fbpx
Wikipedia

Parson Brownlow

William Gannaway "Parson" Brownlow (August 29, 1805 – April 29, 1877) was an American newspaper publisher, Methodist minister, book author, prisoner of war, lecturer, and politician who served as the 17th governor of Tennessee from 1865 to 1869 and as a United States Senator from Tennessee from 1869 to 1875. Brownlow rose to prominence in the late 1830s and early 1840s as editor of the Whig, a polemical newspaper in East Tennessee that promoted Whig Party ideals and opposed secession in the years leading up to the American Civil War. Brownlow's uncompromising and radical viewpoints made him one of the most divisive figures in Tennessee political history and one of the most controversial Reconstruction Era politicians of the United States.

Parson Brownlow
17th Governor of Tennessee
In office
April 5, 1865 – February 25, 1869
Preceded byAndrew Johnson
as Military Governor
Succeeded byDewitt Clinton Senter
United States Senator
from Tennessee
In office
March 4, 1869 – March 3, 1875
Preceded byDavid T. Patterson
Succeeded byAndrew Johnson
Personal details
Born
William Gannaway Brownlow

(1805-08-29)August 29, 1805
Wythe County, Virginia, U.S.
DiedApril 29, 1877(1877-04-29) (aged 71)
Knoxville, Tennessee, U.S.
Resting placeOld Gray Cemetery
Knoxville, Tennessee
Political partyWhig
American
Republican
SpouseEliza O'Brien (m. 1836)
RelationsWalter P. Brownlow (nephew)
ChildrenSusan, John Bell, James, Mary, Fannie, Annie, Caledonia Temple
ProfessionMinister, newspaper editor
Signature

Beginning his career as a Methodist circuit rider in the 1820s, Brownlow was both censured and praised by his superiors for his vicious verbal debates with rival missionaries of other sectarian Christian beliefs. Later, as a newspaper publisher and editor, he was notorious for his relentless personal attacks against his religious and political opponents, sometimes to the point of being physically assaulted. At the same time, Brownlow was successfully building a large base of fiercely loyal subscribers.[1]

Brownlow returned to Tennessee in 1863 and in 1865 became the war governor with the U.S. Army behind him. He joined the Radical Republicans and spent much of his term opposing the policies of his longtime political foe Andrew Johnson.[1] His gubernatorial policies, which were both autocratic and progressive, helped Tennessee become the first former Confederate state to be readmitted to the Union in 1866, "exempting it from the lengthy federal military reconstruction inflicted on most of the South".[1][2]

Soon after the Civil War, Brownlow utilized the state government to enfranchise male African-American former slaves with the right to vote and run for public office in Tennessee. Soon after, ex-Confederate political leaders and military officers used the Ku Klux Klan and likeminded vigilante groups to disenfranchise African-Americans.[1]

Early life edit

Brownlow was born in Wythe County, Virginia, in 1805, the eldest son of Joseph A. Brownlow and Catherine Gannaway. Joseph Brownlow, an itinerant farmer, was born in Augusta County, Virginia in 1782 and died during 1816 in Blountville, Tennessee and Catherine Gannaway followed three months later, leaving William orphaned at the age of 10. The first Brownlow forebear in Virginia was William Brownlow, who was born in Magherafelt, Ulster in 1709 and emigrated to Virginia in 1731. Brownlow and his four siblings were split up among relatives, with Brownlow spending the remainder of his childhood on his uncle John Gannaway's farm. At age 18, Brownlow went to Abingdon where he learned the trade of carpentry from another uncle, George Winniford.[3]: 1–3 

 
Engraving from Brownlow's book The Great Iron Wheel Examined, showing a Baptist minister changing clothes in front of horrified women after administering a baptism by immersion.

In 1825, Brownlow attended a camp meeting near Sulphur Springs, Virginia, where he experienced a dramatic spiritual rebirth. He later recalled that, suddenly, "all my anxieties were at an end, all my hopes were realized, my happiness was complete."[3]: 4  He immediately abandoned the carpentry trade and began studying to become a Methodist minister. In Fall 1826, he attended the annual meeting of the Holston Conference of the Methodist Church in Abingdon. He applied to join the travelling ministry (commonly called "circuit riders"), and was admitted that year by Bishop Joshua Soule.[3]: 6 

The competition in Southern Appalachia for both converts and their tithes among the Baptists, Methodists, and Presbyterians was fierce, and diatribes in both speech and print against rival sectarian Christian beliefs and leaders were commonplace among missionaries. In defending his Methodist Church and its early leaders, Brownlow, took such debates to a whole new level, attacking not only Baptist and Presbyterian theology but also the character of his rival missionaries.[4]

In 1826, Soule gave Brownlow his first assignment as a circuit rider—the Black Mountain circuit in North Carolina. It was here that Brownlow first ran afoul of the Baptists—who were spreading quickly throughout the Southern Appalachian region—and developed an immediate dislike of them, considering them narrow-minded bigots who engaged in "dirty" rituals such as foot washing.[3]: 18 

During the following year in 1827, Brownlow was assigned as a circuit rider in Maryville, Tennessee area, where there was a strong Presbyterian presence, and he later recalled being constantly harassed by a young Presbyterian missionary who taunted him with Calvinistic criticisms of Methodism.[3]: 19 

In 1828, Brownlow was sued for slander, but the suit was dismissed. In 1831, Brownlow was sued for libel by a Baptist preacher, and ordered to pay his accuser $5.[3]: 22 

In 1832, Brownlow was assigned as a circuit rider to the Pickens District in South Carolina, which he claimed was "overrun with Baptists" and "nullifiers." Unable to make headway in the district, Brownlow circulated his venomous 70-page pamphlet blasting the district's Baptists, and narrowly galloped safely back into the mountains as the district's enraged residents demanded he be hanged.[3]: 25  Brownlow's run-in with the South Carolina nullifiers would influence his later views on secession.

Brownlow soon afterward had his 1834 tome Helps To The Study of Presbyterianism (addressing, in part, Brownlow's advancement of the separation of church and state in the United States and the Presbyterian Church domination of the American Sunday School Union) published in Knoxville, Tennessee by newspaper and book publisher Frederick S. Heiskell.

Marriage edit

Brownlow married a younger Eliza Ann O'Brien during 1836 in Carter County, Tennessee, where the two resided in her hometown of Elizabethton. Brownlow began working as a clerk managing her family's O'Brien Furnace (iron foundry), which was located along the banks of the Doe River at Valley Forge about four miles southeast of Elizabethton.[5][6][7] Brownlow would often travel by flatboat on both the Watauga River and the Holston River in East Tennessee, bringing shipments of iron castings from the O'Brien Furnance to Knoxville.[8]

Although Brownlow left the circuit shortly after his marriage during 1836, he would continue his staunch defense of Methodism and Methodist leaders against the published attacks by religious leaders and writers of other sectarian Christian beliefs within his later newspaper columns, books, and speeches. For the remainder of his life and beyond, Brownlow was to become known to friend and foe alike as the "Fighting Parson".[3]

Early newspaper owner edit

Brownlow cut his teeth in the newspaper business during 1838 writing for the short-lived Elizabethton Republican and Manufacturer's Advocate, initially under its editor William Gott. This weekly Elizabethton newspaper advanced Whig politics, and by the time that Brownlow had later been promoted as its editor, the Elizabethton Republican and Manufacturer's Advocate had some three hundred subscribers and was closely associated with Mason R. Lyon.[6]

 
Ad in an 1848 issue of the Jonesborough Whig, attacking presidential candidate Lewis Cass

Historian Stephen Ash says:

What made the Parson stand out was, more than anything else, his vitriolic tongue and pen. Over the course of his long career, he took up many causes. These included not only Methodism, Whiggery, and the Union, but also temperance, Know-Nothingism, and slavery. His favorite method of promoting those causes was to chastise and ridicule his opponents, and few men could do so with as much venomous wit as he. Baptists, Presbyterians, Catholics, Mormons, Democrats, Republicans, secessionists, drunks, immigrants, and abolitionists—all were at one time or another on the receiving end of Brownlow's merciless broadsides. Not surprisingly, he made many enemies. A number of them replied in kind; some tried to kill him.[9]

The rising Elizabethton attorney T.A.R. Nelson suggested that Brownlow should launch a newspaper to support Whig Party candidates in the upcoming elections. Brownlow partnered with the Elizabethton newspaper publisher, Mason R. Lyon, and as the editor within their partnership, with the agreement that Brownlow would receive one-third of the new profits from the Tennessee Whig.[10] Brownlow and Lyon launched their weekly Tennessee Whig on Thursday, May 16, 1839, and within several weeks, Brownlow and Lyon would rebrand their new weekly newspaper as the Elizabethton Whig starting with the June 13, 1839 edition of the newspaper.[11]

As Brownlow's vituperative editorial style quickly brought bitter division to Elizabethton, and he began quarreling with local Whig-turned-Democrat Landon Carter Haynes. Haynes had read law under Elizabethton attorney T.A.R. Nelson, and Haynes would later follow Nelson to Jonesborough during 1840, where Haynes would eventually edit a Jonesborough newspaper.

Brownlow and the Elizabethton Whig also relocated from Elizabethton and to Jonesborough during the same year, where the weekly Brownlow newspaper was again rebranded as the Jonesboro Whig (the Tennessee town has spelled municipal name two different ways through its history), publishing the first edition of the second volume on May 7, 1840. Brownlow had also brought along Valentine Garland along as a new business partner within his Jonesboro Whig enterprise. Garland had previously worked as a journeyman printer with the Elizabethton Whig and had purchased Lyon's interest in the Elizabethton Whig for $550.00, but their business partnership in the Jonesboro Whig was short-lived as an announcement published on August 12, 1840 notified the Whig readers that the Brownlow and Garland business partnership was dissolved.[12]

Brownlow would later accost Haynes in a Jonesborough street and then proceeded to beat Haynes with a sword cane, prompting Haynes to draw out his pistol and shoot Brownlow in the thigh.[3]: 39  Haynes was later hired as editor of the competing Democratic Tennessee Sentinel the following year, and the editors Brownlow and Haynes would publish polemics targeting each other within their respective newspapers over the next several years.[11]

In 1845, Brownlow ran against Andrew Johnson for the state's 1st District seat in the U.S. House of Representatives. Using the Whig to support his campaign, he accused Johnson of being illegitimate, suggested Johnson's relatives were murderers and thieves and stated that Johnson was an atheist.[3]: 121  Johnson won the election by 1,300 votes, out of just over 10,000 votes cast.[3]: 117 

 
Brownlow as he appeared on the frontispiece of his 1856 book, The Great Iron Wheel Examined

Brownlow supported Whig policies such as a national bank, federal funding for internal improvements (more specifically, public improvements to the Moccasin Bend area of the Tennessee River near Chattanooga allowing for better steamboat transportation of goods to New Orleans), developing industries within northeast Tennessee, and a weakened presidency.[3]: 111  He called Andrew Jackson the "greatest curse that ever yet befell this nation,"[13] and attacked Jackson's supporters, the Locofocos, in his 1844 book, A Political Register.[3]: 113  While Brownlow steadfastly supported Whig candidates such as John Bell and James C. Jones, his true political idol was Kentucky senator Henry Clay. Clay was consistently Brownlow's first choice for the party's presidential candidate throughout the 1840s.[3]: 112  Brownlow's son John recalled that one of the few times he ever saw his father cry was after he had received the news of Clay's defeat in the 1844 presidential election.[3]: 116 

In May 1849, Brownlow relocated the Whig to Knoxville, Tennessee, where he was already well known for his clashes with the Democratic Standard, which he had dubbed a "filthy lying sheet."[13] Prior to the departure of Brownlow and his newspaper from Jonesboro, an unknown assailant clubbed Brownlow in the head, leaving him bedridden for two weeks. He blamed this act on Knoxville's newspaper interests, who feared his competition.[3]: 37–44  Upon his arrival, he became embroiled in an editorial war with Knoxville Register editor John Miller McKee that lasted until McKee's departure in 1855.[14]

Brownlow joined the Sons of Temperance in 1850,[15] and promoted temperance policies in the Whig (one of his more common personal attacks was to accuse his opponents of being "drunkards"). Following the collapse of the Whig Party in the mid-1850s, he aligned himself with the Know Nothing movement, as he had long shared this movement's anti-Catholic and nativist sentiments.[3]: 125  In 1856, he published a book, Americanism Contrasted with Foreignism, Romanism and Bogus Democracy, which attacked Catholicism, foreigners and Democratic politicians.

