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Louis Wigfall

Louis Trezevant Wigfall (April 21, 1816 – February 18, 1874) was an American politician who served as a Confederate States Senator from Texas from 1862 to 1865.[1] He was among a group of leading secessionists known as Fire-Eaters, advocating the preservation and expansion of an aristocratic agricultural society based on slave labor. He briefly served as a Confederate Brigadier General of the Texas Brigade at the outset of the American Civil War before taking his seat in the Confederate Senate. Wigfall's reputation for oratory and hard-drinking, along with a combative nature and high-minded sense of personal honor, made him one of the more imposing political figures of his time. He was also a slave owner.[2][3]

Louis Wigfall
Confederate States Senator
from Texas
In office
February 18, 1862 – May 10, 1865
Preceded byConstituency established
Succeeded byConstituency abolished
Member of the Provisional Congress of the Confederate States
from Texas
In office
February 4, 1861 – February 17, 1862
Preceded byConstituency established
Succeeded byConstituency abolished
United States Senator
from Texas
In office
December 5, 1859 – March 23, 1861
Preceded byMatthias Ward
Succeeded byJames Flanagan (1870)
Member of the Texas Senate
from the 8th district
In office
November 7, 1857 – December 7, 1859
Preceded byWilliam Scott
Succeeded byE. A. Blanch
Personal details
Born
Louis Trezevant Wigfall

(1816-04-21)April 21, 1816
Edgefield, South Carolina, U.S.
DiedFebruary 18, 1874(1874-02-18) (aged 57)
Galveston, Texas, U.S.
Political partyDemocratic
Spouse
Charlotte Cross
(m. 1841)
Children3
EducationUniversity of Virginia
University of South Carolina (BA)
Military service
AllegianceConfederate States
Branch/serviceConfederate States Army
Years of service1861–1862
RankBrigadier general
Battles/warsAmerican Civil War

Early life and career edit

Youth edit

Wigfall was born on a plantation near Edgefield, South Carolina, to Levi Durant and Eliza Thomson Wigfall. His father, who died in 1818, was a successful Charleston merchant before moving to Edgefield. His mother was of the French Huguenot Trezavant family. She died when young Louis was 13. An older brother, Hamden, was killed in a duel. Another, Arthur, became a bishop in the Episcopal Church.[4]

Tutored by a guardian until 1834, he then spent a year at Rice Creek Springs School, a military academy near Columbia, South Carolina, for children of elite aristocrats. He then entered the University of Virginia. A perceived insult by another student prompted the first of many dueling challenges he would make, but the affair was resolved peaceably.[5]

In 1836 he entered South Carolina College (now the University of South Carolina) to complete his studies, but his attendance was erratic. He developed an interest in the law, participated in the Euphradian Society, and wrote epistles on student rights. Most of his time however, was spent at off-campus taverns rather than at his studies.[6] He abandoned academics altogether for three months to fight in the Second Seminole War in Florida, achieving the rank of Lieutenant of volunteers. Despite these distractions he managed to graduate in 1837.[7] A fellow graduate considered to be his closest friend was John Lawrence Manning, who would later become governor of South Carolina.[7]

In 1839 Wigfall returned to Edgefield and took over his brother's law practice. Having squandered his inheritance, and with a proclivity for drinking and gambling,[8] he accumulated debts.[7] He borrowed from friends to maintain a freewheeling lifestyle, including from his future bride. "Mere office business" as an upcountry lawyer did not suit his temperament and sense of purpose, nor prove to be as profitable as he had hoped.[7]

Personal life edit

In 1841 Wigfall married his second cousin, Charlotte Maria Cross, daughter of the prominent Charlestown lawyer and former South Carolina State Controller, Col. George Warren Cross, and his wife, Frances Maria Halsey. They had three daughters: Francis Halsey, Louise Sophie, and Mary Frances (Fanny) Wigfall. Louise was a Civil War diarist.

