- Augustus Hill Garland
Infobox US Cabinet official
name=Augustus Hill Garland
order1=39th
title1=United States Attorney General
term_start1=March 6 ,1885
term_end1=March 4 ,1889
predecessor1=Benjamin H. Brewster
successor1=William H. H. Miller
jr/sr2=United States Senator
state2=Arkansas
term_start2=March 4 ,1877
term_end2=March 6 ,1885
predecessor2=Powell Clayton
successor2=James H. Berry
order3=11th
title3=Governor of Arkansas
term_start3=November 12 ,1874
term_end3=January 11 ,1877
predecessor3=Elisha Baxter
successor3=William R. Miller
birth_date=birth date|1832|6|11|mf=y
birth_place=Covington, Tennessee , U.S.
death_date=death date and age|1899|1|26|1832|6|11
death_place=Washington, D.C. , U.S.
party=Whig, American, Constitutional Unionist, Democratic
spouse=Sarah Virginia Sanders Garland
profession=Politician ,Lawyer ,Teacher ,Author
religion=Augustus Hill Garland (
June 11 ,1832 ndashJanuary 26 ,1899 ) was anArkansas lawyer and politician. He was a senator in both the United States and the Confederate States, served as Governor of Arkansas and as Attorney General of the United States in first administration ofGrover Cleveland .Early life and law career
Garland was born in
Covington, Tennessee , onJune 11 ,1832 to Rufus and Barbara Hill Garland. Along with his parents, his older brother, Rufus, and older sister, Elizabeth, the family moved to Lost Prairie inArkansas in 1833 where his father owned a store. His father died when Garland was still a baby and his mother then wed Thomas Hubbard in 1836. He relocated the family to Washington, Arkansas, near the Hempstead County seat of Hope. Garland attended Spring Hill Male Academy from 1838 to 1843 before moving on toSt. Mary's College inLebanon, Kentucky and later graduating fromSt. Joseph's College in Bardstown,Kentucky , in 1849.Garland briefly taught school at Brounstown School in the Mine Creek Community in Sevier County before returning to Washington to study
law with HempsteadCounty clerk Simon Sanders, later being admitted to the bar and starting a law practice with his stepfather in 1853. He married Sarah Virginia Sanders onJune 14 ,1853 with whom he would have nine children aside, four of whom survived to adulthood. They moved to Little Rock in June 1856 where Garland became a law partner to Ebenezer Cummins, a former legal associate ofAlbert Pike 's. Garland became one of Arkansas's most prominent attorneys and was admitted to the bar of theSupreme Court of the United States in 1860.Entrance into politics
Garland was a supporter of the Whig and American "Know Nothing" parties during the 1850s and was a presidential elector in the Arkansas Electoral College for the Constitutional Union Party in the election of 1860, voting for the party's nominees of John Bell and
Edward Everett .Civil War
With the election of Republican
Abraham Lincoln to the Presidency of the United States, more and more southern states were presured to secede from the Union. Garland opposed secession and consistently advocated Arkansas's continued allegiance to theUnited States . In 1861, he was elected to represent Pulaski County at the secession convention in Little Rock where he voiced his opposition to secede, but after President Lincoln called for 75,000 troops in response to theBattle of Fort Sumter , Garland reluctantly supported secession.Confederate Congress
Garland served in the
Provisional Confederate Congress and was later elected to the Confederate House of Representatives in theFirst Confederate Congress in 1861 where he was a member of the Committees on Public Lands, Commerce and Financial Independence, and the Judiciary. He was reelected in 1863 and in 1864 was appointed to the Confederate States Senate to fill the vacancy caused by the death ofCharles B. Mitchel . In Congress, he made efforts to establish a Supreme Court of the Confederate States and supported the administration of PresidentJefferson Davis aside his opposition to the laws suspending thewrit ofhabeas corpus . He returned to Arkansas in February 1865 to help facilitate the return of the state to the Union."Ex parte Garland"
At the end of the Civil War, Garland was pardoned by President
Andrew Johnson onJuly 15 ,1865 . Despite this pardon, he was prohibited from practicing law due to a provision passed by theUnited States Congress onJanuary 24 ,1865 stripping the law licenses of all lawyers who worked with the Confederate government or military. Garland became the petitioner in the case of "Ex parte Garland " inwhich he made the argument that it was unconstitutional and a violation of "ex post facto". OnJanuary 14 ,1867 , by a vote of five to four, the Court agreed. The ruling caused considerable uproar in the north, but gave hope that the judicial system could be used to prevent the implementation of theReconstruction Act that had recently been passed by Congress. He then pushed the Supreme Court to hear the case of "Mississippi v. Johnson " which challenged the constitutionality of those acts, however the Court refused.Post-war political career