In the late 1850s, Brownlow turned his attention to Knoxville's Democratic Party leaders and their associates. He quarreled with the radical Southern Citizen, a pro-secession newspaper published by businessman William G. Swan and Irish patriot John Mitchel (who spent time in Knoxville while in exile), and on at least one occasion, threatened Swan with a revolver.[3]: 49  Following the failure of the Bank of East Tennessee in 1858, Brownlow ruthlessly assailed its directors. His attacks forced A.R. Crozier and William Churchwell to flee the state, and drove John H. Crozier from public life. Brownlow sued another director, J. G. M. Ramsey, winning a civil judgement on behalf of the bank's depositors.[16]: 289–290 

Partially a result of Brownlow's persistent opposition to secession within the pages of his newspapers (and partially due to his long-time feud with Confederate sympathizer, banker, and Tennessee historian J. G. M. Ramsey), he was later jailed by Confederate States military authorities (the CSA district attorney in Knoxville, Tennessee being related to J. G. M. Ramsey) in December 1861, pardoned, and subsequently forced into exile in the northern United States.

Sectarian debates edit

 
Heading for "F.A. Ross' Corner," a series in Brownlow's Jonesborough Whig that attacked Presbyterian minister Frederick Augustus Ross.

While Brownlow left the preaching circuit in the 1830s, he continued responding to the critics attacking the Methodist faith until the Civil War. In 1843, his feud with Haynes led to Haynes being barred from the Methodist clergy.[17] That same year, J.M. Smith, editor of the Abingdon Virginian, accused Brownlow of having stolen jewelry at a camp meeting. Brownlow denied the charge, and accused Smith of being an adulterer. At a meeting of the Methodists' Holston Conference that year, Smith tried unsuccessfully to have Brownlow expelled from the church.[3]: 42 

In the late 1840s, Brownlow quarreled with Presbyterian minister Frederick Augustus Ross (1796–1883), who, from 1826 till 1852, was pastor of Old Kingsport Presbyterian Church in Kingsport, Tennessee, where Ross had taken up in 1818. Ross had earlier "declared war" on Methodism as a co-editor in his Calvinist Magazine, published from 1827 to 1832. Although distracted by internecine conflict within the Presbyterian Church for nearly a decade, he relaunched the Calvinist Magazine in 1845. Ross argued that the Methodist Church was despotic, comparing it to a "great iron wheel" that would crush American liberty. He stated that most Methodists were descended from Revolutionary War loyalists, and accused the Methodist Church founder, John Wesley, of believing in ghosts and witches.[15]

 
Engraving from Brownlow's The Great Iron Wheel Examined, showing an ex-Congressman attacking James Robinson Graves for slander.

Brownlow initially responded to Ross with a running column, "F.A. Ross' Corner," in the Jonesborough Whig. In 1847, he launched a separate paper, the Jonesborough Quarterly Review, which was dedicated to refuting Ross's attacks, and embarked on a speaking tour that summer. Brownlow argued that while it was common in Wesley's time for people to believe in ghosts, he provided evidence that many Presbyterian ministers still believed in such things. He derided Ross as a "habitual adulterer" and the son of a slave, and accused his relatives of stealing and committing indecent acts (Ross's son responded to the latter charge with a death threat). This quarrel continued until Brownlow moved to Knoxville in 1849.[15]

In 1856, James Robinson Graves, the Landmark Baptist minister of Nashville's Second Baptist Church, ripped Methodists in his book, The Great Iron Wheel, which used terminology and attacks similar to the ones Ross had used in the previous decade.[3]: 67  Brownlow quickly fired back with The Great Iron Wheel Examined; Or, Its False Spokes Extracted, published that same year. He accused Graves of slandering an ex-Congressman, argued that Baptist ministers were mostly illiterate and opposed to learning, and charged that the Baptist religion was wrought with "selfishness, bigotry, intolerance, and shameful want of Christian liberality."[3]: 73  Brownlow also mocked the Baptist sectarian method of baptism, immersion.[3]: 75 

Slavery and secession edit

Brownlow's views on slavery changed over time. While his pre-Civil War writings reveal a strong pro-slavery slant, his name appears on an 1834 abolitionist petition.[18]: xiv  In the early 1840s, Brownlow supported the American Colonization Society, which sought to recolonize freed slaves in Liberia.[3]: 94  In subsequent years, however, he shifted to a staunchly pro-slavery stance. Indeed he owned slaves himself.[19] Brownlow's friend and colleague, Oliver Perry Temple, stated that social pressure in the 1830s pushed most abolitionist Southerners to adopt pro-slavery views. Historian Robert McKenzie, however, suggests that Brownlow's pro-slavery shift might have been rooted in the rivalry between Northern and Southern Methodists over the issue in the 1840s.[20]: 38–39 

By the 1850s, Brownlow was radically pro-slavery, arguing that the institution was "ordained by God."[20]: 108  He gave a Scriptural defense of slavery in a speech delivered in Knoxville in 1857, and in the following year, he issued a challenge to Northern abolitionists to debate the issue. The challenge was initially accepted by Frederick Douglass, but Brownlow refused to debate him because of his race.[3]: 97  The challenge was then taken up by Abram Pryne of McGrawville, New York, a clergyman with the Congregational Church, and editor of an abolitionist newspaper. At the debate, which took place in Philadelphia in September 1858, Brownlow stated in his opening argument:

Not only will I throughout this discussion openly and boldly take the ground that Slavery as it exists in America ought to be perpetuated, but that slavery is an established and inevitable condition to human society. I will maintain the ground that God always intended the relation of master and slave to exist; that Christ and the early teachers of Christianity, found slavery differing in no material respect from American slavery, incorporated into every department of society ... that slavery having existed ever since the first organization of society, it will exist to the end of time.[21]

During the course of the Civil War, Brownlow would return to an anti-slavery stance, calling for emancipation.[20]: 191 

 
Illustration in Barton's A Hero In Homespun, showing Brownlow delivering a pro-Union speech in Sevierville in 1861

Brownlow was staunchly opposed to Southern secession.[3]: 136  He argued that secessionists wanted to form a country governed by "purse-proud aristocrats" of the Southern planter class.[3]: 135  Brownlow endorsed his friend, pro-Union candidate John Bell, for president in 1860, and in September of that year, interrupted a pro-Breckinridge rally in Knoxville to spar with the rally's keynote speaker, William Lowndes Yancey of Alabama.[20]: 29  When South Carolina seceded following Lincoln's election in November 1860, Brownlow derided the state and its "miserable cabbage-leaf of a Palmetto flag" as being descended from British loyalists, thus giving it an affinity for the aristocratic types that would govern the proposed Southern Confederacy.[3]: 140 

By 1861, the Knoxville Whig had 14,000 subscribers,[3]: 159  and was considered by secessionists the root of the stubborn pro-Union sentiment in East Tennessee (the region had resoundingly rejected a referendum on secession in February of that year). Knoxville's Democrats tried to counter Brownlow by installing radical secessionist J. Austin Sperry as editor of the Knoxville Register, touching off an editorial war that lasted throughout much of the year. Brownlow called Sperry a "scoundrel" and a "debauchee," and mocked the relatively small circulation of the Register.[16]: 214 

Throughout the Spring of 1861, Brownlow and his colleagues, Oliver Perry Temple, T.A.R. Nelson, and Horace Maynard, canvassed East Tennessee, giving dozens of pro-Union speeches. In May and June 1861, Brownlow represented Knox County at the East Tennessee Convention, which unsuccessfully petitioned the state legislature to allow East Tennessee to form a separate, Union-aligned state. In the weeks following Tennessee's secession in June 1861, Brownlow used the Whig to defend Unionists accused of treasonous acts by Confederate authorities. By the Fall of 1861, the Whig was the last pro-Union newspaper in the South.[20]: 98  He was quoted as saying "We intend to fight the secessionists until hell freezes over, and then fight them on ice."[22]

American Civil War edit

On October 24, 1861, Brownlow suspended publication of the Whig after announcing Confederate authorities were preparing to arrest him.[16]: 254  On November 4, he left Knoxville and went into hiding in the Great Smoky Mountains to the south, where there was a strong pro-Union presence, and would spend several weeks staying with friends in Wears Valley and Tuckaleechee Cove. On November 8, pro-Union guerillas burned several railroad bridges in East Tennessee, and attacked several others. Confederate leaders immediately suspected Brownlow of complicity, but he denied any involvement in the attacks.[3]: 182 

 
Brownlow (center) watches as condemned bridge-burner Harrison Self bids goodbye to his daughter; Self was eventually pardoned by Jefferson Davis

Brownlow asked for permission to leave the state, which was granted by Confederate Secretary of War Judah P. Benjamin. On December 6, as he was in Knoxville preparing to leave, however, Knox County Commissioner Robert B. Reynolds and Confederate States District Attorney John Crozier Ramsey (a son of Confederate States treasury agent J. G. M. Ramsey, the elder who Brownlow earlier in that year referred to as "the vain old historian of Tennessee") arrested and jailed Brownlow on charges of treason. While jailed, Brownlow witnessed the trials and last moments of many of the condemned bridge-burners, which he recorded in a diary. He sent a letter to Benjamin protesting his incarceration, writing, "which is your highest authority, the Secretary of War, a Major General, or a dirty little drunken attorney such as J.C. Ramsey is!"[16]: 318  After Benjamin threatened to pardon Brownlow, he was released in late December 1861.[3]: 200 

Brownlow was escorted to Nashville (which the Union Army had captured), and crossed over into Union-controlled territory on March 3, 1862. His struggle against secession had made him a celebrity in northern states, and he embarked upon a speaking tour, starting with speeches in Cincinnati and Dayton in early April. He spoke alongside Indiana governor Oliver P. Morton at Metropolitan Hall in Indianapolis on April 8, and spoke at the Merchants' Exchange in Chicago a few days later. On April 14, he addressed the Ohio state legislature in Columbus. He hosted a banquet at the Monongahela House in Pittsburgh on April 17, and spoke at Independence Hall in Philadelphia two days later.

 
An artist's 1888 illustration of Brownlow's daughter, Susan, threatening Confederate soldiers who sought to remove the American flag from the Brownlows' home in Knoxville

In Philadelphia, publisher George W. Childs convinced Brownlow to write a book, Sketches of the Rise, Progress, and Decline of Secession, which was completed in May 1862. By September, the book had sold over 100,000 copies.[3]: 239  Brownlow then headed to the northeast, where he addressed the New York City Chamber of Commerce on May 14, and spoke at the Academy of Music on May 15. In subsequent weeks, he spoke in Boston and various cities in New England, and later toured western New York and Illinois. In late June, he testified at the impeachment trial of West Hughes Humphreys, a Confederate judge who had denied Brownlow bail following his arrest in December.[3]: 221–233 

In June 1862, workers at the Colt Armory in Hartford presented a revolver to Brownlow's daughter, Susan, who had threatened to shoot two Confederate soldiers attempting to remove the American flag from the Brownlows' home in Knoxville in December of the previous year.[3]: 230  Later that year, author Erastus Beadle published a dime novel, Parson Brownlow and the Unionists of East Tennessee. In 1863, Philadelphia-based music publisher Lee and Walker issued a musical score, Parson Brownlow's Quick Step.[3]: 242–243 

 
Brownlow's characteristic forthright communication style is evident in the newspaper title Rebel Ventilator;[23] perhaps not insignificantly, Brownlow's sons, John B. Brownlow and James P. Brownlow, both saw combat as Union cavalry officers[24]

Brownlow returned to Nashville in early 1863, and followed Ambrose Burnsides's forces back to Knoxville in September. In November 1863, using proceeds from his speaking tour, he relaunched the Whig under the title, Knoxville Whig and Rebel Ventilator, and began vengefully pursuing ex-Confederates.[3]: 251  He spent a portion of 1864 attempting to reorganize his church's Holston Conference and realign it with the northern Methodists.[3]: 297 

Reconstruction-era as Governor of Tennessee edit

Brownlow was nominated for governor by a convention of Tennessee Unionists in January 1865. He was the only nominee. This convention also submitted state constitutional amendments outlawing slavery and repealing the Ordinance of Secession,[25] thus making his state the first of the Southern states to leave the Confederacy. The military governor, Andrew Johnson, had enacted a series of measures that essentially prevented ex-Confederates from voting, and on March 4, Brownlow was elected by a 23,352 to 35 vote, and the amendments passed by a similarly lopsided margin.[3]: 261  The vote met President Lincoln's "1/10th test," which recognized elections in Southern states if the total vote was at least one-tenth the total vote in the 1860 presidential election.[3]: 261 

 
Portrait of Governor Brownlow by George Dury. This official portrait of Governor Brownlow would only be briefly displayed within the Tennessee State Capitol building during 1987.

