves and several farms in Cherokee County, Georgia.[13]

Brown became a strong supporter of secession from the United States after Abraham Lincoln's election and South Carolina's secession in 1860. He feared that Lincoln would abolish slavery. Considering it the basis of the South's lucrative plantation economy, he called upon Georgians to oppose the efforts to end slavery:

What will be the result to the institution of slavery, which will follow submission to the inauguration and administration of Mr. Lincoln as the President ... it will be the total abolition of slavery ... I do not doubt, therefore, that submission to the administration of Mr. Lincoln will result in the final abolition of slavery. If we fail to resist now, we will never again have the strength to resist.

— Joseph E. Brown, December 7, 1860, emphasis added.[14]

Once the Confederacy was established,[15] Brown, a states' rights advocate, spoke out against expansion of the Confederate central government's powers. He denounced President Jefferson Davis in particular. Brown tried to stop Colonel Francis Bartow from taking Georgia troops "out of the state" to the First Battle of Bull Run. Though he objected most strenuously to military conscription by the Confederate government in Richmond,[16] Brown also protested the army's impressment of goods and slave labor, and was critical of Confederate tax and blockade-running policies. In time, other Confederate governors followed Brown's example, undermining the war effort and sapping the Confederacy of vital resources.[17][18][19]

Third term edit

In 1861, Brown was up for re-election to a third term. It was at this time, during the re-election campaign, that Western & Atlantic Railroad Superintendent John Wood Lewis, and old friend of the governor, decided to resign from the railroad. The timing could not have been worse. Fearing that Lewis' resignation would be interpreted negatively, the governor requested that Lewis keep the resignation a secret; but the resignation letter was leaked to the press, causing a rift between the two old friends. Brown wrote to Lewis, saying: "I did not deserve this at your hands, and I confess I felt it keenly...I do not attribute improper motives, but only say the coincidence was an unfortunate one for me".[20] The two friends eventually smoothed over the incident, and Governor Brown was subsequently re-elected. On April 7, 1862, months after Lewis left the railroad, Governor Brown appointed Lewis to a vacant seat in the Confederate Senate from Georgia in the 1st Confederate States Congress, 1862–1863. Robert Toombs, former Confederate States Secretary of State, had created the vacancy when he declined his election at the Congress's opening session on February 18.[21]

Capture of Milledgeville - the state capital edit

In 1864, after the fall of Atlanta, Union General William Tecumseh Sherman began his March to the Sea. On the route from Atlanta to Savannah the left wing of Sherman's army entered the city of Milledgeville, then Georgia's state capital. As U.S. troops closed in on the city, and with the fall of the capital imminent, Governor Brown ordered Quartermaster General Ira Roe Foster to remove the state records. The task proved to be difficult, as it was undertaken in the midst of chaos.

WAR BETWEEN THE STATES - 1864

Gov. Brown, thinking first of the valuable and perishable State property, ordered Gen. Ira Foster, Georgia's quartermaster general (who was always prompt and efficient), to secure its removal. Some of the books and other similar property were stored in the Lunatic Asylum, three miles out of town. A train of cars was held at the depot to carry off other State property, and Gen. Foster made herculean efforts to carry out the Governor's orders, but, such was the general terror and the rush to leave town, it was next to impossible to procure labor.

When the Governor saw the condition of affairs, he went to the penitentiary, had the convicts drawn up in a line, and made them a short speech; he appealed to their patriotic pride and offered pardon to each one who would help remove the State property and then enlist for the defense of Georgia. They responded promptly, were put under the command of Gen. Foster, and did valuable service in loading the train. When that was done each one was given a suit of gray, and a gun, and they were formed into a military company of which one of their number was captain. They were ordered to report for duty to Gen. Wayne, who was commanding a small battalion of militia at Milledgeville and also the Georgia cadets from the Military Institute at Marietta.

—FRANCES LETCHER MITCHELL.[22]

After the loss of Atlanta, Brown withdrew the state's militia from the Confederate forces to harvest crops for the state and the army.[23] When Union troops under Sherman overran much of Georgia in 1864, Brown called for an end to the war.

 
Burning of the penitentiary at Milledgeville, GA by the Union Army (November 23, 1864)

Post-war imprisonment to Republican judgeship edit

After the war, Brown was briefly held as a political prisoner in Washington, D.C. He supported President Andrew Johnson's Reconstruction policies, joining the Republican Party for a time.

Brown was a delegate to the 1868 Republican National Convention.[24] As a Republican, Brown was appointed as chief justice of the Supreme Court of Georgia, serving from 1868 to 1870.