Violence and politics edit

In the South Carolina gubernatorial election of 1840, Wigfall actively supported the candidacy of John Peter Richardson over the more radical James Henry Hammond, which led to public exchanges of arguments and insults. In a five-month period, Wigfall managed to get into a fistfight, two duels, three near-duels, and was charged, but not indicted, for killing a man.[9] This outbreak of political violence culminated in 1840 on an island in the Savannah River near Augusta, Georgia, where Wigfall took a bullet through both thighs while dueling with future Congressman Preston Brooks.[10] Although Hammond lost the race for Governor, he attempted to mediate the dispute between the two hot-headed young men. Wigfall received an aide-de-camp and Lieutenant Colonelcy on Governor Richardson's staff, but never was completely satisfied with the outcome of the Brooks affair.[11]

This initial foray into politics and the Brooks affair destroyed his law practice. He was elected delegate to the South Carolina Democratic convention in 1844, but his violent temperament and behind-the-scenes meddling had already doomed his youthful political ambitions. He piled up medical bills because of a sickly infant son who eventually died. Sheriff sales followed, swallowing up his Edgefield estate. A Texas cousin, former South Carolina governor James Hamilton, Jr., arranged a fresh start with a law partnership.[12]

Wigfall's reputation as a duelist, often exaggerated, followed him his entire life, even though he gave up the practice entirely after his marriage. However, he would continue to claim the code duello was an important "factor in the improvement of both the morals and manners of the community."[13]

Gone to Texas edit

Arriving in Texas in 1848,[14] Wigfall joined William B. Ochiltree's law practice at Nacogdoches, Texas, then settled in Marshall, Texas. He quickly dove back into politics, serving in the Texas House of Representatives from 1849 to 1850, and in the Texas Senate from 1857 to 1860. He became a staunch political opponent of Sam Houston. When Houston ran for governor in 1857, Wigfall followed him on the campaign trail, attacking his congressional record at each of Houston's stops, and accused Houston of being a traitor to the South. He claimed that Houston had ambitions for a presidential nomination and courted the support of Northern abolitionists.[15]

He organized state Democrats to resist the Know Nothing party, but with their defeat his radical views descended in the estimation of Democratic moderates. John Brown's Raid on Harpers Ferry propelled him and his radical views back to prominence in the state.[15]

United States Senator edit

The Texas legislature elected Wigfall to the United States Senate in 1859 as a Democrat to the 36th United States Congress to fill the vacancy caused by the death of James Pinckney Henderson. Matthias Ward was appointed to the Senate following Henderson's death and served from September 27, 1858, until Wigfall was elected and sworn in on December 5, 1859.[16] Wigfall served until March 23, 1861, when he withdrew. He was expelled from the Senate on July 11, 1861, for support of the rebellion.[17] He also served as a member of the Texas delegation to the Provisional Confederate Congress, which formed the provisional government of the Confederacy, and which selected Jefferson Davis as its president. Wigfall had continued to hold his seat after Texas had seceded on February 1, 1861, and was admitted to the Provisional Confederate Congress on March 2, 1861, exhorting the rightness of the Southern cause and berating his Northern colleagues whether on the floor of the Senate or in Capitol Hill saloons. During this time in Washington, he spied on Federal preparations for the coming conflict, secured weapons for delivery south, and upon expulsion by his fellow Senators, he went to Baltimore, Maryland and recruited soldiers for the new Confederacy before traveling to the Confederate capital at Richmond, Virginia.[18]

American Civil War edit

 
Louis Wigfall in 1861

In the days leading up to the start of hostilities, Wigfall advocated an attack on Fort Sumter and Fort Pickens in Florida to prompt Virginia and other upper southern slave states to join the Confederacy. In January 1865, Wigfall stated his reasons for having supported the Confederacy, namely, opposition to African American equality:

Sir, I wish to live in no country where the man who blacks my boots or curries my horse is my equal.

— Louis Wigfall, January 1865, Richmond.[19]

He arrived in Charleston, South Carolina, as the siege of Fort Sumter commenced. According to diarist Mary Chestnut, he was the only "thoroughly happy person I see."[20] While serving as an aide to General Beauregard during the bombardment of Fort Sumter, and without authorization, he rowed a skiff out to the island fort and demanded its surrender from Major Robert Anderson.[21] The incident was widely reported in the newspapers furthering his celebrity, but the story redacted the important detail that Wigfall had not spoken to Beauregard in two days. When the authorized emissaries arrived at the fort, they were dismayed upon learning that Wigfall had granted terms to Anderson that Beauregard had already rejected.[22]