In early April 1865, Brownlow arrived in Nashville, a city which he despised, having called it a "dunghill," and stating it had a "deadly, treasonable exhalation."[26] He was sworn in on April 5, and submitted the 13th Amendment for ratification the following day.[3]: 265  After this amendment was ratified, Brownlow submitted a series of bills to punish former Confederates. He disfranchised for at least five years anyone who had supported the Confederacy, and, in cases of Confederate leaders, fifteen years. He later strengthened this law to require prospective voters to prove they had supported the Union. He tried to impose fines for wearing a Confederate uniform, and attempted to bar Confederate ministers from performing marriages.[3]: 269 

After a few months in office Brownlow decided Johnson, who had by then become President of the United States, was too lenient toward former Confederate leaders, and aligned himself with the Radical Republicans, a group which dominated Congress and vehemently opposed Johnson. In the elections for the state's congressional seats held in August 1865, Brownlow rejected nearly one-third of the total vote to allow Radical candidate Samuel Arnell to win in the 6th District.[3]: 280  A small group of state legislators, led by state Speaker of the House William Heiskell, turned against Brownlow, alleging his actions were too despotic, and aligned themselves with Johnson.[3]: 309  By 1866, Brownlow had come to believe that some Southerners were plotting another rebellion, and that Andrew Johnson would be its leader.[27]

Opposition to the Ku Klux Klan edit

 
Photograph of Brownlow by Mathew Brady

Brownlow began calling for civil rights to be extended to freed slaves, stating that "a loyal Negro was more deserving than a disloyal white man."[3]: 291  In May 1866, he submitted the 14th Amendment for ratification, which the Radicals in Congress supported, but Johnson and his allies opposed. The pro-Johnson minority in the statehouse attempted to flee Nashville to prevent a quorum, and the House sergeant-at-arms was dispatched to arrest them. Two were captured—Pleasant Williams and A. J. Martin—and confined to the House committee room, giving the House the necessary number of members present to establish a quorum. After the amendment passed by a 43-11 vote, Heiskell refused to sign it and resigned in protest. His successor signed it, however, and the amendment was ratified.[3]: 314  In transmitting the news to Congress, Brownlow taunted Johnson, stating, "My compliments to the dead dog in the White House."[3]: 315  Tennessee was readmitted to the Union shortly afterward, and was represented in Congress again by 1866; Tennessee was the only former Confederate state that bypassed Military Reconstruction.[28]

The Radicals nominated Brownlow for a second term for governor in February 1867. His opponent was Emerson Etheridge, a frequent critic of the Brownlow administration. That same month, the legislature passed a bill giving the state's black residents the right to vote, and Union Leagues were organized to help freed slaves in this process. Members of these leagues frequently clashed with disfranchised ex-Confederates, including members of the burgeoning Ku Klux Klan, and Brownlow organized a state guard, led by General Joseph Alexander Cooper, to protect voters (and harass the opposition).[3]: 333  With the state's ex-Confederates disfranchised, Brownlow easily defeated Etheridge in the 1867 election.[3]: 339 

 
Photograph of Brownlow by Carl Giers

By 1868, Klan violence had increased significantly. The organization had sent Brownlow a death threat, and had come close to assassinating Congressman Samuel Arnell.[3]: 356  General Nathan B. Forrest joined the Klan, becoming its first Grand Wizard, partially in response to the disfranchisement policies of Brownlow.[27] The William G. Brownlow Family Papers, 1836-1900, archived by the Tennessee Secretary of State, contains one letter dated July 4, 1868, from the Great-Grand Cyclops of the Ku Klux Klan Stella Morton, in which Morton threatens Governor Brownlow's life.[29]

In an interview with the Cincinnati Commercial, Forrest stated, "I have never recognized the present government in Tennessee as having any legal existence." He objected to Governor Brownlow calling out the militia and warned if they "committed outrages" that "they and Mr. Brownloe's [sic] government will be swept out of existence not a Radical will be left alive." Forrest claimed the Klan had more than 40,000 members in Tennessee and 550,000 in the southern states. He said the Klan supported the Democratic Party. Forrest suggested that a proclamation of Brownlow called for shooting members of the Klan. Forrest denied being a member of the Klan himself.[30]

Forrest and twelve other Klan members submitted a petition to Brownlow, stating they would cease their activities if Confederates were given the right to vote.[3]: 360  Brownlow rejected this, however, and set about reorganizing the state guard and pressing the legislature for still greater enforcement powers.

Brownlow endorsed Ulysses S. Grant for president in 1868, and asked for federal troops to be stationed in 21 Tennessee counties to counter rising Klan activity. The state legislature granted him the power to throw out entire counties' voter registrations if he thought they included disfranchised voters. In October 1868, prior to the election, Brownlow discarded all registered voters in Lincoln County. Following the election, two of the Radicals' congressional candidates, Lewis Tillman in the 4th District and William J. Smith in the 8th District, were initially defeated. Brownlow, believing Klan intimidation to be the reason for their defeat, rejected the votes from Marshall and Coffee counties, allowing Tillman to win, and rejected the votes from Fayette and Tipton counties, allowing Smith to win.[3]: 366–367 

In February 1869, as Brownlow's final term was near its end, he placed nine counties under martial law, arguing this was necessary to quell rising Klan violence. He also dispatched five state guard companies to occupy Pulaski, where the Klan had been founded.[3]: 372  After Brownlow left office in March, Forrest ordered the Klan to destroy its costumes and cease all activities.[27]

U.S. Senate and his later life edit

Following his reelection as Governor of Tennessee in 1867, Brownlow decided he would not seek a third term, and instead sought election to the U.S. Senate seat that would be vacated by David T. Patterson, Andrew Johnson's son-in-law, in 1869. In October 1867, the state legislature elected Brownlow over William B. Stokes by a 63 to 39 vote.[3]: 347  By the time he was sworn in on March 4, 1869, a persistent nervous disease had weakened him considerably, and the Senate clerk had to read his speeches.[3]: 387  One of his speeches was a defense of Ambrose Burnside, the Union general who had liberated Knoxville from Confederate forces in 1863.[3]: 390 

Brownlow was a member of the U.S. Senate when the final version of the bill S. 810 was introduced onto the Senate floor on April 19, 1870, enacted the next month by the U.S. Congress, and signed into law by President Ulysses S. Grant on May 31, 1870 as the Enforcement Act of 1870 (also known under the popular titles as the Civil Rights Act of 1870 or the First Ku Klux Klan Act) and the later Second Enforcement Act of 1871 (also known under the popular titles as the Civil Rights Act of 1871 or the Third Ku Klux Klan Act) of the United States Congress which empowered the President to suspend the writ of habeas corpus in order to combat the Ku Klux Klan and other white supremacy organizations.

 
Brownlow's house and library at 211 Cumberland Avenue in Knoxville (no longer extant), as drawn by Benson John Lossing

Interviewed (while suffering visibly from the "palsy" that afflicted him in later life) in 1871 by a reporter from the New York Herald, Brownlow essentially predicted the failure of Reconstruction, the coming nadir of American race relations, and beyond:[31]

"The leading men in the South still look upon the separation of the south from the Union as a hopeful probability. The devil is in them, and they will get up another rebellion if they see any chance of success. They exalt in private over the reduction of the regular army, which Congress foolishly cut down to 30,000 men, and they boast of having enough arms to organize an army at any time. Davis, Toombs and Stephens express the sentiments of the masses of the Southern people...[the plan is to] try to accomplish at the ballot-box and by legislation what they failed to do in the field...to get control of the National Government by the aid of the Democratic party, to destroy all the work of reconstruction, and during the administration of a Democratic President to reorganize the Southern Confederacy, after long and careful preparation."

— Parson Brownlow, August 1871[31]

After his Senate term ended in 1875, Brownlow returned to Knoxville. His successor as governor, DeWitt Clinton Senter, had undone most of his Radical initiatives, allowing Democrats to regain control of the state government.[32] Having sold the Whig in 1869, Brownlow purchased an interest in the Knoxville Chronicle, a Republican newspaper published by his old protégé, William Rule. The paper's name was changed to the Knoxville Whig and Chronicle.[3]: 385  In 1876, Brownlow endorsed Rutherford B. Hayes for president.[3]: 396  In December of the same year, he spoke at the opening of Knoxville College, which had been established for the city's African-American residents.[33]

On the night of April 28, 1877, Brownlow collapsed at his home, and died the following afternoon. The cause of death was given as "paralysis of the bowels."[3]: 396  He was interred in Knoxville's Old Gray Cemetery following a funeral procession described by his colleague, Oliver Perry Temple, as the largest in the city's history up to that time.[34]

Legacy edit

In 1870, William Rule, who had been a journalist for the Whig, launched the Knoxville Chronicle, which he considered the Whig's pro-Republican successor. Rule continued editing this paper, which was eventually renamed The Knoxville Journal, until his death in 1928. The Knoxville Journal remained one of Knoxville's daily newspapers until it folded in 1991. Adolph Ochs, who later became publisher of the New York Times, began his career at the Chronicle in the early 1870s.[35]

William Rule wrote that Brownlow was "a master of invective and burning sarcasm, and he flourished in an age when such things were expected of a public journalist."[36] J. Austin Sperry, Brownlow's rival editor in pre-Civil War Knoxville, admitted that Brownlow was a remarkable judge of human nature.[37]

Brownlow's long-time colleague, Oliver Perry Temple, wrote of him:

It was easy for friends to persuade Mr. Brownlow to do anything that did not violate his sense of right; to force him was impossible. A child could lead him; a giant could not drive him. When his mind was once made up, it was as immovable as the mountains.[38]

Brownlow remained a divisive figure for decades after his death. In 1999, historian Stephen Ash wrote, "more than 120 years after his death, merely mentioning his name in the Volunteer State can evoke raucous laughter or bitter curses."[18]: xi  Brownlow has been described as "Tennessee's worst governor," and the "most hated man in Tennessee History."[5] A 1981 poll of fifty-two Tennessee historians that ranked the state's governors on ability, accomplishments, and statesmanship, placed Brownlow dead last.[39]

Journalist Steve Humphrey argued that Brownlow was a talented newspaper editor and reporter, as evidenced by his reporting on events such as the opening of the Gayoso Hotel in Memphis and Knoxville's 1854 cholera epidemic.[37]

The Capitol Committee of the Tennessee General Assembly removed the official portrait of Governor Parson Brownlow that had only been briefly installed during April 1987 within the Legislative Library of state capitol building, upon the recommendation of Democratic Tennessee state Senator Douglas Henry.[40]

Family edit

 
"Liberty & Union. Now & Forever, One and Inseperable" - 34-star U.S. flag given to Susan Brownlow by the Ladies of Philadelphia, June 13, 1862 (East Tennessee Historical Society)

Brownlow married Eliza O'Brien (1819–1914) during 1836 in Elizabethton, Tennessee. They had seven children: Susan, John Bell, James Patton, Mary, Fannie, Annie, and Caledonia Temple.[24]

Eliza O'Brien Brownlow lived at the family's home formerly on East Cumberland Avenue (at the present day James White Parkway) in Knoxville until her death in 1914 at the age of 94. In the 1890s and early 1900s, numerous visitors, including three presidents (William McKinley, Theodore Roosevelt, and William Howard Taft), called on Eliza Brownlow when visiting Knoxville.[40]

The Brownlows' older son, John Bell Brownlow (1839–1922), was a colonel in the Union Army during the Civil War. In the decades following his father's death, he helped finance the development of a Knoxville neighborhood (just north of modern Fourth and Gill) which for years was known as "Brownlow." Brownlow Elementary School, which served this neighborhood from 1913 to 1995, still stands, and has been converted into urban lofts.[41][42]

The Brownlows' younger son, James Patton Brownlow (1842–1879), was also a colonel in the Union Army during the Civil War, though he was later brevetted to brigadier general by President Andrew Johnson. He served as an adjutant general in the state guard during his father's term as governor.[43]

Walter P. Brownlow (1851–1910), a nephew of Parson Brownlow, served as a U.S. congressman from Tennessee's 1st district from 1897 until his death.[24]

James Stewart Martin (1826–1907), another nephew of Parson Brownlow (the son of his sister, Nancy), served as a U.S. congressman from Illinois in the mid-1870s.[24]

Louis Brownlow (1879–1963), a prominent 20th-century political scientist and city planner, was a grandson of one of Parson Brownlow's first cousins.[24] He served a tumultuous 3-year term as Knoxville's city manager in the 1920s.