Rejoining the Democratic Party edit

Brown resigned as judge when offered the presidency of the Western and Atlantic Railroad. In this role, Brown opposed efforts by a committee to revise the state constitution to establish uniform rates for freight over the multiple railroad lines in the state.[25][26]

After Reconstruction ended, Brown rejoined the Democratic Party. He was elected to the U.S. Senate in 1880 by the state legislature, as was custom by the US constitution and state laws of the time. Soon after his election to the Senate, Brown became the first Democratic Party official in Georgia to support public education for all white children. The Republican Reconstruction-era legislature was the first to establish public education in the state but the succeeding post-Reconstruction, white-dominated legislature abandoned it. Brown recommended that railroad fees be used to support it financially. Prior to this, only the elite who could afford tutors or private academies had their children formally educated.[3]

Later political service and business career edit

Brown was first elected to the United States Senate by the state legislature in 1880, taking office on May 26, 1880. He was re-elected in 1885, and retired in 1891 due to poor health.[3]

While Brown's political supporters claimed that he "came to Atlanta on foot with less than a dollar in his pocket after the war and ... made himself all that he is by honest and laborious methods",[27] most of his enterprises stemmed from his political connections. He amassed a fortune, in part through the use of convicts leased from state, county and local government in his coal mining operations in Dade County.[28] His use of leased convict labor began in 1874 and continued until his death in 1894, a period that coincided with "the high tide of the convict lease system in Georgia".[28]

The convict lease system was first authorized during the period of Reconstruction, under military governor and Union general Thomas H. Ruger, who issued the first convict lease in April 1868.[29] It was expanded during the post-Reconstruction era, when the Democratic-dominated state legislature passed new laws criminalizing a range of behavior. State prisoners who were unable to pay fines, levied as part of their conviction, faced the possibility of being leased out by the state, as convict labor.

In 1880 Brown, whose fortune was estimated conservatively at one million dollars, netted $98,000 (~$2.56 million in 2022) from the Dade Coal Company. By 1886, Dade Coal was a parent company, owning Walker Iron and Coal, Rising Fawn Iron, Chattanooga Iron, and Rogers Railroad and Ore Banks, and leasing Castle Rock Coal Company. An 1889 reorganization resulted in the formation of the Georgia Mining, Manufacturing and Investment Company. This rested largely on a foundation of convict labor.[29] The system has been likened by journalist Douglas A. Blackmon to "slavery by another name," in his book by that title.[30]

A legislative committee visited Brown's mines during the same year that Brown sold them. They reported that the convict laborers were "in the very worst condition ... actually being starved and have not sufficient clothing ... treated with great cruelty."[31] Of particular note to the visiting officials was that the mine claimed to have replaced whipping with the water cure torture—in which water was poured into the nostrils and lungs of the prisoners—because it allowed miners to "go to work right away" after punishment.[31] However, it was not established if these practices were in place at the time that Brown sold the mine, or were instituted by the mine's new owner Joel Hurt.

Death and legacy edit

 
Statue of Georgia Civil War Governor Joseph E. Brown and his wife

Joseph E. Brown died on November 30, 1894, in Atlanta, Georgia. He was honored by lying in state in the state capitol.[32]

His tombstone is in Oakland Cemetery.[33] In 1928, a memorial statue of Brown and his wife was installed on the grounds of the State Capitol.[34]

His son, Joseph Mackey Brown, would also become governor of Georgia (twice).

Joseph E. Brown Hall on the campus of the University of Georgia in Athens is named in his honor.[35] The building was completed in 1932.

Joseph Emerson Brown Park in Marietta, Georgia is named for him.[36]

Emerson, Georgia, referencing the governor's middle name, is named in his honor.[37]

In fiction edit

In her novel Gone with the Wind, Margaret Mitchell made reference to Governor Brown, and the reception that "Joe Brown's Pets" received during General Sherman's march through Georgia in 1864. Brown had tried to keep Georgia troops in the state for local defense. Mitchell wrote:

