- Thomas E. Bramlette
Infobox Governor
name = Thomas E. Bramlette
order = 23rd
office = Governor of Kentucky
term_start =September 1 ,1863 cite web |url=http://www.nga.org/portal/site/nga/menuitem.29fab9fb4add37305ddcbeeb501010a0/?vgnextoid=b5a337a59b066010VgnVCM1000001a01010aRCRD&vgnextchannel=e449a0ca9e3f1010VgnVCM1000001a01010aRCRD |title=Kentucky Governor Thomas Elliott Bramlette |publisher=National Governors Association |accessdate=2007-05-06]
term_end =September 3 ,1867
lieutenant = Richard T. Jacob
predecessor =James F. Robinson
successor =John L. Helm
order2 =
term_start2 =
term_end2 =
predecessor2 =
successor2 =
birth_date = birth date|1817|1|3|mf=y
birth_place =Cumberland County, Kentucky
death_date = death date and age |1875|01|12|1817|01|03
death_place =Louisville, Kentucky
party = Democrat
spouse = Sallie Travis
Mary E. Adams
profession =Lawyer
religion =Thomas Elliott Bramlette (
January 3 ,1817 –January 12 ,1875 ) was the twenty-third Governor ofKentucky .Early years
Bramlette was born in a part of
Cumberland County, Kentucky that today is part ofClinton County, Kentucky .cite book |last=Powell |first=Robert A. |title="Kentucky Governors" |publisher=Bluegrass Printing Company |location=Danville, Kentucky |year=1976 |id=OCLC|2690774 |chapter=Thomas Elliott Bramlette] He was the son ofColonel Ambrose S. and Sarah Bramlette.cite book |editor=Kleber, John E. |others=Associate editors:Thomas D. Clark ,Lowell H. Harrison , and James C. Klotter |title="The Kentucky Encyclopedia" |year=1992 |publisher=The University Press of Kentucky |location=Lexington, Kentucky |isbn=0813117720 |chapter=Bramlette, Thomas Elliott] He studied law, was admitted to the bar in 1837 at the age of 20, and began practicing inLouisville, Kentucky . In September of that year, Bramlette married Sallie Travis, the first of his two wives. The couple had two children, Thomas and Corinne.cite book |title="Kentucky's Governors" |editor=Lowell H. Harrison |publisher=The University Press of Kentucky |location=Lexington, Kentucky |year=2004 |isbn=0813123267 |chapter=Thomas Elliott Bramlette]Bramlette's political career began in 1841, when he was elected to represent Clinton County in the General Assembly. In 1848, Governor
John J. Crittenden appointed BramletteCommonwealth's Attorney . He resigned the position in 1850 to continue his legal practice, relocating toColumbia, Kentucky in 1852. In 1856, Bramlette was elected as a judge in Kentucky's 6th Judicial District, serving with distinction for five years.Bramlette accepted a commission as a
colonel in the Union army at the outset of the Civil War in 1861, raising and commanding the3rd Kentucky Infantry Regiment in violation of Kentucky's neutrality agreement. He resigned this post a year later and returned to Louisville to accept President Lincoln's offer to becomeUnited States District Attorney for Kentucky.cite book |title="The Encyclopedia of Kentucky" |publisher=Somerset Publishers |location=New York, New York |year=1987 |isbn=0403099811] During his tenure in this position, he vigorously enforced Kentucky's wartime laws against Confederates and Confederate sympathizers.Governor of Kentucky
In 1863, Bramlette replaced
Joshua Fry Bell as the Union Democrats' nominee for governor. The election saw Union forces intimidate and jail supporters of Bramlette's opponent, former governorCharles A. Wickliffe . Not surprisingly, Bramlette carried the election by a margin of nearly 4-to-1. [cite web |url=http://www.kdla.ky.gov/resources/Governors of Kentucky_pg3.htm#Bramlette |title=Kentucky's Governors: 1851ndash 1879 |publisher=Kentucky Department of Libraries and Archives |accessdate=2007-05-06] During his term, he turned down an offered seat in the U.S. House of Representatives as well as a nomination to become the Democratic candidate for Vice-President in 1864.Civil War
In December 1863, Bramlette addressed the General Assembly, declaring that the state had fulfilled its quota of soldiers to the Union army.
January 4 of the following year, he proclaimed that rebel sympathizers would be held responsible for allguerrilla raids in the state, and specified stiff fines and imprisonment for anyone found to be aiding the guerrillas.Although Bramlette assumed the governorship as a staunch supporter of the Union cause, within a year he issued a proclamation that he would "bloodily baptize the state into the Confederacy". The reasons for Bramlette's reversal were many. He took issue with General
Stephen Burbridge 's decision to enlist Negroes from Kentucky for military service, asking that this measure only be taken if Kentucky failed to meet her quota. The situation worsened when onJuly 5 ,1864 , President Lincoln suspended the writ ofhabeas corpus for citizens of the Commonwealth. Burbridge continued menacing Kentucky's citizens, interfering with the presidential election of 1864, and banishing Lieutenant GovernorRichard T. Jacob from the state. When the General Assembly re-convened in January of 1865, Bramlette continued voicing his opposition to the Union's tactics. Nevertheless, he did urge passage of the Thirteenth Amendment, maintaining that the institution of slavery was "irrevocably doomed."Reconstruction
Despite his disagreements with the Lincoln administration, he proclaimed a day of
fasting andprayer upon receiving news of Lincoln's assassination. The General Assembly petitioned new presidentAndrew Johnson to call an end tomartial law in the state. The tension between the state and federal governments continued, however, leading Bramlette to declare that every "white male citizen" twenty-one years of age having resided in the Commonwealth for at least two years would be eligible to vote. Spurred on by the Democratic governor's actions, Kentucky gave control of both houses of the General Assembly and five of its nine congressional seats to Democrats. Republican President Johnson received the message, ending martial law and restoring habeas corpus in Kentucky.When the General Assembly convened in December 1865, Bramlette sought to restore harmony in the state by issuing pardons to most ex-Confederates. He and the majority of the General Assembly opposed passage of the Fourteenth and Fifteenth Amendments, and Bramlette protested the establishment of the
Freedman's Bureau in the Commonwealth.Bramlette was very proud of his accomplishments not related to the Civil War, including the reduction of the state's debt and the establishment of the Agricultural and Mechanical College (later, the
University of Kentucky ). He supported the construction ofturnpikes financed by government bonds, the development of natural resources, and encouraged immigration to obtain adequate labor to support reconstruction efforts.Later life and death
Following his term as governor, Bramlette conducted a failed campaign to become a U.S. Senator. He married Mary E. Graham Adams in 1874, two years after the death of his first wife. He returned to his law practice in Louisville, and became a patron of many charitable organizations, notably the
Louisville Public Library .Bramlette died in Louisville on
January 12 ,1875 following a brief illness. He is buried atCave Hill Cemetery in Louisville.References
External links
* [http://www.findagrave.com/cgi-bin/fg.cgi?page=gr&GRid=6860277 Find-A-Grave profile for Thomas E. Bramlette]
* [http://www.rootsweb.com/~kygenweb/kybiog/jefferson/bramlette.te.txt Biography from Lawyers and Lawmakers of Kentucky]ee also
*
History of Kentucky
*Kentucky in the Civil War
*Lieutenant GovernorRichard Taylor Jacob
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