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Biographical: officers of civil and military organizations.
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Jefferson Davis was born June 3, 1808, in that portion of
Christian county, Kentucky, which was afterwards set off as
Todd county.
His grandfather was a colonist from
Wales, living in
Virginia and
Maryland, and rendering important public service to those southern colonies.
His father,
Samuel Emory Davis, and his uncles, were all Revolutionary soldiers in 1776.
Samuel Davis served during the Revolution partly with
Georgia cavalry and was also in the siege of
Savannah as an officer in the infantry.
He is described as a young officer of gentle and engaging address, as well as remarkable daring in battle.
Three brothers of
Jefferson Davis, all older than himself, fought in the war of 1812, two of them serving directly with
Andrew Jackson, and gaining from that great soldier special mention of their gallantry in the
battle of New Orleans.
Samuel Davis, after the Revolution removed to
Kentucky, resided there a few years and then changed his home to
Wilkinson county, Mississippi.
Jefferson Davis received his academic education in early boyhood at home, and was then sent to Transylvania university in
Kentucky, where he remained until 1824, the sixteenth year of his age. During that year he was appointed by
President Monroe to
West Point military academy as a cadet.
A class-mate at
West Point said of him, ‘he was distinguished in his corps for manly bearing and hightoned and lofty character.
His figure was very soldier-like and rather robust; his step springy, resembling the tread of an Indian “brave” on the war-path.’
He was graduated June, 1828, at twenty years of age, assigned
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at once to the First infantry and commissioned on the same day brevet second-lieutenant and second-lieutenant.
His first active service in the United States army was at posts in the North-west from 1828 to 1833.
The Blackhawk war occurring in 1831, his regiment was engaged in several of its battles, in one of which the
Indian chieftain, Blackhawk, was captured and placed in the charge of
Lieutenant Davis; and it is stated that the heart of the
Indian captive was won by the kind treatment he received from the young officer who held him prisoner.
In 1833, March 4th,
Lieutenant Davis was transferred to a new regiment called the First Dragoons, with promotion to the rank of first-lieutenant, and was appointed adjutant.
For about two years following this promotion he had active service in various encounters with the Pawnees, Comanches and other tribes.
His sudden and surprising resignation occurred June 30, 1835, with an immediate entrance upon the duties of civil life.
His uncle and other attached friends were averse to his continuance in military life, believing that he was unusually qualified to achieve distinction in a civil career.
For some time he hesitated and then yielded to their wishes.
Perhaps also the attractions of
Miss Sallie Knox Taylor, daughter of
Zachary Taylor, commanding the First infantry, to whom he became affianced, contributed to the decision.
The marriage between them has been often spoken of inaccurately as an elopement, but it was solemnized at the house of the bride's aunt, near
Louisville, Kentucky.
Mr. Davis now became a cotton planter in
Warren county at the age of twenty-seven, and while engaging successfully in this pursuit he devoted much of his time to studies that would prepare him for public life.
His first appearance in political strife on a general field was in the gubernatorial canvass of 1843.
He was sent as a delegate to the Democratic convention of that year and made such impressions by his speeches as to cause a demand for his services on the
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hustings.
In 1844 his abilities were again in requisition as an elector for
Polk and
Dallas.
In this canvass he took a firm position for strict construction, the protection of States from Federal encroachment, and incidentally advocated the annexation of
Texas.
The reputation which he made during this year as a statesman of the
State rights school bore him into the Congress of the United States as the representative of
Mississippi from his congressional district.
Mr. Davis took his seat in Congress December 8, 1845, at a period when certain great questions were in issue, and with only a brief and commendable delay, took a foremost place in the discussions.
The
Oregon question, the tariff, the
Texas question, were all exciting issues.
It is especially noticeable in view of his after life that in these debates he evinced a devotion to the union and glory of his country in eloquent speeches, and in a consistent line of votes favorable to his country's growth in greatness.
One of his earliest efforts in Congress was to convert certain forts into schools of instruction for the military of the States.
His support of the ‘war policy,’ as the
Texas annexation measure was sometimes designated, was ardent and unwavering, in the midst of which he was elected colonel of the First Mississippi regiment of riflemen.