Yes, Governor Brown's darlings are likely to smell powder at last, and I imagine most of them will be much surprised. Certainly they never expected to see action. The Governor as good as promised them they wouldn't. Well, that's a good joke on them. They thought they had bomb proofs because the Governor stood up to even Jeff Davis and refused to send them to Virginia. Said they were needed for the defense of their state. Who'd have ever thought the war would come to their own back yard and they'd really have to defend their state?[38]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Southern Seminary (September 14, 2018). "Albert Mohler - Ask Anything Live (Episode 8)" – via YouTube.
  2. ^ "Southern Seminary retains names, vacates chair, establishes endowment".
  3. ^ a b c Chapter XIX: "Governor Brown of Georgia", in: Smith, Elsie Haws. (1954). More About those Rices. Edmund Rice (1638), Association & Meador Publishers, Boston.
  4. ^ a b Wright, G. Richard (Winter 2009). "New Men in the Old South: Joseph E. Brown and his Associates in Georgia's Etowah Valley". Georgia Historical Quarterly. 93 (4). Retrieved June 20, 2016.
  5. ^ a b Ezra J. Warner Jr. (September 1, 1975). Biographical Register of the Confederate Congress. LSU Press. pp. 152–153. ISBN 978-0-8071-4942-3.
  6. ^ "Cabinet Card of Brown Family members, Atlanta, Fulton County, Georgia, ca. 1895". Vanishing Georgia. Digital Library of Georgia. Retrieved June 20, 2016.
  7. ^ Wright, G. Richard; Wheeler, Kenneth H. (2009). "New Men in the Old South: Joseph E. Brown and his Associates in Georgia's Etowah Valley". Georgia Historical Quarterly. 93 (4): 363–387. Retrieved February 19, 2018.
  8. ^ The National Cyclopaedia of American Biography. Vol. I. New York, N.Y.: James T. White & Company. 1898. p. 227 – via Google Books.
  9. ^ Carole E. Scott, "Joseph E. Brown" January 24, 2018, at the Wayback Machine, About North Georgia website, 2016; accessed December 16, 2016
  10. ^ Lucian Lamar Knight (1917). The period of expansion or Georgia in the process of growth, 1802-1857 (continued); The period of division or Georgia in the assertion of state rights, 1857-1872; The period of rehabilitation or Georgia's rise from the ashes of war, 1872-1916; Georgia miscellanies. Lewis Publishing Company. p. 717.
  11. ^ "Akin, Warren". OurCampaigns.com. Retrieved November 24, 2018.
  12. ^ "1850 United States Census, Slave Schedules", United States census, 1850;.
  13. ^ "1860 United States Census, Slave Schedules", United States census, 1860; page 4, 8,.
  14. ^ Secession Debated. pp. 145–159. Retrieved September 8, 2015.
  15. ^ Georgia in the American Civil War
  16. ^ James M. McPherson (December 11, 2003). The Illustrated Battle Cry of Freedom: The Civil War Era. Oxford University Press. p. 433. ISBN 978-0-19-974390-2.
  17. ^ Carlson, David (2014). "Remember thy Pledge!: Religious and Reformist Influences on Joseph E. Brown's Opposition to Confederate Conscription". Georgia Historical Quarterly. 98 (1/2). Retrieved June 14, 2016.
  18. ^ "Correspondence between Governor Brown and President Davis, on the Constitutionality of the Conscription Act". Documenting the American South (Project). Digital Library of Georgia. Retrieved June 14, 2016.
  19. ^ Boney, F.N. (2002). "Joseph E. Brown (1821-1894)". New Georgia Encyclopedia.
  20. ^ Joseph Howard Parks (March 1, 1999). Joseph E. Brown of Georgia. LSU Press. pp. 164–165. ISBN 978-0-8071-2465-9.
  21. ^ "John W. Lewis, Senate in Georgia". Fayetteville Weekly Observer Fayetteville, N.C. March 24, 1862. Retrieved January 19, 2020.
  22. ^ Georgia Land and People.(1919) p.158 at archive.org
  23. ^ "Reconstruction". www.aboutnorthgeorgia.com.
  24. ^ Abbott 1986, p. 173.
  25. ^ Brown, Joseph E. "Argument of ex-Governor Joseph E. Brown, President of the Western and Atlantic Railroad Company, before the Revision Committee of the Constitutional Convention, on the question of the railroad interests of Georgia, and more especially on the injuries that would result to the railroads and the people from the policy of establishing uniform rates on all freights over our railroad lines". Digital Library of Georgia. Retrieved June 14, 2016.
  26. ^ "Western & Atlantic Railroad's Engine No. 1, "Gov. Jos. E. Brown," built in Atlanta, Georgia. Photograph inscribed and dated by the photographer, J.C. Stokely, October 12, 1888". AJCP551-19b, Atlanta Journal Constitution Photographic Archives. Special Collections and Archives, Georgia State University Library. Digital Library of Georgia. Retrieved June 14, 2016.
  27. ^ Franklin M. Garrett, Atlanta and Environs, I:952
  28. ^ a b Kenneth M. Stampp, The Era of Reconstruction, 1865-1877, 1965, p. 161
  29. ^ a b Matthew J. Mancini, "Race, Economics, and the Abandonment of the Convict Lease System," The Journal of Negro History, Vol. 63, No. 4 [October 1978], p. 342
  30. ^ Douglas A. Blackmon, Slavery By Another Name: The Re-Enslavement of Black Americans from the Civil War to World War II (2008)
  31. ^ a b Blackmon, Slavery By Another Name, (2008), p. 347
  32. ^ . Atlanta History Photograph Collection, Atlanta History Center. Digital Library of Georgia. Archived from the original on June 24, 2016. Retrieved June 14, 2016.
  33. ^ . Atlanta History Photograph Collection, Atlanta History Center. Digital Library of Georgia. Archived from the original on June 24, 2016. Retrieved June 14, 2016.
  34. ^ "[Photograph of unveiling of statue of Governor Joseph E. Brown, Atlanta, Fulton County, Georgia, 1928]". Vanishing Georgia. Digital Library of Georgia. Retrieved June 14, 2016.
  35. ^ "Joe Brown Hall (University of Georgia)". Digital Library of Georgia. Retrieved June 14, 2016.
  36. ^ Seibert, David. "Joseph Emerson Brown Park". GeorgiaInfo: an Online Georgia Almanac. Digital Library of Georgia. Retrieved November 9, 2016.
  37. ^ "Emerson historical marker". Digital Library of Georgia. Retrieved June 14, 2016.
  38. ^ Margaret Mitchell (April 13, 2014). Gone with the Wind. Hayrapetyan Brothers. p. 191. GGKEY:SA26KUXWEFG.