Works edit

Newspapers edit

  • The Whig, Brownlow's primary mouthpiece, was published under the following masthead titles:
    • Tennessee Whig (May 16, 1839 in Elizabethton – June 13, 1839)
    • Elizabethton Whig (June 13, 1839 in Elizabethton – nameplate change)
    • The Whig (May 6, 1840 in Jonesborough – November 3, 1841)
    • Jonesborough Whig (November 10, 1841 – May 11, 1842)
    • Jonesborough Whig and Independent Journal (May 18, 1842 – April 19, 1849)
    • Brownlow's Knoxville Whig and Independent Journal (May 19, 1849 in Knoxville – April 7, 1855)
    • Brownlow's Knoxville Whig (April 14, 1855 – July 27, 1861)
    • Brownlow's Weekly Whig (August 3, 1861 – October 26, 1861)
    • Brownlow's Knoxville Whig, and Rebel Ventilator (November 11, 1863 – February 21, 1866)
    • Brownlow's Knoxville Whig (February 28, 1866 – January 27, 1869)
    • Knoxville Weekly Whig (February 3, 1869 – March 1870)
    • Weekly Whig and Register (c. 1870 – 1871)
  • The Knoxville Whig and Chronicle (1875–1877), co-owner with William Rule

Books edit

  • Helps to the Study of Presbyterianism: Or, An Unsophisticated Exposition of Calvinism, with Hopkinsian Modifications and Policy, with a View to a More Easy Interpretation of the Same (1834)
  • A Narrative of the Life, Travels, and Circumstances Incident Thereto, of William G. Brownlow (1834, a book supplement bound within Helps to the Study of Presbyterianism:)
  • Baptism Examined: Or, the True State of the Case (1842)
  • A Political Register, Setting Forth the Principles of the Whig and Locofoco Parties in the United States, With the Life and Public Services of Henry Clay (1844)
  • Americanism Contrasted with Foreignism, Romanism and Bogus Democracy, In the Light of Reason, History, and Scripture; In Which Certain Demagogues in Tennessee, and Elsewhere, are Shown Up in Their True Colors (1856)
  • The Great Iron Wheel Examined; Or, Its False Spokes Extracted, and an Exhibition of Elder Graves, Its Builder (1856)
  • Sketches of the Rise, Progress, and Decline of Secession; With a Narrative of Personal Adventures Among the Rebels (1862)

Speeches and debates edit

  • "Speech, Being a Reply to Thomas Dog Arnold, Ass, Who Appeared Before the Invitation, On Saturday Night, the 18th of September, 1852, in the Hearing of a Large Audience, and Assailed Said Brownlow" (Knoxville, Tennessee, September 19, 1852)
  • "A Sermon on Slavery: A Vindication of the Methodist Church, South: Her Position Stated" (Knoxville, Tennessee, August 9, 1857)
  • "Ought American Slavery to be Perpetuated? A Debate Between Rev. W.G. Brownlow and Rev. A. Pryne Held At Philadelphia, September, 1858" (1858)
  • "Speech of Parson Brownlow, of Tennessee, Against the Great Rebellion" (New York, May 15, 1862)
  • "Address to the Loyal People of Tennessee" (Knoxville, Tennessee, March 18, 1868)

References edit

  1. ^ a b c d Forrest Conklin, William Gannaway "Parson" Brownlow. Tennessee Encyclopedia of History and Culture, 2009. Retrieved on October 18, 2012.
  2. ^ Jack Neely, "," Metro Pulse, 6 April 2011] Accessed at the Internet Archive, September 20, 2017
  3. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab ac ad ae af ag ah ai aj ak al am an ao ap aq ar as at au av aw ax ay az ba bb bc bd be E. Merton Coulter, William G. Brownlow: Fighting Parson of the Southern Highlands (Knoxville, Tenn.: University of Tennessee Press, 1999).
  4. ^ . Archived from the original on November 7, 2017. Retrieved November 5, 2017.
  5. ^ a b Jack Neely, "," Metro Pulse, 6 April 2011. Accessed at the Internet Archive, 2 October 2015.
  6. ^ a b "Early History of Carter County 1760-1861", p. 55. Frank Merritt, 1950. East Tennessee Historical Society, Knoxville, Tennessee.
  7. ^ "O'Brien Furnace ~ 1A 73 ~ Valley Forge, TN - Tennessee Historical Markers on Waymarking.com"
  8. ^ "That D--d Brownlow!", p. 176. Steve Humphrey. Appalachian Consortium Press, 1978.
  9. ^ Stephen V. Ash, "Introduction" in E. Merton Coulter, William G. Brownlow (Univ. of Tennessee Press, 1999) p xi
  10. ^ "Early History of Carter County 1760-1861", pp. 55-56. Frank Merritt, 1950. East Tennessee Historical Society, Knoxville, Tennessee.
  11. ^ a b Paul Fink, Jonesborough: The First Century of Tennessee's First Town (Johnson City, Tenn.: Overmountain Press, 2002), pp. 140-145.
  12. ^ "Early History of Carter County 1760-1861", pp. 58. Frank Merritt, 1950. East Tennessee Historical Society, Knoxville, Tennessee.
  13. ^ a b Jonesborough Whig and Independent Journal, 18 June 1845.
  14. ^ Verton Queener, "William Gannaway Brownlow as an Editor," East Tennessee Historical Society Publications, No. 4 (1932), pp. 72-76.
  15. ^ a b c Forrest Conklin and John Wittig, "Religious Warfare in the Southern Highlands: Brownlow versus Ross," Journal of East Tennessee History, Vol. 63 (1991), pp. 33-50.
  16. ^ a b c d William Gannaway Brownlow, Sketches of the Rise, Progress, and Decline of Secession (Philadelphia: G.W. Childs, 1862).
  17. ^ James Bellamy, "The Political Career of Landon Carter Haynes," East Tennessee Historical Society Publications, Vol. 28 (1956), pp. 105-107.
  18. ^ a b Stephen Ash, Introduction to E. Merton Coulter's William G. Brownlow: Fighting Parson of the Southern Highlands (Chapel Hill, N.C.: University of North Carolina Press, 1999).
  19. ^ "Congress slaveowners", The Washington Post, January 19, 2022, retrieved July 10, 2022
  20. ^ a b c d e Robert McKenzie, Lincolnites and Rebels: A Divided Town in the American Civil War (New York: Oxford University Press, 2006).
  21. ^ Brownlow, William Gannaway & Pryne, Abram Ought American slavery to be perpetuated?: A debate between Rev. W.G. Brownlow and Rev. A. Pryne. Held at Philadelphia, September, 1858 J.B. Lippincott & Co. (1858)
  22. ^ "The Jeffersonian". Stroudsburg, Pa. August 15, 1861. Retrieved January 14, 2023. Parson Brownlow recently declared in relation to the Union men of East Tennessee: We intend to fight the secessionists until hell freezes over, and then fight them on ice, Or any other man.
  23. ^ Uffelman, Minoa (November 21, 2011). "Tennessee's Fighting Parson". Opinionator. Retrieved June 29, 2023.
  24. ^ a b c d e Zella Armstrong, Notable Southern families, Volume 1, (Chattanooga, Tenn.: The Lookout Publishing Co., 1918), pp. 39-45. OCLC 1079125. Retrieved: 29 October 2012.
  25. ^ Wilson D. Miscamble, "Andrew Johnson and the Election of William G. ('Parson') Brownlow as Governor of Tennessee," Tennessee Historical Quarterly, Vol. 37 (1978), pp. 308-320.
  26. ^ Jesse Burt, Nashville: Its Life and Times (Tennessee Book Company, 1959), p. 67.
  27. ^ a b c Phillip Langsdon, Tennessee: A Political History (Franklin, Tenn.: Hillsboro Press, 2000), pp. 169, 178, 190, 239.
  28. ^ Schroeder-Lein, Glenna R.; Zuczek, Richard (2001). "Brownlow, William Gannaway 'Parson' (1805–1877)". Andrew Johnson: a biographical companion. ABC-CLIO biographical companions. Santa Barbara, Calif.: ABC-CLIO. pp. 39–41. ISBN 978-1-57607-030-7.
  29. ^ . Archived from the original on October 30, 2017. Retrieved October 29, 2017.
  30. ^ The Charleston Daily News. "A Talk with General Forrest." September 8, 1868: 1.
  31. ^ a b "Senator Brownlow: What He Thinks of the Next Presidential Election, the 'Rebel' Spirit, the Kuklux..." The Tennessean. August 5, 1871. p. 3. Retrieved June 24, 2023.
  32. ^ William E. Hardy, "The Margins of William Brownlow's Words: New Perspectives on the End of Radical Reconstruction in Tennessee," Journal of East Tennessee History, Vol. 84 (2012), pp. 78-86.
  33. ^ William MacArthur, Knoxville: Crossroads of the New South (Tulsa, Okla.: Continental Heritage Press, 1982), p. 49, 74.
  34. ^ Oliver Perry Temple, Notable Men of Tennessee, From 1833 to 1875, Their Times and Their Contemporaries (New York: Cosmopolitan Press, 1912), p. 143.
  35. ^ Doris Faber, Printer's Devil to Publisher: Adolph S. Ochs of the New York Times (New York Messner, 1963), pp. 24-25.
  36. ^ William Rule, Standard History of Knoxville, Tennessee (Chicago: Lewis Publishing Company, 1900; reprinted by Kessinger Books, 2010), p. 326.
  37. ^ a b Stephen Humphrey, "The Man Brownlow from a Newspaper Man's Point of View," East Tennessee Historical Society Publications, Vol. 43 (1971), pp. 59-70.
  38. ^ Temple, Notable Men of Tennessee, p. 282.
  39. ^ Tennessee Historical Quarterly, Vol. 41, No. 1 (Spring 1982), p. 100.
  40. ^ a b Jack Neely, "," Metro Pulse, 6 April 2011. Accessed at the Internet Archive, 2 October 2015.
  41. ^ Knox County Development Corporation, Brownlow School Redevelopment & Urban Renewal Plan March 3, 2016, at the Wayback Machine, August 2007. Retrieved: 29 October 2012.
  42. ^ Brownlow Lofts. Retrieved: 29 October 2012.
  43. ^ Roger D. Hunt and Jack R. Brown, Brevet Brigadier Generals in Blue (Gaithersburg, Maryland: Olde Soldier Books, Inc., 1990), p. 86. ISBN 1-56013-002-4.

