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Joseph W. Matthews: Fifteenth Governor of Mississippi: 1848-1850
By David G. Sansing
Governor Joseph W. Matthews was a plain and unlettered frontiersman
who lacked the flair for oratory which Mississippians expected from their
statesmen. During the 1847 governor’s race, Matthews, a Democrat
and surveyor by trade, was jeered by the aristocratic Whigs. But apparently
there were more plain folks than aristocrats, because Matthews defeated
his Whig opponent by 13,000 votes.
Matthews came to Mississippi from Alabama, where he was born in 1812
near Huntsville. He settled in Marshall County near the old town of Salem,
which was then in Tippah County. Matthews was elected to the Mississippi
House of Representatives in 1840 and four years later was elected to the
state senate. In 1847 the Democratic Party nominated him as its candidate
for governor on the third ballot.
By the time Matthews was inaugurated January 10, 1848, Mississippi’s
economy had recovered from the panic of 1837 and the depression that followed.
The American-Mexican War had created another period of prosperity for
the old Cotton Kingdom. Because of that recovery and the state’s
bright future, Governor Matthews proclaimed in his inaugural address,
“our citizens are most free from debt, our storehouses abound with
plenty [and] our march is onward and upwards toward prosperity and happiness.”
Governor Matthews’s administration was almost entirely free from
the political turmoil that had so often characterized Mississippi politics.
That relative tranquility was due largely to the excitement and preoccupation
of the people with the war with Mexico and the general prosperity of the
late 1840s.
Although Governor Matthews’s two years in office were free from
controversy, they were not uneventful. During his administration, the
state adopted a new legal code, established an institution for the blind,
and the University of Mississippi opened for its first session in the
fall of 1848. The Jackson-Brandon railroad also began operation, and telegraph
service became available in Jackson and other parts of the state. It was
also during Governor Matthews’s administration that the Washington
Monument was under construction and Governor Matthews was asked to select
an appropriate stone to be placed in the monument to represent Mississippi.
The American-Mexican War and the admission of California to statehood
as a free state agitated the slavery issue and the Mississippi Democrats
passed over Governor Matthews in 1851 and nominated General John Anthony
Quitman, the hero of the war with Mexico.
After his term expired, Governor Matthews retired from politics, although
he served briefly in the Confederate diplomatic corps during the Civil
War. Governor Matthews died August 27, 1862, at Palmetto, Georgia.
David Sansing, Ph.D., is professor of history emeritus, University
of Mississippi.
Posted December 2003
Sources:
Mississippi Official and Statistical Register (1912), 62.
Rowland, Dunbar. Mississippi Comprising Sketches in Cyclopedic Form
II. 178-181.
Sansing, David and Carroll Waller, Mississippi Governor’s Mansion
(Jackson, 1977), 27-29.
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