Gov. John Jones Pettus, CSA

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Gov. John Jones Pettus, CSA

Also Known As: "Mississippi Fire Eater"
Birthdate:
Birthplace: Wilson County, TN, United States
Death: January 25, 1867 (53)
Pulaski County, Arkansas, United States
Place of Burial: Altheimer, Jefferson County, AR, United States
Immediate Family:

Son of John Pettus and Alice Taylor Pettus
Husband of Susan Pettus and Permelia Virginia Pettus
Father of Corp. John A. Pettus, (CSA)
Brother of Brig. Gen. Edmund Winston Pettus, CSA

Occupation: U.S. politician, Co. B, 1st Regiment, Mississippi Infantry (State Troops) (Foote's)
Managed by: Martin Severin Eriksen
Last Updated:

About Gov. John Jones Pettus, CSA

John Jones Pettus, Jr.

  • BIRTH 9 Oct 1813 - Wilson County, Tennessee, USA
  • DEATH 25 Jan 1867 (aged 53) - Pulaski County, Arkansas, USA
  • BURIAL Flat Bayou Cemetery, Altheimer, Jefferson County, Arkansas, USA
  • MEMORIAL ID 6727704 · View Source

https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/6727704/john-jones-pettus

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/John_J._Pettus

John Jones Pettus (October 9, 1813 – January 28, 1867) was a United States politician. A member of the Democratic party, he was Governor of the state of Mississippi from January 5, 1854 to January 10, 1854, and later was elected to a full term, from 21 November 1859 - 16 November 1863. On April 4, 1837, he married his cousin, Permelia Virginia Winston, a daughter of William Winston and Mary Cooper, in Tuscumbia, Alabama. He was known as "the Mississippi Fire-eater" because he once said that he would rather eat fire than sit down with Yankees. He was also known for making this famous Quote:

"I am Mississippian to the Core. My ancestors are buried upon her hillsides. I am, and have been and ever expect to be within her borders. Whatever may happen, I am with her Heart and Soul."

After the war, amnesty was refused to him and he became a fugitive; the manhunt for him continued until his death in Pulaski County, Arkansas on January 28, 1867. His original interment was in a private or family graveyard (on the property of a cousin, John Jones, although he was later re-interred at Flat Bayou Burial Ground, Wabbaseka, Arkansas. His wife Permelia died in 1857 and is buried in the Winston Family Cemetery in Gainesville, Sumter County, Alabama.

John Jones Pettus was also a brother of Edmund Winston Pettus (1821–1907) a United States Senator from Alabama and for whom the Pettus Memorial Bridge was named in Selma Alabama.

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Gov. John Jones Pettus, CSA's Timeline

1813
October 9, 1813
Wilson County, TN, United States
1839
1839
1867
January 25, 1867
Age 53
Pulaski County, Arkansas, United States
????
Flat Bayou Cemetery, Altheimer, Jefferson County, AR, United States