Jefferson Finis Davis (June
3, 1808 – December 6, 1889) was an American
politician
who served as President of the
Confederate States of America for its entire history, 1861 to
1865, during the American Civil
War.
A West Point
graduate, Davis fought in the Mexican-American War as a colonel of a
volunteer regiment, and was the United States Secretary of
War under Franklin
Pierce. Both before and after his time in the Pierce
Administration, he served as a
U.S. Senator from Mississippi
. As a senator he argued against secession
but believed each state was sovereign and had an unquestionable
right to secede from the Union.
Davis resigned from the Senate in January 1861, after receiving
word that Mississippi had seceded from the Union. The following
month, he was provisionally appointed
President of
the
Confederate States of
America. He was elected to a six-year term that November.
During his presidency, Davis was not able to find a strategy to
defeat the more industrially developed
Union.
After Davis was captured May 10, 1865, he was charged with
treason, though not tried, and stripped of his
eligibility to run for public office. This limitation was
posthumously removed by order of
Congress and
President Jimmy Carter in 1978, 89 years after his death.
While not disgraced, he was displaced in
Southern affection after the war by
its leading general,
Robert E.
Lee.
Early life and military career
Davis was
the youngest of the ten children of Samuel Emory Davis (Philadelphia
, Philadelphia County
, Pennsylvania
, 1756 – July 4, 1824) and wife (married 1783) Jane
Cook (Christian
County
, (later Todd County
), Kentucky
, 1759 –
October 3, 1845), daughter of William Cook and wife Sarah Simpson,
daughter of Samuel Simpson (1706 – 1791) and wife Hannah (b.
1710).
The
younger Davis's grandfather, Evan Davis (Cardiff
, County
Glamorgan
, 1729 – 1758), emigrated from Wales
and had once
lived in Virginia
and Maryland
, marrying Lydia Emory. His father, along with
his uncles, had served in the Continental Army during the American Revolutionary War; he
fought with the Georgia
cavalry and fought in the Siege of
Savannah
as an infantry officer. Also, three of his
older brothers served during the
War of
1812.
Two of them served under Andrew Jackson and received commendation for
bravery in the Battle of New Orleans
.
During
Davis's youth, the family moved twice; in 1811 to St. Mary
Parish, Louisiana
, and in 1812 to Wilkinson
County, Mississippi
near the town of Woodville
. In 1813, Davis began his education together
with his sister Mary, attending a
log
cabin school a mile from their home in the small town of
Woodville, known as the Wilkinson Academy.
Two years later, Davis
entered the Catholic school of Saint Thomas at St. Rose
Priory
, a school operated by the Dominican Order in Washington
County, Kentucky
. At the time, he was the only
Protestant student.
Davis
went on to Jefferson College
at Washington, Mississippi
, in 1818, and to Transylvania University
at Lexington, Kentucky
, in 1821. In 1824, Davis entered the United
States Military Academy
(West Point). He completed his four-year
term as a West Point cadet, and was commissioned as a second
lieutenant in June 1828 following graduation.
Davis was
assigned to the 1st Infantry
Regiment and was stationed at Fort Crawford
, Wisconsin
. His first assignment, in 1829, was to
supervise the cutting of timber on the banks of the
Red Cedar River for the repair
and enlargement of the fort. Later the same year, he was reassigned
to
Fort Winnebago. While supervising
the construction and management of a sawmill along the
Yellow River in Iowa in 1831, he
contracted
pneumonia, causing him to
return to Fort Crawford.
The year
after, Davis was dispatched to Galena, Illinois
, at the head of a detachment assigned to remove
miners from lands claimed by the Native Americans.
Lieutenant Davis was home in Mississippi for the entire Black Hawk
War, returning after the Battle of Bad Axe. Following the conflict,
he was assigned by his colonel,
Zachary
Taylor, to escort
Black Hawk
himself to prison—it is said that the chief liked Davis because of
the kind treatment he had shown.
Another of Davis's duties during this
time was to keep miners from illegally entering what would
eventually become the state of Iowa
.
Marriage, plantation life, and early political career
Davis fell in love with
Zachary
Taylor's daughter,
Sarah Knox
Taylor.
Her father did not approve of the match, so
Davis resigned his commission and married Miss Taylor on June 17,
1835, at the house of her aunt near Louisville, Kentucky
. The marriage, however, proved to be short.
While
visiting Davis's oldest sister near Saint
Francisville, Louisiana
, both newlyweds contracted malaria, and Davis's wife died three months after
the wedding on September 15, 1835. In 1836, he moved to
Brierfield Plantation in
Warren
County, Mississippi
. For the next eight years, Davis was a
recluse, studying government and history, and engaging in private
political discussions with his brother Joseph.