Brigade commander edit

With his newfound celebrity Wigfall secured an appointment to full colonel of the 1st Texas Infantry Regiment, and a rapid promotion thereafter to brigadier general of the "Texas Brigade" in the Confederate Army. He took up residence near his encamped troops in a tavern at Dumfries, Virginia, during the winter of 1861–1862, where he would frequently call the men to arms at midnight, imagining a Federal invasion.[23] His nervousness was blamed on his fondness for whiskey and hard cider. He appeared visibly drunk, on and off-duty, in the presence of his men on more than one occasion.[24] He resigned his commission in February 1862 to take a seat in the Confederate Senate, and was replaced by John Bell Hood.[25]

Confederate States Senator edit

At the beginning of the war Wigfall was a close friend of Confederate President Jefferson Davis. Like political alliances throughout his career, he would first support then split with Davis as the war progressed. Davis supported an increasingly strong national government, while Wigfall, forever an advocate of states rights, moved to block the creation of the Confederate Supreme Court, fearing Davis' appointments would rule against the states. Wigfall also challenged Davis, a West Point graduate and former United States Secretary of War, on many of his military-related policies, citing his own military experience in the Seminole Wars. Wigfall was a close friend of Confederate General Joseph E. Johnston and frequently proposed legislation on the general's behalf. He was also an early proponent of making Robert E. Lee commander of all Confederate armies.[25]

Later life edit

At the conclusion of hostilities, Wigfall escaped back to Texas in the company of Texas troops with a forged parole,[26] then went to London in 1866 as an exile,[27] where he intrigued to foment trouble between Britain and the United States. He bought a mine in Clear Creek, Colorado, returning to the United States in 1870.[28] He lived for a while in Baltimore, Maryland, and was in Galveston, Texas, in January, 1874.[29] He died a month later of "apoplexy" and is buried there in the Episcopal cemetery.[30]

In popular culture edit

In the 1992 alternate history/science fiction novel The Guns of the South by Harry Turtledove, Senator Wigfall appears as a character. The book uses real quotes of Wigfall.[31]

In the historical novel The Lincoln Special[32] by Peg A. Lamphier, Wigfall appears as a major character and villain with some creative dramatization. The novel as a whole is about Kate Warne and the Pinkerton Detective Agency investigating the Baltimore Plot against Lincoln.

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ "Bioguide Search". bioguide.congress.gov. Retrieved January 29, 2022.
  2. ^ Weil, Julie Zauzmer; Blanco, Adrian; Dominguez, Leo. "More than 1,700 congressmen once enslaved Black people. This is who they were, and how they shaped the nation". Washington Post. Retrieved January 29, 2022.
  3. ^ "Congress slaveowners", The Washington Post, January 27, 2022, retrieved January 29, 2022
  4. ^ Ritter, pg. 434
  5. ^ Cashion, p. 58. The claim in this version was that he was expelled.
  6. ^ Green, p. 49. "An act of the legislature was secured in 1837 forbidding the sale of liquor to students as minors; drinking was the cause of the greatest disorders on campus."
  7. ^ a b c d Walther, pp. 161-162
  8. ^ Allegedly, these habits coincided with frequent visits to an Augusta, Georgia, brothel.
  9. ^ Wigfall shot and killed Thomas Bird, a cousin to Preston Brooks, when he attempted to remove "postings" at the Edgefield courthouse that called Brooks' father a coward for rejecting a duel challenge.
  10. ^ New York Times archive on Brooks-Wigfall duel Brooks suffered a wounded hip in the affair and had to use a walking cane for the rest of his life. He would famously use that cane on the floor of the U.S. Senate against Massachusetts Senator Charles Sumner in 1856.
  11. ^ Hammond, p. 60-62. Hammond thought the difficulty between the two started much earlier. Wigfall's letters to his friend John Manning suggest that he and Brooks were courting the same Augusta belle prior to the election.
  12. ^ Burton, p. 70, Jewett, p. 16
  13. ^ Wright, p. 32
  14. ^ Several accounts claim he arrived in 1846. His wife's whereabouts can be traced to Rhode Island during this time. their infant son, John Manning Wigfall, was buried in a Providence, Rhode Island cemetery in 1846 and their daughter Louise was born there in December 1846 according to census records, among other sources.
  15. ^ a b Walther, pg. 169
  16. ^ "Bioguide Search". bioguide.congress.gov.
  17. ^ "Bioguide Search". bioguide.congress.gov.
  18. ^ Eicher, p.12. Wigfall concocted a scheme to kidnap President James Buchanan so that Vice President John C. Breckinridge, a friend and fellow southerner, could assume the presidency.
  19. ^ Curtis, George William; Norton, Charles Eliot (October 16, 1894). "Orations and addresses of George William Curtis". Harper & brothers – via Internet Archive.
  20. ^ Chestnut, p. 34
  21. ^ Wright, p. 41, Walther, p, Eicher, p. 47
  22. ^ Eicher, p. 47
  23. ^ Polley, pg. 16 Colonels Hood and Archer would refuse to call their men to the color line on these instances until General Wigfall had sent down direct orders to do so.
  24. ^ Simpson, p. 78, Polley p. 15 "Wigfall's imagination was too often quickened by deep potations to be reliable."
  25. ^ a b Heidler, pg. 2104
  26. ^ Wright, p. ?
  27. ^ Eicher, p. 12
  28. ^ Casson, p. 24. Some give the year of return as 1871 or 1872, but he appears on the 1870 Colorado census with his son Francis.
  29. ^ Hammond, p. 328. A biographical note claims he was on a lecture tour.
  30. ^ Billups, pg. 144
  31. ^ "Читать онлайн "The Guns of the South" автора Тертлдав Гарри Норман – RuLit – Страница 137". www.rulit.me.
  32. ^ "The Lincoln Special". www.goodreads.com.