His decision to re-enter military life was quickly carried into effect by resignation of his place in Congress June, 1846, and the joining of his regiment at New Orleans, which he conducted to the army of
General Taylor on the
Rio Grande.
He had succeeded in arming his regiment with percussion rifles, prepared a manual and tactics for the new arm, drilled his officers and men diligently in its use, and thus added to
Taylor's force perhaps the most effective regiment in his little army.
He led his well disciplined command in a gallant and successful charge at
Monterey, September 21, 1846, winning a brilliant victory in the assault on Fort Teneria.
For several days afterwards his
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regiment, united with Tennesseeans, drove the Mexicans from their redoubts with such gallantry that their leader won the admiration and confidence of the entire army.
At Buena Vista the riflemen and Indiana volunteers under
Davis evidently turned the course of battle into victory for the
Americans by a bold charge under heavy fire against a larger body of Mexicans.
It was immediately on this brilliant success that a fresh brigade of
Mexican lancers advanced against the
Mississippi regiment in full gallop and were repulsed by the formation of the line in the shape of the V, the flanks resting on ravines, thus exposing the lancers to a converging fire.
Once more on that day the same regiment, now reduced in numbers by death and wounds, attacked and broke the
Mexican right.
During this last charge
Colonel Davis was severely wounded, but remained on the field until the victory was won.
General Taylor's dispatch of March 6, 1847, makes special complimentary mention of the courage, coolness and successful service of
Colonel Davis and his command.
The Mississippi regiment served out its term of enlistment, and was ordered home in July, 1847.
President Polk appointed
Colonel Davis brigadier-general, but he declined the commission on the ground that that appointment was unconstitutional.
In August, 1847, the governor of
Mississippi appointed
Mr. Jefferson Davis to the vacancy in the United States Senate caused by the death of
Senator Speight, and he took his seat December 6, 1847.
The legislature elected him in January for the remainder of the term, and subsequently he was re-elected for a full term.
His senatorial career beginning in December, 1847, extended over the eventful period of 1849 and 1850, in which the country was violently agitated by the questions arising on the disposition of the common territory, and into which the subject of slavery was forcibly injected.
The compromise measures of 1850 proposed by
Mr. Clay, and the plan of
President Taylor's administration, were both designed
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to settle the dangerous controversy, while extreme radicals opposed all compromise and denounced every measure that favored slavery in any respect.
Senator Davis advocated the division of the western territory by an extension of the Missouri Compromise line to the
Pacific ocean, because it had been once accepted as a settlement of the sectional question.
A majority refused this mode of settlement.
On this proposition to adhere to the old Missouri Compromise line of settlement the vote in the Senate was 24 yeas and 32 nays.
All the yeas were cast by Southern senators.
All nays were by Northern senators except
Kentucky one,
Missouri one and
Delaware two.
Mr. Davis thought that the political line of 36° 30′ had been at first objectionable on account of its establishing a geographical division of sectional interests, and was an assumption by Congress of a function not delegated to it, but the act had received such recognition through quasi-ratifications by the people of the States as to give it a value it did not originally possess.
‘Pacification had been the fruit borne by the tree, and it should not have been recklessly hewn down and cast in the fire.’
He regarded this destruction of the Missouri Compromise line in 1849-50 by Northern votes in Congress as dangerous to the peace of the country.
In his opinion at that time the theory of popular sovereignty in the territories ‘was good enough in itself, and as an abstract proposition could not be gainsaid,’ but its practical operation, he feared, would introduce fierce territorial strife.
He now saw very little in the compromise legislation of 1850 favorable to the
Southern States.
According to his view it ‘bore the impress of that sectional spirit so widely at variance with the general purposes of the
Union and destructive of the harmony and mutual benefit which the
Constitution was intended to secure,’ He did not believe the
Northern States would respect any of its provisions which conflicted with their views and interests.
His attitude, however, toward the
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measures of
Mr. Clay was not positively hostile, though it was emphatically distrustful.
But during the perilous discussions of those times
Mr. Davis did not align himself with any disunionists North or South.
He says for himself, ‘My devotion to the