- William P. Kellogg
William Pitt Kellogg (
December 8 1830 -August 10 1918 ) was an American politician and acarpetbagger governor ofLouisiana from 1873-1877. He was the state's last Republican governor until the inauguration ofDavid C. Treen in 1980.Kellogg was born in Orwell in Addison County in western
Vermont near theNew York boundary, where he spent his childhood. He moved toPeoria, Illinois , at the age of eighteen and taught school for several years. He then became a lawyer and moved to Canton, also inIllinois , where he practiced law. There he joined the Republican Party and eventually came to knowAbraham Lincoln , a fellow Illinois lawyer. When Lincoln became President in 1861, he appointed Kellogg to be the chief justice of the Supreme Court of theNebraska Territory. Kellogg accepted this position but soon resigned and joined the seventh Illinoiscavalry . By 1862, he had risen to the rank ofcolonel and played an important role at a small battle nearSikeston, Missouri . Later in the war, Kellogg resigned because of ill health.In 1865, at the end of the civil war, Lincoln, days before his assassination, appointed Kellogg to be the collector of the port of New Orleans. This launched a notable 20-year political career in Louisiana. He remained collector of New Orleans until 1868, when he was appointed to the
United States Senate , when "reconstructed" Louisiana returned to the federal Union. Kellogg resigned from the Senate in 1872, when he was elected governor. In the election of 1872John McEnery , a Democrat, faced Republican William Pitt Kellogg. Sitting GovernorHenry Clay Warmoth , a Republican, supported McEnery because Warmoth opposed the Republican Party faction loyal to President U. S. Grant, who supported Kellogg. As Governor, Warmoth controlled the State Returning Board, the institution which administered elections. His board named McEnery the winner but a rival board claimed Kellogg the victorious. Warmoth was impeached for allegedly stealing the election. A black Republican, P. B. S. Pinchback became Governor for 35 days until Grant seated Kellogg with Federal protection as Governor. McEnery's faction established a "rump legislature" in New Orleans to oppose Kellogg's actions. McEnery urged his supporters to take up arms against Kellogg's fraudulent government. Action by the anti-Republican White League caused President Grant to send Federal reinforcements to New Orleans. Until Federal troops were removed from Louisiana in 1877, no Democrat could be elected. [http://www.sos.louisiana.gov/tabid/382/Default.aspx State of Louisiana - Biography]Kellogg's lieutenant governor was the African American Caesar Carpetier Antoine, a native of New Orleans, who had been a state senator from
Shreveport at the time. Despite the intense backlash against the Republican Party in the South, Kellogg was able to return to the United States Senate in 1876. He served in the Senate until 1883. He did not seek reelection, for his party was too weak in the South to be competitive. He was the chairman of the Senate Committee on Railroads from 1881 to 1883.Kellogg was elected to the
United States House of Representatives in 1882 and served one term from 1883 to 1885. He continued to live inWashington, D.C. , but retired from political life. He died in Washington and is buried atArlington National Cemetery inVirginia .Kellogg was one of the most important politicians in Louisiana during and immediately after Reconstruction. He was able to maintain power for much longer than most other carpetbagger Republicans who moved to the southern states after the Civil War. He is also notable as one of few senators to be elected to the House of Representatives immediately after leaving the Senate. The late
Claude Pepper , aFlorida Democrat was similarly elected to the House after serving in the Senate, but twelve years passed between the end of his Senate service and the beginning of his long House tenure.References
External links
*cite book
title=Annual Message of His Excellency Governor Wm. Pitt Kellogg, to the General ...
author=Louisiana Governor (1873-1877 : Kellogg), Louisiana Governor, 1873-1877 (W.P. Kellogg), William Pitt Kellogg, Louisiana, Governor (1873-1877 : Kellogg
year=1873
publisher=Printed at the Republican office
isbn=
url=http://books.google.com/books?id=2hMCAAAAYAAJ&printsec=titlepagendashGoogle Books full online browsing copy
* [http://www.sos.louisiana.gov/tabid/384/Default.aspx State of Louisiana - Biography]
* [http://www.la-cemeteries.com/Governors/Kellogg,%20William%20Pitt/Kellogg,%20William%20Pitt.shtml Cemetery Memorial] by La-Cemeteries###@@@KEY@@@###succession box |title=Governor of Louisiana
before=P. B. S. Pinchback | after=Francis Tillou Nicholls | years=1873–1877U.S. Representative box
state= Louisiana
district= 3
district_ord=3rd
before=Chester Bidwell Darrall
years= 1883 ndash 1885
after= Edward James Gay
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