Gov. Thomas Bramlette

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Thomas Elliott Bramlette

Birthdate:
Birthplace: Elliott's Cross Roads, Cumberland County (now Clinton County), Kentucky, United States
Death: January 12, 1875 (58)
Louisville, Jefferson County, Kentucky, United States
Place of Burial: Cave Hill Cemetery, Louisville, Jefferson County, Kentucky, USA
Immediate Family:

Son of Col. Ambrose Shrewsbury Bramlette and Sarah Bramblette
Husband of Mary E. Bramlette and Sallie Lean Bramlette
Father of Col. James Thompson Bramlette; Thomas Bramlette; Corinne Walworth; William L. Bramlette and Simeon Eugene Bramlette
Brother of Judge William Bramlette

Occupation: Governor of Kentucky
Managed by: Charles W Lewis, II
Last Updated:

About Gov. Thomas Bramlette

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thomas_E._Bramlette

Thomas Elliott Bramlette (January 3, 1817 – January 12, 1875) was the 23rd Governor of Kentucky. He was elected in 1863 and guided the state through the latter part of the Civil War and the beginning of Reconstruction. At the outbreak of the war, Bramlette put his promising political career on hold and enlisted in the Union Army, raising and commanding the 3rd Kentucky Infantry. In 1862, President Abraham Lincoln appointed him district attorney for Kentucky. A year later, he was the Union Democrats' nominee for governor. Election interference by the Union Army gave him a landslide victory over his opponent, Charles A. Wickliffe. Within a year, however, federal policies such as recruiting Kentucky Negroes for the Union Army and suspending the writ of habeas corpus for Kentucky citizens caused Bramlette to abandon his support of the Lincoln administration and declare that he would "bloodily baptize the state into the Confederacy".

After the war, Bramlette issued a general pardon for most ex-Confederates in the state. He opposed ratification of the Fourteenth and Fifteenth Amendments and the establishment of the Freedman's Bureau in Kentucky. Among his accomplishments not related to the war and its aftermath were the reduction of the state's debt and the establishment of the Kentucky Agricultural and Mechanical College (now the University of Kentucky). Following his term as governor, Bramlette returned to his legal practice in Louisville. He died January 12, 1875 and was buried in Cave Hill Cemetery.

Early life

Thomas E. Bramlette was born on January 3, 1817, at Elliott's Cross Roads in Cumberland (now Clinton) County, Kentucky. He was the son of Colonel Ambrose S. and Sarah (Elliott) Bramlette. His father served two terms in the Kentucky Senate and several terms in the Kentucky House of Representatives.

Bramlette studied law, was admitted to the bar in 1837 at the age of 20, and began practicing in Louisville, Kentucky. In September of that year, Bramlette married Sallie Travis, the first of his two wives. The couple had two children, Thomas and Corinne.

Bramlette's political career began in 1841, when he was elected to represent Clinton County in the General Assembly. In 1848, Governor John J. Crittenden appointed Bramlette Commonwealth's Attorney. He resigned the position in 1850 to continue his legal practice, relocating to Columbia, Kentucky in 1852. He was the Whig nominee for his district's seat in the House of Representatives in 1853, but was defeated by Democrat James Chrisman. In 1856, he was elected as a judge in Kentucky's 6th Judicial District, serving with distinction for five years.

Military service

Bramlette resigned his judgeship and accepted a commission as a colonel in the Union Army on August 7, 1861. In violation of Kentucky's agreement to remain neutral in the Civil War, he raised and commanded the 3rd Kentucky Infantry. On September 19, the 3rd Kentucky marched on Lexington to forestall a peace conference scheduled there on September 21 and to arrest the state's junior Senator, John C. Breckinridge. A delay allowed Breckinridge to escape before the arrest was made, and he enlisted in the Confederate Army shortly thereafter.

Bramlette resigned his military commission on July 13, 1862 at Decherd, Tennessee. He returned to Louisville to accept President Abraham Lincoln's offer to become United States District Attorney for Kentucky. During his tenure in this position, he vigorously enforced Kentucky's wartime laws against Confederates and Confederate sympathizers.

Governor of Kentucky

Union Democrats chose Joshua Fry Bell as their candidate for governor of Kentucky in 1863, but Bell was skeptical of Kentucky's future with the Union and withdrew his name from consideration. The party's central committee chose Bramlette to replace Bell, and Bramlette declined a commission as a brigadier general in the Union Army to make the race. During the election, Union forces intimidated and jailed supporters of Bramlette's opponent, former governor Charles A. Wickliffe. As a result, Bramlette carried the election by a margin of nearly 4-to-1. During his term, he turned down an offered seat in the U.S. House of Representatives as well as a nomination to become the Democratic candidate for Vice-President in 1864.

