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Robert K. Byrd

Robert King Byrd (November 4, 1823 – May 2, 1885) was an American soldier and politician. A Southern Unionist, he commanded the Union Army's First Tennessee Infantry during the Civil War, and saw action at Cumberland Gap, Stones River, and in the Knoxville and Atlanta campaigns. He represented his native Roane County at the pro-Union East Tennessee Convention on the eve of the war in 1861, and at the Nashville convention that reorganized the Tennessee state government toward the end of the war in January 1865.

Robert K. Byrd
Member of the
Tennessee Senate
from the Fifth District
In office
January 6, 1879 – January 2, 1881
Preceded byL.M. Wester
Succeeded byL.T. Smith
Personal details
Born(1823-11-04)November 4, 1823
Roane County, Tennessee, U.S.
DiedMay 2, 1885(1885-05-02) (aged 61)
Roane County, Tennessee, U.S.
Resting placeBethel Cemetery
Kingston, Tennessee
Political partyDemocratic
SpouseMary Lea
ProfessionPlanter
Military service
Allegiance United States of America
Branch/service United States Army
Years of serviceSeptember 1, 1861 – September 17, 1864
Rank Colonel
Commands1st Tennessee Volunteer Infantry
Battles/warsAmerican Civil War
 • Mill Springs (1862)
 • Stones River (1862–3)
 • Knoxville Campaign (1863)
 • Atlanta Campaign (1864)

Byrd served one term (1879–1881) in the Tennessee Senate, and unsuccessfully sought the Democratic Party's nomination for governor in 1880. He was a persistent advocate for railroad construction and navigational improvements to the Tennessee River during the two decades following the war.

Early life and career edit

Byrd was born in Roane County, the son of Joseph and Ann (Pride) Byrd. The Byrds were one of the more prominent families in the county. Jesse Byrd, Robert's grandfather, established a ferry at Kingston in the 1790s, when Fort Southwest Point was still in operation. Joseph Byrd was a major landowner and county sheriff.[1]

Robert K. Byrd fought in the Mexican–American War as a First Lieutenant in Company C of the 4th Tennessee Infantry.[2] During the 1850s, he engaged in farming, and promoted railroad construction. In 1853, he was appointed to a seven-man commission tasked with fundraising and surveying a route for the proposed South Carolina, Tennessee and Kentucky Railroad.[3][4] He was an active member of the Roane County Agricultural Society in the mid-1850s,[5][6] and was listed on the state militia register in 1855.[7]

Civil War edit

Although a slaveholder, Byrd, like many East Tennesseans, remained loyal to the Union during the Civil War. He was a member of the Roane County delegation at both the Knoxville and Greeneville sessions of the East Tennessee Convention in mid-1861. At the latter session, he also served as a proxy delegate for Cumberland County, and represented that county on the convention's powerful business committee. While in Greeneville, Byrd made a secret pact with several other convention delegates, including Joseph A. Cooper and Richard M. Edwards, to return to their respective homes and begin raising and drilling military units to provide for the region's defense.[8] In August 1861, Byrd's father-in-law, James Lea, became one of several Unionists elected to the Tennessee House of Representatives.[9]

Byrd fled to Kentucky in August 1861, and was mustered into the Union Army as a colonel on September 1 of that year, in command of the First Tennessee Volunteer Infantry. This unit was the first Union regiment of the war composed primarily of refugees from East Tennessee.[8] During the first half of 1862, the First Tennessee was involved in numerous skirmishes in the Cumberland Gap area, and was present at the Battle of Mill Springs. In February 1862, Byrd suffered a wound that left him incapacitated for a month. After withdrawing northward with Union forces to the Ohio River in September 1862, the First Tennessee was reassigned to the Army of the Cumberland.[10]

Byrd's unit was in Nashville by the time the Battle of Stones River began on December 31, 1862, and helped escort supplies from Nashville to the Union front in Murfreesboro. Toward the end of the battle, Byrd led an attack that drove a force of Confederate soldiers out of a patch of woods near the front lines, and was singled out for distinction by the brigade commander, General James G. Spears. During operations in the aftermath of the battle on January 5, 1863, Byrd led a "fearless charge" that drove three Confederate regiments from their position along a road outside of Murfreesboro.[10]