Bibliography edit

  • Billups, Carolyn S., Zarvona, Richard Thomas, Lady Louise founder of the Maryland Division United Daughters of the Confederacy: a compilation of official records, newspaper articles and book references on the lives of Louise Wigfall Wright and Daniel Giraud Wright and their descendants as well as David Gregg McIntosh and Virginia Johnson ... , C. S. Billups, 2000.
  • Burton, Orville Vernon, In My Father's House Are Many Mansions: Family and Community in Edgefield, South Carolina, UNC Press, 1987 ISBN 0-8078-4183-8.
  • Cashion, Ty & de la Teja, Jesus F., The Human Condition in Texas: (Louis T. Wigfall "Just Plain Mean" by Dallas Cothburn), Rowman & Littlefield, 2001, ISBN 0-8420-2906-0.
  • Casson, Mark and Spence, Clark C., British Investments and the American Mining Frontier, 1860–1901: Evolution of International Business, 1800–1945, Taylor & Francis, 2000, ISBN 0-415-19009-6, ISBN 978-0-415-19009-1.
  • Chesnut, Mary Boykin, Diary From Dixie, D. Appleton Co., 1905.
  • Eicher, David J., Dixie Betrayed: How the South Really Lost the Civil War, University of Nebraska Press, 2007, ISBN 0-8032-6017-2.
  • Eicher, John H., and David J. Eicher, Civil War High Commands. Stanford: Stanford University Press, 2001. ISBN 978-0-8047-3641-1.
  • Green, Edwin Luther, A History of the University of South Carolina, Published by The State Co., 1916.
  • Hammond, James Henry, & Bleser, Carol Secret and Sacred: The Diaries of James Henry Hammond, a Southern Slaveholder, University of South Carolina Press, 1997, ISBN 1-57003-222-X, 9781570032226.
  • Heidler, David Stephen, Heidler, Jeanne T., Coles, David J. Encyclopedia Of The American Civil War: A Political, Social, and Military History, W. W. Norton & Company, 2002, ISBN 0-393-04758-X.
  • Jewett, Clayton E., Texas in the Confederacy: An Experiment in Nation Building, University of Missouri Press, 2002, ISBN 0-8262-1390-1.
  • King, Alvy L. "Louis T. Wigfall, Southern Fire-eater", Louisiana State University Press, 1970, ISBN 0-8071-0402-7.
  • Polley, J. B., Hood's Texas Brigade: Its Marches, Its Battles, Its Achievements, Morningside Bookshop, 1988, ISBN 978-0-89029-037-8.
  • Ritter, Charles F., Wakelyn, Jon L., Leaders of the American Civil War: a biographical and historiographical dictionary, Greenwood Publishing Group, 1998, ISBN 0-313-29560-3.
  • Sifakis, Stewart. Who Was Who in the Civil War. New York: Facts On File, 1988. ISBN 978-0-8160-1055-4.
  • Simpson, Harold B., Hood's Texas Brigade: Lee's Grenadier Guard, Texas Press, 1970, ISBN 1-56013-009-1.
  • Warner, Ezra J. Generals in Gray: Lives of the Confederate Commanders. Baton Rouge: Louisiana State University Press, 1959. ISBN 978-0-8071-0823-9.
  • Wright, Louise Wigfall, A Southern Girl in '61: The War-Time Memories of a Confederate Senator's Daughter, New York: Doubleday, Page & Company, 1905.
  • Walther, Eric H., The Fire-Eaters, Louisiana State University Press, 1992, ISBN 0-8071-1775-7.

