|

War, Ruin, and Reconstruction
Part I, 1861-1866
|
Edward Clark
|
|
Timeline
|
|

March 16, 1861 -
November 7, 1861
|
Born: April 1, 1815 in New Orleans, the nephew Governor John Clark
of Georgia.
Early Career: Clark moved to Alabama in 1832, and then to Marshall,
Texas in 1842 to practice law. Clark was elected to the Annexation
Convention of 1845, the House of Representatives in the First Legislature,
and the state senate in the Second Legislature. He served under
General J. Pinckney Henderson at the Battle of Monterrey and later
was appointed secretary of state by Governor E.M. Pease (1853-1857)
and state commissioner of claims in 1858. As lieutenant governor
under Sam Houston, Clark replaced Houston as governor after Houston's
refusal to take the oath of allegiance to the Confederate States
of America.
Accomplishments: The major event of Clark's governorship was the
enlistment of 20,000 Texans to fight for the Confederacy.
Later years: After being narrowly defeated by Francis Lubbock (he
lost by 124 votes), Clark became colonel of the 14th Texas Infantry.
He was wounded at Pleasant Hill, Louisiana, and promoted to brigadier
general. After a brief exile in Mexico at the end of the war, Clark
returned to business and a law practice in Marshall, where he died
May 4, 1880.
Handbook
of Texas article
|
Apr 12 1861
Civil War begins at Fort Sumter, South Carolina
Emancipation of Russian serfs
Jul 2 1861
Lincoln suspends habeas corpus for the duration of the war
Jul 1861
First Battle of Bull Run
Union blockade of the South
begins
Aug 3 1861
USS South Carolina fires on Galveston
Sep 9 1861
Ben Terry's Texas Rangers organize to fight for the Confederacy
Louis Pasteur proposes germ
theory
Matthew Brady begins photographs
of Civil War
Eberhard Faber begins mass
production of pencils
First Federal income tax enacted
(3% on incomes over $800)
|
|

Letter from Confederate
General Ben McCulloch
|

Letter from John H. Reagan
on the Confederate postal service
|
|
Francis R. Lubbock
|
|
Timeline
|
|

November 7, 1861 -
November 5, 1863
|
Born: October 16, 1815 in South Carolina
Early Career: Lubbock clerked in a hardware store and managed a
cotton warehouse before he became a druggist in New Orleans in 1834.
He followed his brother Tom to Texas in 1836, after the Battle of
San Jacinto. He claimed to have sold the first barrel of flour and
the first sack of coffee in the village of Houston. After clerking
in the House of Representatives in the Second Congress of Texas,
he was appointed comptroller of the Republic. He became the district
clerk of Harris County in 1841, and bought a ranch near Harrisburg
in 1846. Lubbock was elected lieutenant governor in 1857, and governor
in 1861.
Accomplishments: Among his actions were the mobilizing of a frontier
regiment of cavalry against hostile Indians, the modest expansion
of industrial resources, and the sale of U.S. bonds acquired in
1850 to help replenish an exhausted treasury. His interpretation
of conscription laws made every able-bodied man between 16 and 60
years of age liable for military service. He did not run for reelection,
preferring to join the Confederate Army as a lieutenant colonel
in November 1863.
Later years: In 1864 Lubbock joined Jefferson Davis' staff, and
was captured with him in May 1865. Upon his release he returned
to business in Houston and Galveston. He was tax collector in Galveston
for three years, and state treasurer (1879-1891). He served under
Governor James Hogg on the Board of Pardons before retiring at age
80. Lubbock wrote his autobiography Six Decades in Texas
in 1900. He died in Austin on June 22, 1905.
Handbook
of Texas article
|
Mar 9 1862
Battle of the Monitor and the Merrimac
Apr 1862
Battle of Shiloh
May 5 1862
"Cinco de Mayo"
Mexican victory over French
Aug 10 1862
Massacre of 68 Union loyalists, mostly German immigrants, at the
Nueces River
Aug 1862
Second Battle of Bull Run
Sep 17 1862
Battle of Antietam
Oct 1862
Mass hangings of Union sympathizers at Gainesville
Gatling machine gun patented
Jan 1 1863
Emancipation Proclamation
May 1863
Battle of Chancellorsville
May
1863
Fall of Vicksburg
"When Johnny Comes Marching
Home"
Jul
1863
Battle of Gettysburg
Sep 1863
Battle of Chickamauga
Sep- Nov 1863
Battle of Chattanooga
|
|