Further reading edit

  • Alexander, Thomas B. Political Reconstruction in Tennessee (Vanderbilt UP, 1950).
  • Alexander, Thomas B. "Strange Bedfellows: The Interlocking Careers of TAR Nelson, Andrew Johnson, and WG (Parson) Brownlow." East Tennessee Historical Society Publications 24 (1952): 68+.
  • Alexander, Thomas B. "Whiggery and Reconstruction in Tennessee." Journal of Southern History 16.3 (1950): 291-305. online
  • Alexander, Thomas B. "Kukluxism in Tennessee, 1865-1869." Tennessee Historical Quarterly (1949): 195-219. online
  • Ash, Stephen (1999), Secessionists and Scoundrels, Louisiana State University Press, ISBN 0-8071-2354-4
  • Robert Booker, "Brownlow Roared Pro-Union Message, Knoxville News Sentinel, 28 June 2011.
  • Coulter, E. Merton, William G. Brownlow: Fighting Parson of the Southern Highlands (1937; reprinted 999). Full text online free of 1999 edition, with important new introduction by Stephen V. Ash pp xi to xvii.
  • Downing, David C. (2007), A South Divided: Portraits of Dissent in the Confederacy. Nashville: Cumberland House, ISBN 978-1-58182-587-9
  • Kelly, James C. "William Gannaway Brownlow" Tennessee Historical Quarterly 43.1, 2 (1984): 25-43 and 155-72. part 1 online; and part 2 online
  • Haskins, Ralph W. "Internecine Strife in Tennessee: Andrew Johnson Versus Parson Brownlow" Tennessee Historical Quarterly 24#4 (1965), pp. 321–340 online
  • Miscamble, William G. "Andrew Johnson and the Election of William G. ("Parson") Brownlow as Governor of Tennessee." Tennessee Historical Quarterly 37.3 (1978): 308.
  • Severance, Ben H. Tennessee's Radical Army: The State Guard and Its Role in Reconstruction, 1867-1869 (Univ. of Tennessee Press, 2005).

External links edit

  • United States Congress. "Parson Brownlow (id: b000963)". Biographical Directory of the United States Congress.
  • Brownlow's Knoxville Whig and Rebel Ventilator – from the Library of Congress "Chronicling America" database; includes issues published 1863–1866
  • William Gannaway Brownlow entry at the National Governors Association
  • Governor William G. Brownlow Papers July 12, 2013, at the Wayback Machine – Tennessee State Library and Archives
  • Brownlow-related photographs in the Calvin McClung Digital Collection – includes newspaper clippings and family photos
  • Works by Parson Brownlow at Project Gutenberg
  • Works by or about Parson Brownlow at Internet Archive
Party political offices
First Republican nominee for Governor of Tennessee
1865, 1867
Succeeded by
Political offices
Preceded by
Edward H. East
Acting Governor
Governor of Tennessee
1865–1869
Succeeded by
U.S. Senate
Preceded by U.S. senator (Class 1) from Tennessee
1869–1875
Served alongside: Joseph S. Fowler, Henry Cooper
Succeeded by

