- Gerard Brandon
Gerard Chittocque Brandon (
September 15 1788 ndashMarch 28 1850 ) was an American political leader who twice served asGovernor of Mississippi during its early years of statehood.Early life and education
Gerard Brandon was the son of Irish immigrant, Gerard Chittocque Brandon, who established and ran
Selma Plantation in Adams County, Mississippi and Dorothy Nugent, the daughter of Irish immigrants Matthew Nugent and Isabel MacBray. The couple moved to Mississippi from South Carolina sometime in 1785.Brandon was born
September 15 1788 , the second child and first son of the family. He was educated atPrinceton University andWilliam and Mary College , and served in theWar of 1812 . He later practiced law at Washington County, Mississippi and was a successful planter, following his father's footsteps, in Adams County, Mississippi.He married Margaret Chambers on
January 18 1816 in Bardstown, Kentucky. After Margaret's death in June of 1820, Gerard married Betsy Stanton onJuly 12 1824 in Adams County, Mississippi. The governor had a total of eight children with his two wives.Brandon died, at the age of 62, on
March 28 1850 and was buried in a private family cemetery at his Columbian Springs Plantation in Wilkinson County, Mississippi.Political Life
A delegate to the constitutional conventions of 1817 and 1832, Gerard Brandon also helped draft Mississippi's first two constitutions. He served in the
Mississippi Legislature and was electedSpeaker of the House of Representatives in 1822.Brandon became
governor of Mississippi for the first time upon the death ofWalter Leake , serving from Leake's death onNovember 17 1825 untilJanuary 7 1826 , when David Holmes, the last territorial governor and first governor of the State ofMississippi was again inaugurated as governor.Brandon became governor of Mississippi again on
July 25 1826 and served untilJanuary 9 1832 .References
* [http://mshistory.k12.ms.us/ Mississippi History Now] "Gerard Chittocque Brandon Fourth and Sixth Governor of Mississippi: 1825-1826;1826-1832". Mississippi Historical Society
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