Letter from a soldier
|

Letter to Jefferson Davis
|
|
Pendleton Murrah
|
|
Timeline
|
|

November 5, 1863 -
June 17, 1865
|
Born: 1824 in South Carolina, either illegitimate or orphaned early.
Early Career: Murrah attended the University of Alabama and graduated
from Brown University in 1848. Murrah moved to Marshall, Texas and
began practicing law there sometime before 1855, when he was defeated
by the Know-Nothing candidate in a race for Congress. In 1857, he
was elected to the state legislature. He defeated T.J. Chambers
in the gubernatorial election of 1863.
Accomplishments: During his administration, military and financial
difficulties pushed the state and the Confederacy into contests
over conscription, frontier defense, and the impressment of cotton,
cattle, and slaves. In addition, Murrah was dying of tuberculosis.
In May 1865, Governor Murrah fled to Mexico, where he died at Monterrey
in July or August.
In Murrah's absence (May to June 1865), Lieutenant Governor Fletcher
S. Stockdale was acting governor. Stockdale was born in Kentucky
in 1827 and moved to Indianola, Texas in 1846. In 1856 he was a
promoter of the Powderhorn, Victoria, and Gonzales Railroad. He
served in the state senate from 1857 to 1861, and was on the committee
which drafted the Ordinance of Secession in 1861. After the Civil
War, Stockdale practiced law and promoted land in Cuero. He was
active in a number of Democratic National Conventions, and in the
Constitutional Convention of 1875. He died in Cuero in 1902.
Handbook
of Texas article
|
May 1864
Wilderness Campaign
May 1864
Battle of Spotsylvania
Jun 1864
Battle of Cold Harbor
Jun 1864
Siege of Petersburg
Sep 2 1864
Fall of Atlanta
Nov-Dec 1864
Sherman's march
Nov 1864
Lincoln
reelected
Apr 1865
Fall of Richmond
Apr 9 1865
Lee surrenders at Appomattox Courthouse
Apr 15 1865
Lincoln assassinated
Apr-May 1865
Confederate troops surrender; 500,000 American soldiers lost their
lives in the Civil War
May 13 1865
Last battle of the Civil War at Palmito Ranch, near Brownsville
|
|

Letter to the public urging
resistance, April 1865
|

Invitation to the Marshall
conference, April 1865
|
|
Andrew J. Hamilton
|
|
Timeline
|
|

June 17, 1865 -
August 9, 1866
|
Born: January 28, 1815 in Alabama
Early Career: Hamilton left Alabama in 1846 to practice law in
La Grange, Texas. Governor P. Hansbrough Bell appointed "Colossal
Jack" Hamilton attorney general in 1849, and he was elected state
representative from Travis County in 1851 and 1853. After briefly
considering the Know-Nothing party, Hamilton was elected to the
U.S. Congress in 1859 as an Independent. He retained his seat after
other Southern congressmen had withdrawn. In 1861 Hays, Travis,
and Bastrop counties elected him to the state senate, but Hamilton
refused to take the oath to the Confederacy and left the state in
1862. President Abraham Lincoln named him military governor of Texas,
with headquarters at federally-occupied New Orleans and Brownsville.
Accomplishments: In 1865, President Andrew Johnson confirmed Hamilton
as provisional governor. Among the problems faced were Indian incursions,
general lawlessness, chaotic finances, and the huge number of freedmen,
emancipated since June 19, whom he advised to work hard and acquire
property. He criticized the Constitutional Convention, which met
in early 1866, for its reluctance to grant black suffrage. Hamilton
chose not to run for governor in the 1866 election, but supported
E.M. Pease, who lost to James Throckmorton. Hamilton did not finish
his term, but turned the governor's office over to the secretary
of state while he went to Philadelphia to fight President Johnson's
plan for Reconstruction.
Later years: After General Philip Sheridan removed Governor Throckmorton
and the Texas Supreme Court, General J.J. Reynolds named Hamilton
to the state supreme court. In the Constitutional Convention of
1868-1869, and again in the gubernatorial election of 1869, A.J.
Hamilton ran against the leader of the Radical Republicans, E.J.
Davis. Hamilton had alienated General Reynolds, who threw his support
to Davis, who won by a narrow margin. In 1871 Hamilton participated
in the anti-Davis Non-Partisan Taxpayers' Convention. He died in
Austin on April 11, 1875.
Handbook
of Texas article
|
Jun 19 1865
"Juneteenth" - Official announcement of the abolition
of slavery in Texas
Sep 1865
Freedmen's Bureau established in Texas
Mark Twain's "The Celebrated
Jumping Frog of Calaveras County"
Baseball becomes widely popular
Salvation Army founded
Nov 1865
Execution of Henry Wirtz, superintendent of the Confederate prison
at Andersonville
Dec 18 1865
Thirteenth Amendment to the Constitution abolishes slavery
Dec 24 1865
Ku Klux Klan founded in Tennessee
Dec 25 1865
Union stockyards open in Chicago
Lewis Carroll's Alice in Wonderland
Large-scale cattle drives begin (four
months from Texas to Kansas rail yards)
Jul 1866
Race riots throughout the South over the introduction of black male
suffrage
Winchester
introduces repeating rifle
|
|

Letter from Van Zandt County
asking for an agent of the Freedmen's Bureau
|

Telegram from President
Andrew Johnson on the Constitutional Convention of 1866
|
Continue>>
<<
Back | Home
|