Works cited edit

Bibliography edit

  • Blackmon, Douglas A. Slavery by Another Name: The Re-Enslavement of Black Americans from the Civil War to World War II. New York : Doubleday, 2008. ISBN 978-0385506250
  • Fielder, Herbert. A sketch of the life and times and speeches of Joseph E. Brown. Springfield, Mass.: Springfield Printing Company, 1883.
  • Hill, Louise Biles. Joseph E. Brown and the Confederacy. Westport, Conn: Greenwood Press 1972. ISBN 978-0-8371-5722-1
  • Lichtenstein, Alex. Twice the Work of Free Labor: The Political Economy of Convict Labor in the New South. New York: Verso, 1996. ISBN 978-1859840863
  • Mancini, Matthew J. One Dies, Get Another: Convict Leasing in the American South, 1866-1928. Columbia: University of South Carolina Press, 1996. ISBN 978-1570030833
  • Parks, Joseph Howard. Joseph E. Brown of Georgia. Southern biography series. Baton Rouge: Louisiana State University Press 1977. ISBN 978-0-8071-0189-6
  • Roberts, Derrell C. Joseph E. Brown and the politics of Reconstruction. Southern historical publications, no. 16. University: University of Alabama Press 1973. ISBN 978-0-8173-5222-6
  • Scaife, William R., and William Harris Bragg. Joe Brown's pets: the Georgia Militia, 1861-1865. Macon, Ga: Mercer University Press 2004. ISBN 978-0-86554-883-1
  • Wright, G. Richard and Kenneth H. Wheeler, "New Men in the Old South: Joseph E. Brown and his Associates in Georgia's Etowah Valley," Georgia Historical Quarterly 93:4 (Winter, 2009)

External links edit

  •   This article incorporates public domain material from the Biographical Directory of the United States Congress
  • Joseph E. Brown (1821-1894), New Georgia Encyclopedia
  • Joseph E. Brown Papers at Stuart A. Rose Manuscript, Archives, & Rare Book Library, Emory University
Party political offices
Preceded by Democratic nominee for Governor of Georgia
1857, 1859
Vacant
Title next held by
John Brown Gordon
Political offices
Preceded by Governor of Georgia
1857–1865
Succeeded by
Legal offices
Preceded by Chief Justice of the Supreme Court of Georgia
1868–1870
Succeeded by
U.S. Senate
Preceded by U.S. senator (Class 3) from Georgia
1880–1891
Served alongside: Benjamin H. Hill, Middleton P. Barrow, Alfred H. Colquitt
Succeeded by

