- Francis Cockrell
Francis Marion Cockrell (
October 1 ,1834 –December 13 ,1915 ) was a Confederate military commander and American politician from the state ofMissouri . He served as aUnited States Senator from Missouri for five terms. He was a prominent member of the famedSouth–Cockrell–Hargis family of Southern politicians.Cockrell was born inWarrensburg, Missouri . His older brother wasJeremiah Vardaman Cockrell , who was a congressman fromTexas in the 1890s. Francis Cockrell attended local schools and became a lawyer as a young man, practicing law in Warrensburg. At the beginning of theAmerican Civil War in 1861, Cockrell joined the Confederate Army as acaptain . He eventually rose to the rank ofbrigadier general and was an important leader in theVicksburg Campaign . In April 1865, shortly before the end of the war which resulted in defeat for the Confederates, Cockrell was captured inAlabama , but was paroled after a few weeks. He returned to his law practice in Missouri.In 1874, Cockrell, who became a member of the
United States Democratic Party , was elected to the U.S. Senate from Missouri by the state legislature. He served in the Senate from 1875 to 1905, when he retired. He held several committee chairmanships, including the chairmanships of the Claims Committee, Engrossed Bills Committee and Appropriations Committee during his senate career.He was appointed to the
Interstate Commerce Commission by PresidentTheodore Roosevelt in 1905. He served on the Commission until 1910. Cockrell then became part of a commission which negotiated the boundaries between the state of Texas and theNew Mexico Territory , which was about to become a state. In 1912, he became a director of ordnance at the War Department. He remained in that job until his death inWashington, D.C. External links
*findagrave|9913 Retrieved on
2008-02-13
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