The year 1844 saw Davis's first political success, as he was
elected to the
United States House of
Representatives, taking office on March 4 of the following
year.
In
1845, Davis married Varina Howell, the
granddaughter of late New Jersey
Governor Richard Howell whom he
met the year before, at her home in Natchez, Mississippi
.
Jefferson and Varina Howell Davis had 6 children, but only 1
survived young adulthood and married:
- Samuel Emory Davis, b. July 30, 1852; d. June 13, 1854
- Margaret Howell Davis, b. February 25, 1855; d. July 18, 1909;
married Joel Addison Hayes Jr.(1848-1919) 5 children
- Jefferson Davis, Jr., b. January 16, 1857; d. October 16, 1878;
never married
- Joseph Evan Davis, b. April 18, 1859; d. April 30, 1864
- William Howell Davis, b. December 6, 1861; d. October 16,
1872
- Varina Anne "Winnie" Davis, b. June 27, 1864; d. September 18,
1898; never married
There is
a portrait of Mrs. Jefferson Davis in old age at the Jefferson Davis
Presidential Library in Biloxi, Mississippi
, painted by Adolfo Müller-Ury (1862-1947) in 1895
and dubbed 'Widow of the Confederacy'. It was exhibited at
the Durand-Ruel Galleries in New York in 1897.
The Museum of
the Confederacy
at Richmond, Virginia
, possesses Müller-Ury's 1897-98 profile portrait of
their daughter Winnie Davis which the artist presented to the
Museum in 1918.
Second military career
In
1846, the
Mexican-American War began. Davis
resigned his House seat in June, and raised a volunteer regiment,
the
Mississippi Rifles, becoming
its colonel.
On July
21, 1846, they sailed from New Orleans
for the Texas
coast. Davis armed the regiment with
percussion rifles and trained the regiment
in their use, making it particularly effective in combat.
In
September 1846, Davis participated in the successful siege of Monterrey
.
On
February 22, 1847, Davis fought bravely at the Battle of
Buena Vista
and was shot in the foot, being carried to safety
by Robert H. Chilton. In recognition of Davis's bravery
and initiative, commanding general
Zachary Taylor is reputed to have said: "My
daughter, sir, was a better judge of men than I was."
On May 17th, 1847, President
James K.
Polk offered Davis a Federal
commission as a
brigadier general and
command of a
brigade of
militia. He declined the appointment, however,
arguing that the
United
States Constitution gives the power of appointing militia
officers to the
state, and not to the
Federal
government of the United States.
Return to politics
Senator
Because of his war service, the
governor of Mississippi appointed
Davis to fill out the
Senate
term of the late
Jesse Speight. He
took his seat December 5, 1847, and was elected to serve the
remainder of his term in January 1848.
In addition, the
Smithsonian
Institution
appointed him a regent at the
end of December 1847.
Davis introduced an amendment to the
Treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo to
annex most of
northeastern
Mexico. It failed 44-11.
The Senate made Davis chairman of the
Committee on
Military Affairs. When his term expired, he was elected to the
same seat (by the Mississippi legislature, as the Constitution
mandated at the time). He had not served a year when he resigned
(in September 1851) to run for the Governorship of Mississippi on
the issue of the
Compromise of
1850, which Davis opposed. This election bid was unsuccessful,
as he was defeated by fellow senator
Henry Stuart Foote by 999 votes.
Left without political office, Davis continued his political
activity.
He took part in a convention on states' rights, held at Jackson,
Mississippi
in January 1852. In the weeks leading up to
the
presidential
election of 1852, he campaigned in numerous Southern states for
Democratic candidates
Franklin
Pierce and
William R. King.
Secretary of War
Pierce won the election and, in 1853, made Davis his
Secretary of War. In this
capacity, Davis gave to Congress four annual reports (in December
of each year), as well as an elaborate one (submitted on February
22, 1855) on
various routes
for the proposed
Transcontinental
Railroad, and promoted the
Gadsden
Purchase of today's southern Arizona from Mexico. The Pierce
Administration ended in 1857. The President lost the Democratic
nomination, which went instead to
James
Buchanan. Davis's term was to end with Pierce's, so he ran
successfully for the Senate, and re-entered it on March 4,
1857.
Return to Senate
His renewed service in the Senate was interrupted by an illness
that threatened him with the loss of his left
eye.