External links edit

  Media related to Louis Trezevant Wigfall at Wikimedia Commons

louis, wigfall, louis, trezevant, wigfall, april, 1816, february, 1874, american, politician, served, confederate, states, senator, from, texas, from, 1862, 1865, among, group, leading, secessionists, known, fire, eaters, advocating, preservation, expansion, a. Louis Trezevant Wigfall April 21 1816 February 18 1874 was an American politician who served as a Confederate States Senator from Texas from 1862 to 1865 1 He was among a group of leading secessionists known as Fire Eaters advocating the preservation and expansion of an aristocratic agricultural society based on slave labor He briefly served as a Confederate Brigadier General of the Texas Brigade at the outset of the American Civil War before taking his seat in the Confederate Senate Wigfall s reputation for oratory and hard drinking along with a combative nature and high minded sense of personal honor made him one of the more imposing political figures of his time He was also a slave owner 2 3 Louis WigfallConfederate States Senatorfrom TexasIn office February 18 1862 May 10 1865Preceded byConstituency establishedSucceeded byConstituency abolishedMember of the Provisional Congress of the Confederate Statesfrom TexasIn office February 4 1861 February 17 1862Preceded byConstituency establishedSucceeded byConstituency abolishedUnited States Senatorfrom TexasIn office December 5 1859 March 23 1861Preceded byMatthias WardSucceeded byJames Flanagan 1870 Member of the Texas Senate from the 8th districtIn office November 7 1857 December 7 1859Preceded byWilliam ScottSucceeded byE A BlanchPersonal detailsBornLouis Trezevant Wigfall 1816 04 21 April 21 1816Edgefield South Carolina U S DiedFebruary 18 1874 1874 02 18 aged 57 Galveston Texas U S Political partyDemocraticSpouseCharlotte Cross m 1841 wbr Children3EducationUniversity of VirginiaUniversity of South Carolina BA Military serviceAllegianceConfederate StatesBranch serviceConfederate States ArmyYears of service1861 1862RankBrigadier generalBattles warsAmerican Civil War Contents 1 Early life and career 1 1 Youth 1 2 Personal life 1 3 Violence and politics 1 4 Gone to Texas 1 5 United States Senator 2 American Civil War 2 1 Brigade commander 2 2 Confederate States Senator 3 Later life 4 In popular culture 5 See also 6 References 7 Bibliography 8 External linksEarly life and career editYouth edit Wigfall was born on a plantation near Edgefield South Carolina to Levi Durant and Eliza Thomson Wigfall His father who died in 1818 was a successful Charleston merchant before moving to Edgefield His mother was of the French Huguenot Trezavant family She died when young Louis was 13 An older brother Hamden was killed in a duel Another Arthur became a bishop in the Episcopal Church 4 Tutored by a guardian until 1834 he then spent a year at Rice Creek Springs School a military academy near Columbia South Carolina for children of elite aristocrats He then entered the University of Virginia A perceived insult by another student prompted the first of many dueling challenges he would make but the affair was resolved peaceably 5 In 1836 he entered South Carolina College now the University of South Carolina to complete his studies but his attendance was erratic He developed an interest in the law participated in the Euphradian Society and wrote epistles on student rights Most of his time however was spent at off campus taverns rather than at his studies 6 He abandoned academics altogether for three months to fight in the Second Seminole War in Florida achieving the rank of Lieutenant of volunteers Despite these distractions he managed to graduate in 1837 7 A fellow graduate considered to be his closest friend was John Lawrence Manning who would later become governor of South Carolina 7 In 1839 Wigfall returned to Edgefield and took over his brother s law practice Having squandered his inheritance and with a proclivity for drinking and gambling 8 he accumulated debts 7 He borrowed from friends to maintain a freewheeling lifestyle including from his future bride Mere office business as an upcountry lawyer did not suit his temperament and sense of purpose nor prove to be as profitable as he had hoped 7 Personal life edit In 1841 Wigfall married his second cousin Charlotte Maria Cross daughter of the prominent Charlestown lawyer and former South Carolina State Controller Col George Warren Cross and his wife Frances Maria Halsey They had three daughters Francis Halsey Louise Sophie and Mary Frances Fanny Wigfall Louise was a Civil War diarist Violence and politics edit In the South Carolina gubernatorial election of 1840 Wigfall actively supported