In May 1863, the First Tennessee was mounted and redesignated the "First Tennessee Mounted Infantry," commonly called "Byrd's mounted men." In June of that year, the unit joined a raid led by Colonel William P. Sanders that destroyed railroad lines and bridges in the areas around Knoxville. Sanders credited Byrd's knowledge of the area with the raid's success.[10] During the Knoxville Campaign in late 1863, Byrd and his unit were posted in his home town of Kingston. They took part in several skirmishes during the campaign, including one at Mossy Creek in Jefferson County in December 1863.[10]

In May 1864, the First Tennessee was dismounted and ordered to the front lines in Georgia. The unit engaged in action near Lost Mountain in June 1864, and along the Chattahoochee River in July of the same year. In August, the unit's three-year period of service ended, and it was ordered to Knoxville to be mustered out. General John Schofield praised the First Tennessee as the "first among the patriotic men from East Tennessee to take up arms in defense of the Union," and tendered a "soldier's appreciation and regard for soldierly fidelity and gallantry" to Byrd and his officers.[10] Byrd and his men fought one final skirmish in Athens, Tennessee, en route to Knoxville, on August 17, 1864.[10]

Byrd served as an interim commander of the Third Brigade (Third Division) on two occasions: the first from August to December 17, 1863, and the second from June 17 to August 9, 1864.[10]

Postwar endeavors edit

Byrd served on the state executive committee for the Unconditional Unionist party in 1864. In January 1865, he represented Roane County at the convention in Nashville that reorganized the state government. This convention ordered elections to be held in March, and called for an amendment outlawing slavery.[11][12]

In August 1865, Byrd ran for the 2nd district seat in Congress. While he expressed support for Abraham Lincoln and endorsed legislation barring ex-Confederates from voting, he was criticized for calling for former slaveholders to be compensated for their freed slaves (Byrd had been a slaveholder before the war).[13] On election day, he captured just over 10% of the vote (1,210 votes out of 12,785) and placed fourth behind Horace Maynard (the victor, with 7,154 votes), Joseph A. Cooper, and Leonidas C. Houk.[14]

By 1867, Byrd had come to support the "Conservative" faction in state politics, which sought leniency toward former Confederates, and opposed civil rights for freed slaves.[15] He afterward supported the Democratic Party, and helped organize the party's campaign efforts in East Tennessee.[16][17] In 1868, Byrd was appointed federal revenue agent for the Knoxville area, and served in this position until the 1870s.[18]

Throughout the late 1860s and 1870s, Byrd was a persistent advocate of navigational improvements to the Tennessee River. In 1868, he served as a vice president of the Tennessee River Improvement Convention in Chattanooga, and was appointed by the convention to a commission tasked with presenting a proposal to Congress for the removal of navigational hazards along the river.[19][20] He served as vice president of the second Tennessee River Improvement Convention in 1869.[21]

In 1878, Byrd ran unopposed for the Tennessee Senate seat representing the fifth district, which consisted of Roane, Cumberland, Campbell, Morgan, Scott, Fentress, Overton, White and Putnam counties.[22][23] During the state debt crisis that dominated state politics in the late 1870s, Byrd vehemently opposed repudiation of the debt and supported the "state credit" faction of the Democratic Party. Describing himself as a "Jeffersonian Democrat,"[24] he stated he would "rather have his arm severed" than face the ruin repudiation would bring.[25] In an 1879 interview, Byrd explained that he supported paying the state's debt in full because he didn't want future generations to pass his grave and say, "there lies a damned old repudiationist."[24] He eventually expressed support the "50-4" compromise, a proposal by Governor Albert S. Marks to pay 50% of the state's railroad bond debt at 4% interest, and pay the rest of the debt in full.[26][27]

In May 1880, Byrd was a delegate to the Democratic National Convention.[28] He sought the state credit faction's nomination for governor later that year, but was defeated by John V. Wright.[29][30]

Later life and legacy edit

Byrd was appointed to the Board of Directors for the Knoxville, Cincinnati and Southern Railroad in 1880,[31] and announced plans to build a narrow gauge line from Kingston to Emory Gap (along the Cumberland Plateau) in 1882.[32] He fell ill a short time later, however, and died at his home on May 2, 1885. He was interred with his family in Bethel Cemetery in Kingston.

