James Lusk Alcorn: Twenty-eighth Governor of Mississippi: March 1870 to November 1871
By David G. Sansing
James L. Alcorn was Mississippi’s first elected Republican governor.
Alcorn had previously served in the state legislature of Kentucky and
Mississippi, and had risen to the rank of general in the Confederate military
service during the Civil War.
Alcorn was born near Golconda, Illinois, on November 4, 1816. At an early
age he moved to Kentucky with his family. After graduating from Cumberland
College, Alcorn moved to Mississippi to establish a law practice at Delta,
in Panola County. While he was practicing law, and accumulating large
land holdings and a large number of slaves, Alcorn served in the Mississippi
Legislature. He also represented his county in the state constitutional
conventions of 1851 and 1861. Perhaps his most important contribution
to his adopted state prior to the Civil War was the Mississippi levee
system. Alcorn was the author of the bill creating the levee board and
served as its first president.
As a member of the Whig Party, Alcorn opposed secession in 1861 but like
most other Mississippi Whigs, he served in the Confederate Army and supported
the Confederacy. After the war, Alcorn advocated full civil rights for
the former slaves, including the right to vote, the right to hold public
office, and the right to testify in court. Alcorn became a leader in Mississippi’s
newly established Republican Party and won his party’s nomination
for governor. Following his election in 1869, and Mississippi’s
re-admission to the Union, Alcorn was inaugurated on March 10, 1870. In
the political parlance of the Reconstruction era, Governor Alcorn was
a “scalawag,” that is, a white southerner who became a Republican
after the Civil War.
During his administration, the Mississippi Legislature established a state
system of public education and founded Alcorn University, the first land-grant
college for blacks in the United States. The legislature also granted
new business corporations certain tax exemptions and other benefits to
make Mississippi more attractive to industry.
Governor Alcorn resigned in November 1871 to accept an appointment to
the U. S. Senate. Two years later he again ran for governor but lost to
Adelbert Ames. Following the expiration of his senate term in 1877, Alcorn
returned to Eagle’s Nest, his plantation home in Coahoma County.
Alcorn served as a delegate to the convention that drafted Mississippi’s
1890 Constitution. It was the third state constitutional convention he
had attended during his long career in Mississippi. It was also his last
act of public service. Four years later he died at Eagle’s Nest
on December 19, 1894. Alcorn County and Alcorn State University are named
in honor of Mississippi’s twenty-eighth governor.
David Sansing, Ph.D., is history professor emeritus, University of
Mississippi.
Posted December 2003
Sources:
Biographical Directory of the United States Congress (1950),
767.
Mississippi Official and Statistical Register (1912), 75.
Pereyra, Lillian A. James L. Alcorn: Persistent Whig (Baton
Rouge, 1966).
Rowland, Dunbar. Mississippi Comprising Sketches in Cyclopedic Form
I. 62-71.
|