Garland was elected to the
United States Senate for a term beginning in 1867, but was not allowed to take the seat as Arkansas had not yet been readmitted to the Union. He continued practicing law and observing the political scene from a distance. In 1872, with the Republican Party split into three factions, Arkansas Democrats sought Garland to help elect Democrats into the state legislator and had been considered for the Democratic nomination for the U.S. Senate. During the conflict known as theBrooks-Baxter War , he sided with GovernorElisha Baxter and was a primary strategists for him. He was an advisor and constitutional scholar at the next state constitutional convention and, with strong support from the Democratic Party, was elected Governor of Arkansas.Governor of Arkansas
Garland was faced with a number of problems after taking office as Governor including turmoil in the state over threatening groups like the
Ku Klux Klan , an ongoing congressional investigation over the Brooks-Baxter confect and the state debt of $17,000,000. With help from the finance board, the debt was significantly lowered in two years time. Garland was a strong supporter of better education. He urged the legislator to establish schools for theblind anddeaf , successfully advocated in appointing a new president for the Arkansas Industrial University, today theUniversity of Arkansas , and helped founded the Branch Normal College, today theUniversity of Arkansas at Pine Bluff , which made education more accessible forAfrican-American s. Under his administration, he also oversaw the creation of the Arkansas bureau of statistics and bureau of agriculture, mining and manufacturing.United States Senate
Garland ran successfully for the United States Senate in 1876 and was reelected in 1883. In the Senate, he served as a member of the Committees on Public Lands, the Territories and the Judiciary, serving as chairman of the Territories Committee in the 46th Congress. As a Senator, he made efforts to bring about tariff reform, internal improvements such as the regulation of interstate commerce and a federal prison system, federal aid to education and civil service reform.
Attorney General
Garland resigned from the Senate in 1885 after excepting the appointment of Attorney General of the United States by newly elected President
Grover Cleveland , becoming the first Arkansan to receive a cabinet post. Not long after taking office, he became embrolied in a political scandal. While serving in the Senate, Garland became ashareholder in and attorney for the Pan-Electric Telephone Company which was organized to form regional telephone companies using equipment developed by J. Harris Rogers. TheBell Telephone Company brought suit against Pan-Electric forpatent infringement after it was discovered that their equipment was similar to that of Bell's. Garland was ordered to bring a suit in the name of theUnited States to invalidate the Bell patent, breaking their monopoly of telephone technology, but refused to do so. However, while Garland was on vacation in the summer, Solicitor GeneralJohn Goode authorized the suit. A year long congressional investigation and constant public attention effected his work as Attorney General, however, despite having to serve under a cload of suspicion, he was supported from President Cleveland. Garland was also the first, and to date only, United States cabinet secretary to be censured by Congress when, in 1886, Garland failed to provide documents about the firing of aUnited States Attorney .Later life and death
President Cleveland lost reelection to
Benjamin Harrison in the 1888 election and Garland left office at the end of Cleveland's term in 1889. He resumed practicing law inWashington, D.C. and published a number of books encluding "The Constitution As It Is" (1880), "Experience in the Supreme Court of the United States, with Some Reflections and Suggestions as to that Tribunal" (1883), "Third-Term Presidential" (1896), "Experience in the Supreme Court of the United States" (1898) and " Treatise on the Constitution and Jurisdiction of the United States Courts" (1898). OnJanuary 26 ,1899 , while arguing a case before the Supreme Court, Garland suffered astroke and died a few hours later in the Capitol. He was internedMount Holly Cemetery inLittle Rock, Arkansas .Garland County, Arkansas ,Garland, Arkansas andGarland, Texas were named in his honor.ources
* [http://www.encyclopediaofarkansas.net/encyclopedia/entry-detail.aspx?entryID=106 Augustus Hill Garland at the Encyclopedia of Arkansas History and Culture]
* [http://www.oldstatehouse.com/exhibits/virtual/governors/the_redeemers/garland.asp Augustus Hill Garland at the Old State House Museum]External links
* [http://www.findagrave.com/cgi-bin/fg.cgi?page=gr&GRid=18488 Augustus Hill Garland] at
Find A Grave
Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.