Edmund Pettus

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Template:Short description Template:Redirect Template:Use American English Template:Use dmy dates Template:Infobox officeholder Edmund Winston Pettus (July 6, 1821 – July 27, 1907) was an American lawyer, politician and military officer who represented Alabama in the United States Senate from 1897 to 1907.<ref name="cd">Template:Cite web</ref> He served as a senior officer of the Confederate States Army, commanding infantry in the Western Theater of the American Civil War. After the war, he was Grand Dragon, or supreme leader, of the Ku Klux Klan, which terrorized and often killed African Americans.<ref name="Watson">Template:Cite web</ref>

A bridge across the Alabama River in Selma, built in 1940, was named after him. According to Smithsonian, "The bridge was named for him, in part, to memorialize his history, of restraining and imprisoning African-Americans in their quest for freedom after the Civil War".<ref name="SMITH" /> In 1965, the bridge became a landmark of the civil rights movement.

Early life and career

Edmund Pettus was born in 1821 in Limestone County, Alabama.<ref name="SMITH">Template:Cite web</ref> He was the youngest of nine children of John Pettus and Alice Taylor Winston, a brother of John J. Pettus, and a distant cousin of Jefferson Davis.<ref>Eicher (2), p. 427. Wakelyn, p. 344.</ref> Pettus was educated in local public schools, and later graduated from Clinton College located in Smith County, Tennessee.<ref name=Warner238>Warner, p. 238.</ref>

Pettus then studied law under William Cooper in Tuscumbia, Alabama and was admitted to the bar in 1842. Shortly afterward, he settled in Gainesville and began practicing as a lawyer. On June 27, 1844, Pettus married Mary L. Chapman, with whom he had three sons, two of whom died in infancy, and two daughters.<ref name="Watson"/> Also that year he was elected solicitor for the seventh Judicial Circuit of Alabama.<ref name=Wakelyn344>Wakelyn, p. 344.</ref>

During the Mexican–American War in 1846–48, Pettus served as a lieutenant with the Alabama Volunteers, and after the end of hostilities he moved to California.<ref name=Eicher(2)427>Eicher (2), p. 427.</ref>

By 1853, he returned to Alabama, serving again in the seventh circuit as solicitor. He was appointed a judge in that circuit in 1855 until resigning in 1858. Pettus then relocated to the now extinct town of Cahaba<ref name=Warner238/> in Dallas County, Alabama, where he again took up work as a lawyer.<ref name="Biographical Directory of the U.S. Congress">Template:Cite web</ref>

American Civil War

Pettus in uniform, ca. 1863

In 1861, Pettus, an enthusiastic champion of the Confederate cause and of slavery, was a Democratic Party delegate to the secession convention in Mississippi, where his brother John was serving as governor. Pettus helped organize the 20th Alabama Infantry, and was elected as one of its first officers.<ref name=Warner238/> On September 9, he was made the regiment's major, and on October 8, he became its lieutenant colonel.<ref name=Eicher(2)427/>

Pettus served in the Western Theater of the American Civil War. During the Stones River Campaign, he was captured by Union soldiers on December 29, 1862, and exchanged a short time later for Union soldiers. Pettus was captured again on May 1, 1863, while part of the surrendered garrison that had been defending Port Gibson in Mississippi. He managed to escape and return to his own lines. Pettus was promoted to colonel on May 28, and given command of the 20th Alabama.<ref name=Eicher(2)427/>

During the 1863 Vicksburg Campaign, Pettus and his regiment were part of the force defending Confederate control of the Mississippi River. When the garrison surrendered on July 4, Pettus was again a prisoner until his exchange on September 12.<ref name=Eicher(2)427/> Six days later he was promoted to the rank of brigadier general,<ref>Wright, p. 112. Appointed from Alabama on September 19, 1863, to rank from September 18, and confirmed by Confederate Congress February 17, 1864.</ref> and on November 3 he was given brigade command in the Army of Tennessee.<ref name=Eicher(2)427/> Pettus and his brigade participated in the Chattanooga Campaign, posted on the extreme southern slope of Missionary Ridge on November 24, and fought during the action the following day.<ref>Eicher (1), p. 607.</ref>