Still nominally serving in the Senate, Davis
spent the summer of 1858 in Portland, Maine
. On the Fourth of July,
he delivered an anti-secessionist speech
on board a ship near Boston
. He again urged the preservation of the Union
on October 11 in Faneuil
Hall
, Boston, and returned to the Senate soon
after.
As Davis explained in his memoir
The Rise and Fall of the
Confederate Government, he believed that each state was
sovereign and had an unquestionable right to secede from the Union.
He counseled delay among his fellow Southerners, however, because
he did not think that the North would permit the peaceable exercise
of the right to secession. Having served as Secretary of War under
President
Franklin Pierce, he also
knew that the South lacked the military and naval resources
necessary to defend itself if war were to break out. Following the
election of
Abraham Lincoln in
1860,
however, events accelerated.
South Carolina
adopted an ordinance of secession on December 20,
1860, and Mississippi
did so on January 9, 1861. As soon as Davis
received official notification of that fact, he delivered a
farewell address to the United
States Senate, resigned, and returned to Mississippi
.
President of the Confederate States February 18, 1861-May 5,
1865

Jefferson Davis on 5 and 10 Cent CSA
postage stamps (1862 & 1863)
Four days after his resignation, Davis was commissioned a
Major General of Mississippi
troops.
On February 9, 1861, a Constitutional convention at Montgomery,
Alabama
named him provisional President of the Confederate States of America
and he was inaugurated on February 18, 1861. In meetings of
his own Mississippi legislature, Davis had argued against
secession, but when a majority of the delegates opposed him, he
gave in.
In conformity with a resolution of the
Confederate Congress, Davis immediately
appointed a Peace Commission to resolve the Confederacy's
differences with the Union.
In March 1861, before the bombardment of
Fort
Sumter
, the Commission was to travel to Washington, D.C.,
to offer to pay for any Federal property on Southern soil, as well
as the Southern portion of the national debt, but it was not
authorized to discuss terms for reunion. He appointed
General
P.G.T. Beauregard to command Confederate troops in the vicinity
of Charleston,
South Carolina
. He approved the Cabinet decision to bombard
Fort Sumter, which started the Civil War.
When Virginia
switched from neutrality and joined the Confederacy, he moved his
government to Richmond,
Virginia
, in May 1861. Davis and his family
took up his residence there at the White House
of the Confederacy
in late May.
Davis was elected to a six-year term as President of the
Confederacy on November 6, 1861. He had never served a full term in
any elective office, and that would turn out to be the case on this
occasion as well. He was inaugurated on February 18, 1861. In June
1862 he assigned General
Robert E.
Lee to replace the wounded
Joseph E. Johnston in command of the
Army of Northern Virginia, the
main Confederate army in the Eastern Theater. That December, he
made a tour of Confederate armies in the
west of the
country. Davis largely made the main strategic decisions on his
own, or approved those suggested by Lee. He had a very small circle
of military advisers. Jefferson Davis openly pushed for the
acquisition of Cuba upon completion of the Civil War.
In August
1863, Davis declined General Lee's offer of resignation after his
defeat at the Battle of Gettysburg
. As Confederate military fortunes turned for
the worse in 1864, he visited Georgia
with the intent of raising morale.
On April 3, 1865, with
Union troops under
Ulysses S. Grant poised to capture Richmond, Davis
escaped for Danville,
Virginia
, together with the Confederate Cabinet, leaving on
the Richmond and Danville
Railroad. He issued his last official proclamation as
President of the Confederacy, and then went south to Greensboro,
North Carolina
. Circa April 12, he received
Robert E. Lee's letter announcing
surrender.
President
Jefferson Davis met with his Confederate Cabinet for the last time
on May 5, 1865 in Washington, Georgia
, and the Confederate Government was officially
dissolved. The meeting took place at the Heard house, the
Georgia Branch Bank Building, with fourteen officials present.
He was
captured on May 10, 1865 at Irwinville
in Irwin County, Georgia
. In the confusion of the capture, Davis
accidentally wore his wife's overcoat leading to persistent rumors
and caricatures of him being captured in women's clothing.
After
being captured, he was held as a prisoner for two years in Fort Monroe,
Virginia
.
Administration and Cabinet
Imprisonment and retirement
On May
19, 1865, Davis was imprisoned in a casemate at Fortress Monroe
, on the coast of Virginia. He was placed in
irons for three days. Davis was indicted for
treason a year later. While in prison, Davis
arranged to sell his Mississippi
estate
to one of his former slaves,
Ben
Montgomery. Montgomery was a talented business manager,
mechanic, and inventor who had become wealthy in part from running
his own general store. However, floods ruined Montgomery's early
years at the reins, and he was unable to turn an early profit. The
Davis family was unwilling to forgive the debt of their former
slave, and he lost the land. Montgomery never recovered, and died
soon after.