joseph, brown, this, article, about, georgia, governor, actor, comedian, brown, joseph, emerson, brown, april, 1821, november, 1894, often, referred, brown, american, attorney, politician, serving, 42nd, governor, georgia, from, 1857, 1865, only, governor, ser. This article is about the Georgia governor For the actor and comedian see Joe E Brown Joseph Emerson Brown April 15 1821 November 30 1894 often referred to as Joe Brown was an American attorney and politician serving as the 42nd Governor of Georgia from 1857 to 1865 the only governor to serve four terms He also served as a United States Senator from that state from 1880 to 1891 Joseph Emerson BrownUnited States Senatorfrom GeorgiaIn office May 26 1880 March 3 1891Preceded byJohn B GordonSucceeded byJohn B GordonChief Justice of the Georgia Supreme CourtIn office 1868 1870Preceded byHiram B WarnerSucceeded byOsborne Augustus Lochrane42nd Governor of GeorgiaIn office November 6 1857 June 17 1865Preceded byHerschel JohnsonSucceeded byJames JohnsonPersonal detailsBorn 1821 04 15 April 15 1821Pickens South Carolina U S DiedNovember 30 1894 1894 11 30 aged 73 Atlanta Georgia U S Political partyWhig Democratic RepublicanSpouseElizabeth GrishamChildrenJoseph Mackey BrownEducationYale UniversityProfessionLawyer politicianSignatureA former Whig and a firm believer in slavery and Southern states rights Brown was a leading secessionist in 1861 and led his state into the Confederacy Yet he also defied the Confederate government s wartime policies he resisted the military draft believing that local troops should be used only for the defense of Georgia and denounced Confederate President Jefferson Davis as an incipient tyrant challenging Confederate impressment of animals and goods to supply the troops and slaves to work in military encampments and on the lines Several other governors followed his lead After the American Civil War Brown joined the Republican Party for a time and was appointed as chief justice of the Supreme Court of Georgia from 1865 to 1870 Later he rejoined the Democrats became president of the Western and Atlantic Railroad and began to amass great wealth he was estimated to be a millionaire by 1880 He benefited from using convicts leased from state county and local governments in his coal mining operations in Dade County His Dade Coal Company bought other coal and iron companies and by 1889 was known as the Georgia Mining Manufacturing and Investment Company Finally he was twice elected by the state legislature as a U S Senator serving from 1880 to 1891 During this time he was part of the Bourbon Triumvirate alongside fellow prominent Georgia politicians John Brown Gordon and Alfred H Colquitt Brown saved the Southern Baptist Theological Seminary financially in the 1870s 1 An endowed chair in his honor the Joseph Emerson Brown Chair of Christian Theology was established at the institution In 2020 the endowed chair was vacated because of Brown s position on slavery and use of the convict leasing system 2 Contents 1 Early life and education 2 Governor of Georgia 2 1 First term 2 2 Second term 2 3 Third term 3 Capture of Milledgeville the state capital 4 Post war imprisonment to Republican judgeship 4 1 Rejoining the Democratic Party 5 Later political service and business career 6 Death and legacy 7 In fiction 8 See also 9 References 10 Works cited 11 Bibliography 12 External linksEarly life and education editJoseph Emerson Brown was born on April 15 1821 in Pickens County South Carolina to Mackey Brown and Sally Rice Brown At a young age he moved with his family to Union County Georgia 3 In 1840 he decided to leave the farm and seek an education With the help of his younger brother James and their father s plow horse Brown drove a yoke of oxen on a 125 mile trek to an academy near Anderson South Carolina There Brown traded the oxen for eight months board and lodging 4 In 1844 Brown moved to Canton Georgia where he served as headmaster of the town s academy 4 During this time Brown boarded in the home of local businessman and Baptist minister John W Lewis 5 Brown paid for his room and board by tutoring the Lewis children A friendship developed between the men and Lewis loaned Brown money to continue his legal education 5 Brown went to Yale University to study law then returned to Canton to practice In 1847 he opened a law office in the county seat and began to make the connections on which he built his fortune He married Elizabeth Grisham daughter of a major land developer They had several children together 6 Brown joined the Democratic Party and was soon elected to the Georgia state senate in 1849 from the developing Etowah River valley 7 He rapidly rose as a leader in the party He was elected as state circuit court judge in 1855 He was a presidential elector in 1856 8 Governor of Georgia editFirst term edit In 1857 at the young age of 36 Brown was elected governor of the state He supported free public education for poor white children believing that it was key to development of the state He asked the state legislature to divert a portion of profits from the state owned railroad the Western amp Atlantic to help fund the schools 9 Most planters did not support public education and paid for private tutors and academies for their children The Western and Atlantic Railroad was mismanaged and unable to produce the income Brown required to fund his public education proposal In 1858 Governor Brown appointed John W Lewis his landlord and benefactor from Brown s early days in Canton to the position of Superintendent of the state owned railroad Lewis was a successful businessman and immediately undertook reforms to turn around the failing enterprise The railroad said to be in dire financial straits required the same strict economic controls Lewis had practiced in his private businesses In the three years that Lewis ran the railroad he was able to turn the business into a money making enterprise paying 400 000 per year into the state treasury 10 Second term edit Brown easily won re election in 1859 when he defeated a young Warren Akin Sr