Francis P. Fleming, Governor

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Governor Francis Philip Fleming

Birthdate:
Birthplace: Panama Park, Duval County, Florida, United States
Death: December 20, 1908 (67)
Jacksonville, Duval County, Florida, United States
Place of Burial: Jacksonville, Duval County, Florida, United States
Immediate Family:

Son of Lewis Michael Fleming and Margaret Fleming
Husband of Floride Lydia Pearson
Father of Francis Philip Fleming, Jr.; Charles Seton Fleming and Elizabeth Legere Hamilton
Brother of Captain Charles Seton Fleming (CSA); Frederic Alexander Fleming; William Henry Fleming; Matilda Caroline McRae; Margaret Seton Fleming and 1 other
Half brother of Louis Isidore Fleming; Rev. George C. Fleming and Augustina A. Stephens

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About Francis P. Fleming, Governor

GUIDE TO THE FRANCIS P. FLEMING PAPERS 1694-1912 (bulk 1810-1912)

Francis Philip Fleming was born 28 September 1841 at Panama Park, Duval County, Florida, one of seven children born to Lewis Fleming and his second wife, Margaret (Seton) Fleming. The Flemings had three children, Francis Philip, Charles Seton (killed at the Battle of Cold Harbor, 1864), and Frederick A.

With his first wife, Augustina Cortez, Lewis Fleming had two sons, George and Lewis I.

Francis Fleming’s paternal grandfather, George Fleming, emigrated to Florida from Scotland in 1785, receiving large land grants for his military service for the Spanish government; he married Sophia, daughter of Francis Philip Fatio, a Swiss immigrant. Their son, Lewis Fleming (1798-1862), was a Major on the staff of Richard Keith Call who distinguished himself in the Indian Wars; he farmed Hibernia, a St. Johns River plantation.

Fleming’s maternal grandfather, Charles Seton, settled in Fernandina Beach in the early 1800s; [Gov. Francis P. Fleming] also descended from the Fatios.

As a member of a prominent Florida family, Francis was educated at home by private tutors. When he was twenty years old he left the business world and enlisted as a private in a company of volunteers that was incorporated into the Confederate Army’s 2nd Florida Regiment during the Civil War. He became quartermaster-sergeant of his regiment in November 1862, and earned a battlefield promotion to First Lieutenant in Virginia. While home on sick leave, he commanded a company of volunteers at the Battle of Natural Bridge south of Tallahassee, Florida.

At the end of the war Fleming studied law and was admitted to the bar 12 May 1868 in Jacksonville, practicing in the firm Fleming and Daniel. He became involved in politics beginning as a member of the State Democratic Executive Committee and participated in the campaign of Governor George F. Drew in 1876. He accepted the nomination in 1888 and was elected the fifteenth governor (8 January 1889-3 January 1893). During his term he established a state Board of Health with the goal of suppressing Yellow Fever, and reformed the tax structure.

Fleming was a member of the Florida Yacht Club; commander of the R.E. Lee Camp of Confederate Veterans; aide-de-camp to General John B. Gordon, Florida Division of the United Confederate Veterans; vestryman and warden of St. John’s Episcopal Church; member of the Florida Board of Trade; member of the Seminole Club; president of the Jacksonville Bar Association; member of the Florida Bar Association; president of the Old Confederate Soldiers’ and Sailors’ Home Association; trustee of the University School of Medicine of Richmond, Virginia; president and active member of the Florida Historical Society, and editor and contributor to the society’s quarterly publication.

He married Floride Lydia Pearson in 1871; they had three children: a daughter, Elizabeth Legere Fleming who married Frank Percival Hamilton; Francis Philip, Junior; and Charles Seton, both of whom practiced law.

Francis Philip Fleming died in Jacksonville on 20 December 1908.


http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Francis_P._Fleming

Francis Philip Fleming (September 28, 1841 – December 20, 1908) was an American politician and the 15th Governor of Florida from 1889 to 1893. Fleming was a Democrat, strong supporter of segregation and an opponent of civil rights for blacks. Fleming was a Confederate soldier and lawyer before he became governor.