the candidacy of John Peter Richardson over the more radical James Henry Hammond which led to public exchanges of arguments and insults In a five month period Wigfall managed to get into a fistfight two duels three near duels and was charged but not indicted for killing a man 9 This outbreak of political violence culminated in 1840 on an island in the Savannah River near Augusta Georgia where Wigfall took a bullet through both thighs while dueling with future Congressman Preston Brooks 10 Although Hammond lost the race for Governor he attempted to mediate the dispute between the two hot headed young men Wigfall received an aide de camp and Lieutenant Colonelcy on Governor Richardson s staff but never was completely satisfied with the outcome of the Brooks affair 11 This initial foray into politics and the Brooks affair destroyed his law practice He was elected delegate to the South Carolina Democratic convention in 1844 but his violent temperament and behind the scenes meddling had already doomed his youthful political ambitions He piled up medical bills because of a sickly infant son who eventually died Sheriff sales followed swallowing up his Edgefield estate A Texas cousin former South Carolina governor James Hamilton Jr arranged a fresh start with a law partnership 12 Wigfall s reputation as a duelist often exaggerated followed him his entire life even though he gave up the practice entirely after his marriage However he would continue to claim the code duello was an important factor in the improvement of both the morals and manners of the community 13 Gone to Texas edit Arriving in Texas in 1848 14 Wigfall joined William B Ochiltree s law practice at Nacogdoches Texas then settled in Marshall Texas He quickly dove back into politics serving in the Texas House of Representatives from 1849 to 1850 and in the Texas Senate from 1857 to 1860 He became a staunch political opponent of Sam Houston When Houston ran for governor in 1857 Wigfall followed him on the campaign trail attacking his congressional record at each of Houston s stops and accused Houston of being a traitor to the South He claimed that Houston had ambitions for a presidential nomination and courted the support of Northern abolitionists 15 He organized state Democrats to resist the Know Nothing party but with their defeat his radical views descended in the estimation of Democratic moderates John Brown s Raid on Harpers Ferry propelled him and his radical views back to prominence in the state 15 United States Senator edit The Texas legislature elected Wigfall to the United States Senate in 1859 as a Democrat to the 36th United States Congress to fill the vacancy caused by the death of James Pinckney Henderson Matthias Ward was appointed to the Senate following Henderson s death and served from September 27 1858 until Wigfall was elected and sworn in on December 5 1859 16 Wigfall served until March 23 1861 when he withdrew He was expelled from the Senate on July 11 1861 for support of the rebellion 17 He also served as a member of the Texas delegation to the Provisional Confederate Congress which formed the provisional government of the Confederacy and which selected Jefferson Davis as its president Wigfall had continued to hold his seat after Texas had seceded on February 1 1861 and was admitted to the Provisional Confederate Congress on March 2 1861 exhorting the rightness of the Southern cause and berating his Northern colleagues whether on the floor of the Senate or in Capitol Hill saloons During this time in Washington he spied on Federal preparations for the coming conflict secured weapons for delivery south and upon expulsion by his fellow Senators he went to Baltimore Maryland and recruited soldiers for the new Confederacy before traveling to the Confederate capital at Richmond Virginia 18 American Civil War edit nbsp Louis Wigfall in 1861 In the days leading up to the start of hostilities Wigfall advocated an attack on Fort Sumter and Fort Pickens in Florida to prompt Virginia and other upper southern slave states to join the Confederacy In January 1865 Wigfall stated his reasons for having supported the Confederacy namely opposition to African American equality Sir I wish to live in no country where the man who blacks my boots or curries my horse is my equal Louis Wigfall January 1865 Richmond 19 He arrived in Charleston South Carolina as the siege of Fort Sumter commenced According to diarist Mary Chestnut he was the only thoroughly happy person I see 20 While serving as an aide to General Beauregard during the bombardment of Fort Sumter and without authorization he rowed a skiff out to the island fort and demanded its surrender from Major