For other people with the same name, see Mark Cooper
Mark Anthony Cooper (April
20, 1800 – March 17, 1885) was a United States
Representative, businessman and
lawyer from Georgia
. His cousin was U.S. Representative
Eugenius Aristides Nisbet.
Cooper was
born near Powellton, Georgia, in
Hancock
County
in 1800 and graduated from South Carolina College
(now the University of South Carolina
) in Columbia
in 1819. After studying law and gaining admittance to
the state bar in 1821, he practiced law in
Eatonton,
Georgia
. He later moved to Columbus,
Georgia
. In 1825 and again in 1836, Cooper fought in
the Seminole
Wars
. (He was a Major in these campaigns.)
In 1833, Cooper served in the
Georgia House of
Representatives. In 1838, he was elected as a
Whig Representative from Georgia
to the
26th United States
Congress and served one term in that seat from March 4, 1839
until March 3, 1841, as he lost his bid for reeleciton in 1840. He
returned to the U.S. Congress in 1842 after winning election as a
Democrat to fill
the remainder of the term of
William Crosby Dawson, who had
resigned in 1841 to run for the
Governor of Georgia. Cooper was
reelected to that congressional seat in the general election in
1842; however, he resigned in 1843 to run an unsuccessful candidacy
for Governor. Cooper's second stint in Congress lasted from January
3, 1842, to June 26, 1843.
Iron Man of Georgia
During his time as an attorney, Cooper was a lender essentially
functioning as the local bank in Eatonton. He then invested in a
bank in Columbus, Georgia and after a few years, sold out for
$300,000which he used to build his Iron works nearby Etowah,
Georgia.
After his
political service, Cooper became president of the Etowah Manufacturing and
Mining Company in Etowah, Georgia
, in 1859. He died at his home, Glen Holly,
near Cartersville,
Georgia
, on March 17, 1885, and was buried
there.
The iron works included large facilities e.g. a plant for making
nails and another plant for making pots and pans out of iron. But
the most famous plant was one for making cannon during the Civil
War. These cannon were highly regarded for their higher quality
(not explodingas others did).
All these ventures in business were highly successful and Cooper
was well off, but his iron works was confiscated after the Civil
War and his investments in conferate notes and bonds that became
worthless left him poor after a lifetime of hard work.
Further family history
Mark Anthony Cooper was the grandson of Capt Thomas Cooper of the
Revolutionary War. And he is named for Capt Cooper's wife's family
which traces its ancestry back to the famous Mark Anthony of
Rome.
Capt Cooper moved to Powelton Area of central Georgia from Virginia
and had a large family with many descendants-Iron Man Cooper being
the most famous.
References
- Mark Anthony Cooper- The Iron Man of Georgia
by Mark Cooper Pope III and J Donald MacKeeGraphic Publishing
(Atlanta, 2000)ISBN 0-9679640-0-8