Civil War

In December 1863, Bramlette addressed the General Assembly, declaring that the state had fulfilled its quota of soldiers for the Union army. January 4 of the following year, he proclaimed that rebel sympathizers would be held responsible for all guerrilla raids in the state, and specified stiff fines and imprisonment for anyone found to be aiding the guerrillas.

Although Bramlette assumed the governorship as a staunch supporter of the Union cause, within a year he issued a proclamation that he would "bloodily baptize the state into the Confederacy". The reasons for Bramlette's reversal were many. He took issue with General Stephen Burbridge's decision to enlist Negroes from Kentucky for military service, asking that this measure only be taken if Kentucky failed to meet her quota. The situation worsened when on July 5, 1864, President Lincoln suspended the writ of habeas corpus for citizens of the Commonwealth. Burbridge continually menaced Kentucky's citizens, interfering with the presidential election of 1864, and banishing Lieutenant Governor Richard T. Jacob from the state. When the General Assembly re-convened in January 1865, Bramlette continued to voice his opposition to the Union's tactics. Nevertheless, he urged passage of the Thirteenth Amendment, maintaining that the institution of slavery was "irrevocably doomed".

Reconstruction

Despite his disagreements with the Lincoln administration, Bramlette proclaimed a day of fasting and prayer upon receiving news of Lincoln's assassination. The General Assembly petitioned new president Andrew Johnson to call an end to martial law in the state. The tension between the state and federal governments remained however, leading Bramlette to declare that every "white male citizen" twenty-one years of age who had resided in the Commonwealth for at least two years would be eligible to vote. Spurred on by the Democratic governor's actions, Kentucky gave control of both houses of the General Assembly and five of its nine congressional seats to Democrats. President Johnson received the message, ending martial law and restoring habeas corpus in Kentucky.

When the General Assembly convened in December 1865, Bramlette sought to restore harmony in the state by issuing pardons to most ex-Confederates. He and the majority of the General Assembly opposed passage of the Fourteenth and Fifteenth Amendments, and Bramlette protested the establishment of the Freedman's Bureau in the Commonwealth.

Bramlette was very proud of those of his accomplishments not related to the Civil War, including the reduction of the state's debt and the establishment of the Agricultural and Mechanical College (later, the University of Kentucky). He supported the construction of turnpikes financed by government bonds, the development of natural resources, and encouraged immigration to obtain adequate labor to support reconstruction efforts.

Later life and death

Following his term as governor, Bramlette conducted a failed campaign to become a U.S. Senator. He married Mary E. Graham Adams in 1874, two years after the death of his first wife. He returned to his law practice in Louisville, and became a patron of many charitable organizations.

Bramlette died in Louisville on January 12, 1875 following a brief illness. He is buried at Cave Hill Cemetery in Louisville.



Civil War Union Army Officer, 23rd Kentucky Governor. A native of Kentucky, he studied law and practiced as an attorney in Louisville. He became a member of the State Legislature in 1841 and was appointed by Governor John J. Crittenden as the Commonwealth's Attorney in 1848. He resigned in 1850 to resume his law profession. He was an unsuccessful candidate on the Democratic ticket for a seat in the United States House of Representatives in 1853. In 1856, he was appointed as a state court judge to represent the 6th Judicial District of Kentucky and served until Kentucky abandoned its neutrality during the Civil War. Bramlette received a Colonel's commission to raise, organize, and command the 3rd Kentucky Volunteer Infantry. He led his regiment in the Siege of Corinth, and the Battles of Shiloh, Perryville, and Stones River. He resigned in 1863 to accept an appointment by President Abraham Lincoln as the United States District Attorney for Kentucky. Later in 1863, he was elected as Kentucky's 23rd Governor and served until 1867. While Governor, he enforced Kentucky's wartime laws against Confederates and sympathizers and dealt harshly with guerrillas and raiders. By 1864, he strongly opposed the tactics of the Union Army, and especially disapproved of the enlistment of African-Americans as soldiers. When the war was over, he sought to restore harmony in war-torn Kentucky and issued pardons to Confederate veterans. He died in Louisville in 1875 when he was 58 years old.* Reference: Find A Grave Memorial - SmartCopy: Jul 14 2019, 1:40:37 UTC

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Gov. Thomas Bramlette's Timeline

1817
January 3, 1817
Elliott's Cross Roads, Cumberland County (now Clinton County), Kentucky, United States
1839
August 27, 1839
1841
1841
1851
1851
1875
January 12, 1875
Age 58
Louisville, Jefferson County, Kentucky, United States
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Cave Hill Cemetery, Louisville, Jefferson County, Kentucky, USA