parson, brownlow, william, gannaway, parson, brownlow, august, 1805, april, 1877, american, newspaper, publisher, methodist, minister, book, author, prisoner, lecturer, politician, served, 17th, governor, tennessee, from, 1865, 1869, united, states, senator, f. William Gannaway Parson Brownlow August 29 1805 April 29 1877 was an American newspaper publisher Methodist minister book author prisoner of war lecturer and politician who served as the 17th governor of Tennessee from 1865 to 1869 and as a United States Senator from Tennessee from 1869 to 1875 Brownlow rose to prominence in the late 1830s and early 1840s as editor of the Whig a polemical newspaper in East Tennessee that promoted Whig Party ideals and opposed secession in the years leading up to the American Civil War Brownlow s uncompromising and radical viewpoints made him one of the most divisive figures in Tennessee political history and one of the most controversial Reconstruction Era politicians of the United States Parson Brownlow17th Governor of TennesseeIn office April 5 1865 February 25 1869Preceded byAndrew Johnsonas Military GovernorSucceeded byDewitt Clinton SenterUnited States Senator from TennesseeIn office March 4 1869 March 3 1875Preceded byDavid T PattersonSucceeded byAndrew JohnsonPersonal detailsBornWilliam Gannaway Brownlow 1805 08 29 August 29 1805Wythe County Virginia U S DiedApril 29 1877 1877 04 29 aged 71 Knoxville Tennessee U S Resting placeOld Gray Cemetery Knoxville TennesseePolitical partyWhigAmericanRepublicanSpouseEliza O Brien m 1836 RelationsWalter P Brownlow nephew ChildrenSusan John Bell James Mary Fannie Annie Caledonia TempleProfessionMinister newspaper editorSignatureBeginning his career as a Methodist circuit rider in the 1820s Brownlow was both censured and praised by his superiors for his vicious verbal debates with rival missionaries of other sectarian Christian beliefs Later as a newspaper publisher and editor he was notorious for his relentless personal attacks against his religious and political opponents sometimes to the point of being physically assaulted At the same time Brownlow was successfully building a large base of fiercely loyal subscribers 1 Brownlow returned to Tennessee in 1863 and in 1865 became the war governor with the U S Army behind him He joined the Radical Republicans and spent much of his term opposing the policies of his longtime political foe Andrew Johnson 1 His gubernatorial policies which were both autocratic and progressive helped Tennessee become the first former Confederate state to be readmitted to the Union in 1866 exempting it from the lengthy federal military reconstruction inflicted on most of the South 1 2 Soon after the Civil War Brownlow utilized the state government to enfranchise male African American former slaves with the right to vote and run for public office in Tennessee Soon after ex Confederate political leaders and military officers used the Ku Klux Klan and likeminded vigilante groups to disenfranchise African Americans 1 Contents 1 Early life 1 1 Marriage 2 Early newspaper owner 3 Sectarian debates 4 Slavery and secession 5 American Civil War 6 Reconstruction era as Governor of Tennessee 6 1 Opposition to the Ku Klux Klan 7 U S Senate and his later life 8 Legacy 9 Family 10 Works 10 1 Newspapers 10 2 Books 10 3 Speeches and debates 11 References 12 Further reading 13 External linksEarly life editBrownlow was born in Wythe County Virginia in 1805 the eldest son of Joseph A Brownlow and Catherine Gannaway Joseph Brownlow an itinerant farmer was born in Augusta County Virginia in 1782 and died during 1816 in Blountville Tennessee and Catherine Gannaway followed three months later leaving William orphaned at the age of 10 The first Brownlow forebear in Virginia was William Brownlow who was born in Magherafelt Ulster in 1709 and emigrated to Virginia in 1731 Brownlow and his four siblings were split up among relatives with Brownlow spending the remainder of his childhood on his uncle John Gannaway s farm At age 18 Brownlow went to Abingdon where he learned the trade of carpentry from another uncle George Winniford 3 1 3 nbsp Engraving from Brownlow s book The Great Iron Wheel Examined showing a Baptist minister changing clothes in front of horrified women after administering a baptism by immersion In 1825 Brownlow attended a camp meeting near Sulphur Springs Virginia where he experienced a dramatic spiritual rebirth He later recalled that suddenly all my anxieties were at an end all my hopes were realized my happiness was complete 3 4 He immediately abandoned the carpentry trade and began studying to become a Methodist minister In Fall 1826 he attended the annual meeting of the Holston Conference of the Methodist Church in Abingdon He applied to join the travelling ministry commonly called circuit riders and was admitted that year by Bishop Joshua Soule 3 6 The competition in Southern Appalachia for both converts and their tithes among the Baptists Methodists and Presbyterians was fierce and diatribes in both speech and print against rival sectarian Christian beliefs and leaders were commonplace among missionaries In defending his Methodist Church and its early leaders Brownlow took such debates to a whole new level attacking not only Baptist and Presbyterian theology but also the character of his rival missionaries 4 In 1826 Soule gave Brownlow his first assignment as a circuit rider the Black Mountain circuit in North Carolina It was here that Brownlow first ran afoul of the Baptists who were spreading quickly throughout the Southern Appalachian region and developed an immediate dislike of them considering them narrow minded bigots who engaged in dirty rituals such as foot washing 3 18 During the following year in 1827 Brownlow was assigned as a circuit rider in Maryville Tennessee area where there was a strong Presbyterian presence and he later recalled being constantly harassed by a young Presbyterian missionary who taunted him with Calvinistic criticisms of Methodism 3 19 In 1828 Brownlow was sued for slander but the suit was dismissed In 1831 Brownlow was sued for libel by a Baptist preacher and ordered to pay his accuser 5 3 22 In 1832 Brownlow was assigned as a circuit rider to the Pickens District in South Carolina which he claimed was overrun with Baptists and nullifiers Unable to make headway in the district Brownlow circulated his venomous 70 page pamphlet blasting the district s Baptists and narrowly galloped safely back into the mountains as the district s enraged residents demanded he be hanged 3 25 Brownlow s run in with the South Carolina nullifiers would influence his later views on secession Brownlow soon afterward had his 1834 tome Helps To The Study of Presbyterianism addressing in part Brownlow s advancement of the separation of church and state in the United States and the Presbyterian Church domination of the American Sunday School Union published in Knoxville Tennessee by newspaper and book publisher Frederick S Heiskell Marriage edit Brownlow married a younger Eliza Ann O Brien during 1836 in Carter County Tennessee where the two resided in her hometown of Elizabethton Brownlow began working as a clerk managing her family s O Brien Furnace iron foundry which was located along the banks of the Doe River at Valley Forge about four miles southeast of Elizabethton 5 6 7 Brownlow would often travel by flatboat on both the Watauga River and the Holston River in East Tennessee bringing shipments of iron castings from the O Brien Furnance to Knoxville 8 Although Brownlow left the circuit shortly after his marriage during 1836 he would continue his staunch defense of Methodism and Methodist leaders against the published attacks by religious leaders and writers of other sectarian Christian beliefs within his later newspaper columns books and speeches For the remainder of his life and beyond Brownlow was to become known to friend and foe alike as the Fighting Parson 3 Early newspaper owner editMain article Brownlow s Whig Brownlow cut his teeth in the newspaper business during 1838 writing for the short lived Elizabethton Republican and Manufacturer s Advocate initially under its editor William Gott This weekly Elizabethton newspaper advanced Whig politics and by the time that Brownlow had later been promoted as its editor the Elizabethton Republican and Manufacturer s Advocate had some three hundred subscribers and was closely associated with Mason R Lyon 6 nbsp Ad in an 1848 issue of the Jonesborough Whig attacking presidential candidate Lewis CassHistorian Stephen Ash says What made the Parson stand out was more than anything else his vitriolic tongue and pen Over the course of his long career he took up many causes These included not only Methodism Whiggery and the Union but also temperance Know Nothingism and slavery His favorite method of promoting those causes was to chastise and ridicule his opponents and few men could do so with as much venomous wit as he Baptists Presbyterians Catholics Mormons Democrats Republicans secessionists drunks immigrants and abolitionists all were at one time or another on the receiving end of Brownlow s merciless broadsides Not surprisingly he made many enemies A number of them replied in kind some tried to kill him 9 The rising Elizabethton attorney T A R Nelson suggested that Brownlow should launch a newspaper to support Whig Party candidates in the upcoming elections Brownlow partnered with the Elizabethton newspaper publisher Mason R Lyon and as the editor within their partnership with the agreement that Brownlow would receive one third of the new profits from the Tennessee Whig 10 Brownlow and Lyon launched their weekly Tennessee Whig on Thursday May 16 1839 and within several weeks Brownlow and Lyon would rebrand their new weekly newspaper as the Elizabethton Whig starting with the June 13 1839 edition of the newspaper 11 As Brownlow s vituperative editorial style quickly brought bitter division to Elizabethton and he began quarreling with local Whig turned Democrat Landon Carter Haynes Haynes had read law under Elizabethton attorney T A R Nelson and Haynes would later follow Nelson to Jonesborough during 1840 where Haynes would eventually edit a Jonesborough newspaper Brownlow and the Elizabethton Whig also relocated from Elizabethton and to Jonesborough during the same year where the weekly Brownlow newspaper was again rebranded as the Jonesboro Whig the Tennessee town has spelled municipal name two different ways through its history publishing the first edition of the second volume on May 7 1840 Brownlow had also brought along Valentine Garland along as a new business partner within his Jonesboro Whig enterprise Garland had previously worked as a journeyman printer with the Elizabethton Whig and had purchased Lyon s interest in the Elizabethton Whig for 550 00 but their business partnership in the Jonesboro Whig was short lived as an announcement published on August 12 1840 notified the Whig readers that the Brownlow and Garland business partnership was dissolved 12 Brownlow would later accost Haynes in a Jonesborough street and then proceeded to beat Haynes with a sword cane prompting Haynes to draw out his pistol and shoot Brownlow in the thigh 3 39 Haynes was later hired as editor of the competing Democratic Tennessee Sentinel the following year and the editors Brownlow and Haynes would publish polemics targeting each other within their respective newspapers over the next several years 11 In 1845 Brownlow ran against Andrew Johnson for the state s 1st District seat in the U S House of Representatives Using the Whig to support his campaign he accused Johnson of being illegitimate suggested Johnson s relatives were murderers and thieves and stated that Johnson was an atheist 3 121 Johnson won the election by 1 300 votes out of just over 10 000 votes cast 3 117 nbsp Brownlow as he appeared on the frontispiece of his 1856 book The Great Iron Wheel ExaminedBrownlow supported Whig policies such as a national bank federal funding for internal improvements more specifically public improvements to the Moccasin Bend area of the Tennessee River near Chattanooga allowing for better steamboat transportation of goods to New Orleans developing industries within northeast Tennessee and a weakened presidency 3 111 He called Andrew Jackson the greatest curse that ever yet befell this nation 13 and attacked Jackson s supporters the Locofocos in his 1844 book A Political Register 3 113 While Brownlow steadfastly supported Whig candidates such as John Bell and James C Jones his true political idol was Kentucky senator Henry Clay Clay was consistently Brownlow s first choice for the party s presidential candidate throughout the 1840s 3 112 Brownlow s son John recalled that one of the few times he ever saw his father cry was after he had received the news of Clay s defeat in the 1844 presidential election 3 116 In May 1849 Brownlow relocated the Whig to Knoxville Tennessee where he was already well known for his clashes with the Democratic Standard which he had dubbed a filthy lying sheet 13 Prior to the departure of Brownlow and his newspaper from Jonesboro an unknown assailant clubbed Brownlow in the head leaving him bedridden for two weeks He blamed this act on Knoxville s newspaper interests who feared his competition 3 37 44 Upon his arrival he became embroiled in an editorial war with Knoxville Register editor John Miller McKee that lasted until McKee s departure in 1855 14 Brownlow joined the Sons of Temperance in 1850 15 and promoted temperance policies in the Whig one of his more common personal attacks was to accuse his opponents of being drunkards Following the collapse of the Whig Party in the mid 1850s he aligned himself with the Know Nothing movement as he had long shared this movement s anti Catholic and nativist sentiments 3 125 In 1856 he published a book Americanism Contrasted with Foreignism Romanism and Bogus Democracy which attacked Catholicism foreigners and Democratic politicians In the late 1850s Brownlow turned his attention to Knoxville s Democratic Party leaders and their associates He quarreled with the radical Southern Citizen a pro secession newspaper published by businessman William G Swan and Irish patriot John Mitchel who spent time in Knoxville while in exile and on at least one occasion threatened Swan with a revolver 3 49 Following the failure of the Bank of East Tennessee in 1858 Brownlow ruthlessly assailed its directors His attacks forced A R Crozier and William Churchwell to flee the state and drove John H Crozier from public life Brownlow sued another director J G M Ramsey winning a civil judgement on behalf of the bank s depositors 16 289 290 Partially a result of Brownlow s persistent opposition to secession within the pages of his newspapers and partially due to his long time feud with Confederate sympathizer banker and Tennessee historian J G M Ramsey he was later jailed by Confederate States military authorities the CSA district attorney in Knoxville Tennessee being related to J G M Ramsey in December 1861 pardoned and subsequently forced into exile in the northern United States Sectarian debates edit nbsp Heading for F A Ross Corner a series in Brownlow s Jonesborough Whig that attacked Presbyterian minister Frederick Augustus Ross While Brownlow left the preaching circuit in the 1830s he continued responding to the critics attacking the Methodist faith until the Civil War In 1843 his feud with Haynes led to Haynes being barred from the Methodist clergy 17 That same year J M Smith editor of the Abingdon Virginian accused Brownlow of having stolen jewelry at a camp meeting Brownlow denied the charge and accused Smith of being an adulterer At a meeting of the Methodists Holston Conference that year Smith tried unsuccessfully to have Brownlow expelled from the church 3 42 In the late 1840s Brownlow quarreled with Presbyterian minister Frederick Augustus Ross 1796 1883 who from 1826 till 1852 was pastor of Old Kingsport Presbyterian Church in Kingsport Tennessee where Ross had taken up in 1818 Ross had earlier declared war on Methodism as a co editor in his Calvinist Magazine published from 1827 to 1832 Although distracted by internecine conflict within the Presbyterian Church for nearly a decade he relaunched the Calvinist Magazine in 1845 Ross argued that the Methodist Church was despotic comparing it to a great iron wheel that would crush American liberty He stated that most Methodists were descended from Revolutionary War loyalists and accused the Methodist Church founder John Wesley of believing in ghosts and witches 15 nbsp Engraving from Brownlow s The Great Iron Wheel Examined showing an ex Congressman attacking James Robinson Graves for slander Brownlow initially responded to Ross with a running column F A Ross Corner in the Jonesborough Whig In 1847 he launched a separate paper the Jonesborough Quarterly Review which was dedicated to refuting Ross s attacks and embarked on a speaking tour that summer Brownlow argued that while it was common in Wesley s time for people to believe in ghosts he provided evidence that many Presbyterian ministers still believed in such things He derided Ross as a habitual adulterer and the son of a slave and accused his relatives of stealing and committing indecent acts Ross s son responded to the latter charge with a death threat This quarrel continued until Brownlow moved to Knoxville in 1849 15 In 1856 James