who was just beginning his political career by a margin of 60 40 11 Brown was a slave owner in 1850 he owned five slaves 12 By 1860 when he was governor he owned a total of 19 slaves and several farms in Cherokee County Georgia 13 Brown became a strong supporter of secession from the United States after Abraham Lincoln s election and South Carolina s secession in 1860 He feared that Lincoln would abolish slavery Considering it the basis of the South s lucrative plantation economy he called upon Georgians to oppose the efforts to end slavery What will be the result to the institution of slavery which will follow submission to the inauguration and administration of Mr Lincoln as the President it will be the total abolition of slavery I do not doubt therefore that submission to the administration of Mr Lincoln will result in the final abolition of slavery If we fail to resist now we will never again have the strength to resist Joseph E Brown December 7 1860 emphasis added 14 Once the Confederacy was established 15 Brown a states rights advocate spoke out against expansion of the Confederate central government s powers He denounced President Jefferson Davis in particular Brown tried to stop Colonel Francis Bartow from taking Georgia troops out of the state to the First Battle of Bull Run Though he objected most strenuously to military conscription by the Confederate government in Richmond 16 Brown also protested the army s impressment of goods and slave labor and was critical of Confederate tax and blockade running policies In time other Confederate governors followed Brown s example undermining the war effort and sapping the Confederacy of vital resources 17 18 19 Third term edit In 1861 Brown was up for re election to a third term It was at this time during the re election campaign that Western amp Atlantic Railroad Superintendent John Wood Lewis and old friend of the governor decided to resign from the railroad The timing could not have been worse Fearing that Lewis resignation would be interpreted negatively the governor requested that Lewis keep the resignation a secret but the resignation letter was leaked to the press causing a rift between the two old friends Brown wrote to Lewis saying I did not deserve this at your hands and I confess I felt it keenly I do not attribute improper motives but only say the coincidence was an unfortunate one for me 20 The two friends eventually smoothed over the incident and Governor Brown was subsequently re elected On April 7 1862 months after Lewis left the railroad Governor Brown appointed Lewis to a vacant seat in the Confederate Senate from Georgia in the 1st Confederate States Congress 1862 1863 Robert Toombs former Confederate States Secretary of State had created the vacancy when he declined his election at the Congress s opening session on February 18 21 Capture of Milledgeville the state capital editIn 1864 after the fall of Atlanta Union General William Tecumseh Sherman began his March to the Sea On the route from Atlanta to Savannah the left wing of Sherman s army entered the city of Milledgeville then Georgia s state capital As U S troops closed in on the city and with the fall of the capital imminent Governor Brown ordered Quartermaster General Ira Roe Foster to remove the state records The task proved to be difficult as it was undertaken in the midst of chaos WAR BETWEEN THE STATES 1864 Gov Brown thinking first of the valuable and perishable State property ordered Gen Ira Foster Georgia s quartermaster general who was always prompt and efficient to secure its removal Some of the books and other similar property were stored in the Lunatic Asylum three miles out of town A train of cars was held at the depot to carry off other State property and Gen Foster made herculean efforts to carry out the Governor s orders but such was the general terror and the rush to leave town it was next to impossible to procure labor When the Governor saw the condition of affairs he went to the penitentiary had the convicts drawn up in a line and made them a short speech he appealed to their patriotic pride and offered pardon to each one who would help remove the State property and then enlist for the defense of Georgia They responded promptly were put under the command of Gen Foster and did valuable service in loading the train When that was done each one was given a suit of gray and a gun and they were formed into a military company of which one of their number was captain They were ordered to report for duty to Gen Wayne who was commanding a small battalion of militia at Milledgeville and also the Georgia cadets from the Military Institute at Marietta FRANCES LETCHER MITCHELL 22 After the loss of Atlanta Brown withdrew the state s militia from the Confederate forces to harvest crops for the state and the army 23 When Union troops under Sherman overran much of Georgia in 1864 Brown called for an end to the war nbsp Burning of the penitentiary at Milledgeville GA by the Union Army November 23 1864 Post war imprisonment to Republican judgeship editAfter the war Brown was briefly held as a political prisoner in Washington D C He supported President Andrew Johnson s Reconstruction policies joining the Republican Party for a time Brown was a delegate to the 1868 Republican National Convention 24 As a Republican Brown was appointed as chief justice of the Supreme Court of Georgia serving from 1868 to 1870 Rejoining the Democratic Party edit Brown resigned as judge when offered the presidency of the Western and Atlantic Railroad In this role Brown opposed efforts by a committee to revise the state constitution to establish uniform rates for freight over the multiple railroad lines in the state 25 26 After Reconstruction ended Brown rejoined the Democratic Party He was elected to the U S Senate in 1880 by the state legislature as was custom by the US constitution and state laws of the time Soon after his election to the Senate Brown became the first Democratic Party official in Georgia to support public education for all white children The Republican Reconstruction