Biography

Fleming was born in Panama Park (now part of Jacksonville) in Duval County, Florida. He spent his early years with his parents, Lewis Fleming and his second wife Margaret Seton, on their St. Johns River plantation, "Hibernia." The plantation narrowly escaped destruction at the hands of the Independent Battalion, Massachusetts Cavalry in mid-April 1864 when Colonel Guy V. Henry, a relative of the Fleming family, ordered it spared.

During the American Civil War, Fleming served the Confederate cause by enlisting as a private in the 2nd Florida Regiment and received a battlefield promotion to First Lieutenant, and subsequently to the rank of Captain. After being wounded, Fleming returned to Florida and actively enlisted new volunteers, commanding a volunteer company at the Battle of Natural Bridge at St. Marks on March 6, 1865. By the end of the war, Fleming had served under four generals: John Magruder, Joseph Johnston, John Bell Hood, and Robert E. Lee.

After the war, Francis Fleming studied law and was admitted to the bar in 1868, becoming a partner in the firm of Fleming and Daniel, later Fleming and Fleming. In 1871, he married Floride Lydia Pearson, the daughter of Florida Supreme Court justice Bird M. Pearson. Together the couple had three children: Francis Philip Jr., Elizabeth Fleming, and Charles Seton.

Francis P. Fleming authored a book memorializing his brother titled: The Florida Troops/A Memoir of Captain C. Seton Fleming C.S.A., originally published by Times-Union Publishing House, Jacksonville, FL, 1884. It's preface includes; "The preparation of the following pages was not commenced with the design of publication; but for the purpose of collecting and preserving in manuscript form, a brief memoir of one, in whose life was combined all the elements of true nobility, with that daring heroism which characterized his service as a soldier, during the most eventful period of this country's history, which I felt might be read with profit and pleasure by kindred of another generation." Original copies are quite rare.

Fleming later entered politics, and became the fifteenth Governor of Florida on January 8, 1889, serving until January 3, 1893, the sole term provided by state law at that time. Fleming, a segregationist, Southern nationalist, and partisan Democrat, sought to limit the power of the carpetbagger- and blacks-dominated Republican Party. Fleming signed into law restrictive poll taxes and "literacy" tests designed to limit the voting rights of blacks and carpetbaggers not protected by the grandfather clause. Fleming also removed from office Florida's only black judge, James Dean of Monroe County, because he had married a white man to a black woman. Other notable events during Fleming's term include:

The creation of a state Board of Health to stop a yellow fever epidemic that was sweeping the state;

The repeal of the Florida Railroad Commission, at the urging of railroad baron Henry Flagler;

The start of a reorganization of higher education institutions;

Adjustment of state revenues;

The Farmers' Alliance movement;

The 1891 reelection dispute of Senator Wilkinson Call.

Fleming later advocated adding a red saltire, or diagonal cross, to the Florida flag, in order to distinguish it from a flag of surrender (the flag at that time was a white flag with the Florida seal in the center). This proposal was adopted in 1900 by a statewide referendum. Fleming also began the tradition of having an official portrait painted and hung in the Florida State Capitol.

After he left office, Fleming served on the board of trustees of the new Florida Old Confederate Soldiers and Sailors Home. On December 20, 1908, Fleming died following a long illness. He is buried at the Old City Cemetery in Jacksonville.

Facts

Francis P. Fleming was the son Lewis Fleming (1798–1862) and his second wife, Margaret Seton.

Fleming Island, Florida (an un-incorporated community in between Orange Park and Green Cove Springs in Clay County, Florida is named after his family.

The former governor and his wife, Floride, are buried in The Old City Cemetery, Jacksonville, Florida.

University Athletic Field, the original football facility at the University of Florida, was renamed Fleming Field in 1915 at the urging of the late governor's son, Francis P. Fleming Jr., who served on the university's Board of Control. The venue was replaced by much larger Florida Field in 1930, but the grassy area to the north of the current stadium is still known as Fleming Field.

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Francis P. Fleming, Governor's Timeline

1841
September 28, 1841
Panama Park, Duval County, Florida, United States
1874
January 23, 1874
Florida, United States
1875
August 24, 1875
Florida, United States
1908
December 20, 1908
Age 67
Jacksonville, Duval County, Florida, United States
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Old Jacksonville City Cemetery, Jacksonville, Duval County, Florida, United States