- William Dudley Chipley
William Dudley Chipley (
June 6 ,1840 –December 1 ,1897 ) was an Americanrailroad tycoon andstatesman . He created two railroads in theFlorida Panhandle and served one term as mayor ofPensacola, Florida and in theFlorida State Legislature .Early life
Chipley was born in
Columbus, Georgia , the son of DoctorWilliam Stout Chipley andAmelia Stout Chipley . Chipley's grandfather, theReverend Stephen Chipley , was one of the founding citizens ofLexington, Kentucky . William Stout Chipley was renowned for his work relating tobrain disease s and held two jobs: aprofessor ofmedicine atTransylvania University and the warden of the Eastern Asylum for the Insane in Lexington.Chipley moved with his parents back to Lexington when he was four years old, and was raised for all of his formative years in Kentucky. He graduated from the
Kentucky Military Institute and Transylvania University.Military service
After graduation from Transylvania, he enlisted in
9th Kentucky Infantry , fighting for the Confederacy. He was elevated to the position oflieutenant colonel and was wounded at the battles of Shiloh and Chickamauga before being taken prisoner at theBattle of Peachtree Creek near Atlanta. As aprisoner of war , Chipley was transported toJohnson's Island onLake Erie inOhio , and served time there until the war was over. In mid-1865, he settled inColumbus, Georgia and married Ann Elizabeth Billups, the daughter of a prominentPhenix City, Alabama planter.Chipley would later be implicated in the
Ashburn affair . He was brought to trial, in which the federal government attempted to jail Chipley for his role in the murders of the soldiers he fought during the Civil War. WithAlexander Stephens representing the defense, Chipley was found not guilty by a jury of his peers. It was only revealed later that Mrs. Chipley had in her possession a letter Stephens wrote to Chipley, in which the government apologized to Chipley and offered him freedom because the prosecution had no evidence. Chipley turned down the offer, and instead waited for vindication at the trial.Railroad executive
Chipley became fascinated with the railroad industry shortly after the Ashburn affair trial. He built what would become the
Columbus and Rome Railroad , and later became involved with theBaltimore and Ohio Railroad from 1873 to 1876. It was at this time that he moved to Pensacola, Florida, where he built the town's first railroad (this line would eventually become a part of theLouisville and Nashville Railroad ). He also built thePensacola and Atlantic Railroad , linking theAtlantic coast ofFlorida with theGulf Coast states for the first time.His achievements in the railroad industry inspired the residents of Orange to name their town Chipley in 1882.
tatesman
Chipley created the Democratic Executive Committee in
Muscogee County, Georgia in the late 1860s, and was its first director. He later served as director of the Florida Democratic Executive Committee.After opening the two rail lines in Pensacola, he parlayed his industrial success into one term as the mayor of the town (1887-1888). He also served in the Florida State Legislature from 1895 to 1897, and lost his bid for
United States Senator in 1896 by one vote.While on a trip to
Washington, DC , Chipley died onDecember 1 ,1897 . He was in the middle of a trip to lobby lawmakers to base more industrial endeavors in Florida. He was buried in Columbus, while the townspeople of Pensacola erected anobelisk in thePlaza Ferdinand VII in his honor.ee also
*
List of mayors of Pensacola, Florida Notes
References
*Biographical Notes, "Memoirs of Florida", Volume 1, 481–483, 1902 ( [http://fulltext.fcla.edu/cgi/t/text/pageviewer-idx?q1=SF00000009;subtype=bib;sid=e9020005777487f24cc59837f1ceaedd;cc=fhp;idno=SF00000009_0001_000;node=SF00000009_0001_000%3A24;seq=491;view=image;size=s;start=1;c=fhp] )
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