era legislature was the first to establish public education in the state but the succeeding post Reconstruction white dominated legislature abandoned it Brown recommended that railroad fees be used to support it financially Prior to this only the elite who could afford tutors or private academies had their children formally educated 3 Later political service and business career editBrown was first elected to the United States Senate by the state legislature in 1880 taking office on May 26 1880 He was re elected in 1885 and retired in 1891 due to poor health 3 While Brown s political supporters claimed that he came to Atlanta on foot with less than a dollar in his pocket after the war and made himself all that he is by honest and laborious methods 27 most of his enterprises stemmed from his political connections He amassed a fortune in part through the use of convicts leased from state county and local government in his coal mining operations in Dade County 28 His use of leased convict labor began in 1874 and continued until his death in 1894 a period that coincided with the high tide of the convict lease system in Georgia 28 The convict lease system was first authorized during the period of Reconstruction under military governor and Union general Thomas H Ruger who issued the first convict lease in April 1868 29 It was expanded during the post Reconstruction era when the Democratic dominated state legislature passed new laws criminalizing a range of behavior State prisoners who were unable to pay fines levied as part of their conviction faced the possibility of being leased out by the state as convict labor In 1880 Brown whose fortune was estimated conservatively at one million dollars netted 98 000 2 56 million in 2022 from the Dade Coal Company By 1886 Dade Coal was a parent company owning Walker Iron and Coal Rising Fawn Iron Chattanooga Iron and Rogers Railroad and Ore Banks and leasing Castle Rock Coal Company An 1889 reorganization resulted in the formation of the Georgia Mining Manufacturing and Investment Company This rested largely on a foundation of convict labor 29 The system has been likened by journalist Douglas A Blackmon to slavery by another name in his book by that title 30 A legislative committee visited Brown s mines during the same year that Brown sold them They reported that the convict laborers were in the very worst condition actually being starved and have not sufficient clothing treated with great cruelty 31 Of particular note to the visiting officials was that the mine claimed to have replaced whipping with the water cure torture in which water was poured into the nostrils and lungs of the prisoners because it allowed miners to go to work right away after punishment 31 However it was not established if these practices were in place at the time that Brown sold the mine or were instituted by the mine s new owner Joel Hurt Death and legacy edit nbsp Statue of Georgia Civil War Governor Joseph E Brown and his wifeJoseph E Brown died on November 30 1894 in Atlanta Georgia He was honored by lying in state in the state capitol 32 His tombstone is in Oakland Cemetery 33 In 1928 a memorial statue of Brown and his wife was installed on the grounds of the State Capitol 34 His son Joseph Mackey Brown would also become governor of Georgia twice Joseph E Brown Hall on the campus of the University of Georgia in Athens is named in his honor 35 The building was completed in 1932 Joseph Emerson Brown Park in Marietta Georgia is named for him 36 Emerson Georgia referencing the governor s middle name is named in his honor 37 In fiction editIn her novel Gone with the Wind Margaret Mitchell made reference to Governor Brown and the reception that Joe Brown s Pets received during General Sherman s march through Georgia in 1864 Brown had tried to keep Georgia troops in the state for local defense Mitchell wrote Yes Governor Brown s darlings are likely to smell powder at last and I imagine most of them will be much surprised Certainly they never expected to see action The Governor as good as promised them they wouldn t Well that s a good joke on them They thought they had bomb proofs because the Governor stood up to even Jeff Davis and refused to send them to Virginia Said they were needed for the defense of their state Who d have ever thought the war would come to their own back yard and they d really have to defend their state 38 See also edit nbsp American Civil War portal nbsp Georgia U S state portalAmerican Civil War Ira Roe Foster Confederate Quartermaster General of GeorgiaReferences edit Southern Seminary September 14 2018 Albert Mohler Ask Anything Live Episode 8 via YouTube Southern Seminary retains names vacates chair establishes endowment a b c Chapter XIX Governor Brown of Georgia in Smith Elsie Haws 1954 More About those Rices Edmund Rice 1638 Association amp Meador Publishers Boston a b Wright G Richard Winter 2009 New Men in the Old South Joseph E Brown and his Associates in Georgia s Etowah Valley Georgia Historical Quarterly 93 4 Retrieved June 20 2016 a b Ezra J Warner Jr September 1 1975 Biographical Register of the Confederate Congress LSU Press pp 152 153 ISBN 978 0 8071 4942 3 Cabinet Card of Brown Family members Atlanta Fulton County Georgia ca 1895 Vanishing Georgia Digital Library of Georgia Retrieved June 20 2016 Wright G Richard Wheeler Kenneth H 2009 New Men in the Old South Joseph E Brown and his Associates in Georgia s Etowah Valley Georgia Historical Quarterly 93 4 363 387 Retrieved February 19 2018 The National Cyclopaedia of American Biography Vol I New York N Y James T White amp Company 1898 p 227 via Google Books Carole E Scott Joseph E Brown Archived January 24 2018 at the Wayback Machine About North Georgia website 2016 accessed December 16 2016 Lucian Lamar Knight 1917 The period of expansion or Georgia in the process of growth 1802 1857 continued The period of division or Georgia in the assertion of state rights 1857 1872 The period of rehabilitation or Georgia s rise from the ashes of war 1872 1916 Georgia miscellanies Lewis Publishing Company