- Joseph Carter Abbott
Joseph Carter Abbott (
15 July 1825 –8 October 1881 ) was a Union general during theAmerican Civil War and a RepublicanUnited States Senator from the state ofNorth Carolina between 1868 and 1871.Early life
Abbott was born in
Concord, New Hampshire , and graduated fromPhillips Academy inAndover, Massachusetts , in 1846. He studied law and was admitted to the bar in 1852. From 1852 to 1857, Abbott was the owner and editor of the "Daily American"newspaper , inManchester, New Hampshire . His success with it led to his being given the position of editor of the "Boston Atlas and Bee," which he held from 1859 through 1861.He served as
adjutant general for New Hampshire from 1855–61 and was a member of the commission to adjust the boundary between New Hampshire andCanada .Civil War
In December 1861, Abbott became the lieutenant colonel of the 7th New Hampshire Infantry Regiment and participated in the battles of Port Royal Sound, St. John's Bluff, Fort Pulaski and Fort Wagner. In November 1863, he became
colonel of the regiment and led it at theBattle of Olustee and during the subsequentBermuda Hundred Campaign inVirginia .During the
siege of Petersburg , he commanded the 2nd Brigade, 1st Division, X Corps at Chaffin's Farm and the subsequent actions along the Darbytown and New Market Roads. TheArmy of the James was then reorganized and his command became the 2nd Brigade, 2nd Division, XXIV Corps which was attached to the Fort Fisher Expeditionary Corps under Brig. Gen. Alfred H. Terry and participated in the second battle of Fort Fisher and the capture of Wilmington. He was appointed brigadier general by brevet for his action at Fort Fisher. During the final stages of the war, he was stationed inWilmington, North Carolina .Postbellum
Following the war, Abbott remained in North Carolina. He was active in state politics, serving as a delegate to the State constitutional convention in 1868. During this time, his political strength came primarily through the black population. He believed in their capacity and assisted in organization and politically counselling them in ways which brought him blunt warnings from the white population. He was elected to the United States Senate that same year, representing North Carolina in that body for the first time since July 1861, when the state's two senators were expelled following the North Carolina's
secession from the Union. He served as a Senator fromJuly 11 ,1868 toMarch 3 ,1871 .He also served as a member of the
Republican National Committee from North Carolina from 1870 through 1872. During this period, he was also found to be in the pay of a "ring" whose major interests seemed substantially similar to Abbott's own political positions. During his tenure in the Senate, he spoke orthodoxly on matters ofsuffrage , and was helpful in handling the details of army administration. He devoted a good deal of time to improve the harbor of Wilmington, and hoped that the railroads of the Carolinas would be consolidated and made part of a southern transcontinental system. However, for all his efforts, his single greatest achievement was the imposition of a duty on peanuts. He was not nominated for a second term to the Senate.Upon leaving the Senate, he conducted a lumber manufacturing business and served as editor of the "Wilmington Post." He also received federal offices from both Presidents
Rutherford Hayes andUlysses S. Grant , including serving as collector of the port of Wilmington, inspector of posts along the eastern line of the southern coast during theRutherford B. Hayes Administration, and special agent of theUnited States Treasury Department . From August, 1869, he served as editor of the "Wilmington Post", a Republican organ of good quality for the era. However, he never again achieved any real status as a party leader. He established the town ofAbbottsburg, North Carolina .He was originally buried in the National Cemetery in Wilmington, North Carolina. He was reinterred in 1887 at
Valley Cemetery in Manchester, New Hampshire. Despite three marriages, he died childless. His political legacy is not much better. According to the "Dictionary of American Biography", "The historians of the state even now mention him only to condemn him." [Johnson, Volume 1, page 24.]ee also
* List of American Civil War generals
References
*"Biographical Directory of the United States Congress, 1774-1989: Bicentennial Edition." United States: Government Printing Office, 1989. ISBN 0-16-006384-1
*Johnson, Allen. "Dictionary of American Biography." New York: Charles Scribner's Sons, 1964.Notes
External links
* [http://virtualology.com/josephcarterabbott/ Appleton's Cyclopedia of American Biography, edited by James Grant Wilson, John Fiske and Stanley L. Klos. Six volumes, New York: D. Appleton and Company, 1887-1889 ]
*CongBio|A000006 Retrieved on2008-02-11 ###@@@KEY@@@###U.S. Senator box
state=North Carolina
class=2
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after=Matt W. Ransom
alongside=John Pool
years=1868–1871Persondata
NAME= Abbott, Joseph Carter
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SHORT DESCRIPTION= Union Army general
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