Robert Anderson 21 The incident was widely reported in the newspapers furthering his celebrity but the story redacted the important detail that Wigfall had not spoken to Beauregard in two days When the authorized emissaries arrived at the fort they were dismayed upon learning that Wigfall had granted terms to Anderson that Beauregard had already rejected 22 Brigade commander edit With his newfound celebrity Wigfall secured an appointment to full colonel of the 1st Texas Infantry Regiment and a rapid promotion thereafter to brigadier general of the Texas Brigade in the Confederate Army He took up residence near his encamped troops in a tavern at Dumfries Virginia during the winter of 1861 1862 where he would frequently call the men to arms at midnight imagining a Federal invasion 23 His nervousness was blamed on his fondness for whiskey and hard cider He appeared visibly drunk on and off duty in the presence of his men on more than one occasion 24 He resigned his commission in February 1862 to take a seat in the Confederate Senate and was replaced by John Bell Hood 25 Confederate States Senator edit At the beginning of the war Wigfall was a close friend of Confederate President Jefferson Davis Like political alliances throughout his career he would first support then split with Davis as the war progressed Davis supported an increasingly strong national government while Wigfall forever an advocate of states rights moved to block the creation of the Confederate Supreme Court fearing Davis appointments would rule against the states Wigfall also challenged Davis a West Point graduate and former United States Secretary of War on many of his military related policies citing his own military experience in the Seminole Wars Wigfall was a close friend of Confederate General Joseph E Johnston and frequently proposed legislation on the general s behalf He was also an early proponent of making Robert E Lee commander of all Confederate armies 25 Later life editAt the conclusion of hostilities Wigfall escaped back to Texas in the company of Texas troops with a forged parole 26 then went to London in 1866 as an exile 27 where he intrigued to foment trouble between Britain and the United States He bought a mine in Clear Creek Colorado returning to the United States in 1870 28 He lived for a while in Baltimore Maryland and was in Galveston Texas in January 1874 29 He died a month later of apoplexy and is buried there in the Episcopal cemetery 30 In popular culture editIn the 1992 alternate history science fiction novel The Guns of the South by Harry Turtledove Senator Wigfall appears as a character The book uses real quotes of Wigfall 31 In the historical novel The Lincoln Special 32 by Peg A Lamphier Wigfall appears as a major character and villain with some creative dramatization The novel as a whole is about Kate Warne and the Pinkerton Detective Agency investigating the Baltimore Plot against Lincoln See also editList of American Civil War generals Confederate List of United States senators expelled or censured List of United States senators from TexasReferences edit Bioguide Search bioguide congress gov Retrieved January 29 2022 Weil Julie Zauzmer Blanco Adrian Dominguez Leo More than 1 700 congressmen once enslaved Black people This is who they were and how they shaped the nation Washington Post Retrieved January 29 2022 Congress slaveowners The Washington Post January 27 2022 retrieved January 29 2022 Ritter pg 434 Cashion p 58 The claim in this version was that he was expelled Green p 49 An act of the legislature was secured in 1837 forbidding the sale of liquor to students as minors drinking was the cause of the greatest disorders on campus a b c d Walther pp 161 162 Allegedly these habits coincided with frequent visits to an Augusta Georgia brothel Wigfall shot and killed Thomas Bird a cousin to Preston Brooks when he attempted to remove postings at the Edgefield courthouse that called Brooks father a coward for rejecting a duel challenge New York Times archive on Brooks Wigfall duel Brooks suffered a wounded hip in the affair and had to use a walking cane for the rest of his life He would famously use that cane on the floor of the U S Senate against Massachusetts Senator Charles Sumner in 1856 Hammond p 60 62 Hammond thought the difficulty between the two started much earlier Wigfall s letters to his friend John Manning suggest that he and Brooks were courting the same Augusta belle prior to the election Burton p 70 Jewett p 16 Wright p 32 Several accounts claim he arrived in 1846 His wife s whereabouts can be traced to Rhode Island during this time their infant son John Manning Wigfall was buried in a Providence Rhode