- Isham G. Harris
Infobox Officeholder
name= Isham G. Harris
order=18th
office=Governor of Tennessee
term_start=November 3 ,1857
term_end=1862
lieutenant= John C. Burch (1857-1859) Tazewell W. Newman (1859-1861) B.L. Stovall (1861) Edward S. Cheatham (1861-1862)
predecessor=Andrew Johnson
successor=Andrew Johnson (Military Governor)
order2=United States Senator fromTennessee
term_start2=March 4 ,1877
term_end2=July 8 ,1897
predecessor2=Henry Cooper
successor2=Thomas B. Turley
birth_date=February 10 ,1818
birth_place=Tullahoma, Tennessee
death_date=July 8 ,1897 (aged age |1818|02|10|1897|07|08)
death_place=Washington, D.C.
spouse=
profession=
party= DemocraticIsham Green Harris (
February 10 ,1818 ndashJuly 8 ,1897 ) was an American politician. He served asGovernor of Tennessee from 1857 to 1862 and as a U.S. Senator from 1877 until his death.As governor, his decision not to respond to President
Abraham Lincoln 's request for troops to quell the secession of the Southern states helped make Tennessee the last state to join the Confederacy. During theAmerican Civil War , Harris served as staff officer in theConfederate Army .Following the defeat of the CSA, Harris fled to
Mexico , but returned to Memphis after learning most Confederate officials were not being prosecuted fortreason . He was subsequently elected to four terms in theUnited States Senate and served as its President pro tempore.Early life
Harris was born near Tullahoma,
Tennessee . He was educated at Winchester Academy inWinchester, Tennessee . He moved toParis, Tennessee , to become a store clerk. He studied law while there and was admitted to the bar in 1841 and began his practice in Paris.Early career
He was elected to the
Tennessee State Senate in 1847, serving one term there and then two in the U.S. House of Representatives, from 1849 to 1853. During his first term in the House, he chaired the Committee on Invalid Pensions. A Democrat, he was his party's nominee forgovernor in 1857 and was elected, succeedingAndrew Johnson .Civil War period
Perhaps rather surprisingly given the troubled and volatile nature of the times, he was re-elected twice, in 1859 and 1861. When President
Abraham Lincoln declared that there was rebellion in the South in 1861 and asked for troops to help quell it, Harris refused to make the call, and none were provided. This helped push Tennessee to become the last state to secede from the Union and join the Confederacy.The Confederate government had lost control of much of Tennessee, including the capital, Nashville, by early 1862. Apparently, upon learning that Lincoln had appointed Andrew Johnson as military governor of Tennessee, Harris, while not resigning formally, ceased to make any real effort to function as governor, serving instead as a staff officer in the
Confederate States Army , first forAlbert Sidney Johnston and then forJoseph E. Johnston .Post-war career
After the war, Harris fled with General
Hylan B. Lyon and other Confederates toMexico , hoping to rally withMaximillian . Harris then sought refuge inEngland . Upon learning that only the highest-ranking officials of the Confederacy were being punished, and that it might be possible for all others to have theircivil rights restored, he returned to Tennessee and resumed the practice oflaw inMemphis, Tennessee . He was subsequently elected to four terms in the U.S. Senate, serving from 1877 until his death, and is, as of 2004, Tennessee's second-longest serving Senator. From 1893 to 1895 (53rd Congress), Harris was President pro tempore of the Senate. Other Senate assignments in his career included chairing theDistrict of Columbia Committee in the 46th Congress and the 53rd Congress, the Committee on Epidemic Diseases in the 49th Congress through the 52nd Congress, and the Committee on Private Land Claims in the 54th and 55th Congresses.Death and legacy
His funeral was held in the Senate chamber of the
United States Capitol and he is buried at Elmwood Cemetery in Memphis, where many prominentWest Tennessee political figures are buried.References
CongBio|H000243 Retrieved on
2008-02-13
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