Robinson Graves the Landmark Baptist minister of Nashville s Second Baptist Church ripped Methodists in his book The Great Iron Wheel which used terminology and attacks similar to the ones Ross had used in the previous decade 3 67 Brownlow quickly fired back with The Great Iron Wheel Examined Or Its False Spokes Extracted published that same year He accused Graves of slandering an ex Congressman argued that Baptist ministers were mostly illiterate and opposed to learning and charged that the Baptist religion was wrought with selfishness bigotry intolerance and shameful want of Christian liberality 3 73 Brownlow also mocked the Baptist sectarian method of baptism immersion 3 75 Slavery and secession editBrownlow s views on slavery changed over time While his pre Civil War writings reveal a strong pro slavery slant his name appears on an 1834 abolitionist petition 18 xiv In the early 1840s Brownlow supported the American Colonization Society which sought to recolonize freed slaves in Liberia 3 94 In subsequent years however he shifted to a staunchly pro slavery stance Indeed he owned slaves himself 19 Brownlow s friend and colleague Oliver Perry Temple stated that social pressure in the 1830s pushed most abolitionist Southerners to adopt pro slavery views Historian Robert McKenzie however suggests that Brownlow s pro slavery shift might have been rooted in the rivalry between Northern and Southern Methodists over the issue in the 1840s 20 38 39 By the 1850s Brownlow was radically pro slavery arguing that the institution was ordained by God 20 108 He gave a Scriptural defense of slavery in a speech delivered in Knoxville in 1857 and in the following year he issued a challenge to Northern abolitionists to debate the issue The challenge was initially accepted by Frederick Douglass but Brownlow refused to debate him because of his race 3 97 The challenge was then taken up by Abram Pryne of McGrawville New York a clergyman with the Congregational Church and editor of an abolitionist newspaper At the debate which took place in Philadelphia in September 1858 Brownlow stated in his opening argument Not only will I throughout this discussion openly and boldly take the ground that Slavery as it exists in America ought to be perpetuated but that slavery is an established and inevitable condition to human society I will maintain the ground that God always intended the relation of master and slave to exist that Christ and the early teachers of Christianity found slavery differing in no material respect from American slavery incorporated into every department of society that slavery having existed ever since the first organization of society it will exist to the end of time 21 During the course of the Civil War Brownlow would return to an anti slavery stance calling for emancipation 20 191 nbsp Illustration in Barton s A Hero In Homespun showing Brownlow delivering a pro Union speech in Sevierville in 1861Brownlow was staunchly opposed to Southern secession 3 136 He argued that secessionists wanted to form a country governed by purse proud aristocrats of the Southern planter class 3 135 Brownlow endorsed his friend pro Union candidate John Bell for president in 1860 and in September of that year interrupted a pro Breckinridge rally in Knoxville to spar with the rally s keynote speaker William Lowndes Yancey of Alabama 20 29 When South Carolina seceded following Lincoln s election in November 1860 Brownlow derided the state and its miserable cabbage leaf of a Palmetto flag as being descended from British loyalists thus giving it an affinity for the aristocratic types that would govern the proposed Southern Confederacy 3 140 By 1861 the Knoxville Whig had 14 000 subscribers 3 159 and was considered by secessionists the root of the stubborn pro Union sentiment in East Tennessee the region had resoundingly rejected a referendum on secession in February of that year Knoxville s Democrats tried to counter Brownlow by installing radical secessionist J Austin Sperry as editor of the Knoxville Register touching off an editorial war that lasted throughout much of the year Brownlow called Sperry a scoundrel and a debauchee and mocked the relatively small circulation of the Register 16 214 Throughout the Spring of 1861 Brownlow and his colleagues Oliver Perry Temple T A R Nelson and Horace Maynard canvassed East Tennessee giving dozens of pro Union speeches In May and June 1861 Brownlow represented Knox County at the East Tennessee Convention which unsuccessfully petitioned the state legislature to allow East Tennessee to form a separate Union aligned state In the weeks following Tennessee s secession in June 1861 Brownlow used the Whig to defend Unionists accused of treasonous acts by Confederate authorities By the Fall of 1861 the Whig was the last pro Union newspaper in the South 20 98 He was quoted as saying We intend to fight the secessionists until hell freezes over and then fight them on ice 22 American Civil War editOn October 24 1861 Brownlow suspended publication of the Whig after announcing Confederate authorities were preparing to arrest him 16 254 On November 4 he left Knoxville and went into hiding in the Great Smoky Mountains to the south where there was a strong pro Union presence and would spend several weeks staying with friends in Wears Valley and Tuckaleechee Cove On November 8 pro Union guerillas burned several railroad bridges in East Tennessee and attacked several others Confederate leaders immediately suspected Brownlow of complicity but he denied any involvement in the attacks 3 182 nbsp Brownlow center watches as condemned bridge burner Harrison Self bids goodbye to his daughter Self was eventually pardoned by Jefferson DavisBrownlow asked for permission to leave the state which was granted by Confederate Secretary of War Judah P Benjamin On December 6 as he was in Knoxville preparing to leave however Knox County Commissioner Robert B Reynolds and Confederate States District Attorney John Crozier Ramsey a son of Confederate States treasury agent J G M Ramsey the elder who Brownlow earlier in that year referred to as the vain old historian of Tennessee arrested and jailed Brownlow on charges of treason While jailed Brownlow witnessed the trials and last moments of many of the condemned bridge burners which he recorded in a diary He sent a letter to Benjamin protesting his incarceration writing which is your highest authority the Secretary of War a Major General or a dirty little drunken attorney such as J C Ramsey is 16 318 After Benjamin threatened to pardon Brownlow he was released in late December 1861 3 200 Brownlow was escorted to Nashville which the Union Army had captured and crossed over into Union controlled territory on March 3 1862 His struggle against secession had made him a celebrity in northern states and he embarked upon a speaking tour starting with speeches in Cincinnati and Dayton in early April He spoke alongside Indiana governor Oliver P Morton at Metropolitan Hall in Indianapolis on April 8 and spoke at the Merchants Exchange in Chicago a few days later On April 14 he addressed the Ohio state legislature in Columbus He hosted a banquet at the Monongahela House in Pittsburgh on April 17 and spoke at Independence Hall in Philadelphia two days later nbsp An artist s 1888 illustration of Brownlow s daughter Susan threatening Confederate soldiers who sought to remove the American flag from the Brownlows home in KnoxvilleIn Philadelphia publisher George W Childs convinced Brownlow to write a book Sketches of the Rise Progress and Decline of Secession which was completed in May 1862 By September the book had sold over 100 000 copies 3 239 Brownlow then headed to the northeast where he addressed the New York City Chamber of Commerce on May 14 and spoke at the Academy of Music on May 15 In subsequent weeks he spoke in Boston and various cities in New England and later toured western New York and Illinois In late June he testified at the impeachment trial of West Hughes Humphreys a Confederate judge who had denied Brownlow bail following his arrest in December 3 221 233 In June 1862 workers at the Colt Armory in Hartford presented a revolver to Brownlow s daughter Susan who had threatened to shoot two Confederate soldiers attempting to remove the American flag from the Brownlows home in Knoxville in December of the previous year 3 230 Later that year author Erastus Beadle published a dime novel Parson Brownlow and the Unionists of East Tennessee In 1863 Philadelphia based music publisher Lee and Walker issued a musical score Parson Brownlow s Quick Step 3 242 243 nbsp Brownlow s characteristic forthright communication style is evident in the newspaper title Rebel Ventilator 23 perhaps not insignificantly Brownlow s sons John B Brownlow and James P Brownlow both saw combat as Union cavalry officers 24 Brownlow returned to Nashville in early 1863 and followed Ambrose Burnsides s forces back to Knoxville in September In November 1863 using proceeds from his speaking tour he relaunched the Whig under the title Knoxville Whig and Rebel Ventilator and began vengefully pursuing ex Confederates 3 251 He spent a portion of 1864 attempting to reorganize his church s Holston Conference and realign it with the northern Methodists 3 297 Reconstruction era as Governor of Tennessee editBrownlow was nominated for governor by a convention of Tennessee Unionists in January 1865 He was the only nominee This convention also submitted state constitutional amendments outlawing slavery and repealing the Ordinance of Secession 25 thus making his state the first of the Southern states to leave the Confederacy The military governor Andrew Johnson had enacted a series of measures that essentially prevented ex Confederates from voting and on March 4 Brownlow was elected by a 23 352 to 35 vote and the amendments passed by a similarly lopsided margin 3 261 The vote met President Lincoln s 1 10th test which recognized elections in Southern states if the total vote was at least one tenth the total vote in the 1860 presidential election 3 261 nbsp Portrait of Governor Brownlow by George Dury This official portrait of Governor Brownlow would only be briefly displayed within the Tennessee State Capitol building during 1987 In early April 1865 Brownlow arrived in Nashville a city which he despised having called it a dunghill and stating it had a deadly treasonable exhalation 26 He was sworn in on April 5 and submitted the 13th Amendment for ratification the following day 3 265 After this amendment was ratified Brownlow submitted a series of bills to punish former Confederates He disfranchised for at least five years anyone who had supported the Confederacy and in cases of Confederate leaders fifteen years He later strengthened this law to require prospective voters to prove they had supported the Union He tried to impose fines for wearing a Confederate uniform and attempted to bar Confederate ministers from performing marriages 3 269 After a few months in office Brownlow decided Johnson who had by then become President of the United States was too lenient toward former Confederate leaders and aligned himself with the Radical Republicans a group which dominated Congress and vehemently opposed Johnson In the elections for the state s congressional seats held in August 1865 Brownlow rejected nearly one third of the total vote to allow Radical candidate Samuel Arnell to win in the 6th District 3 280 A small group of state legislators led by state Speaker of the House William Heiskell turned against Brownlow alleging his actions were too despotic and aligned themselves with Johnson 3 309 By 1866 Brownlow had come to believe that some Southerners were plotting another rebellion and that Andrew Johnson would be its leader 27 Opposition to the Ku Klux Klan edit nbsp Photograph of Brownlow by Mathew BradyBrownlow began calling for civil rights to be extended to freed slaves stating that a loyal Negro was more deserving than a disloyal white man 3 291 In May 1866 he submitted the 14th Amendment for ratification which the Radicals in Congress supported but Johnson and his allies opposed The pro Johnson minority in the statehouse attempted to flee Nashville to prevent a quorum and the House sergeant at arms was dispatched to arrest them Two were captured Pleasant Williams and A J Martin and confined to the House committee room giving the House the necessary number of members present to establish a quorum After the amendment passed by a 43 11 vote Heiskell refused to sign it and resigned in protest His successor signed it however and the amendment was ratified 3 314 In transmitting the news to Congress Brownlow taunted Johnson stating My compliments to the dead dog in the White House 3 315 Tennessee was readmitted to the Union shortly afterward and was represented in Congress again by 1866 Tennessee was the only former Confederate state that bypassed Military Reconstruction 28 The Radicals nominated Brownlow for a second term for governor in February 1867 His opponent was Emerson Etheridge a frequent critic of the Brownlow administration That same month the legislature passed a bill giving the state s black residents the right to vote and Union Leagues were organized to help freed slaves in this process Members of these leagues frequently clashed with disfranchised ex Confederates including members of the burgeoning Ku Klux Klan and Brownlow organized a state guard led by General Joseph Alexander Cooper to protect voters and harass the opposition 3 333 With the state s ex Confederates disfranchised Brownlow easily defeated Etheridge in the 1867 election 3 339 nbsp Photograph of Brownlow by Carl GiersBy 1868 Klan violence had increased significantly The organization had sent Brownlow a death threat and had come close to assassinating Congressman Samuel Arnell 3 356 General Nathan B Forrest joined the Klan becoming its first Grand Wizard partially in response to the disfranchisement policies of Brownlow 27 The William G Brownlow Family Papers 1836 1900 archived by the Tennessee Secretary of State contains one letter dated July 4 1868 from the Great Grand Cyclops of the Ku Klux Klan Stella Morton in which Morton threatens Governor Brownlow s life 29 In an interview with the Cincinnati Commercial Forrest stated I have never recognized the present government in Tennessee as having any legal existence He objected to Governor Brownlow calling out the militia and warned if they committed outrages that they and Mr Brownloe s sic government will be swept out of existence not a Radical will be left alive Forrest claimed the Klan had more than 40 000 members in Tennessee and 550 000 in the southern states He said the Klan supported the Democratic Party Forrest suggested that a proclamation of Brownlow called for shooting members of the Klan Forrest denied being a member of the Klan himself 30 Forrest and twelve other Klan members submitted a petition to Brownlow stating they would cease their activities if Confederates were given the right to vote 3 360 Brownlow rejected this however and set about reorganizing the state guard and pressing the legislature for still greater enforcement powers Brownlow endorsed Ulysses S Grant for president in 1868 and asked for federal troops to be stationed in 21 Tennessee counties to counter rising Klan activity The state legislature granted him the power to throw out entire counties voter registrations if he thought they included disfranchised voters In October 1868 prior to the election Brownlow discarded all registered voters in Lincoln County Following the election two of the Radicals congressional candidates Lewis Tillman in the 4th District and William J Smith in the 8th District were initially defeated Brownlow believing Klan intimidation to be the reason for their defeat rejected the votes from Marshall and Coffee counties allowing Tillman to win and rejected the votes from Fayette and Tipton counties allowing Smith to win 3 366 367 In February 1869 as Brownlow s final term was near its end he placed nine counties under martial law arguing this was necessary to quell rising Klan violence He also dispatched five state guard companies to occupy Pulaski where the Klan had been founded 3 372 After Brownlow left office in March Forrest ordered the Klan to destroy its costumes and cease all activities 27 U S Senate and his later life editFollowing his reelection as Governor of Tennessee in 1867 Brownlow decided he would not seek a third term and instead sought election to the U S Senate seat that would be vacated by David T Patterson Andrew Johnson s son in law in 1869 In October 1867 the state legislature elected Brownlow over William B Stokes by a 63 to 39 vote 3 347 By the time he was sworn in on March 4 1869 a persistent nervous disease had weakened him considerably and the Senate clerk had to read his speeches 3 387 One of his speeches was a defense of Ambrose Burnside the Union general who had liberated Knoxville from Confederate forces in 1863 3 390 Brownlow was a member of the U S Senate when the final version of the bill S 810 was introduced onto the Senate floor on April 19 1870 enacted the next month by the U S Congress and signed into law by President Ulysses S Grant on May 31 1870 as the Enforcement Act of 1870 also known under the popular titles as the Civil Rights Act of 1870 or the First Ku Klux Klan Act and the later Second Enforcement Act of 1871 also known under the