Island cemetery in 1846 and their daughter Louise was born there in December 1846 according to census records among other sources a b Walther pg 169 Bioguide Search bioguide congress gov Bioguide Search bioguide congress gov Eicher p 12 Wigfall concocted a scheme to kidnap President James Buchanan so that Vice President John C Breckinridge a friend and fellow southerner could assume the presidency Curtis George William Norton Charles Eliot October 16 1894 Orations and addresses of George William Curtis Harper amp brothers via Internet Archive Chestnut p 34 Wright p 41 Walther p Eicher p 47 Eicher p 47 Polley pg 16 Colonels Hood and Archer would refuse to call their men to the color line on these instances until General Wigfall had sent down direct orders to do so Simpson p 78 Polley p 15 Wigfall s imagination was too often quickened by deep potations to be reliable a b Heidler pg 2104 Wright p Eicher p 12 Casson p 24 Some give the year of return as 1871 or 1872 but he appears on the 1870 Colorado census with his son Francis Hammond p 328 A biographical note claims he was on a lecture tour Billups pg 144 Chitat onlajn The Guns of the South avtora Tertldav Garri Norman RuLit Stranica 137 www rulit me The Lincoln Special www goodreads com Bibliography editBillups Carolyn S Zarvona Richard Thomas Lady Louise founder of the Maryland Division United Daughters of the Confederacy a compilation of official records newspaper articles and book references on the lives of Louise Wigfall Wright and Daniel Giraud Wright and their descendants as well as David Gregg McIntosh and Virginia Johnson C S Billups 2000 Burton Orville Vernon In My Father s House Are Many Mansions Family and Community in Edgefield South Carolina UNC Press 1987 ISBN 0 8078 4183 8 Cashion Ty amp de la Teja Jesus F The Human Condition in Texas Louis T Wigfall Just Plain Mean by Dallas Cothburn Rowman amp Littlefield 2001 ISBN 0 8420 2906 0 Casson Mark and Spence Clark C British Investments and the American Mining Frontier 1860 1901 Evolution of International Business 1800 1945 Taylor amp Francis 2000 ISBN 0 415 19009 6 ISBN 978 0 415 19009 1 Chesnut Mary Boykin Diary From Dixie D Appleton Co 1905 Eicher David J Dixie Betrayed How the South Really Lost the Civil War University of Nebraska Press 2007 ISBN 0 8032 6017 2 Eicher John H and David J Eicher Civil War High Commands Stanford Stanford University Press 2001 ISBN 978 0 8047 3641 1 Green Edwin Luther A History of the University of South Carolina Published by The State Co 1916 Hammond James Henry amp Bleser Carol Secret and Sacred The Diaries of James Henry Hammond a Southern Slaveholder University of South Carolina Press 1997 ISBN 1 57003 222 X 9781570032226 Heidler David Stephen Heidler Jeanne T Coles David J Encyclopedia Of The American Civil War A Political Social and Military History W W Norton amp Company 2002 ISBN 0 393 04758 X Jewett Clayton E Texas in the Confederacy An Experiment in Nation Building University of Missouri Press 2002 ISBN 0 8262 1390 1 King Alvy L Louis T Wigfall Southern Fire eater Louisiana State University Press 1970 ISBN 0 8071 0402 7 Polley J B Hood s Texas Brigade Its Marches Its Battles Its Achievements Morningside Bookshop 1988 ISBN 978 0 89029 037 8 Ritter Charles F Wakelyn Jon L Leaders of the American Civil War a biographical and historiographical dictionary Greenwood Publishing Group 1998 ISBN 0 313 29560 3 Sifakis Stewart Who Was Who in the Civil War New York Facts On File 1988 ISBN 978 0 8160 1055 4 Simpson Harold B Hood s Texas Brigade Lee s Grenadier Guard Texas Press 1970 ISBN 1 56013 009 1 Warner Ezra J Generals in Gray Lives of the Confederate Commanders Baton Rouge Louisiana State University Press 1959 ISBN 978 0 8071 0823 9 Wright Louise Wigfall A Southern Girl in 61 The War Time Memories of a Confederate Senator s Daughter New York Doubleday Page amp Company 1905 Walther Eric H The Fire Eaters Louisiana State University Press 1992 ISBN 0 8071 1775 7 External links edit nbsp Media related to Louis Trezevant Wigfall at Wikimedia Commons United States Congress Louis Wigfall id W000447 Biographical Directory of the United States Congress Retrieved on 2008 02 13 Louis Trezevant Wigfall from the Handbook of Texas Online A Southern Girl in 61 The War Time Memories of a Confederate Senator s Daughter New York Doubleday Page amp Company 1905 Louis Wigfall at Find a Grave Famous Duelists at Political Graveyard Portals nbsp American Civil War nbsp Biography nbsp Politics nbsp Texas Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Louis Wigfall amp oldid 1210927326, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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