- George W. Towns
George Washington Bonaparte Towns (
May 4 ,1801 –July 15 ,1854 ) was aUnited States lawyer, legislator, and politician.Towns began his 22 year long political career in 1829 as a strong Unionist and opponent of nulification as a representative and senator in the
Georgia General Assembly . He subsequently served as a U.S congressmen, and governor of Georgia from 1847 to 1851. However, by the end of his time in politics, Towns had become a radical secessionist who believed the federal government was controlled byabolitionist s keen on repressing the South.Early life and career
George Washington Bonaparte Towns was born on
May 4 ,1801 to Margaret George Hardwick and John Towns, a a veteran of theAmerican Revolution , inWilkes County, Georgia . His parents were Virginians who had moved to Georgia and settled in Wilkes County. Shortly after his birth, the Towns family moved throughout Georgia, where he received a small preparatory education. He then began to study medicine inEatonton , but after his studies were interrupted by an injury, he moved toMontgomery, Alabama , which had recently joined the Union. There, he studied law and, in 1824 was admitted to the Montgomery bar. As time went by, Towns continued to gain prominence in sociey, and in 1826 acquired the newspaper, "Alabama Journal". During that same year he married his first wife Margaret Jane Campbell, whose poor health led to her death several days after the marriage ceremony. Following the death of his wife, Towns moved back to Georgia and settled in Talbot County. In 1828 he became one of the original town commissioners ofTalbotton , where he also established a law office. During this period Towns served as colonel in the 65th Regiment of the Georgia Militia.External links
* [http://www.findagrave.com/cgi-bin/fg.cgi?page=gr&GRid=7116407 Find-A-Grave biography]
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