The town of Byrdstown, Tennessee, was named in honor of Byrd in 1879, when it was founded as the county seat of the newly created Pickett County. The new county was located within the fifth district, which Byrd represented at the time in the state senate.[33] In 1890, the East Tennessee Land Company purchased Byrd's 10,000-acre plantation for the establishment of the city of Harriman, Tennessee.[34] A Tennessee Historical Commission marker along Highway 61 in Harriman is dedicated to Byrd.

References edit

  1. ^ Goodspeed's History of Roane County, 1886. Accessed at the Roane County Heritage Commission website, 1 February 2015.
  2. ^ Roger D. Hunt, "Robert King Byrd," Colonels in Blue- Indiana, Kentucky and Tennessee: A Civil War Biographical Dictionary (McFarland, 2013), p. 201.
  3. ^ "Rail Road Meeting," Loudon Free Press, 10 June 1853, p. 2.
  4. ^ "Meeting of the Directory of the S.C., Tenn. and Ky. Rail Road," Loudon Free Press, 23 August 1854, p. 2.
  5. ^ "Agricultural Society Meeting," Loudon Free Press, 13 September 1854, p. 2.
  6. ^ "Annual Meeting of the Roane County Agricultural Society," Nashville Union and American, 18 January 1855, p. 2.
  7. ^ Emma Middleton Wells, The History of Roane County, 1801-1870 (Regional Publishing Company, 1975).
  8. ^ a b Oliver Perry Temple, Mary Boyce Temple (ed.), "Robert K. Byrd," Notable Men of Tennessee (Cosmopolitan Press, 1912), pp. 79-81.
  9. ^ Mary C. Bell, National Register of Historic Places Inventory Form for Bethel Cemetery, February 2006, Sec. 8, p. 5.
  10. ^ a b c d e f g Civil War Centennial Commission of Tennessee, "1st Tennessee Volunteer Infantry Regiment, USA," Tennessee & the Civil War, Vol. 1. Accessed at TNGenWeb.org, 31 January 2015.
  11. ^ Knoxville Whig and Rebel Ventilator, 28 September 1864, p. 2.
  12. ^ "Union State Convention," Nashville Daily Union, 10 January 1865, p. 2.
  13. ^ "Congressional Canvass," Knoxville Whig and Rebel Ventilator, 2 August 1865, p. 2.
  14. ^ "Vote of the Knoxville District," Knoxville Whig and Rebel Ventilator, 13 September 1865, p. 2.
  15. ^ "East Tennessee," Nashville Union and American, 11 July 1867, p. 1.
  16. ^ "Congressional Convention," Nashville Union and American, 13 September 1870, p. 1.
  17. ^ "Congressional Convention," Sweetwater (TN) Enterprise, 15 September 1870, p. 2.
  18. ^ "Appointment of Revenue Collector," Nashville Union and American, 19 November 1868, p. 4.
  19. ^ "River Improvement Convention," Knoxville Whig, 25 March 1868, p. 3.
  20. ^ "Miscellaneous," Memphis Daily Appeal, 9 June 1868, p. 4.
  21. ^ "Tennessee River," Memphis Daily Appeal, 1 March 1869, p. 3.
  22. ^ Tennessee Blue Book (1890), p. 237.
  23. ^ "Additional Election Returns," Knoxville Chronicle, 9 November 1878, p. 1.
  24. ^ a b "The Legislature," Morristown (TN) Gazette, 13 November 1878, p. 2.
  25. ^ Knoxville Chronicle, 21 January 1879, p. 1.
  26. ^ "Pencilettes," Knoxville Chronicle, 31 July 1879, p. 4.
  27. ^ "Col. R.K. Byrd," Morristown (TN) Gazette, 20 August 1879, p. 2.
  28. ^ "County Political Conventions," Knoxville Chronicle, 15 May 1880, p. 4.
  29. ^ Robert K. Byrd, "To the People of Tennessee," Knoxville Chronicle, 6 April 1880, p. 2.
  30. ^ "Rule or Ruin," Memphis Daily Appeal, 13 August 1880, p. 1.
  31. ^ "The Ball in Motion," Knoxville Chronicle, 13 May 1880, p. 4.
  32. ^ "Tennessee News," Memphis Daily Appeal, 3 March 1882, p. 2.
  33. ^ Tim Huddleston, "Pickett County: The Beginning," The Historical News, Vol. 33, No. 6-TN (February 2013), p. 17.
  34. ^ Lardner/Klein Landscape Architects, "The Walton Road Corridor Management Plan," February 2013, p. 17. Accessed: 4 February 2015.