popular titles as the Civil Rights Act of 1871 or the Third Ku Klux Klan Act of the United States Congress which empowered the President to suspend the writ of habeas corpus in order to combat the Ku Klux Klan and other white supremacy organizations nbsp Brownlow s house and library at 211 Cumberland Avenue in Knoxville no longer extant as drawn by Benson John LossingInterviewed while suffering visibly from the palsy that afflicted him in later life in 1871 by a reporter from the New York Herald Brownlow essentially predicted the failure of Reconstruction the coming nadir of American race relations and beyond 31 The leading men in the South still look upon the separation of the south from the Union as a hopeful probability The devil is in them and they will get up another rebellion if they see any chance of success They exalt in private over the reduction of the regular army which Congress foolishly cut down to 30 000 men and they boast of having enough arms to organize an army at any time Davis Toombs and Stephens express the sentiments of the masses of the Southern people the plan is to try to accomplish at the ballot box and by legislation what they failed to do in the field to get control of the National Government by the aid of the Democratic party to destroy all the work of reconstruction and during the administration of a Democratic President to reorganize the Southern Confederacy after long and careful preparation Parson Brownlow August 1871 31 After his Senate term ended in 1875 Brownlow returned to Knoxville His successor as governor DeWitt Clinton Senter had undone most of his Radical initiatives allowing Democrats to regain control of the state government 32 Having sold the Whig in 1869 Brownlow purchased an interest in the Knoxville Chronicle a Republican newspaper published by his old protege William Rule The paper s name was changed to the Knoxville Whig and Chronicle 3 385 In 1876 Brownlow endorsed Rutherford B Hayes for president 3 396 In December of the same year he spoke at the opening of Knoxville College which had been established for the city s African American residents 33 On the night of April 28 1877 Brownlow collapsed at his home and died the following afternoon The cause of death was given as paralysis of the bowels 3 396 He was interred in Knoxville s Old Gray Cemetery following a funeral procession described by his colleague Oliver Perry Temple as the largest in the city s history up to that time 34 Legacy editIn 1870 William Rule who had been a journalist for the Whig launched the Knoxville Chronicle which he considered the Whig s pro Republican successor Rule continued editing this paper which was eventually renamed The Knoxville Journal until his death in 1928 The Knoxville Journal remained one of Knoxville s daily newspapers until it folded in 1991 Adolph Ochs who later became publisher of the New York Times began his career at the Chronicle in the early 1870s 35 William Rule wrote that Brownlow was a master of invective and burning sarcasm and he flourished in an age when such things were expected of a public journalist 36 J Austin Sperry Brownlow s rival editor in pre Civil War Knoxville admitted that Brownlow was a remarkable judge of human nature 37 Brownlow s long time colleague Oliver Perry Temple wrote of him It was easy for friends to persuade Mr Brownlow to do anything that did not violate his sense of right to force him was impossible A child could lead him a giant could not drive him When his mind was once made up it was as immovable as the mountains 38 Brownlow remained a divisive figure for decades after his death In 1999 historian Stephen Ash wrote more than 120 years after his death merely mentioning his name in the Volunteer State can evoke raucous laughter or bitter curses 18 xi Brownlow has been described as Tennessee s worst governor and the most hated man in Tennessee History 5 A 1981 poll of fifty two Tennessee historians that ranked the state s governors on ability accomplishments and statesmanship placed Brownlow dead last 39 Journalist Steve Humphrey argued that Brownlow was a talented newspaper editor and reporter as evidenced by his reporting on events such as the opening of the Gayoso Hotel in Memphis and Knoxville s 1854 cholera epidemic 37 The Capitol Committee of the Tennessee General Assembly removed the official portrait of Governor Parson Brownlow that had only been briefly installed during April 1987 within the Legislative Library of state capitol building upon the recommendation of Democratic Tennessee state Senator Douglas Henry 40 Family edit nbsp Liberty amp Union Now amp Forever One and Inseperable 34 star U S flag given to Susan Brownlow by the Ladies of Philadelphia June 13 1862 East Tennessee Historical Society Brownlow married Eliza O Brien 1819 1914 during 1836 in Elizabethton Tennessee They had seven children Susan John Bell James Patton Mary Fannie Annie and Caledonia Temple 24 Eliza O Brien Brownlow lived at the family s home formerly on East Cumberland Avenue at the present day James White Parkway in Knoxville until her death in 1914 at the age of 94 In the 1890s and early 1900s numerous visitors including three presidents William McKinley Theodore Roosevelt and William Howard Taft called on Eliza Brownlow when visiting Knoxville 40 The Brownlows older son John Bell Brownlow 1839 1922 was a colonel in the Union Army during the Civil War In the decades following his father s death he helped finance the development of a Knoxville neighborhood just north of modern Fourth and Gill which for years was known as Brownlow Brownlow Elementary School which served this neighborhood from 1913 to 1995 still stands and has been converted into urban lofts 41 42 The Brownlows younger son James Patton Brownlow 1842 1879 was also a colonel in the Union Army during the Civil War though he was later brevetted to brigadier general by President Andrew Johnson He served as an adjutant general in the state guard during his father s term as governor 43 Walter P Brownlow 1851 1910 a nephew of Parson Brownlow served as a U S congressman from Tennessee s 1st district from 1897 until his death 24 James Stewart Martin 1826 1907 another nephew of Parson Brownlow the son of his sister Nancy served as a U S congressman from Illinois in the mid 1870s 24 Louis Brownlow 1879 1963 a prominent 20th century political scientist and city planner was a grandson of one of Parson Brownlow s first cousins 24 He served a tumultuous 3 year term as Knoxville s city manager in the 1920s Works editNewspapers edit The Whig Brownlow s primary mouthpiece was published under the following masthead titles Tennessee Whig May 16 1839 in Elizabethton June 13 1839 Elizabethton Whig June 13 1839 in Elizabethton nameplate change The Whig May 6 1840 in Jonesborough November 3 1841 Jonesborough Whig November 10 1841 May 11 1842 Jonesborough Whig and Independent Journal May 18 1842 April 19 1849 Brownlow s Knoxville Whig and Independent Journal May 19 1849 in Knoxville April 7 1855 Brownlow s Knoxville Whig April 14 1855 July 27 1861 Brownlow s Weekly Whig August 3 1861 October 26 1861 Brownlow s Knoxville Whig and Rebel Ventilator November 11 1863 February 21 1866 Brownlow s Knoxville Whig February 28 1866 January 27 1869 Knoxville Weekly Whig February 3 1869 March 1870 Weekly Whig and Register c 1870 1871 The Knoxville Whig and Chronicle 1875 1877 co owner with William RuleBooks edit Helps to the Study of Presbyterianism Or An Unsophisticated Exposition of Calvinism with Hopkinsian Modifications and Policy with a View to a More Easy Interpretation of the Same 1834 A Narrative of the Life Travels and Circumstances Incident Thereto of William G Brownlow 1834 a book supplement bound within Helps to the Study of Presbyterianism Baptism Examined Or the True State of the Case 1842 A Political Register Setting Forth the Principles of the Whig and Locofoco Parties in the United States With the Life and Public Services of Henry Clay 1844 Americanism Contrasted with Foreignism Romanism and Bogus Democracy In the Light of Reason History and Scripture In Which Certain Demagogues in Tennessee and Elsewhere are Shown Up in Their True Colors 1856 The Great Iron Wheel Examined Or Its False Spokes Extracted and an Exhibition of Elder Graves Its Builder 1856 Sketches of the Rise Progress and Decline of Secession With a Narrative of Personal Adventures Among the Rebels 1862 Speeches and debates edit Speech Being a Reply to Thomas Dog Arnold Ass Who Appeared Before the Invitation On Saturday Night the 18th of September 1852 in the Hearing of a Large Audience and Assailed Said Brownlow Knoxville Tennessee September 19 1852 A Sermon on Slavery A Vindication of the Methodist Church South Her Position Stated Knoxville Tennessee August 9 1857 Ought American Slavery to be Perpetuated A Debate Between Rev W G Brownlow and Rev A Pryne Held At Philadelphia September 1858 1858 Speech of Parson Brownlow of Tennessee Against the Great Rebellion New York May 15 1862 Address to the Loyal People of Tennessee Knoxville Tennessee March 18 1868 References edit a b c d Forrest Conklin William Gannaway Parson Brownlow Tennessee Encyclopedia of History and Culture 2009 Retrieved on October 18 2012 Jack Neely Requiem for Parson Brownlow Metro Pulse 6 April 2011 Accessed at the Internet Archive September 20 2017 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab ac ad ae af ag ah ai aj ak al am an ao ap aq ar as at au av aw ax ay az ba bb bc bd be E Merton Coulter William G Brownlow Fighting Parson of the Southern Highlands Knoxville Tenn University of Tennessee Press 1999 Finding Aid for the William G Brownlow Tennessee Bonds Circular MS 2750 Special Collections Online The University of Tennessee Retrieved November 5 2017 Archived from the original on November 7 2017 Retrieved November 5 2017 a b Jack Neely Requiem for Parson Brownlow Metro Pulse 6 April 2011 Accessed at the Internet Archive 2 October 2015 a b Early History of Carter County 1760 1861 p 55 Frank Merritt 1950 East Tennessee Historical Society Knoxville Tennessee O Brien Furnace 1A 73 Valley Forge TN Tennessee Historical Markers on Waymarking com That D d Brownlow p 176 Steve Humphrey Appalachian Consortium Press 1978 Stephen V Ash Introduction in E Merton Coulter William G Brownlow Univ of Tennessee Press 1999 p xi Early History of Carter County 1760 1861 pp 55 56 Frank Merritt 1950 East Tennessee Historical Society Knoxville Tennessee a b Paul Fink Jonesborough The First Century of Tennessee s First Town Johnson City Tenn Overmountain Press 2002 pp 140 145 Early History of Carter County 1760 1861 pp 58 Frank Merritt 1950 East Tennessee Historical Society Knoxville Tennessee a b Jonesborough Whig and Independent Journal 18 June 1845 Verton Queener William Gannaway Brownlow as an Editor East Tennessee Historical Society Publications No 4 1932 pp 72 76 a b c Forrest Conklin and John Wittig Religious Warfare in the Southern Highlands Brownlow versus Ross Journal of East Tennessee History Vol 63 1991 pp 33 50 a b c d William Gannaway Brownlow Sketches of the Rise Progress and Decline of Secession Philadelphia G W Childs 1862 James Bellamy The Political Career of Landon Carter Haynes East Tennessee Historical Society Publications Vol 28 1956 pp 105 107 a b Stephen Ash Introduction to E Merton Coulter s William G Brownlow Fighting Parson of the Southern Highlands Chapel Hill N C University of North Carolina Press 1999 Congress slaveowners The Washington Post January 19 2022 retrieved July 10 2022 a b c d e Robert McKenzie Lincolnites and Rebels A Divided Town in the American Civil War New York Oxford University Press 2006 Brownlow William Gannaway amp Pryne Abram Ought American slavery to be perpetuated A debate between Rev W G Brownlow and Rev A Pryne Held at Philadelphia September 1858 J B Lippincott amp Co 1858 The Jeffersonian Stroudsburg Pa August 15 1861 Retrieved January 14 2023 Parson Brownlow recently declared in relation to the Union men of East Tennessee We intend to fight the secessionists until hell freezes over and then fight them on ice Or any other man Uffelman Minoa November 21 2011 Tennessee s Fighting Parson Opinionator Retrieved June 29 2023 a b c d e Zella Armstrong Notable Southern families Volume 1 Chattanooga Tenn The Lookout Publishing Co 1918 pp 39 45 OCLC 1079125 Retrieved 29 October 2012 Wilson D Miscamble Andrew Johnson and the Election of William G Parson Brownlow as Governor of Tennessee Tennessee Historical Quarterly Vol 37 1978 pp 308 320 Jesse Burt Nashville Its Life and Times Tennessee Book Company 1959 p 67 a b c Phillip Langsdon Tennessee A Political History Franklin Tenn Hillsboro Press 2000 pp 169 178 190 239 Schroeder Lein Glenna R Zuczek Richard 2001 Brownlow William Gannaway Parson 1805 1877 Andrew Johnson a biographical companion ABC CLIO biographical companions Santa Barbara Calif ABC CLIO pp 39 41 ISBN 978 1 57607 030 7 Guide to Manuscript Materials MF 1800 MF 1899 Tennessee Secretary of State Archived from the original on October 30 2017 Retrieved October 29 2017 The Charleston Daily News A Talk with General Forrest September 8 1868 1 a b Senator Brownlow What He Thinks of the Next Presidential Election the Rebel Spirit the Kuklux The Tennessean August 5 1871 p 3 Retrieved June 24 2023 William E Hardy The Margins of William Brownlow s Words New Perspectives on the End of Radical Reconstruction in Tennessee Journal of East Tennessee History Vol 84 2012 pp 78 86 William MacArthur Knoxville Crossroads of the New South Tulsa Okla Continental Heritage Press 1982 p 49 74 Oliver Perry Temple Notable Men of Tennessee From 1833 to 1875 Their Times and Their Contemporaries New York Cosmopolitan Press 1912 p 143 Doris Faber Printer s Devil to Publisher Adolph S Ochs of the New York Times New York Messner 1963 pp 24 25 William Rule Standard History of Knoxville Tennessee Chicago Lewis Publishing Company 1900 reprinted by Kessinger Books 2010 p 326 a b Stephen Humphrey The Man Brownlow from a Newspaper Man s Point of View East Tennessee Historical Society Publications Vol 43 1971 pp 59 70 Temple Notable Men of Tennessee p 282 Tennessee Historical Quarterly Vol 41 No 1 Spring 1982 p 100 a b Jack Neely Gov Brownlow s Bad Reputation Metro Pulse 6 April 2011 Accessed at the Internet Archive 2 October 2015 Knox County Development Corporation Brownlow School Redevelopment amp Urban Renewal Plan Archived March 3 2016 at the Wayback Machine August 2007 Retrieved 29 October 2012 Brownlow Lofts Retrieved 29 October 2012 Roger D Hunt and Jack R Brown Brevet Brigadier Generals in Blue Gaithersburg Maryland Olde Soldier Books Inc 1990 p 86 ISBN 1 56013 002 4 Further reading editAlexander Thomas B Political Reconstruction in Tennessee Vanderbilt UP 1950 Alexander Thomas B Strange Bedfellows The Interlocking Careers of TAR Nelson Andrew Johnson and WG Parson Brownlow East Tennessee Historical Society Publications 24 1952 68 Alexander Thomas B Whiggery and Reconstruction in Tennessee Journal of Southern History 16 3 1950 291 305 online Alexander Thomas B Kukluxism in Tennessee 1865 1869 Tennessee Historical Quarterly 1949 195 219 online Ash Stephen 1999 Secessionists and Scoundrels Louisiana State University Press ISBN 0 8071 2354 4 Robert Booker Brownlow Roared Pro Union Message Knoxville News Sentinel 28 June 2011 Coulter E Merton William G Brownlow Fighting Parson of the Southern Highlands 1937 reprinted 999 Full text online free of 1999 edition with important new introduction by Stephen V Ash pp xi to xvii Downing David C 2007 A South Divided Portraits of Dissent in the Confederacy Nashville Cumberland House ISBN 978 1 58182 587 9 Kelly James C William Gannaway Brownlow Tennessee Historical Quarterly 43 1 2 1984 25 43 and 155 72 part 1 online and part 2 online Haskins Ralph W Internecine Strife in Tennessee Andrew Johnson Versus Parson Brownlow Tennessee Historical Quarterly 24 4 1965 pp 321 340 online Miscamble William G Andrew Johnson and the Election of William G Parson Brownlow as Governor of Tennessee Tennessee Historical Quarterly 37 3 1978 308 Severance Ben H Tennessee s Radical Army The State Guard and Its Role in Reconstruction 1867 1869 Univ of Tennessee Press 2005 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to William Gannaway Brownlow United States Congress Parson Brownlow id b000963 Biographical Directory of the United States Congress Brownlow s Knoxville Whig and Rebel Ventilator from the Library of Congress Chronicling America database includes issues published 1863 1866 William Gannaway Brownlow entry at the National Governors Association Governor William G Brownlow Papers Archived July 12 2013 at the Wayback Machine Tennessee State Library and Archives Brownlow related photographs in the Calvin McClung Digital Collection includes newspaper clippings and family photos Works by Parson Brownlow at Project Gutenberg Works by or about Parson Brownlow at Internet ArchiveParty political officesFirst Republican nominee for Governor of Tennessee1865 1867 Succeeded byDewitt Clinton SenterPolitical officesPreceded byEdward H East Acting Governor Governor of Tennessee1865 1869 Succeeded byDewitt Clinton SenterU S SenatePreceded byDavid T Patterson U S senator Class 1 from Tennessee1869 1875 Served alongside Joseph S Fowler Henry Cooper Succeeded byAndrew Johnson Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Parson Brownlow amp oldid 1194815617, 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.