p 717 Akin Warren OurCampaigns com Retrieved November 24 2018 1850 United States Census Slave Schedules United States census 1850 1860 United States Census Slave Schedules United States census 1860 page 4 8 Secession Debated pp 145 159 Retrieved September 8 2015 Georgia in the American Civil War James M McPherson December 11 2003 The Illustrated Battle Cry of Freedom The Civil War Era Oxford University Press p 433 ISBN 978 0 19 974390 2 Carlson David 2014 Remember thy Pledge Religious and Reformist Influences on Joseph E Brown s Opposition to Confederate Conscription Georgia Historical Quarterly 98 1 2 Retrieved June 14 2016 Correspondence between Governor Brown and President Davis on the Constitutionality of the Conscription Act Documenting the American South Project Digital Library of Georgia Retrieved June 14 2016 Boney F N 2002 Joseph E Brown 1821 1894 New Georgia Encyclopedia Joseph Howard Parks March 1 1999 Joseph E Brown of Georgia LSU Press pp 164 165 ISBN 978 0 8071 2465 9 John W Lewis Senate in Georgia Fayetteville Weekly Observer Fayetteville N C March 24 1862 Retrieved January 19 2020 Georgia Land and People 1919 p 158 at archive org Reconstruction www aboutnorthgeorgia com Abbott 1986 p 173 Brown Joseph E Argument of ex Governor Joseph E Brown President of the Western and Atlantic Railroad Company before the Revision Committee of the Constitutional Convention on the question of the railroad interests of Georgia and more especially on the injuries that would result to the railroads and the people from the policy of establishing uniform rates on all freights over our railroad lines Digital Library of Georgia Retrieved June 14 2016 Western amp Atlantic Railroad s Engine No 1 Gov Jos E Brown built in Atlanta Georgia Photograph inscribed and dated by the photographer J C Stokely October 12 1888 AJCP551 19b Atlanta Journal Constitution Photographic Archives Special Collections and Archives Georgia State University Library Digital Library of Georgia Retrieved June 14 2016 Franklin M Garrett Atlanta and Environs I 952 a b Kenneth M Stampp The Era of Reconstruction 1865 1877 1965 p 161 a b Matthew J Mancini Race Economics and the Abandonment of the Convict Lease System The Journal of Negro History Vol 63 No 4 October 1978 p 342 Douglas A Blackmon Slavery By Another Name The Re Enslavement of Black Americans from the Civil War to World War II 2008 a b Blackmon Slavery By Another Name 2008 p 347 Joseph E Brown Lying In State Atlanta History Photograph Collection Atlanta History Center Digital Library of Georgia Archived from the original on June 24 2016 Retrieved June 14 2016 Joseph E Brown Grave Marker Atlanta History Photograph Collection Atlanta History Center Digital Library of Georgia Archived from the original on June 24 2016 Retrieved June 14 2016 Photograph of unveiling of statue of Governor Joseph E Brown Atlanta Fulton County Georgia 1928 Vanishing Georgia Digital Library of Georgia Retrieved June 14 2016 Joe Brown Hall University of Georgia Digital Library of Georgia Retrieved June 14 2016 Seibert David Joseph Emerson Brown Park GeorgiaInfo an Online Georgia Almanac Digital Library of Georgia Retrieved November 9 2016 Emerson historical marker Digital Library of Georgia Retrieved June 14 2016 Margaret Mitchell April 13 2014 Gone with the Wind Hayrapetyan Brothers p 191 GGKEY SA26KUXWEFG Works cited editAbbott Richard 1986 The Republican Party and the South 1855 1877 The First Southern Strategy University of North Carolina Press ISBN 0807816809 Bibliography editBlackmon Douglas A Slavery by Another Name The Re Enslavement of Black Americans from the Civil War to World War II New York Doubleday 2008 ISBN 978 0385506250 Fielder Herbert A sketch of the life and times and speeches of Joseph E Brown Springfield Mass Springfield Printing Company 1883 Hill Louise Biles Joseph E Brown and the Confederacy Westport Conn Greenwood Press 1972 ISBN 978 0 8371 5722 1 Lichtenstein Alex Twice the Work of Free Labor The Political Economy of Convict Labor in the New South New York Verso 1996 ISBN 978 1859840863 Mancini Matthew J One Dies Get Another Convict Leasing in the American South 1866 1928 Columbia University of South Carolina Press 1996 ISBN 978 1570030833 Parks Joseph Howard Joseph E Brown of Georgia Southern biography series Baton Rouge Louisiana State University Press 1977 ISBN 978 0 8071 0189 6 Roberts Derrell C Joseph E Brown and the politics of Reconstruction Southern historical publications no 16 University University of Alabama Press 1973 ISBN 978 0 8173 5222 6 Scaife William R and William Harris Bragg Joe Brown s pets the Georgia Militia 1861 1865 Macon Ga Mercer University Press 2004 ISBN 978 0 86554 883 1 Wright G Richard and Kenneth H Wheeler New Men in the Old South Joseph E Brown and his Associates in Georgia s Etowah Valley Georgia Historical Quarterly 93 4 Winter 2009 External links edit nbsp This article incorporates public domain material from the Biographical Directory of the United States Congress Joseph E Brown 1821 1894 New Georgia Encyclopedia Joseph E Brown Papers at Stuart A Rose Manuscript Archives amp Rare Book Library Emory UniversityUnited States Congress Joseph E Brown id B000936 Biographical Directory of the United States Congress Joseph Emerson Brown letters W S Hoole Special Collections Library The University of Alabama Joseph Emerson Brown historical markerParty political officesPreceded byHerschel Vespasian Johnson Democratic nominee for Governor of Georgia1857 1859 VacantTitle next held byJohn Brown GordonPolitical officesPreceded byHerschel Vespasian Johnson Governor of Georgia1857 1865 Succeeded byJames JohnsonLegal officesPreceded byHiram B Warner Chief Justice of the Supreme Court of Georgia1868 1870 Succeeded byOsborne Augustus LochraneU S SenatePreceded byJohn B Gordon U S senator Class 3 from Georgia1880 1891 Served alongside Benjamin H Hill Middleton P Barrow Alfred H Colquitt Succeeded byJohn B Gordon Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Joseph E Brown amp oldid 1197495568, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.