- Francis Preston Blair, Jr.
Infobox Senator
name=Francis Preston Blair, Jr.
jr/sr=United States Senator
state=Missouri
party=Free Soiler, Democrat, Unconditional Unionist
term=January 20 ,1871 –March 3 ,1873
preceded=Daniel T. Jewett
succeeded=Lewis V. Bogy
date of birth=February 19 ,1821
place of birth=Lexington, Kentucky
date of death=July 9 ,1875
place of death=St. Louis, Missouri
spouse=Appoline Alexander Blair
profession=Politician ,Lawyer Francis Preston Blair, Jr. (
February 19 ,1821 –July 9 ,1875 ) was an American politician andUnion Army general during theAmerican Civil War . He representedMissouri in both the House of Representatives and the Senate, and he was the Democratic Party's nominee for Vice President in 1868.Early life and career
Blair was born in
Lexington, Kentucky . He was the son ofFrancis Preston Blair and the brother ofMontgomery Blair . He was also the cousin ofB. Gratz Brown . He attended schools inWashington, D.C. , graduated fromPrinceton University in 1841, and studied law atTransylvania University . After his admission to the bar in Lexington, he went on to practice in St. Louis in 1842.Blair participated in the
Mexican-American War and was appointedattorney general for theNew Mexico Territory after it was secured by GeneralStephen W. Kearny . A personal and political friend of Thomas Hart Benton, he became known for his views opposingslavery . He also was an outspoken Free-Soiler and was elected to theUnited States House of Representatives in 1852. He was defeated in 1858 but reelected in 1860. In Congress, he served as chairman of the important Military Affairs Committee.Civil War
Immediately after
South Carolina 's secession in December 1860, Blair, believing that the southern leaders were planning to carry neutral Missouri into the movement, began active efforts to prevent it and personally organized and equipped a secret body of 1000 men formed out of theparamilitary Wide Awakes organization to be ready for the emergency. When hostilities became inevitable, acting in conjunction with Captain (later General)Nathaniel Lyon , he suddenly transferred the arms in the Federal arsenal at St Louis toAlton, Illinois . A few days later (May 10, 1861), Federal troops surrounded and captured a force of state guards which had been stationed at Camp Jackson in the suburbs of St Louis with the intention of seizing the arsenal. This action gave the Federal cause a decisive initial advantage in Missouri but also inflamed secessionist sentiments in the state due to the subsequentSt. Louis Massacre .Blair was promoted brigadier general of volunteers in August 1862 and then to major general in November. He commanded the 1st Brigade, which consisted of the 13th Illinois Infantry, the 29th, 30th, 31st, and 32nd Missouri Infantries, the 58th Ohio Infantry, 4th Company, Ohio Light Artillery, and Company C, 10th Missouri Cavalry.
In the US Army, he commanded a division in the Vicksburg campaign and in the fighting about Chattanooga, and was one of
William T. Sherman 's corps commanders in the final campaigns in Georgia andthe Carolinas .Postbellum activities
At the close of the war, Blair, having spent much of his private fortune in support of the Union, was financially ruined. In 1866 like his father and brother he opposed the Congressional Reconstruction policy, and on that issue left the Republican Party. He was the unsuccessful Democratic candidate for vice president in 1868, running with
Horatio Seymour . In 1871 Blair was chosen by theMissouri Legislature as a United States Senator, but he was defeated for reelection in 1873. During the same year he was stricken with paralysis, from which he never recovered. Blair died from a fall on July 9, 1875.In 1899, the state of
Missouri donated a marble statue of Blair to theU.S. Capitol 'sNational Statuary Hall Collection .ee also
References
*1911
* [http://www.pgdp.net/c/tools/project_manager/page_detail.php?project=projectID3eec8bccd1240&show_
]External links
CongBio|B000523 Retrieved on
2008-02-12
*findagrave|18442 Retrieved on2008-02-12
* [http://www.aoc.gov/cc/art/nsh/blair.cfm Blair in Statuary Hall at the U.S. Capital]
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