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Albert Gallatin Brown: Fourteenth Governor of Mississippi: 1844-1848
By David G. Sansing
Governor Albert Gallatin Brown was Mississippi’s youngest and
perhaps its most popular antebellum governor. His election in 1843 ended
the bitter division among the state’s Democrats over the issue of
whether the state should honor the bonds from two failed banks, Planters
Bank and Union Bank, and reunited the party. Following his re-election
in 1845 by a large majority and the completion of his second term, Governor
Brown was elected to the U. S. Congress, where he served until his appointment
to the U. S. Senate in 1854.
Brown was born in Chester District, South Carolina, on May 31, 1813,
and migrated to Copiah County in 1823. Brown attended Jefferson College
and Mississippi College and then read law with Ephraim G. Peyton. After
serving two terms in the state legislature, Brown was elected to the U.
S. Congress when he was only twenty-four years old; five years later he
was elected circuit judge as a Democrat in a predominantly Whig district.
In 1843, at age thirty-one, he was elected governor.
Governor Brown was a strong advocate of public education and tried, unsuccessfully,
to establish a statewide system of free schools. He was more successful,
however, in his effort to establish a state university. In 1844 Governor
Brown signed the charter establishing the University of Mississippi at
Oxford. The university opened in 1848.
After he was elected to the United States Senate, Brown became one of
the most ardent defenders of states’ rights and was one of the South’s
first advocates of secession. After Mississippi seceded and joined the
Confederate States of America, Brown resigned his U.S. Senate seat and
organized a military company known as Brown’s Rifles. Brown was
stationed briefly in Virginia before his election as one of Mississippi’s
two members in the Confederate Senate where he served until the end of
the Civil War.
After the fall of Vicksburg on July 4, 1863, Brown and other leaders,
realizing that the South would not win the Civil War, advocated an immediate
settlement and a negotiated peace treaty. Neither Mississippi nor the
Confederate States of America would accept that suggestion, and the war
continued for two more years. After the war was finally over, Brown advised
the people of Mississippi to accept the consequences of military defeat
and the emancipation of the state’s former slaves.
Governor Brown retired from public life after the Civil War and spent
his last years practicing law. He died at his home in Terry, Mississippi,
near Jackson, on June 12, 1880.
David Sansing, Ph.D., is history professor emeritus, University of
Mississippi.
Posted December 2003
Sources:
Biographical Directory of the United States Congress (1950),
897.
Mississippi Official and Statistical Register (1912), 60.
Ranck, James B. Albert Gallatin Brown: Radical Southern Nationalist.
New York, 1837.
Rowland, Dunbar. Mississippi Comprising Sketches in Cyclopedic Form
I. 310-319.
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