robert, byrd, robert, king, byrd, november, 1823, 1885, american, soldier, politician, southern, unionist, commanded, union, army, first, tennessee, infantry, during, civil, action, cumberland, stones, river, knoxville, atlanta, campaigns, represented, native,. Robert King Byrd November 4 1823 May 2 1885 was an American soldier and politician A Southern Unionist he commanded the Union Army s First Tennessee Infantry during the Civil War and saw action at Cumberland Gap Stones River and in the Knoxville and Atlanta campaigns He represented his native Roane County at the pro Union East Tennessee Convention on the eve of the war in 1861 and at the Nashville convention that reorganized the Tennessee state government toward the end of the war in January 1865 Robert K ByrdMember of the Tennessee Senate from the Fifth DistrictIn office January 6 1879 January 2 1881Preceded byL M WesterSucceeded byL T SmithPersonal detailsBorn 1823 11 04 November 4 1823Roane County Tennessee U S DiedMay 2 1885 1885 05 02 aged 61 Roane County Tennessee U S Resting placeBethel Cemetery Kingston TennesseePolitical partyDemocraticSpouseMary LeaProfessionPlanterMilitary serviceAllegianceUnited States of AmericaBranch service United States ArmyYears of serviceSeptember 1 1861 September 17 1864RankColonelCommands1st Tennessee Volunteer InfantryBattles warsAmerican Civil War Mill Springs 1862 Stones River 1862 3 Knoxville Campaign 1863 Atlanta Campaign 1864 Byrd served one term 1879 1881 in the Tennessee Senate and unsuccessfully sought the Democratic Party s nomination for governor in 1880 He was a persistent advocate for railroad construction and navigational improvements to the Tennessee River during the two decades following the war Contents 1 Early life and career 2 Civil War 3 Postwar endeavors 4 Later life and legacy 5 ReferencesEarly life and career editByrd was born in Roane County the son of Joseph and Ann Pride Byrd The Byrds were one of the more prominent families in the county Jesse Byrd Robert s grandfather established a ferry at Kingston in the 1790s when Fort Southwest Point was still in operation Joseph Byrd was a major landowner and county sheriff 1 Robert K Byrd fought in the Mexican American War as a First Lieutenant in Company C of the 4th Tennessee Infantry 2 During the 1850s he engaged in farming and promoted railroad construction In 1853 he was appointed to a seven man commission tasked with fundraising and surveying a route for the proposed South Carolina Tennessee and Kentucky Railroad 3 4 He was an active member of the Roane County Agricultural Society in the mid 1850s 5 6 and was listed on the state militia register in 1855 7 Civil War editAlthough a slaveholder Byrd like many East Tennesseans remained loyal to the Union during the Civil War He was a member of the Roane County delegation at both the Knoxville and Greeneville sessions of the East Tennessee Convention in mid 1861 At the latter session he also served as a proxy delegate for Cumberland County and represented that county on the convention s powerful business committee While in Greeneville Byrd made a secret pact with several other convention delegates including Joseph A Cooper and Richard M Edwards to return to their respective homes and begin raising and drilling military units to provide for the region s defense 8 In August 1861 Byrd s father in law James Lea became one of several Unionists elected to the Tennessee House of Representatives 9 Byrd fled to Kentucky in August 1861 and was mustered into the Union Army as a colonel on September 1 of that year in command of the First Tennessee Volunteer Infantry This unit was the first Union regiment of the war composed primarily of refugees from East Tennessee 8 During the first half of 1862 the First Tennessee was involved in numerous skirmishes in the Cumberland Gap area and was present at the Battle of Mill Springs In February 1862 Byrd suffered a wound that left him incapacitated for a month After withdrawing northward with Union forces to the Ohio River in September 1862 the First Tennessee was reassigned to the Army of the Cumberland 10 Byrd s unit was in Nashville by the time the Battle of Stones River began on December 31 1862 and helped