William McWillie: Twenty-second Governor of Mississippi: 1857-1859
By David G. Sansing
William McWillie migrated to Mississippi from South Carolina, but, unlike
most other antebellum Mississippians who migrated to the state, he did
not come during his early childhood. McWillie moved to Mississippi during
his middle years after a successful banking career in Camden, South Carolina.
McWillie, who was born in the Kershaw District of South Carolina on November
17, 1795, had also served four years in the South Carolina Legislature.
In 1845, McWillie and his family moved to Madison County where he had
purchased a plantation. He built a colonial style mansion called Kirkwood,
where he lavishly entertained most of Mississippi’s prominent citizens
of that era.
Although most other wealthy planters were Whigs who generally opposed
secession, McWillie was an ardent advocate of states’ rights and
aligned himself with that wing of the Mississippi Democratic Party. He
began his political career in Mississippi in 1849 when he was elected
to the United States Congress as a Democrat in a Whig district. But in
1851 he was defeated by a combination of Whigs and Democrats who formed
the Union Party under Henry Foote.
At the Democratic Party Convention in 1857, McWillie was given the party’s
nomination for governor on the fourteenth ballot by a majority of only
three votes. He easily defeated the Whig candidate in the general election.
Under the provisions of the 1855 constitutional amendment, Governor McWillie
was inaugurated November 16, 1857.
In his inaugural address Governor McWillie alluded to the country’s
great sectional issues of slavery and states’ rights and predicted
that secession of the slave states would become inevitable if those divisive
issues were not resolved. And he called on the nation's leaders both in
the North and South to seek an early solution to those issues.
During Governor McWillie’s administration the levee system was
greatly improved and railroad construction increased substantially. The
growth of the railroads was encouraged largely because the state purchased
stock in newly organized companies. Governor McWillie recommended a statewide
public school system and the creation of a state superintendent of education
to supervise Mississippi’s free schools. He commended the legislature
for supporting higher education for the young men of the state and urged
them to do the same for Mississippi’s college-age women. The legislature
did not enact any of the educational legislation he recommended.
Just before Governor McWillie’s term expired, the John Brown raid
at Harpers Ferry, Virginia, occurred. That raid created great alarm in
Mississippi, and Governor McWillie, fearing a large-scale slave revolt,
urged the legislature to enlarge the state militia. The legislature did
authorize an increase in the militia, but the fear of revolt proved to
be unfounded.
After Governor McWillie left office in 1859, he retired from public life
and spent his remaining years at Kirkwood. He was an active supporter
of the Confederacy and his eldest son, Adam, was killed in the first Battle
of Bull Run. Governor McWillie died at Kirkwood on March 3, 1869.
David Sansing, Ph.D., is history professor emeritus, University of
Mississippi.
Posted December 2003
Sources:
Biographical Directory of the United States Congress (1950),
1552.
Mississippi Official and Statistical Register (1912), 69.
Rowland, Dunbar. Mississippi Comprising Sketches in Cyclopedic Form
II. 207-212.
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