After two years of imprisonment, he was released on bail which was
posted by prominent citizens of both northern and southern states,
including
Horace Greeley,
Cornelius Vanderbilt, and
Gerrit Smith (Smith, a former member of the
Secret Six, had supported
John Brown). Davis visited Canada,
Cuba and Europe. In December 1868, the court rejected a motion to
nullify the indictment, but the prosecution dropped the case in
February 1869.
In 1869
Davis became president of the Carolina Life Insurance
Company in Memphis,
Tennessee
, where he resided at the Peabody Hotel
. Upon
Robert E.
Lee's death in 1870, Davis presided over the
memorial meeting in Richmond, Virginia
. Elected to the U.S. Senate again, he was
refused the office in 1875, having been barred from Federal office
by the
Fourteenth
Amendment to the United States Constitution.
He turned down the
opportunity to become the first president of the Agricultural and
Mechanical College of Texas (now Texas
A&M University
).
In 1876, he promoted a society for the stimulation of U.S. trade
with
South America.
Davis visited
England
the next year, returning in 1878 to Beauvoir
. Over the next three years there, Davis
wrote
The Rise and
Fall of the Confederate Government.
Having completed that
book, he visited Europe again, and traveled
to Alabama
and Georgia the following year.
He completed
A Short
History of the Confederate States of America in October
1889.
Two
months later on December 6, Davis died in New Orleans
of unestablished cause at the age of
eighty-one. His funeral was one of the largest ever
staged in the South, and included a continuous cortège, day and
night, from New Orleans to Richmond, Virginia
. He is buried at Hollywood
Cemetery
in Richmond.
Notes
- Shelby Foote (1986): The Civil War: A Narrative, Fort
Sumter to Perryville, p. 8. Retrieved 2009-08-04
- Davis, Jefferson (in Wisconsin)
- http://www.tin-soldier.com/mexwar.htm#rifles
- http://www.tin-soldier.com/mexwar.htm#rifles
-
http://www.helium.com/debates/156160-was-jefferson-davis-a-traitor/side_by_side?page=4
- http://www.jeffersondavis.net/
- http://www.jeffersondavis.net/
-
http://www.georgiaencyclopedia.org/nge/Article.jsp?id=h-640
- United States Census, 1870, Tennessee, Shelby Co., 4-WD
Memphis, Peabody Hotel, Series: M593 Roll: 1562 Page: 147.
-
http://www.findagrave.com/cgi-bin/fg.cgi?page=gr&GSln=davis&GSfn=Jefferson&GSmn=finis&GSbyrel=in&GSdyrel=in&GSob=n&GRid=260&
See also
List of Memorials
to Jefferson Davis
References
Primary sources
- Jefferson Davis, Jefferson Davis: The Essential
Writings ed. by William J. Cooper (2003)
- Dunbar Rowland, ed., Jefferson Davis: Constitutionalist;
His Letters, Papers, and Speeches (10 vols., 1923).
- The Papers of Jefferson Davis (1971- ), edited by
Haskell M. Monroe, Jr., James T. McIntosh, and Lynda L. Crist;
latest is vol. 12 (2008) to December 1870 published by Louisiana State University
Press
- Jefferson Davis. The Rise and Fall of the Confederate
Government (1881; numerous reprints)
Secondary sources
- Allen, Felicity. Jefferson Davis: Unconquerable Heart
(1999) online edition
- Ballard, Michael. Long Shadow: Jefferson Davis and the
Final Days of the Confederacy (1986) online edition
- Rankin Barbee, The Capture of
Jefferson Davis (1947)
- William J. Cooper. Jefferson Davis, American
(2000)
- William C. Davis, Jefferson Davis: The Man and His Hour
(1991).
- William E Dodd. Jefferson Davis (1907)
- Clement Eaton, Jefferson Davis (1977).
- Paul Escott, After Secession: Jefferson Davis and the
Failure of Confederate Nationalism (1978).
- Herman Hattaway and Richard E. Beringer. Jefferson Davis,
Confederate President. (2001)
- Rable; George C. The Confederate Republic: A Revolution
against Politics. (1994). online edition
- Neely Jr.' Mark E. Confederate Bastille: Jefferson Davis
and Civil Liberties (1993) online edition
- Hudson Strode, Jefferson Davis (3 vols.,
1955-1964)
- Emory M. Thomas, The Confederate Nation, 1861-1865
(1979)
External links