escort supplies from Nashville to the Union front in Murfreesboro Toward the end of the battle Byrd led an attack that drove a force of Confederate soldiers out of a patch of woods near the front lines and was singled out for distinction by the brigade commander General James G Spears During operations in the aftermath of the battle on January 5 1863 Byrd led a fearless charge that drove three Confederate regiments from their position along a road outside of Murfreesboro 10 In May 1863 the First Tennessee was mounted and redesignated the First Tennessee Mounted Infantry commonly called Byrd s mounted men In June of that year the unit joined a raid led by Colonel William P Sanders that destroyed railroad lines and bridges in the areas around Knoxville Sanders credited Byrd s knowledge of the area with the raid s success 10 During the Knoxville Campaign in late 1863 Byrd and his unit were posted in his home town of Kingston They took part in several skirmishes during the campaign including one at Mossy Creek in Jefferson County in December 1863 10 In May 1864 the First Tennessee was dismounted and ordered to the front lines in Georgia The unit engaged in action near Lost Mountain in June 1864 and along the Chattahoochee River in July of the same year In August the unit s three year period of service ended and it was ordered to Knoxville to be mustered out General John Schofield praised the First Tennessee as the first among the patriotic men from East Tennessee to take up arms in defense of the Union and tendered a soldier s appreciation and regard for soldierly fidelity and gallantry to Byrd and his officers 10 Byrd and his men fought one final skirmish in Athens Tennessee en route to Knoxville on August 17 1864 10 Byrd served as an interim commander of the Third Brigade Third Division on two occasions the first from August to December 17 1863 and the second from June 17 to August 9 1864 10 Postwar endeavors editByrd served on the state executive committee for the Unconditional Unionist party in 1864 In January 1865 he represented Roane County at the convention in Nashville that reorganized the state government This convention ordered elections to be held in March and called for an amendment outlawing slavery 11 12 In August 1865 Byrd ran for the 2nd district seat in Congress While he expressed support for Abraham Lincoln and endorsed legislation barring ex Confederates from voting he was criticized for calling for former slaveholders to be compensated for their freed slaves Byrd had been a slaveholder before the war 13 On election day he captured just over 10 of the vote 1 210 votes out of 12 785 and placed fourth behind Horace Maynard the victor with 7 154 votes Joseph A Cooper and Leonidas C Houk 14 By 1867 Byrd had come to support the Conservative faction in state politics which sought leniency toward former Confederates and opposed civil rights for freed slaves 15 He afterward supported the Democratic Party and helped organize the party s campaign efforts in East Tennessee 16 17 In 1868 Byrd was appointed federal revenue agent for the Knoxville area and served in this position until the 1870s 18 Throughout the late 1860s and 1870s Byrd was a persistent advocate of navigational improvements to the Tennessee River In 1868 he served as a vice president of the Tennessee River Improvement Convention in Chattanooga and was appointed by the convention to a commission tasked with presenting a proposal to Congress for the removal of navigational hazards along the river 19 20 He served as vice president of the second Tennessee River Improvement Convention in 1869 21 In 1878 Byrd ran unopposed for the Tennessee Senate seat representing the fifth district which consisted of Roane Cumberland Campbell Morgan Scott Fentress Overton White and Putnam counties 22 23 During the state debt crisis that dominated state politics in the late 1870s Byrd vehemently opposed repudiation of the debt and supported the state credit faction of the Democratic Party Describing himself as a Jeffersonian Democrat 24 he stated he would rather have his arm severed than face the ruin repudiation would bring 25 In an 1879 interview Byrd explained that he supported paying the state