- John Allen Wilcox
John Allen Wilcox (
April 18 ,1819 –February 7 ,1864 ) was a politician fromMississippi andTexas who served in theUnited States House of Representatives in the early 1850s and then in theConfederate Congress during theAmerican Civil War .Wilcox was born in
Greene County, North Carolina , a son of Ruben and Sarah (Garland) Wilcox. One brother,Cadmus Wilcox , would later become a general in theConfederate States Army . It is likely that Wilcox was raised and educated inTipton County, Tennessee , where the family moved. Moving toMississippi and entering politics, he served as secretary of the State Senate. He enlisted in theU.S. Army during theMexican-American War , serving aslieutenant colonel of the 2nd Mississippi Volunteer Infantry. When hostilities ceased, he returned to Mississippi and practiced law in Aberdeen.In 1850, he was elected to Congress as a Whig, defeating future Civil War general
Winfield S. Featherston . Two years later, Wilcox was defeated for re-election. In 1853, he moved toSan Antonio, Texas , and resumed his law practice. He briefly dabbled in theKnow Nothing political movement, serving as a presidential elector in 1856, but then joined the Democratic Party in 1858, attending the National Convention that year.With talk of
secession increasing in Texas, Wilcox, a strong supporter ofstates rights , was selected as a delegate to the state's Secession Convention in 1861. He served on the committee that drafted theordinance of secession . He was elected to theFirst Confederate Congress in November 1861 and travelled to Richmond to assume his duties, serving on various committees and proving to be a staunch support of the policies of PresidentJefferson Davis . He was active in helping raise recruits and organizing theTexas Brigade .After his term in Congress expired, Wilcox joined the
Confederate States Army as a volunteer aide to Maj. Gen.John B. Magruder . Given the rank ofcolonel , Wilcox served in theBattle of Galveston .He was elected to the
Second Confederate Congress , but died in Richmond unexpectedly ofapoplexy shortly before taking his seat. He was buried in Richmond'sHollywood Cemetery . His wife and two young children were taken in by his brother, General Cadmus M. Wilcox.References
* [http://www.tsha.utexas.edu/handbook/online/articles/WW/fwi10.html Handbook of Texas Online]
* Warner, Ezra J. and Yearns, W. Buck, "Biographical Register of the Confederate Congress" Baton Rouge: Louisiana State University Press, 1975.
Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.