Andrew Gregg Curtin

Andrew Gregg Curtin

Infobox Governor
name = Andrew Gregg Curtin



order = 15th
office = Governor of Pennsylvania
term_start = January 15, 1861
term_end = January 15, 1867
lieutenant =
predecessor = William F. Packer
successor = John W. Geary
title2 = Member of the United States House of Representatives for Pennsylvania's 20th
term_start2 = 4 March 1881
term_end2 = 3 March 1887
predecessor2= Seth H. Yocum
successor2 = John Patton
ambassador_from3= United States
country3 = Russia
term_start3 = 1869
term_end3 = 1872
predecessor3= Cassius M. Clay
successor3 = James L. Orr
president3 = Ulysses S. Grant
birth_date = birth date|1817|4|22|mf=y
birth_place = Bellefonte, Pennsylvania, U.S.
death_date = death date and age|1894|10|07|1817|04|22
death_place = Bellefonte, Pennsylvania, U.S.
party = Whig, Republican, Democratic,
spouse =
profession = Politician, Lawyer
religion = Presbyterian

Andrew Gregg Curtin (April 22, 1817October 7, 1894) was a U.S. lawyer and politician who served as Governor of Pennsylvania during the American Civil War.

Curtin was born in Bellefonte, Pennsylvania. He attended Dickinson College and the Dickinson School of Law and was employed as a lawyer. His first public office was as Secretary of the Commonwealth. In 1855, Governor James Pollock appointed him as Superintendent of Public Schools. He switched political allegiance from the Whigs to the new Republican political party in 1860, with his successful run for governor. He served in that office from 1861 until 1867.

During the Civil War, Curtin organized the Pennsylvania reserves into combat units, and oversaw the construction of the first Union military camp for training militia. It opened as Camp Curtin on April 18, 1861. In the years that followed, Curtin became a close friend and confidant of Abraham Lincoln, visiting the White House several times in order to converse about the status of the war effort.

Curtin was very active during the Gettysburg Campaign, working with Major General Darius N. Couch and Major Granville O. Haller to delay Robert E. Lee's Army of Northern Virginia and prevent it from crossing the Susquehanna River. Major General George G. Meade, a Pennsylvania officer whom Curtin had recommended for brigadier general and command of one of the Pennsylvania reserve brigades in 1861, defeated Lee in the Battle of Gettysburg.

After the Battle of Gettysburg, Governor Curtin was the principal force behind the establishment of the National Cemetery there. Through his agent, David Wills, Curtin procured the attendance of President Abraham Lincoln at the dedication of the cemetery. Governor Curtin was sitting with Lincoln on the platform on November 19, 1863 when Lincoln delivered his Gettysburg Address.

In his first term, Governor Curtin suffered a severe breakdown from the stresses of war. Secretary of State Eli Slifer handled governmental affairs during the increasingly frequent periods when Curtin was incapacitated. President Lincoln offered the governor a diplomatic position abroad, but he chose to run for reelection in 1863.

To coordinate Union war efforts, Curtin convened the Loyal War Governors' Conference on September 24 and September 25, 1862, in Altoona. This event was one of his most significant contributions to the Union war effort. He formed the Pennsylvania State Agency in Washington, and another branch in Nashville, Tennessee, to provide support for wounded soldiers on the battlefield and returned home. He also founded the state-funded Orphan's School to aid and educate children of military men who had died for the Union cause.

Soon after ending his second term, Curtin switched to the Democratic political party, and was appointed Minister to Russia by President Ulysses S. Grant. He later served as a Democratic Congressman from 1881 until 1887 in the United States House of Representatives. He died at his birthplace of Bellefonte, Pennsylvania, and is buried there in Union Cemetery. Four identical statues of Andrew Gregg Curtin—one in Bellefonte, one on the Pennsylvania State Monument at Gettysburg, one in the rotunda of the State Capitol Building, and one at the site of Camp Curtin—honor his service and life.

Curtin's family was prominent in Pennsylvania politics and in the Civil War. He was the grandson of Andrew Gregg, also a prominent Pennsylvania politician. He was the uncle of John I. Gregg and cousin of David McMurtrie Gregg, both Union generals in the Civil War.

libship honor|name=Andrew G. Curtin|type=his The University Park campus of Penn State University has both a residence hall and a campus road named for Curtin.

References

*Eicher, John H., & Eicher, David J., "Civil War High Commands", Stanford University Press, 2001, ISBN 0-8047-3641-3.
* [http://www.isr.bucknell.edu/Collections_and_Borrowing/Special_Collections_University_Archives/Union_County_History/andrewcurtin.html Bucknell University's Biography of Andrew Gregg Curtin]
*CongBio|C001004


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