s debt in full because he didn t want future generations to pass his grave and say there lies a damned old repudiationist 24 He eventually expressed support the 50 4 compromise a proposal by Governor Albert S Marks to pay 50 of the state s railroad bond debt at 4 interest and pay the rest of the debt in full 26 27 In May 1880 Byrd was a delegate to the Democratic National Convention 28 He sought the state credit faction s nomination for governor later that year but was defeated by John V Wright 29 30 Later life and legacy editByrd was appointed to the Board of Directors for the Knoxville Cincinnati and Southern Railroad in 1880 31 and announced plans to build a narrow gauge line from Kingston to Emory Gap along the Cumberland Plateau in 1882 32 He fell ill a short time later however and died at his home on May 2 1885 He was interred with his family in Bethel Cemetery in Kingston The town of Byrdstown Tennessee was named in honor of Byrd in 1879 when it was founded as the county seat of the newly created Pickett County The new county was located within the fifth district which Byrd represented at the time in the state senate 33 In 1890 the East Tennessee Land Company purchased Byrd s 10 000 acre plantation for the establishment of the city of Harriman Tennessee 34 A Tennessee Historical Commission marker along Highway 61 in Harriman is dedicated to Byrd References edit Goodspeed s History of Roane County 1886 Accessed at the Roane County Heritage Commission website 1 February 2015 Roger D Hunt Robert King Byrd Colonels in Blue Indiana Kentucky and Tennessee A Civil War Biographical Dictionary McFarland 2013 p 201 Rail Road Meeting Loudon Free Press 10 June 1853 p 2 Meeting of the Directory of the S C Tenn and Ky Rail Road Loudon Free Press 23 August 1854 p 2 Agricultural Society Meeting Loudon Free Press 13 September 1854 p 2 Annual Meeting of the Roane County Agricultural Society Nashville Union and American 18 January 1855 p 2 Emma Middleton Wells The History of Roane County 1801 1870 Regional Publishing Company 1975 a b Oliver Perry Temple Mary Boyce Temple ed Robert K Byrd Notable Men of Tennessee Cosmopolitan Press 1912 pp 79 81 Mary C Bell National Register of Historic Places Inventory Form for Bethel Cemetery February 2006 Sec 8 p 5 a b c d e f g Civil War Centennial Commission of Tennessee 1st Tennessee Volunteer Infantry Regiment USA Tennessee amp the Civil War Vol 1 Accessed at TNGenWeb org 31 January 2015 Knoxville Whig and Rebel Ventilator 28 September 1864 p 2 Union State Convention Nashville Daily Union 10 January 1865 p 2 Congressional Canvass Knoxville Whig and Rebel Ventilator 2 August 1865 p 2 Vote of the Knoxville District Knoxville Whig and Rebel Ventilator 13 September 1865 p 2 East Tennessee Nashville Union and American 11 July 1867 p 1 Congressional Convention Nashville Union and American 13 September 1870 p 1 Congressional Convention Sweetwater TN Enterprise 15 September 1870 p 2 Appointment of Revenue Collector Nashville Union and American 19 November 1868 p 4 River Improvement Convention Knoxville Whig 25 March 1868 p 3 Miscellaneous Memphis Daily Appeal 9 June 1868 p 4 Tennessee River Memphis Daily Appeal 1 March 1869 p 3 Tennessee Blue Book 1890 p 237 Additional Election Returns Knoxville Chronicle 9 November 1878 p 1 a b The Legislature Morristown TN Gazette 13 November 1878 p 2 Knoxville Chronicle 21 January 1879 p 1 Pencilettes Knoxville Chronicle 31 July 1879 p 4 Col R K Byrd Morristown TN Gazette 20 August 1879 p 2 County Political Conventions Knoxville Chronicle 15 May 1880 p 4 Robert K Byrd To the People of Tennessee Knoxville Chronicle 6 April 1880 p 2 Rule or Ruin Memphis Daily Appeal 13 August 1880 p 1 The Ball in Motion Knoxville Chronicle 13 May 1880 p 4 Tennessee News Memphis Daily Appeal 3 March 1882 p 2 Tim Huddleston Pickett County The Beginning The Historical News Vol 33 No 6 TN February 2013 p 17 Lardner Klein Landscape Architects The Walton Road Corridor Management Plan February 2013 p 17 Accessed 4 February 2015 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Robert K Byrd amp oldid 1211465197, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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