Pettus and his command took part in the 1864 Atlanta Campaign, fighting in the battles of Kennesaw Mountain on June 27, Atlanta on July 22, and Jonesborough from August 31 to September 1.<ref name=Wakelyn344/> Beginning on December 17, he temporarily led a division in the Army of Tennessee.<ref>Eicher (2), p. 427. Led Stevenson's Division until wounding on March 19, 1865.</ref> During the 1865 Campaign of the Carolinas, Pettus was sent to defend Columbia, South Carolina, and fought at Bentonville from March 19–21.<ref name=Wakelyn344/> Pettus was wounded in this fight, hit in his right leg during the battle's first day. On May 2 he was paroled from Salisbury, North Carolina, and, four months after the Confederacy surrendered, Pettus was pardoned by U.S. President Andrew Johnson on October 20.<ref name=Eicher(2)427/>

Later life and career

After the war, Edmund Pettus returned to Alabama and resumed his law practice in Selma. Pettus served as chairman of the state delegation to the Democratic National Convention for more than two decades.<ref name=SMITH /> In 1877, during the final year of Reconstruction, Pettus was named Grand Dragon of the Alabama Ku Klux Klan. With earnings from his law practice, he bought farm land.<ref name=SMITH />

In 1896, at the age of 75, Pettus ran for the U.S. Senate as a Democrat and won, beating incumbent James L. Pugh. The state legislature, rather than state voters, elected United States senators at that time. His campaign relied on his successes in organizing and popularizing the Alabama Klan and his prominent opposition to the constitutional amendments following the Civil War that elevated former slaves to the status of free citizens.<ref name=SMITH /> On March 4, 1897, he began service in the U.S. Senate. The state legislature re-elected him on January 26, 1903, and January 22, 1907. This term would begin two years later in 1909.

Pettus died at Hot Springs, North Carolina, in the summer of 1907, at age 86, while still in office and elected for the next term. He is buried in Live Oak Cemetery in Selma.<ref name="Biographical Directory of the U.S. Congress"/>

Legacy

Military historian Ezra J. Warner wrote that Pettus was "a fearless and dogged fighter and distinguished himself on many fields in the western theater of war" and after his promotion to a general officer "he followed with conspicuous bravery every forlorn hope which the Confederacy offered..."<ref name=Warner238/> Likewise historian Jon L. Wakelyn summed up his military career by saying " … he volunteered for service in the Confederate Army and distinguished himself in the western command."<ref name=Wakelyn344/> As a U.S. senator, Pettus was "the last of the Confederate brigadiers to sit in the upper house of the national Congress."<ref name=Warner238/>

Edmund Pettus Bridge

Template:Main In 1940, a bridge across the Alabama River in Selma was named after him. In 1965, it became a civil rights movement landmark when 525 to 600 civil rights marchers on their way from Selma to Montgomery tried to cross the bridge, but were turned back and attacked by Alabama state troopers and members of the Ku Klux Klan. This event has since been called Bloody Sunday.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>

In 2020, Pettus’ great-great-granddaughter Caroline Randall Williams, Vanderbilt University writer-in-residence, proposed renaming the bridge after John Lewis because "We name things after honorable Americans to commemorate their legacies. That bridge is named after a treasonous American who cultivated and prospered from systems of degradation and oppression before and after the Civil War."<ref name="WRDW Rename">Template:Cite news</ref>

Writing in the New York Times, Williams argued:<ref>Template:Cite news</ref> Template:Blockquote

At least one other Pettus descendant, Dave Pettus, supports renaming the bridge "Bloody Sunday Bridge."<ref name="Bloody Sunday Bridge">Template:Cite news</ref>

See also

References

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